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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. XVIII. PINOKNEY, LIVINGSTON 00., MICH., THURSDAY, JULY 5.1900. No. 27.&#13;
The&#13;
The stock in the Store having&#13;
changed hands we will continue&#13;
the buishess at the same old&#13;
stand. 10*This week we will&#13;
five 5 per cent discount on every&#13;
1 worth of goods—that is one&#13;
dollars worth for 9 5 c e n t s .&#13;
15 Marbles .01&#13;
Good lead Pencils .01&#13;
6 Sheets Paper .01&#13;
1 Tablet .01&#13;
1 Pen Tablet .02&#13;
1 Spool Machine thread .02&#13;
1 Flying Machine .03&#13;
1 Bottle Goqd Ink .03&#13;
Good Curling iron .04&#13;
1 Good Oil Can .05&#13;
1 Bottle Machine Oil .04&#13;
3 Bars Good Toilet Soap. .05&#13;
3 Bars Laundry Soap .05&#13;
Mens 10 cent Half Hose .07&#13;
Ladies Hose 15 cents Quality .10&#13;
inldrens Hose .05&#13;
Stick Pins .01&#13;
Beauty Pms .01&#13;
Shirt Waist Sets .25&#13;
Set White Metal Knives and For us .75&#13;
Stag Handle^arviBg Set — 1.50&#13;
White Metal Sugar Spoons .05&#13;
White Metal Butter Knife .05&#13;
Set Nut Picks .15&#13;
1 Glass Cutter ^.. .. .10&#13;
Good Whips .10 and 15&#13;
Pocket Screw Driver .05&#13;
A Good Tin Coffee or Tea Pot .10&#13;
A Good Nickel Coffee Pot .45&#13;
A Good Nickel Tea Pot .39&#13;
Lanre Size Roaster -.25&#13;
No. 8 Copper Bottdm Tea Kettle .60&#13;
Ladies Fancy Hose .10&#13;
Mens Double Knee Extra Heavy&#13;
Overalls .75 cent Quality .49&#13;
Mens Fancy Dress Shirts Latest&#13;
Styles and Shades .23 and .25&#13;
A Good Towel .05&#13;
A Better Towel .10&#13;
Extra Quality Towels .13 to .25&#13;
Ladies Aprons .10&#13;
Our Prices on China and Glass Ware&#13;
are Right.&#13;
Cuff Buttons Per Pair .05 to .50&#13;
Belt Buckles .10 to .50&#13;
Collar Button, Gold Plate-2 for .05&#13;
Belt Rings 2 for .05&#13;
Brooches .10 to .50&#13;
L O C A L N E W S . I&#13;
H. W. ELLIS, Prop. A&#13;
Ross Read spent the past week in&#13;
Ann Arbor,&#13;
Blanche and Ethel Graham are visiting&#13;
their aunt at Morton.&#13;
Miss Anna Brogan of Detroit is&#13;
spending the summer here.&#13;
Mrs. Johona Birnie and daughter&#13;
Kate are visiting relatives here.&#13;
Mrs. Harry Ayers is spending a&#13;
couple of weeks with her parents&#13;
here.&#13;
James Smith aud Thomas Stapish&#13;
of Chelsea called on Plnckney friends&#13;
this week.&#13;
A Mr. Francis is shipping several&#13;
dozen frogs from this place nearly&#13;
every day. He ships to a Cincinnati&#13;
market and gets from $1.25 to $1.50&#13;
per dozen.&#13;
The Misses Mame and Mabel Sigler&#13;
are visiting their sister Mrs. B. K. {&#13;
Pierce of Chesaning. Miss Mabel returned&#13;
Saturday, but Mame will stay&#13;
for two weeks.&#13;
On Friday evening, July 13, there&#13;
will be an ice cream social at the home&#13;
~bf E. P. jJcCluskey for the, benefit of&#13;
St. Mary's church. A cordial invitation&#13;
is extended to all.&#13;
Henry Mead a f&amp;rmer resident of&#13;
this place, was brought to this place&#13;
for burial on Friday morning last. Mr.&#13;
Mead has lived at the Soldiers fiome&#13;
in Grand Kapids for several years&#13;
butwas in Detroit on a furlough when&#13;
taken sick and died there. __&#13;
We understand that a whole bundle&#13;
of our papers to Unadilla have&#13;
been misscaried or lost in the mail aud&#13;
our patrons thus miss their paper.&#13;
We are glad to be informed at any&#13;
time j)f the loss of the paper so we&#13;
can look the matter up at once and if&#13;
possible send a dupicate package.&#13;
Our aim is not only furnish all the&#13;
news every week but send tbe paper&#13;
every week as agreed. Our patrons&#13;
will confer a favor by notifying us at&#13;
any time they9 miss an issue.&#13;
LOSS OVER $1500.&#13;
Pinekney Pays Another Tribute to BO&#13;
Fire Protection.&#13;
TEEPLE &amp; CADWELL&#13;
General Hardware,&#13;
Have as complete an assort mentjafJieaYy^^^nd Bnell.^ard:&#13;
ware as can be found in the county, and 1900 finds us&#13;
^nore thoroughly equipped than ever before.&#13;
Builders Hardware a Specialty.&#13;
Doors and Common Sash always in stock.&#13;
Complete line ofJBuggies, Wagons and&#13;
Heating Stoves, Ranges, Wood Stoves&#13;
Wood and Coal.&#13;
Our Specials:&#13;
Best Apron Ginghams&#13;
All Best Prints&#13;
10 and 20 per cent reduction on Dimities,&#13;
. Organdies, Ginghams, Percales, Piques.&#13;
10 per cent off on Straw Hats.&#13;
5fc&#13;
5c&#13;
Saturday July 7,&#13;
Ladies, $2.00 Tan Shoes $1.75&#13;
2.50 " " 2.00&#13;
3.00 ', ; 2.40&#13;
Gents' Tan Shoes less 15 per cent&#13;
Gents' Fancy Shirts at 35c, 45c, 50cv&#13;
l l b S o d i o 4c&#13;
Red Alaska Salmon 10c&#13;
Full Cream Cheese 9^c&#13;
Pound Baking Powder 6V&#13;
Canned Corn 7&lt;-&#13;
On Thursday afternoon last, when&#13;
the wind was blowing a gale, the citizens&#13;
of this village were alarmed by&#13;
the cry of fire and were not long in&#13;
getting tq the scene, when it was&#13;
found that fire was just breaking out&#13;
of the roof of Mrs. Colby's kitchen.&#13;
Had the village had any fire protection&#13;
whatever it would have been an&#13;
asy matter to have put out the flames&#13;
but with but little water available,&#13;
and the strong wind there was nothing&#13;
left to do but carry out furniture&#13;
and save surrounding buildings. The&#13;
fire made quick work and it was but&#13;
a short time before the fine substantial&#13;
brick house was in ruins.&#13;
Everyone worked heroically or many&#13;
other buildings would have paid tribute&#13;
to Pinckney's folly,—no fire protection.&#13;
As it was fire caught several&#13;
times on Hi W. Crofoot's.house and&#13;
barn alsj H. J. Clark's barn but&#13;
"thosewho were^there were guarding&#13;
them and did not let it get a start.&#13;
' Much of the household goods were&#13;
saved but loss still falls heavily.&#13;
Mrs. E. W.Martin who occupied part&#13;
of the house was also a loser although&#13;
much of her goods were saved. The&#13;
bouse and contents belonging to Mrs.&#13;
Colby was insured for $1,200. Mrs.&#13;
E. W. Martin's goods were insured&#13;
for $500.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Colby are now situated&#13;
in the hotel and Mrs. Martin moved&#13;
her goods into Mrs. LaRue's house on&#13;
Main street. It is not known at this&#13;
time whether tbe house will be rebuilt&#13;
or not.&#13;
Shall We Have Fire Protection?&#13;
Since the above article was written&#13;
tie council have had their regular&#13;
meeting and offered resolutions which&#13;
will be found on another page, giving&#13;
the citizens a chance to vote on the&#13;
matter of a small bond for fire pro*&#13;
tection. Thus it will be the citizens'&#13;
fault if something 13 not done in the&#13;
matter.&#13;
Knowing the feeling that exists in&#13;
the matter, we have no doubt but the&#13;
vote will be unanimously in favor of&#13;
4h^^©nd.—^he- expense will-not—be&#13;
but little on any one and the saving&#13;
may be great.&#13;
A mad-dog Scare.&#13;
One day last week Henry Barton&#13;
bad his dog sheared and about that&#13;
time the dog got into a fight with a&#13;
dog belonging to Matt Brady. Mr.&#13;
Barton's dog began to act strangely&#13;
snapping at things and bitting several&#13;
other dogs until Saturday when he&#13;
was killed.&#13;
Tbe dogs that were bitten are being&#13;
watched closely, most of them being&#13;
shut up tor fear of madness. It is&#13;
claimed however that it may not appear&#13;
for several months and, then developed&#13;
rabies. Dog-days will soon&#13;
be here and it would be well to guard&#13;
those dogs bitten or muzzle them.&#13;
One human life is worth more in some&#13;
people's eyes than many dogs.&#13;
- » « « « 4&#13;
OBITUARY.&#13;
MRS. SARAH HAUSE.&#13;
Corn Starch&#13;
.10c Tobacco&#13;
\ lb Cake Cbocolace&#13;
40c&#13;
14c&#13;
—-«**£ f,G. 3ACKS0N. SuAar Sold Ch«ap.&#13;
&gt; .&#13;
Mrs. Sarah Swarthout was born in&#13;
Stuben Co., N'Y. Sept. 2, 1817 and&#13;
died at her home July 1, 1900. In&#13;
1836 she came to Michigan where she&#13;
married Jessie rjause and settled on&#13;
a farm where *&gt;he has lived nearly&#13;
ever since. Her husband died m 1888&#13;
since which time she bas lived a widlnvftri&#13;
XXW- hy k\\ who knew her. &amp;ha&#13;
'was the mother of six children, four&#13;
of whom survive bar.&#13;
Tbe funeral was hold Tuesday&#13;
afternoon at 2 o'clock from tbe North&#13;
Hamburg churoh.&#13;
Where did you spend tbe Fourth?&#13;
Now the papers are full of Fourth&#13;
accidents.&#13;
J. L. Roche was home from Detroit&#13;
over Sunday,&#13;
Mrs. Fred Stowe of near Unadilla&#13;
was in town Saturday last.&#13;
Mesdames Albert Reason and A Hie&#13;
Mclntyre were in Detroit the first of&#13;
the week.&#13;
John Sigler and daughter Mae, of&#13;
Leslie spent Sunday with G. W.&#13;
Teeple and family.&#13;
Rev. Horace Palmer and wife of&#13;
Unadilla were guests of J.. A. Cadwell&#13;
and wife the last of last week.&#13;
Card of Thanks.&#13;
We desire :o thank the many who&#13;
so willingly and ably assisted us in tbe&#13;
saving of our household goods during&#13;
the recent fire.&#13;
Mrs. L. Colby.&#13;
Mrs. E. W. Mantin.&#13;
We will deliver riour&#13;
direct to th9 people&#13;
at&#13;
•&#13;
45 cents for a 25-pound sacfe&#13;
90 cents for a 50-pound sack&#13;
$3.50 for a barrel.&#13;
10 pounds Graham 15 cents.&#13;
10 lbs. granulated meal lOcts&#13;
Seed Buckwheat.&#13;
n&#13;
T e r m s , Cash.&#13;
R. H. ERWIN.&#13;
Specials For This Week:&#13;
— U a d t e s ' S h o e s — —&#13;
All Three Dollar Shoes £2.50&#13;
All Two-fifty " 2.00&#13;
All " " 1.65&#13;
M e n ' s S h o e s&#13;
All Three Dollar Shoes #2.50&#13;
All Two-fifty " 2.00&#13;
All Two " " 1.65&#13;
B o y s ' S h o e s """&#13;
All Two Dollar Shoes $1.65&#13;
All One seveDty-five Shoes $1.45 _ A l l One twenty-five Shoes $1.00&#13;
M i s s e s ' S h o e s&#13;
All One-fifty Shoes 81.20&#13;
All One seventy-five Shoes $1.45&#13;
All Two Dollar Shoes 81.65&#13;
All Odds and Ends in Shoes for what they will bring.&#13;
Cottons and Prints are all on sale this weak at special prices.&#13;
S p e c i a l s o n G r o c e r i e s f o r S a t u r d a y :&#13;
1 pkg Yeast Foam 3c or 2 for 5c&#13;
Armours Key Soap 2c per bar&#13;
1 Can Salmon 7c&#13;
1 lb Baking Powder 4c&#13;
1 Can Best Tomatoes 7c&#13;
1 Can Best Peas 8c&#13;
I&#13;
1&#13;
\ OUR LADDER TO SUCCESS&#13;
* = *&#13;
Ikocurate Cotnpound'g|&#13;
itive Methods&#13;
Courtesv&#13;
Cleanliness&#13;
Complete Stock&#13;
Pure Drugs&#13;
Facilities&#13;
Experience&#13;
Knowledge&#13;
Skill&#13;
Study&#13;
Your P a t r o n a g s , w h e n In need or Drugs, •&#13;
P a t e n t .Vl&gt;iicini». ct= , U s j i i - t t i i . 2&#13;
- -if"-iJ!&#13;
-- ."rt . - ^ 3&#13;
Give your&#13;
-Horse&#13;
S pears*&#13;
Worm&#13;
Powders.&#13;
We have ,&#13;
Secured the&#13;
Agency&#13;
For them.&#13;
I Prescriptions&#13;
Carefully s&#13;
g Compounded. %&#13;
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'KOMlNATIONS HIAtlE.&#13;
There wmi a Total of »41 Totes In the&#13;
Convention and the Number Necss-&#13;
«ary to a Choice Being 4 3 1 — Bliss&#13;
Aeeeived 595 Vote*..&#13;
e Bliss, v.*ho led on the j peace may be speedily secur&#13;
CPW 'ballots w i s ivisseri liv Mr T h e Republican party ren&#13;
^ 4 ^ . - . . . . . - ^ ^ . 1 - . . . ^ I glance to the principle of ec&#13;
t h e m s e l v e s hoarse. • P a n d e m o n i u m&#13;
reigned. T h e Ferry m e n w e r e shout*&#13;
Inx for O'Donnell, and t h e Stearns&#13;
m e n kept up their noise In a vain att&#13;
e m p t to create a s t a m p e d e for their&#13;
favorite son. I t w a s titoftOBt to possible&#13;
to &gt; e w the result* e t t h e call of count&#13;
i e s ©wing to £ h e .tertitic din.&#13;
The! Platform.&#13;
' The fcepublioams of the state of Michi- 8an, through their chosen representatives,&#13;
nlte with theft* fellow Republicans, met&#13;
•recently in national convention^ i"in looking&#13;
back upon an unsurpassed record of&#13;
achievement, in looking forward into a&#13;
great field of duty and responsibility and&#13;
In appealing to the Judgment of their&#13;
countrymen," and make these declarations&#13;
of principles: .&#13;
We Indorse tne administration of our illustrious&#13;
leader, President William Mc-&#13;
Klnley. We commend his'wise and patriotic&#13;
course in the cpnduct of the late war&#13;
and his far-seeing and beneficent policy in&#13;
relation to the government of the islands&#13;
of the sea which, by the fortunes, of war,&#13;
have come to us for protection and guidance.&#13;
We especially commend and indorse the&#13;
action and work of our senators and representatives&#13;
in congress in establishing&#13;
our currency upon a sound basis; and we&#13;
commend the legislation of congress looking&#13;
toward the establishment of suitable&#13;
government for newly acquired territory;&#13;
promoting the general prosperity and In&#13;
its efforts to restrain trusts and monopolies.&#13;
We cordially and enthusiastically indorse&#13;
the platform of principles adopted&#13;
by the Republican national convention at&#13;
Philadelphia June 19. 1900, and the splendid&#13;
ticket nominated; ami we pledge to&#13;
President Wm. McJhLinley and Gov. Theodore&#13;
Roosevelt our unite*! and energetic&#13;
support.&#13;
in asking the people of Michigan to inuo-&#13;
s? the princlu.es of our party, we remind&#13;
them of the fact that all the business&#13;
Interests of the state have prospered&#13;
under Republican rule, and that a change&#13;
now would be disastrous.&#13;
We again declare our allegiance to the&#13;
gold standard, believing that the free and&#13;
unlimited coinage of silver by this nation&#13;
alone would briny: about untold disasters.&#13;
We place our stamp of disapproval upon&#13;
all combinations of capital tending to restrict&#13;
competition in business, to create&#13;
monopolies, to limit production or to control&#13;
prices, and v,e favor legislation to&#13;
that end.&#13;
| We sympathize with the people of the&#13;
South .African republic in their struggle&#13;
, for liberty and independence, and we&#13;
commend President McKinley for prorr.pt-&#13;
I ly tendering- tho friendly offices of this&#13;
j government In the'interest jett peace; and&#13;
wliile the American government, followi&#13;
n g t h e established precedent of pon-tn-&#13;
! terference in foreign affairs, must mainj&#13;
tain a position of strict neutrality, nevertheless&#13;
we earnestly hope that honorable&#13;
red .-&#13;
ews Its alle&#13;
The Scotten Tobacco Factory has&#13;
Been Purchased From tl.eTrust&#13;
OWNED BY DETROIT CAPITAL,&#13;
The Republican State Ticket.&#13;
F o r Governor— Col. A. T. Bliss, of&#13;
S a g i n a w .&#13;
For Lieutenant-Governor—0. W. Robinson,&#13;
of Chassell.&#13;
For Secretary of State—Fred M. Warner,&#13;
of Farraington.&#13;
F o r S t a t e Treasurer—Daniel McCoy,&#13;
o f Grand Kapids.&#13;
For Auditor-General—Perry F. P o w -&#13;
e r s , of Cadillac.&#13;
For Commissioner of State Land Off&#13;
i c e — E . A. Wildey, of P a w Paw.&#13;
For A t t o r n e y - General — Horace M.&#13;
Oren, of Sault Ste. Marie.&#13;
For Superintendent of Public Ins&#13;
t r u c t i o n — D e l o s Fall, of Albion.&#13;
For Member of the State Board of&#13;
E d u c a t i o n — J a m e s H. Thompson, Of&#13;
O^ceqla County.&#13;
T h e Republican state convention,&#13;
w h i c h opened a t Grand Rapids'-oh the&#13;
27th, w a s one of the most largely attended,&#13;
interesting and exciting conventions&#13;
ever held in Michigan. It&#13;
w a s afternoon before the balloting for&#13;
a candidate for the head of the ticket&#13;
w a s commenced. But when once started&#13;
the session Iasted'six hours without&#13;
a break. The contest w a s really so&#13;
k e e n and interesting that no one&#13;
s e e m e d to h a v e time to think about bei&#13;
n g huiwiry. F r o m the start it seemed&#13;
almost, improbable that M r . - S t e a r n s&#13;
had enough in reserve to win out, but&#13;
the situation at the close of the tirst&#13;
d a y of the convention w a s by no&#13;
tnealis discouraging to his followers. It&#13;
1s true that Col. Bliss.&#13;
first It .- ~....-..~. ...v., i^nny, i-,, ..-.^. • g j a n o e t o the principleof equal and unl-&#13;
Ferry, b u t - t h e - a p p a r e n t s i g n i f i c a n c e o r • YnrmTaxatlon. All[ prcmeftyowners in the&#13;
It Is Reported That the Hew Firm Will&#13;
Establish Even a Greater Institution&#13;
Than was Previously Maintained—-&#13;
Other State Happenings of Interest.&#13;
Weakly Crop Bulletin.&#13;
In t h e -weekly crop b u l l e t i n i s s u e d o n&#13;
t h e 26th, Director Schneider, of t h e&#13;
L a n s i n g station, disousses crop prospects&#13;
a s f o l l o w s : T h e c o n t i n u e d l o w&#13;
temperature and especially t h e cool&#13;
n i g h t s , h a v e greatly retarded t h e&#13;
this is weakened s o m e w h a t by the fact _j state,^whether JnljyiduaK copartners, or&#13;
that Mr. Ferry w a s not gaining at the """ ~~~*! "' "&#13;
•expense of Mr. Bliss, but w a s picking&#13;
tip a vote here and there from the&#13;
minor candidates. Mr. Stearns held&#13;
b i s o w n fairly well throughout the balloting,&#13;
but his supporters appeared to&#13;
b e playing a w a i t i n g game. While It&#13;
is probably true that Sybrant Wesse-&#13;
Ilus, w h o w a s leading the tight for Mr.&#13;
Stearns on the floor of the convention.&#13;
corporations, should contribute, their just&#13;
share to the public burden and expense;&#13;
and we demand that every dollar of&#13;
wealth shall be taxed equally with every&#13;
other.&#13;
We fnvor the prompt repeal of all spe—\&#13;
rial railroad charters granting to any&#13;
railroad in the state special privileges.&#13;
We believe that all tno railroad^ of the&#13;
Ptate should do business under the same&#13;
general laws.&#13;
We condemn the corruption of state officials&#13;
that has'brought s'.\amo and diswrnlrt&#13;
b i v n nrpfprrpd aftpr the ballot- ! ff'"ace to wc um n a t e preierrea aitei tne uauoi | the state: and we demand the v l ( r o r m l a prosecution and punishment or&#13;
all who are guilty.&#13;
We favor the strictest economy in the&#13;
l n g began, an earlier adjournment, he&#13;
did not indicate his desire by word or&#13;
rote, fearing, DO doubt, that s u c h action&#13;
would be a confession of weakn&#13;
e s s . However, when the Ferry forces&#13;
disbursement of public moneys and in the&#13;
aclm'.nistration of state affairs.&#13;
The Republicans of Michigan confidently&#13;
Invoke the consideration and approval&#13;
had had enonch, Wesselius joined w i t h j of the foregoing declaration of principles&#13;
them In voting to adjourn, w h i c h fol&#13;
l o w e d after the 10th ballot had been&#13;
taken.&#13;
When the gavel fell In the convention&#13;
hall on t h e ' m o r n i n g of the 28th,&#13;
the roll call for the nomination for&#13;
governor w a s at once proceeded w i t h .&#13;
"The first f e w counties went d o w n the&#13;
line recording the same vote they did&#13;
'on the last ballot the night, before.&#13;
B a r a g i recorded the first change,&#13;
''Ferry losing one to Bliss. Great cheeri&#13;
n g by the Bliss people followed. Berrien's&#13;
21 for Ferry and Calhoun's 20&#13;
brought great cheering from the Ferry&#13;
followers. Any Stearns vote brouglU&#13;
*.out Stearns cheers. The floor manag&#13;
e r s of all three leading candidates&#13;
I t e p t u p the cheering for the purpose of&#13;
teeepin-g their forces in heart. One-thii*rt&#13;
&lt;he w a v d o w n the list of counties the&#13;
«iet changes recorded a rtliss loss oT&#13;
Hiree a n d gain ©f one; Terry a gain&#13;
of t w o and loss of one; Stearns a gain&#13;
of one and loss of one; O'Donnell a&#13;
loss of one and jrain of one. This carrled&#13;
thr roll of counties d o w n alphabetically&#13;
to Leelanau.&#13;
On the 12th ballot Stearns gained s i x&#13;
f r o m Osborn in Menominee and t w o&#13;
•frutn Bliss in Osceola, and Bliss gained&#13;
o n e from Stearns lu Presque Isle.&#13;
On the -13th ballot Ferry had lost 17&#13;
votes over the result of t h e ' p r e v i o u s&#13;
day.&#13;
On the 14th ballot the losses and&#13;
•gains were: Ferry, loss of 12; Stearns,&#13;
^;aln of ;&gt;; Osborn, loss of 1; O'Donnell,&#13;
gain of i).&#13;
On the l o t h ballot O'Donnell gained&#13;
\&gt; from Bliss in Barry county, 1 from&#13;
Ferry and 2 from Stearns in Ionia&#13;
•county and 1 from Ferry in Livingston,&#13;
On the 10th ballot Ferry lost 10&#13;
v o t e s ; Bliss gained 10 votes; Stearns&#13;
l o s t 8 v o t e s ; O'Donnell gained 7 v o t e s ;&#13;
Osborn gained 1 vote.&#13;
On the 17th ballot Ferry lost t w o&#13;
more votes; Bliss gained &lt;5; Stearns lost&#13;
4; Osborn lost 3 ; O'Donnell gained 3.&#13;
T h e convention then adjourned until&#13;
2 p. in.&#13;
T h e interior of the convention hall&#13;
w a s a m a s s of seethinar, shouting,&#13;
s c r e a m i n g delegates a s the convention&#13;
w a s called to order at 2 p. m., the word&#13;
b e i n g passed d o w n the line that the&#13;
Ferry strength w a s to go to O'Donnell,&#13;
TnnJ-a frantic effort w a s being made to&#13;
deliver the goads. T h e B l i s s lieutena&#13;
n t s w e r e putting forth every effort&#13;
to drive back the O'Donnell tide; but&#13;
in the roar of t h e convention nobody&#13;
«ouid ascertain w h a t s u c c e s s t h e y had.&#13;
The convention w a s in wild confusion&#13;
long after the chairman called it&#13;
to "order." On the 18th ballot Ferry&#13;
d e l e g a t e s from Allegan w e n t to O'Donn&#13;
e l l . Nine Blis* delegates from Barry&#13;
w e n t to O'Donnell. Berrien cast her&#13;
•21. y o t e s for J a m e s O'Donnell. Branch&#13;
g a v e 13 t o Campbell; Cass g a v e 11&#13;
to. O'Donnell; Charlevoix. 3 for Bliss;&#13;
- C h e b o y g a n / 4 for Bliss. 1 for O'Doni&#13;
i e l l ; Chltipewa, 5 for Osborn. Antrim&#13;
•ciimged/ner vpte to 3 fpr O'Donnell.&#13;
A s the 19th ballot progressed it w a s&#13;
seen/fhat the S a g i n a w lumberman w a s&#13;
"*K&gt;utw] to w m and. bis friends howled&#13;
,% - - : - * • ' • •: • • • • • ^ n i • ' ' . ,&#13;
Two Meet a Horrible Death.&#13;
An engine o n the narrow gauge railroad&#13;
owned by t h e Brownell Improvement&#13;
company cf Chicago, which is&#13;
building stone roads at Crown Point,&#13;
If id., jumped the trac'k when going&#13;
down an incline, and Engineer Ricksackcr&#13;
of Chicago and Fireman Mose3&#13;
Livingston of Crown Point met a horrible&#13;
death. The engine overturned&#13;
frid pinned both in the cab. Before&#13;
they could be taken out the hot water&#13;
from the boiler literally cooked their&#13;
flesh.&#13;
L&amp;ndfiiiric Caus s Bad Wreck.&#13;
In Pittsburg, Pa., Sunday five pcr-&#13;
-scng—were painfully Injured- and f.fg&#13;
r o w t h of corn; o t h e r w i s e t h e w e a t h e r&#13;
conditions of t h e past week h a v e been&#13;
very beneficial to all v e g e t a t i o n . L i g h t&#13;
rains have occurred and relieved the&#13;
d r o u g h t y condition i n the upper peninsula&#13;
a n d t h e northern c o u n t i e s ; i n&#13;
t h e s o u t h e r n counties s h o w e r s have&#13;
s l i g h t l y interfered w i t h h a y i n g and&#13;
cultivation. Corn haa^generally made&#13;
a good s t a n d and c o n t i n u e s to look&#13;
h e a l t h y a l t h o u g h its g r o w t h is very&#13;
slow. Oats are in fine c o n d i t i o n and&#13;
h e a d i n g i n southern counties. Rye,&#13;
barley and early planted b e a n s have&#13;
made good progress and look promising;&#13;
l a t e planted beans h a v e germinated&#13;
poorly on account of t h e cool dry&#13;
w e a t h e r of t h e early p a r t of t h e week.&#13;
Sugar b e e t s are g e n e r a l l y t h i n n e d ,&#13;
w e l l c u l t i v a t e d and in a g e n e r a l l y&#13;
promising condition. B o t h early and&#13;
late p o t a t o e s are d o i n g w e l l . W h e a t&#13;
contiuues t o deteriorate a n d is crinkl&#13;
i n g and f a l l i n g badly o n account of&#13;
the Hessian fly. H a y i n g is g e n e r a l in&#13;
the s o u t h e r n and central c o u n t i e s ; old&#13;
m e a d o w s as a rule are h e a v y a n d yieldi&#13;
n g finely. Apples have f a l l e n considerably.&#13;
»&#13;
Scotten Tobacco Factory to Reopen.&#13;
F r o m tlie tlajrstaff ofHhe '-btjf-tobaccoplant&#13;
flies once more the n a m e "Scotten,"&#13;
and Detroit is g i v e n assurance&#13;
that a l t h o u g h the trust tried to beat&#13;
the city out of one of its b i g industries&#13;
under"the""""guise of c o n c e n t r a t i o n of&#13;
business, t h e army of m e n a n d w o m e n&#13;
w i l l once more be g i v e n e m p l o y m e n t .&#13;
Detroit w i l l establish e v e n a greater&#13;
institution t h a n w a s m a i n t a i n e d after&#13;
the flag Scotten &amp; Co. w a s removed&#13;
and t h e n a m e of the tobacco t r u s t substituted.&#13;
From the s t a n d p o i n t of t h e&#13;
city, t h e result of the decision to close&#13;
t h e factory h a s resulted/in a beneficial&#13;
c h a n g e , from the h o l d i n g s of foreign&#13;
capital w i t h i n t e r e s t s foreign to Detroit&#13;
to those of m e n w h o have b e e n identified&#13;
w i t h Detroit's commercial g r o w t h&#13;
for many years, and will probably be&#13;
for m a n y y e a r s to come. T h e deed of&#13;
t r a n s f e r e n c e w a s made o u t t o Oren&#13;
Scotten on the 25th&#13;
7 M I C H I G A N N E W S J T t f M S .&#13;
T h e anti-«alooni»U o f A d r i a n are per*&#13;
iaetfng an o r g a n i s a t i o n .&#13;
i T K e n a y crop In C h e b o y g a n c o u n t y&#13;
w i l L n o t be more t h a n h a l f a c r o p a t&#13;
t h e m o a t • .:;&#13;
T i e Simpson park o a m p m e e t f n g w i l l&#13;
o p e j a t Romeo, J u l y .20, a n d ^ploae&#13;
A u g u s t 5. ": "* LMarine City residents e x p e r i e n c e d&#13;
c h e a v i e s t electrical sto#rm, i n y e a r s&#13;
f* t h e 37th.&#13;
',;Through service on t h e n e w electric&#13;
line b e t w e e n Detroit and Port H u r o n&#13;
w a s i n a u g u r a t e d on t h e 20th.&#13;
T h e U n i v e r s i t y of Michigan°stlU ret&#13;
a i n s second place in point of attendance&#13;
w i t h Havard, t h e l a t t e r h a v i n g&#13;
4,047 s t u d e n t s a n d Michigan 3,447.&#13;
SHARKEY K H O I . &lt;&gt;&gt;^-«**0»&lt;1*n«--4*v&lt;-dta *W«Mr -. '-*••• *-'K&#13;
F r u i t g r o w e r s around M u s k e g o n h a v e&#13;
a n e w e n e m y t o fight, i n t h e shape of t\&#13;
-am&amp;H b e e t l e called the "rose chafer,"&#13;
teen or twenty others were hurt by the&#13;
wreck of the Carnegie accommodation&#13;
on the Panhandle railroad. All of the&#13;
injured were able to go to their homos&#13;
"except James Keenan, an—employe cf [&#13;
the Pennsylvania company, who was&#13;
sent to the Mer:y hospital. H e will&#13;
recover. The accident wa3 caused by&#13;
a landslide from Mount W a s h i n g t o n ,&#13;
over 100 tons of rock and earth top*&#13;
piing over on the train.&#13;
Dewey Cannon Unveiled at Three u«ks.&#13;
The u n v e i l i n g of the D e w e y c a n u o n&#13;
took place at Three Oaks o n t h e -Nth&#13;
w i t h great elate. T h e principle part w a s&#13;
performed by Miss H e l e n (Jbuld. Hon.&#13;
R. A. Alger, of Detroit, d e l i v e r e d the&#13;
w e l c o m i n g address. T h e g r e e t i n g s&#13;
were offered by E. K. Warren, president&#13;
of the village. T h e reception&#13;
c o m m i t t e e consisted of E. K. Warren,&#13;
J. L. McKie. Mrs! T. A. Davis, Mrs. E.&#13;
K. Warren a n d MTST-WT-C. H a l l . — ^ h t s -&#13;
George MedUl Kills Himself.&#13;
George D. Medill, cousin of the" late&#13;
Joseph Medill of Chicago, and brother&#13;
of ex-Mayor T. J. Medill of Rock Island,&#13;
111., committed suicide near Milan,&#13;
111. The body was discovered a short&#13;
distance above thb town by dogs belonging&#13;
to William Tayson. Their&#13;
barking attracted the owner's attention,&#13;
w h o notified the coroner. The&#13;
m a n w a s dead, aod the revolver with&#13;
which he killed himself w a s l y i n g beside&#13;
him.&#13;
Ex-Councilman J. W. Ware of H o p -&#13;
kinsville, Ky., shot the Rev. Dr. W. F.&#13;
Piner, pastor of the Methodist church,&#13;
while the latter w a s making a pastoral&#13;
call on Mrs. W a r e at the residence of&#13;
the former. W a r e entered the parlor&#13;
and fired at the minister without warning.&#13;
Dr. Piner threw h i m t o the floor&#13;
and disarmed him. W a r e w a s arrested&#13;
and released on 11,000 bond. It is&#13;
stated that W a r e h a s long disliked the&#13;
minister and t h a t an unwarranted&#13;
jealousy was a t t h e bottom of the&#13;
shooting. Dr. Piner W a scalp wound&#13;
w h i c h is very painful but h o t serious.&#13;
F i f t e e n t h o u s a n d dollars w a s received&#13;
a t N e w York on t h e 26th from&#13;
t h e Kansas-India famine relief com*&#13;
m i t t e e a n d cabled U t u t Inter-denomin&#13;
a t i o n a l missionary c o m m i t t e e a t Bombay.&#13;
5 T h e mercury reached 87 d e g r e e s i n&#13;
Chicago o n the 26th, the h o t t e s t d a y of.&#13;
t h e season t o date.&#13;
c o m m i t t e e greeted Miss^ Gould o n the&#13;
arrival of t h e train at t h e depot. A&#13;
long parade took place a t 3 o'clock&#13;
which w a s reviewed by t h e g u e s t s of&#13;
honor, Jli&amp;s Gould and her party. _ Admiral&#13;
D e w e y w a s unable t o be present,&#13;
as previously plarined, o w i n g to pressing&#13;
b u s i n e s s e n g a g e m e n t s .&#13;
— m&#13;
Degaw Wins the Content.&#13;
In the D e g a w - F i t z s i m m o n s contested^&#13;
election case, of Detroit, t h e supreme"&#13;
court decided t h a t i n g i v i n g t h e election&#13;
t o F i t z s i m m o n s the court below&#13;
counted several ballots for h i m t o&#13;
w h i c h h e w a s n o t entitled. According&#13;
to t h e decision below, F i t z s i m m o n s ,&#13;
the Democratic candidate, h a d 18,260&#13;
votes, a s a g a i n s t 18,255 for D e G a w , t h e&#13;
Republican candidate. T h e s u p r e m e&#13;
court decides t h a t the court should&#13;
have g i v e n DeGaw 18,263 and F i t z s i m -&#13;
mons 18,251, a majority of 12 for De-&#13;
Gaw.&#13;
m&#13;
For Good Roads.&#13;
E. S. .Harrington, g o v e r n m e n t road&#13;
expert, i s i n Port Huron superintending&#13;
t h e construction of t h e macadam&#13;
road o n 24th street. The o b j e c t of the&#13;
good roads congress in Port H u r o n i s&#13;
t o a w a k e n an interest in t h e improvem&#13;
e n t of public roads and t o discuss the&#13;
various m e a n s for s e c u r i n g t h e same.&#13;
A p o r t i o n of t h e road w i l l b e construction&#13;
d u r i n g t h e congress i n t h a t&#13;
city o n J u l y 2, 3, 4 and 5. T h e e v e n t&#13;
w i l l b e o n e of t h e special f e a t u r e s of&#13;
the L. A. W. festival.&#13;
Ball Storm In Grand Traverse County.&#13;
One of t h e w o r s t hail s t o r m s ever&#13;
k n o w n i n northern M i c h i g a n took place&#13;
on t h e n i g h t of t h e 27th, e x t e n d i n g&#13;
over a p o r t i o n of L e e l a n a u c o u n t y ,&#13;
across Grand Traverse b a y a n d over&#13;
Grand' Traverse ' county t o E l k lake.&#13;
The d a m a g e t o grain, f r u i t a n d a l l&#13;
g r o w i n g crops w a s very large. Everyw&#13;
h e r e i n t h e p a t h of t h e storm, farmhouse&#13;
w i n d o w s w e r e s h a t t e r e d and the&#13;
loss will,, a g g r e g a t e t h o u s a n d s of dollars^&#13;
w h i c h a t t a c k s both l a r g e a n d s m a l l&#13;
fruits.&#13;
R o g e e r s City, w i t h a p o p u l a t i o n of&#13;
500, b o a s t s four saloons, a a d three&#13;
more w i l l be opened d u r i n g t h e summer.&#13;
A b r e w e r y is a l s o b e i n g projected.&#13;
Copemish w i l l celebrate t h e F o u r t h&#13;
w i t h a union Sunday school picnic&#13;
under the c o m b i n e d efforts of t h e business&#13;
men a n d every S a b b a t h sohool in&#13;
t h a t section.&#13;
J a m e s H. Poage, of Chicago, had an&#13;
e x c i t i n g fight w i t h a bear w h i l e fishing&#13;
n e a r E s c a n a b a on t h e 23d. A companion&#13;
came t o h i s rescue j u s t in time&#13;
to s a v e h i s life.&#13;
A n independent military c o m p a n y i s&#13;
to be'organized at CadillaeT w i t h t h e&#13;
idea of s e e k i n g admission t o t h e national&#13;
guard of the s t a t e w h e n e v e r a&#13;
vacancy occurs.&#13;
It w a s t w o years a g o J u n e 28 t h a t&#13;
the Michigan b o y s w h o took p a r t in&#13;
the S a n t i a g o campaign as m e m b e r s of&#13;
the 33d and 34th Michigan r e g i m e n t s ,&#13;
landed on Cuoan soil at Siboney.&#13;
Kalamazoo's chamber of c o m m e r c e&#13;
has been abandoned, but the business&#13;
men of-the city-..will--form another—org&#13;
a n i z a t i o n a l o n g different l i n e s t o&#13;
work for t h e welfare of the c e l e r y city.&#13;
B y the explosion of 150 p o u n d s of&#13;
p o w d e r in t h e Champion m i n e o n t h e&#13;
L'3d, four m e n w e r e k i l l e d in the bottom&#13;
of t h e shaft, 93 f e e t b e l o w t h e&#13;
Fevel. Cause of the accident u n k n o w n .&#13;
T h e supervisors of D e l t a c o u n t y h a v e&#13;
voted tp build a n e w jail at a n e x p e n s e&#13;
of ¢20,000 if the people of t h e c o u n t y&#13;
w i l l authorize the i s s u i n g of bonds to&#13;
t h a t a m o u n t at t h e regular fall election.&#13;
^&#13;
Counterfeit half dollars a n d silver&#13;
dollars are in circulation in l a r g e n u m -&#13;
bers a t the Soo, and so good a j o b have&#13;
the counterfeiters done t h a t it is hard&#13;
to d i s t i n g u i s h the b o g u s c o i n s from t h e&#13;
real t h i n g s .&#13;
T h e Michigan Traction Co. ran their&#13;
first car over t h e s t r e e t s of Battle&#13;
Creek on t h e 2fith. R e g u l a r cars will&#13;
be run b e t w e e n that city and Galesburg,&#13;
and from Galesburg and .Kalamazoo,&#13;
J u l y 1, and from b o t h cities t o&#13;
Gull lake, J u l y 4.&#13;
91he military board will ask t h a t t h e&#13;
$12,000 paid back to t h e s t a t e by the&#13;
H e n d e r s o n - A m e s Co. as t h e profits' acc&#13;
r u i n g to t h a t firm from the military&#13;
c l o t h i n g deal be transferred to the military&#13;
board. U u l e s s t h i s is done&#13;
there w i l l be no state e n c a m p m e n t&#13;
"thts^yearT&#13;
T h e South African w a r is a long* w a y&#13;
from Michigan, b u t i t s effects are b e i n g&#13;
felt in at least one Michigan city. One&#13;
of t h e lumber mills at M e n o m i n e e h a s&#13;
closed d o w n because of t h e c e s s a t i o n&#13;
of t h e demand for i t s o u t p u t , w h i c h&#13;
has heretofore all b e e n e x p o r t e d t o&#13;
S o u t h Africa.&#13;
Oil w a s struck at t h e Ryerson, &amp; H i l l s&#13;
t e s t w e l l at M u s k e g o n o n t h e 26th,. a n d&#13;
the first three m i n u t e s after t h e s t r i k e&#13;
w a s made, 20 g a l l o n s of p e t r o l e u m w e r e&#13;
pumped. T h e Talve t h e n b r o k e a n d&#13;
operations h a d to be suspended u n t i l&#13;
repairs w e r e made. T h e d e p t h w a s&#13;
a b o u t 900 feet. *&#13;
J u s t i c e s of t h e peace w h o w e r e&#13;
elected at t h e spring e l e c t i o n m u s t file&#13;
their bond before the F o u r t h , or forfeit&#13;
their r i g h t to occupy t h e office.&#13;
There are said to be a l a r g e n u m b e r&#13;
t h r o u g h o u t t h e s t a t e w h o h a v e a s y e t&#13;
failed to perform t h i s i m p o r t a n t qualification.&#13;
Great preparation i&amp; b e i n g m a d e for&#13;
the b i g Orangemen's d a y celebration&#13;
to be held a t S a g i n a w , J u l y 12. Every- -&#13;
t h i n g indicates t h a t t h i s w i l l be the&#13;
l a r g e s t demonstration of t h e k i n d ever&#13;
h e l d in S a g i n a w Valley. Orangemen&#13;
from all parts of the s t a t e a n d Canada&#13;
w i l l be in attendance.&#13;
Rural free delivery service w i l l be&#13;
established at Lansing, I n g h a m c o u n t y ,&#13;
J u l y 2. Area covered, 33 square miles;&#13;
l e n g t h of route, 21 m i l e s ; carrier, Alfred&#13;
H. Belter; and a t S t Clair, S t&#13;
Clair county; l e n g t h of route, 25&#13;
m i l e s ; are covered, 34 square miles;&#13;
population served, 790; carrrier, Benj.&#13;
B. Potter.&#13;
A w h o l e s a l e p o i s o n i n g occurred a t&#13;
K a l k a s k a and vicinity o n t h e 24th and&#13;
25th, there b e i n g 24 c a s e s i n all—15&#13;
cases in t o w n , 8 cases at t h e h o m e of&#13;
J a m e s Earl, four m i l e s n o r t h of Kalk&#13;
a s k a , a n d one at Alden. T h e poisoni&#13;
n g w a s caused i n each case b y e a t i n g&#13;
pressed beef. '"The v i c t i m s suffered&#13;
.great a g o n y , and prompt medical aid&#13;
was. all t h a t saved the l i v e s of s e v e r a l&#13;
Gu$^Ruhlinr*)ie Ohio JVgUist, Ac&#13;
The Secretary's Report Shows That the&#13;
T. F. S. C. B. Numbers 5 9 , 7 } f Societies'&#13;
l a the WoWd With. * Total&#13;
of 6,000,000 110010091.&#13;
' i . , . • * . . .&#13;
Shirker Knocked Out In the 15tih Round.&#13;
F o r t h e first t i m e i n h i s pugilistic&#13;
career T o m ShaVkey w e n t d o w n t o decisive&#13;
d e f e a t on t h e uijfhtf of t h e 26th,&#13;
in t h e historic a r e n a of t h e Seaside&#13;
A t h l e t i c Club, a n d big* Gus Ruhlin, the&#13;
Ohio pugilist, w a s h i s conqueror. It&#13;
w a s a c l e a n k n o c k o u t after 15 rounds&#13;
of hard fighting t h a t m a d e a memorable&#13;
ring battle. S a v e i n t h e matter&#13;
of a g g r e s s i v e n e s s , RabJin l e d from the&#13;
face-off i n every f e a t u r e of t h e game&#13;
and at all t i m e s had the fighjt, w e l l in&#13;
h a n d . Sharkey did not g i v e u p his&#13;
place in t h e l i n e of first-class heavyw&#13;
e i g h t s w i t h o u t a desperate struggle.&#13;
N o soldier e v e r gave more desperate&#13;
battle, no m a n s i n k i n g to unconsciousn&#13;
e s s ever c l u n g more determinedly to&#13;
h i s v i t a l i t y . Even a t t h e end w h e n ,&#13;
blinded by the b l o w s of h i s powerful&#13;
o p p o n e n t and dulled m e n t a l l y by the&#13;
b a t t e r i n g of h i s foe, h e c l u n g instinctively&#13;
t o t h e massive frame of t h e man&#13;
w h o w a s h i s master.&#13;
Y. P.-B. C. E. ID a Flourishing Condition.&#13;
T h e a n n u a l corporation m e e t i n g of&#13;
t h e U n i t e d Society of Christian Endeavor&#13;
w a s held in t h e headquarters,&#13;
T r e m o n t Temple, Philadelphia, on the&#13;
27th. Secretary Baer made his annual&#13;
report. T h e year's g r o w t h in Christian&#13;
Endeavor, Secretary Baer said,&lt; had&#13;
b e e n remarkable. More societies have&#13;
b e e n added to the rolls d u r i n g t h e last&#13;
12 m o n t h s t h a n for several years.&#13;
T h e r e are—now—ft©, 7-12 Christian Endeavor&#13;
societies in t h e world, w i t h a&#13;
total m e m b e r s h i p of G,"JOO&lt;00&amp;. Every&#13;
s i n g l e n a t i o n in t h e world is represented.&#13;
There are t h r e e driving societ&#13;
i e s in t h e Philippines. T h e treasurer's&#13;
report s h o w e d t h e finances in g o o d condition.&#13;
Total receipts w e r e §11,203&#13;
a n d total e x p e n d i t u r e s $11,413.&#13;
HHllatorm Rains Cvopa,'&#13;
A d i s a s t r o u s hail storm visited a section&#13;
of I d a h o county, Idaho, on the 26th.&#13;
W h e a t fields a n d orchards w e r e destroyed,&#13;
and small p i g s a n d chickens&#13;
w e r e k i l l e d by t h e h a i l s t o n e s , w h i c h&#13;
ranged i n size from a p i g e o n egg to a&#13;
ben's egg. T h e hail w a s driven by a&#13;
heavy w i n d storm w i t h terrific force&#13;
and h o r s e s w e r e k n o c k e d d o w n . The&#13;
s t o r m canoe from t h e s o u t h and covered&#13;
a p a t h of a b o u t one-half mile in&#13;
w i d t h . D a m a g e to g r a i n and fruit crops&#13;
i s e s t i m a t e d at $30,000. Reports from&#13;
other p o i n t s indicate m u c h d a m a g e to&#13;
g r a i n . . •&#13;
Bx-Ctov. Taylor In &lt;l*rok«a Health.&#13;
B r o k e n in h e a l t h a n d spirit, ex-Gov.&#13;
W i l l i a m &amp; Taylor, of K e n t u c k y , started&#13;
for N i a g a r a F a l l s on t h e 35th. H e w a s&#13;
accompanied b y Mrs. Taylor, and four&#13;
d e t e c t i v e s followed close a t their heels.&#13;
T w o of t h e officers r e p r e s e n t the state&#13;
of K e n t u c k y t o bear w i t n e s s of t h e arrest&#13;
of Mr. T a y l o r o n c h a r g e s g r o w i n g&#13;
o u t of t h e assassination of UovT Goebel.&#13;
T h e ^ b t h e r t w o are e m p l o y e d by Mr&#13;
T a y l o r to g u a r d his person.' H i s stay&#13;
in P h i l a d e l p h i a w a s devoid of personal&#13;
pleasure.&#13;
Injunction agalnut Strikers.&#13;
I n t h e U. S. circuit court on t h e 25th&#13;
J u d g e E l m e r B. A d a m s issued a temporary&#13;
i n j u n c t i o n restraining Wm. D.&#13;
Mahon. president of t h e A m a l g a m a t e d&#13;
Association of Street Car Employes*&#13;
a n d o t h e r s f r o m i n t e r f e r i n g w i t h the&#13;
operation of t h e m a i l s over the l i n e s of&#13;
t h e S t L o u i s T r a n s i t Co. T h e injunct&#13;
i o n n a m e s over 100 m e n , m o s t of w h o m&#13;
are m e m b e r s of t h e association over&#13;
w h i c h Mr. M a h o n presides.&#13;
Boer Envoy* S*H Away.&#13;
T h e B o e r e n v o y s , J u l e s Cambon, ambassador&#13;
of France t o the U. 8.; Bourke&#13;
Cockran and Prof. A d o l p h e Cohn, of&#13;
Columbia college, w e r e a m o n g t h e pass&#13;
e n g e r s w h o sailed i n the cabin of the&#13;
F r e n c h l i n e s t e a m s h i p L'Aquitaine on&#13;
t h e 3 8 t h . T h e e n v o y s w e r e driven to&#13;
t h e pier In carriages decorated w i t h&#13;
flags, a n d w e r e accompanied t o the&#13;
s t e a m e r b y a n u m b e r of sympathizers.&#13;
WAR N O T E S .&#13;
Brig.-Gen. J o s e p h W h e e l e r a s s u m e d&#13;
c o m m a n d of t h e d e p a r t m e n t of the&#13;
l a k e s on t h e 25tn, r e l i e v i n g Gen. James&#13;
F. W a d e , w h o w i l l return t o h i s former&#13;
post a t S t P a u l to direct t h e affairs of&#13;
t h e d e p a r t m e n t of t h e Dakota*. Gen.&#13;
Wheeler e x p e c t s t o r e m a i n in Chicago&#13;
u n t i l S e p t 10, h i s 64th birthday, w h e n&#13;
h e w i l l reach t h e a g e l i m i t and retire&#13;
from active service. T h e r e w e r e no&#13;
c e r e m o n i e s a t t e n d a n t o n t h e transfer.&#13;
T h e y e l l o w fever s i t u a t i o n a t Quem&#13;
a d o s s h o w s m u c h i m p r o v e m e n t&#13;
T h e r e h a s o n l y been four d e a t h s , t w o&#13;
of w h i c h w e r e of Americans, including&#13;
Maj. F r a n k H. E d m u n d s , a c t i n g inspector-&#13;
general of t h e s,taff of Gen.&#13;
F i t z h u g h Lee, w h o died J u n e 18. Gen.&#13;
Lee refuses t o leave h i s headquarters,&#13;
t h o u g h h e h a s g i v e n permission t o h i s&#13;
staff, if t h e y dcairc t o do BO. V&#13;
y^tiriUkUyaaAa*&#13;
• &gt;»-. I&#13;
P^PHIT ^ - ^ ,&#13;
..$&#13;
1111 !!•.,,!,.. 'I,IJ, ....!,• ^P. I ;!| ;# ^ ^ q U ^ r ; # . ^&#13;
T—-y-^ • •, K, '«•» ' »&#13;
. ' . " • &gt; '&#13;
• ' •&gt; ' * ; _ ! , $&#13;
" • ^ " ^ . t . . •• : ' f&#13;
. : " * ' • • •ii.- 'igr •wr&#13;
Mi O n ^ 52 A Fascinating&#13;
Romance&#13;
Alan Adair&gt;.* *0&#13;
" ^ "&#13;
CHAPTBRI.&#13;
"Its tho only thing to do," said Alan,&#13;
thrusting bit'brad* into his pockeis&#13;
and looking straight before him. "Here&#13;
there Is nothing for me, and, as you&#13;
say, there is nothing to keep me here.&#13;
It was her wUh besides; and yet—yet&#13;
I hat* leaving it."&#13;
"I can, well understand It, lad. I&#13;
was the same. It is Just in us Scotch- such a high opinion, and who was,&#13;
men, this love of the land* And I had&#13;
Joen, too, to keop me hire* and so I've&#13;
just stuck on and made a precarious&#13;
living, and I've but staved off the evil1&#13;
days, for now my boys will have to&#13;
go. We can't make a living In the&#13;
old country, and there's no Joan, Is&#13;
there?" asked the old man, kindly.&#13;
"No. No woman has Bver bsen anything&#13;
to me except my mother," said&#13;
the lad.&#13;
"Well, well; time enough; there's&#13;
sure to be," said Masphorson. "A fine&#13;
lad like you!" As a matter of fact, the&#13;
old man said, "Weel, weel," but that&#13;
did not take away from the kindliness&#13;
of his speech. You've always got a&#13;
friend in me. I wish 7 could help you&#13;
substantially; but that isn't easy. Still,&#13;
if you need It, I can make a push as&#13;
well as my neighbors."&#13;
"Thank you kindly," said Alan Mackenzie,&#13;
"but there will be no need of&#13;
It. The sale of my poor little sticks&#13;
will pay my passage money and there's&#13;
a good place waiting for me when I get&#13;
out, so that there will be no need for&#13;
me to go borrowing. I wish I felt a&#13;
little more -enthusiasm about making&#13;
money. It's safd to be in Scots' blood,&#13;
but it isn't in me. I would fain stop&#13;
here and watch the clouds settling&#13;
rorad the hilltops all the rest of my&#13;
life than go to South America, and&#13;
make my fortune. Yet because my&#13;
mothor wished it, and because she was&#13;
so overjoyed when the offer came to&#13;
me, I feel It is just my duty to.do it,&#13;
neither more nor less."&#13;
It did-not take long for Alan Mackenzie&#13;
to sell his few possessions, acid&#13;
to turn his back upon the little Scotch&#13;
town. He was going as far as Glasgow,&#13;
to take a steamer to South America.&#13;
His story was simply this: A&#13;
lad to Whom his father had once given&#13;
a free passage to South America had&#13;
done so well at Rio that he was now&#13;
one of the foremost merchants there.&#13;
He had remembered his benefactor.and&#13;
when he heard of the captain's death,&#13;
had written and offered a good place&#13;
in his counting house to Alan Mackenzie.&#13;
Mrsy Mackenzie was dying of a&#13;
painful disease, and she saw In this&#13;
offer a future for her son who she so&#13;
tenderly loved, and she was keen that&#13;
he should accept it. So that when she&#13;
died there seemed nothing for the lad&#13;
to do but to go.&#13;
He was a good looking lad, standing&#13;
about six feet in his stockings. He&#13;
had passed hU twenty-first birthday,&#13;
but he was younger than lads generally&#13;
are at 21, having no experience in&#13;
the world, and none of men and women.&#13;
He had worked at school always^&#13;
having been fond of his books, and he&#13;
had played outdoor games, so that he&#13;
had very little knowledge of either the&#13;
usual amusements or the perplexities&#13;
of life.&#13;
When he had finally said good-by to&#13;
his native place his spirits began to&#13;
rise wlthfci him. The world and adventure&#13;
were before him. He had said&#13;
good-by to the old life, but the -new&#13;
was there. He had never been so far&#13;
as Glasgow before, and the big town,&#13;
with its lighted streets and the ships&#13;
in the river, attracted him. After all,&#13;
boldea to his wife for his advancement&#13;
So that although he was on&#13;
terms or perfect friendship with Ina&#13;
and Eleanor Dempster, yet he neither&#13;
sought nor wished for any stronger&#13;
feeling.&#13;
The girls looked with favor on the&#13;
handsome young Scotsman, who work*&#13;
ed so hard, of whom their father had&#13;
things. Large enterprises and wealth&#13;
attracted and had charms after all. So&#13;
that it was with a lighter heart that&#13;
Alan Mackenzie embarked finally.&#13;
He loved the voyage. Heredity eouats&#13;
for something and his father had loved&#13;
the sea. He felt it was his own element.&#13;
When he reached Rio It was&#13;
with high hopes and resolves to make&#13;
his mark. He had a kind reception&#13;
from Richard Dempster,and here again&#13;
Alan felt the charm of rlehes and&#13;
power. Dempster's house was one of&#13;
moreover, always perfectly willing to&#13;
be at their beck and call.&#13;
Alan soon found friends Ja Rio.&#13;
Dempster's position was almost unique&#13;
and when it became known that he&#13;
looked with favor on the young Scotsman,&#13;
every one joined in maktag fun&#13;
of him.&#13;
Most of the employes in the firm&#13;
were married, and they constituted a&#13;
little circle to themselves, Alan had&#13;
the run of their houses, and sopn began&#13;
to feel at home; however, amongst&#13;
them there WP.S one man to whom he&#13;
never took. Aa EngHshmanr Hutchinson&#13;
by name, a surly, red-haired&#13;
brute, with a magnificent head for figures.&#13;
He was the one man whom Mackenzie&#13;
did not like, although he had&#13;
never quarreled with him; but he&#13;
fancied that it seemed as if Hutchinson&#13;
had a particular grudge again3t&#13;
him.&#13;
This surmise .on Alea's part was well&#13;
founded, for, as a matter of fact, when&#13;
Dempster found him so Intelligent, he&#13;
had thought it might be well to raise&#13;
him to Hutckinson's place.&#13;
There was— some mystery about&#13;
Hutchinson. He lived in a house some&#13;
little way out of town, and no one&#13;
knew exactly whether he was married&#13;
or inot. Some affirmed that he had a&#13;
daughter, who has almost reached&#13;
woman's estate; others said that he&#13;
never made any mention of any one.&#13;
But, as a matter of fact, Hutchinson&#13;
never mentioned his private affairs at&#13;
all, so it ofras not wonderful.that the&#13;
rest of the firm knew nothiag about&#13;
them.&#13;
But one day there came some&#13;
rather important tidings to the firm.&#13;
Richard Dempster consulted Alan, and&#13;
he offered to talk over the matter with&#13;
Hutchinson. It was after business&#13;
hours, and the young man'offered to&#13;
find the Englishmen. He had not the&#13;
least idea of spying upon him, because&#13;
he had so many friends that he had&#13;
no need to seek any, and he was actuated&#13;
solely by the wish to be useful to&#13;
his employer in what might become&#13;
advantageous.&#13;
South American affairs have not the&#13;
stability of ours. A day's delay, even&#13;
a few hours, might mean the loss of&#13;
ms»iy thousand^. So Alan obtained&#13;
Hutchinson's address from Dempster,&#13;
and, in all good fr.lth, went to find his&#13;
colleague. It took him some little time&#13;
to find the house. It was quite out of&#13;
Rio, and was more of a country house&#13;
than a tovn house.&#13;
When he found it he was amazed at&#13;
the beauty of his surroundings. It&#13;
seemed to him that Hutchinsoa lived&#13;
WAM. AVERI3AN EXPOSITION.&#13;
even in greater style than did Dempster,&#13;
and that probably he did not wish&#13;
this to be known. There was no reason&#13;
why Hutchinson should not live as&#13;
a rich man. He drew a large salary&#13;
from Dempster, and there were many&#13;
ways iti which he could enlarge his&#13;
means.&#13;
Alan rode on through avenues of&#13;
trees, fresh bowers of fruit and flowers,&#13;
gorgeous in their tropical wealth&#13;
of color, and suddenly as he rode it&#13;
seemed to him that he heard the sound&#13;
of a woman sobbing. He reined in hi3&#13;
there was something pleasing in big I horse so as to make sure; he still&#13;
the best in .Rio. his clerks were well Alan w?.tched her for a moment and&#13;
paid, and his wife and daughters occupied&#13;
a place secoid to none In society.&#13;
Dempster wanted Alan to become accustomed&#13;
to the work, and then to&#13;
found another branch of the house in&#13;
a mining town some hundred miles&#13;
away.&#13;
Dempster had two daughters, fine,&#13;
fresh, handsome girls, but no sons.&#13;
The obvious thtag would have been&#13;
for Alan Mackenzie to have fallen in&#13;
love with one of the girlsTto^Eftve-settled&#13;
down comfortably and prosperously&#13;
in Rio; but there was one thing&#13;
against it. There was a little vein of&#13;
romance in Alec's nature, and he die?&#13;
liked the obvious. Besides, he had the&#13;
J&amp;dependent man's dislike to being Bell&#13;
ear d the sound. The spirit of adventure&#13;
burned hot with'a him; the crying&#13;
was so piteous, and Alan could not&#13;
bear to~ hear it. It was like that of&#13;
some girl in pain.&#13;
He fastened hi3 horse to a tree, forgetting&#13;
all about the financial crisis&#13;
and his errand. All the chivalry in his&#13;
nature was stirred. He pulled aside&#13;
the boughs of the trees and came to&#13;
an open glade. A girl dressed in white&#13;
had thrown herself on the ground;&#13;
her slight body was shaking with sobs.&#13;
with such evident conetm, and then&#13;
she Mashed and answered/ with an at- mfn.^rntt o - w ^ e a t BUMIM&#13;
tempt at •4f-pos*e*^ihftt was very , §mm Vfm ^ %% nQam^&#13;
2fri^ert^o w1h2ich¾ Ala n^ Wl!b^o*A?d? h*e*r: .£I t A t tne Pan-American Exposition M X t y e a r ftt ^ ^ t n e U n n e d Bta)fcft|&#13;
is nothing, sir. I would not do as my w l l l j ^ ft g r o t j p o f three-trattdra**;&#13;
father wished, and he was angry and f o r t h e government display. The main;&#13;
struck me. | D Und l n g : W M ^ 1 3 0 feet wide and 600&#13;
"Struck you? The brute!" cried&#13;
Alan. "The detestable brute! How&#13;
dare, he strike a woman?"&#13;
The girl's eyes were cast down; she&#13;
seemed ashamed. Perhaps she bad not&#13;
yet realized her womanhood completely;&#13;
she seemed very young. "He has&#13;
a violent temper, sir, and perhaps I do&#13;
act manage him well. I have no mother;&#13;
she died years ago."&#13;
"Fortunately for her," said Alan&#13;
grimly, "if your father is the sort of&#13;
man who would strike a woman!"&#13;
"You see," said the girl, "it seems&#13;
that this is important. My father had&#13;
promised my hand to a man—he is a&#13;
Mexican Spaniard, and they think&#13;
nothing of arranging marriages for&#13;
you; but I could not marry him. I&#13;
said so, rod my father is not used to&#13;
being thwarted. He was angry at&#13;
something in business, too, so the&#13;
moment, perhaps, was hardly chosen&#13;
well."&#13;
"Your father is not Hutchinson, of&#13;
the firm of Dempster?" said Alan.&#13;
Somehow it did not seem to him likely&#13;
that Hutchinson could be the father&#13;
of such a beautiful girl, md yet it was&#13;
not unlikely, seeing that he had found&#13;
her there.&#13;
"Yes," she said. "Do you know&#13;
him?"&#13;
"I work in his office," said Mackenzie&#13;
shortly.&#13;
"Ah!" The girl looked up shyly.&#13;
"Are you Mr. Mackenzie?"&#13;
"Yes," said Alan. "Has he spoken&#13;
of me at all?"&#13;
"He does not like you," answered&#13;
the girl. "He would not like me to be&#13;
talking to you. He would be more&#13;
displeased if he thought that you knew&#13;
he had struck me."- - •-—. —&#13;
"He should not have done it, thca,"&#13;
said Alan shortly. "The coward! I&#13;
can well believe it of him!"&#13;
"You do not know him?" she said,&#13;
very anxiously. "But do not quarrel&#13;
with him! It is not good to thwart&#13;
him!"&#13;
"Possibly not," said Alan, "but these&#13;
considerations do not affect me, you&#13;
see."&#13;
Her lips quivered, but she did not&#13;
weep again. "They might affect mc,&#13;
though," she said, timidly.&#13;
"How?"&#13;
"If he Iview that I had told you. He I&#13;
does not like me to speak to say one.&#13;
I have to bear it all alone," said the&#13;
girl.&#13;
Alan looked indignant. "I shall not&#13;
betray you, Miss Hutchinson," he said,&#13;
"but I wish " •&#13;
"You must wish nothing,^ said"the&#13;
girl, and she colored. "You must forget&#13;
that you saw me weep. I am&#13;
proud, and it troubles me;~&#13;
"I wish I had no cause," he B«Iswered;&#13;
"but I have business with&#13;
your father. I hope I may see you&#13;
again."&#13;
She hesitated. "You will not tell&#13;
father you have seen me?" she said.&#13;
"He Is strange—he does not like it to&#13;
be known that he has a daughter, except&#13;
to his Spanish and Mexican&#13;
friends."&#13;
"I will say nothing,'1 said Alan; "but&#13;
I meta to see you again."&#13;
He lifted his hat, found his horse*&#13;
and rode up to the house.&#13;
(To be continued.)&#13;
feet long, and on either side, connected&#13;
by coloaades, will be the lesser buildings,&#13;
each 150 feet square. The government&#13;
work Is under the direction&#13;
of James Knox Taylor, supervising&#13;
architect of the treasury department.&#13;
The group will be treated architecturally&#13;
in a modified Spanish renaissance,&#13;
the details suggesting a Mexican&#13;
rather than a strictly Spanish origin.&#13;
Like.the others, these buildings will&#13;
be constructed of staff, already made&#13;
familiar to the public by its use at&#13;
the Chicago and more recent Omaha&#13;
exposition. The color scheme, in&#13;
marked contrast to that used at Chicago,&#13;
will be rich and brilliant, the&#13;
lavish use of color and the gilding&#13;
giving, with the intricate plastic dec*&#13;
orations and sculpture groups, an ensemble&#13;
both striking and interesting.&#13;
Portions of the roofs, covered with red&#13;
Spanish tiles, will add much to the&#13;
'character of the building as a whole.&#13;
In plan, the buildings are shaped like&#13;
a letter U, the opening being toward&#13;
the west. The main building corresponds&#13;
to the bottom of the U, which&#13;
will accommodate the greater portion&#13;
of the government exhibits, th'e administrative&#13;
offices, guard room, etc. Its&#13;
center will be surmounted by a dome,&#13;
the apex of which, 250 feet above the&#13;
main floor level and crowned with a&#13;
figure of Victory 20 feet in hight, will&#13;
form one of the most conspicuous features&#13;
of the exposition grounds. Connected&#13;
by colonnades to the main&#13;
building are the two lesser buildings&#13;
or pavillions, one of which is intended&#13;
to hold an exhibition typical of lifo&#13;
and labor in the government's new&#13;
possessions; while the other will contain&#13;
a branch station of the United&#13;
States weather bureau, and the exhibit,&#13;
aquariums, etc., of the United&#13;
States fish commission. Inlets from&#13;
the lagoon fill the spaces within the&#13;
colonnades connecting the pavilions&#13;
with the main building. The central&#13;
piazza, the space enclosed by the arms&#13;
of the U, is decorated by steps, terraces&#13;
and formal flower beds, making&#13;
an easy and beautiful approach to the&#13;
main.entrance under the dome.&#13;
5*.&#13;
Ave *e*&gt; »#**« A W * V*s**sta#T&#13;
It Is the only cart for 8W*UNB»&#13;
Smarting, Burning, Sweating Feet,&#13;
Corns and Bunions. Ask for Allenl*&#13;
Foot-Base, a Powder to be shaken Intothe&#13;
shoes. A i all Druggists'and&#13;
mple tent FIUBBr&#13;
• I -. , ' • s ••"/l.'^P.""&#13;
' ' -'•-. iff??.&#13;
BtAfgM&#13;
dress Alfen JJLOUBsUdT LeRoj,, N. I&#13;
The man with, the hoe is getting- biswork&#13;
in—in the weed*.&#13;
{ Coagblag Leads to CooawpaioH.&#13;
! Kemp ft Balsam will stop the cough-&#13;
»at once. Go to your druggist today&#13;
»and get a sample bottle free, Sold in&#13;
125 and 60 cent bottles. Go at once; de-&#13;
' lays are dangerous.&#13;
[ A good test of housekeeping is the-&#13;
, quality of the coffee.&#13;
' A merry laugh makes all who hear i t&#13;
I better and brighter.&#13;
'••y&#13;
; . ' ; , : K-&#13;
• • ' ' : , « • ' . ¥&#13;
/2£T&lt;£ ! 4 , .&#13;
then he spoke. "You seem in trouble,'*&#13;
he said in English, for, though the&#13;
girl's head was dusky, yet she did not&#13;
look altogether Spanish. "Can I help&#13;
you?"&#13;
The girl, startled by the voice,&#13;
sprang up, and showed to Alan's gaze&#13;
a face, disfigured by weeping, it is true,&#13;
buTot a perfect type of beauty. There&#13;
was Spanish blood In her, as was testified&#13;
by the liquid, dark eyes, and the&#13;
perfect oval of her face, and the slim,&#13;
yet well-shaped limbs. Her mouth,&#13;
too, quivering with emotion, was ripe&#13;
and red, and the little white teeth were&#13;
even and sharp.&#13;
She looked up for a moment at the&#13;
handsome lad, who was watch'og her&#13;
Ate Shamrock for Watercress.&#13;
On the eve of St. Patrick's day a Bir&#13;
mingham woman, thinking the supply&#13;
of shamrock might give out, took the&#13;
precaution to buy a large quantity.&#13;
She carefully placed the plant in a&#13;
small dish, with plenty of water in,&#13;
and let it remain on the table in the&#13;
sitting room. Somehow it was late&#13;
before the husband returned home that&#13;
night, in fact it was midnight when&#13;
the latchkey was heard at work. Perhaps&#13;
it was business worry, but his&#13;
footsteps sounded somewhat irregular,&#13;
a trifle unsteady, as it were, but the&#13;
wife heard him go into the sitting&#13;
room, where he remained some time.&#13;
Eventually he silently crawled up to&#13;
bed. Next morning, what was the&#13;
wife's surprise tj see nothing but the&#13;
roots of the shamrock left in the dish.&#13;
Hurrying up to her still sleeping&#13;
spouse, she aroused him, and asked&#13;
him what he had done with it. "Shamrock,&#13;
what BhamTock?" he heavily inquired.&#13;
"Why, that I left in the glass&#13;
dish downstairs." "That! Was that&#13;
shamrock? Why, I ate it; I thought it&#13;
was mustard and cress!" After that&#13;
fairy tales were useless.—Weekly Telegraph.&#13;
L O N D O N OMNIBUSES.&#13;
An American Girl Describes the Odd&#13;
Vehicles.&#13;
A San Francisco girl in writing of&#13;
her experiences in London, amusingly&#13;
describes the street omnibuses. She&#13;
says: "Several times I have seen&#13;
them stop for an old lady, but never&#13;
for a young woman, unless it is one&#13;
of their stopping places or a number&#13;
want to get on or off. You wave your&#13;
hand and the conductor signals you ce&#13;
come on,. He rings, the driver slows&#13;
down a little and then you run. If&#13;
you succeed in getting near enough the&#13;
conductor grabs you and gives you a&#13;
boost that sends you flying half way&#13;
up the spiral stairway that takes you&#13;
up on top. Then you climb up and&#13;
perhaps have to walk along the toti&#13;
clinging to heads or shoulders or anything&#13;
handy until you get a seat. By&#13;
that time you are a long way on your&#13;
journey. My skirts are long. I need&#13;
both hands and I have yet to find a&#13;
way of fastening my hat to my head&#13;
so that it will stay on in these winds.&#13;
I usually make severaT~atrempts~before&#13;
I finally succeed in getting onto&#13;
an omnibus. I run a little distance&#13;
and then give it up. I never can tell&#13;
what 'bus I want until it is past, for&#13;
they are all a flaming mass of advertisements,&#13;
with the destination of&#13;
the 'bus in small letters somewhere.&#13;
At night it is almost impossible t:-&#13;
tell where they go, for they carry no&#13;
lights and the streets are dark."&#13;
)k at yourself! Is your face&#13;
covered with pimples? Your skin&#13;
rough and blotchy? It's your liver!&#13;
Averts Pills are liver pills. They&#13;
cure constipation, biliousness, and&#13;
dyspepsia. 25c. All druggists.&#13;
Want your moustache or beard a beautiful&#13;
brown or rich black ? Then use BUCKINGHAM'S DYE M S ™&#13;
A. Swallow la one of the earUeat harbingers of springequally&#13;
aura indication is that feellnj of languid&#13;
depression. Many swallows of HIRES Ro*tbt4r&#13;
abreveebreasgtef.o r6a c *siiponr»in tgar't o*4n iecm—ua. nWd froirt *a** a ommar&#13;
Urt ef pranlnm* ofhnd trt* tor Ubeta.&#13;
Charles E. Hires Ce.&#13;
Mai rem, Pa.&#13;
Where Municipal Ownership Ffty*.&#13;
Hamtlton Is giving Ohio cities an object&#13;
lesson in municipal ownership.&#13;
The annual report of Supi. John Lorens,&#13;
just issued, show that the gas&#13;
works earned a net profit, above all&#13;
expense* *ad interest, last year, 96,-&#13;
975.91. t i e electric light plant cleared&#13;
*3,21U#; sad' the water works, which&#13;
Is unwe* a tfparate superintendent, at&#13;
much SJSMBJL In addition the properties&#13;
are vmtasst s* 1600,000.&#13;
— Miss Long's Mission.&#13;
Miss Ruth T!ordls Long, a niece of&#13;
the secretary of the navy, John D.&#13;
Long, intends to be a gospel singer,&#13;
and is full of enthusiasm about her&#13;
new work. Two years ago, when in&#13;
San Diego county, California, Miss&#13;
Long was asked by the Christian Endeavor&#13;
society if she would be willing&#13;
to sing at some services to be held on&#13;
board the United States steamship&#13;
Monterey. She gladly consented and&#13;
sang "Where Is My Wandering Boy&#13;
Tonight?" with so much effect that&#13;
one of the sailors, a boy of about 20,&#13;
came forward to her at the conclusion&#13;
of the services and declared that the&#13;
song as rendered by her had determined&#13;
him to lead a different life, and that&#13;
he intended to write to his mother to&#13;
that effect on that same night He&#13;
gave Miss Long one of his cards, on&#13;
which he wrote: 'May God bless you&#13;
for showing one sinner the. true light."&#13;
Miss Long carries the card in her&#13;
purse as a keepsake of her first missionary&#13;
work. She also sang at a revival&#13;
service at Worcester, Mass., not&#13;
long ago, and since her return to Boston&#13;
from California, Miss Long has&#13;
been engaged in church singing.&#13;
e&#13;
e&#13;
e&#13;
e&#13;
• e&#13;
e&#13;
e&#13;
• e&#13;
e&#13;
e&#13;
e&#13;
e&#13;
•&#13;
e&#13;
e&#13;
e&#13;
•&#13;
e&#13;
e&#13;
e&#13;
New&#13;
Railroad to&#13;
San Francisco&#13;
Santa Fe Route, by&#13;
its San Joaquin&#13;
Valley Extension.&#13;
The only line with&#13;
track and trains under&#13;
one management all&#13;
the way from Chicago&#13;
to the Golden Gate.&#13;
Mountain passes, •&#13;
extinct yolcanos,&#13;
petrified forests,&#13;
prehistoric ruins,&#13;
Indian pueblos,&#13;
Yosemite, Grand&#13;
Canon of Arizona,&#13;
en route.&#13;
Same high-grade&#13;
service that has made&#13;
the Santa Fe the&#13;
favorite route to&#13;
Southern, California.&#13;
Fast schedule; Pullman&#13;
and Tourist&#13;
sleepers daily; Free&#13;
reclining chair cars;&#13;
Harvey meals&#13;
throughout.&#13;
co&#13;
•&#13;
• -&#13;
e-&#13;
•» ee-&#13;
:&#13;
. &lt; • &gt; *&#13;
• i'&#13;
V&#13;
The smokeless cigarette would be an&#13;
Jmuovement.&#13;
General Passenger Office&#13;
The AtcnUen, Topefca * Stota Fe *Ty,&#13;
CHICAGO.'&#13;
If afflicted with&#13;
son* ere*, use&#13;
claiias.attj»W»*&#13;
•v.'&#13;
' • $ •&#13;
^^tmMttmm^^mmtmmm^^M^^^m^&#13;
*r #-oV'**&#13;
^ ; - ; ; ?.&gt;•••;•.&#13;
'•'• •.'•,' i " : - '•&#13;
• - '"'t ''••, i ^ ',4 ' , , .&#13;
' ; . » , • • &lt; . • . ; * ' ' • • • • hB"-"&#13;
k,S:.,,v ,&#13;
Sv*".--&#13;
I"&#13;
&amp; •&#13;
rav&#13;
, - • - '&#13;
&amp; •&#13;
hfc--T '&#13;
V* •••.••&#13;
. • . ' . • v \ ; ; ) •&#13;
»,•*&gt;&#13;
Sfte frodttmj fjfejwteli,&#13;
F. L. ANDREWS l b EOITOI*1.&#13;
THURSDAY, JULY 5, 1900.&#13;
The Warren Featherbone Co.,&#13;
E. K. Warren, president, has paid&#13;
$250 to the village of Three Oaks,&#13;
on condition that there shall not&#13;
be a saloon licensed to do business&#13;
in the village during the coming&#13;
year. That is what one might&#13;
call practical temperance.&#13;
« m i&#13;
When you want a modern, up-todate&#13;
physic try Chamberlain's Stomach&#13;
and Liver Tablets. Tbey are easy to&#13;
take and pleasant in effect. Price. 25&#13;
cents. Samples free at F. A. Sigler's&#13;
drug store.&#13;
There will be a meeting of the&#13;
Village Officers of Michigan, consisting&#13;
of the President, President&#13;
protem and one delegate to be&#13;
selected by the Village Board&#13;
from each village, said meeting to&#13;
be held in Detroit, beginning&#13;
Tuesday, July 10, 1900, and continuing&#13;
until the following Thursday,&#13;
for the purpose of exchanging&#13;
ideas in regard to village affairs.&#13;
All railroads will grant a fare and&#13;
a third to all^represenitives, their&#13;
wives or members of their families.&#13;
In order to secure this reduced&#13;
rate it will be neccessary to pay&#13;
full fare going, and to get receipt&#13;
from ticket agent for the amount&#13;
of fare paid which will enable&#13;
each person to return for one&#13;
third fare, provided instruction&#13;
printed on receipt are carried out.&#13;
Eecreation will be indulged in,&#13;
such as a boat ride,. going to the&#13;
theatre etc.&#13;
W^H". Marvin, Secretar;&#13;
Utica, Mich.&#13;
\ ,• " ' • ! • &lt; TIT&#13;
H E RECTRICITY BUILDING AT THE PAN-AMERICAN EXPOSITION.&#13;
}&#13;
i '&#13;
Copyright, 1900, by the Pan-American Exposition Oo.&#13;
Elaborate designs have recently been completed for the Electricity building for the Pan-American Exposition, to&#13;
be held In Buffalo May 1 to Nov. 1,1901. Displays of all kinds In the practical and artistic uses of electricity, together&#13;
with complete exhibits of electrical machinery and appliances, are to be conspicuous features of the great Exposition.&#13;
The designs contemplate a very handsome and commodious building. The structure is to be 500 feet from east&#13;
to west and 150 feet wide, giving as exhibition space of 75,000 square feet. The South Facade fronts the Mall, and&#13;
the north fronts the Midway. The east end is toward the massive Electric Tower, while the west faces tLj Grand&#13;
CanaL The general ornamentation of the structure Is to be frescoes in a mixture of reds, greens and yellows.&#13;
"p&lt; *&#13;
DOW IT PAY JO BUY GHEAP?&#13;
^q^r*f*«dyfq|oougtoai4 oojdi fa&#13;
all rigty^ntyojL-Want eometWag that will&#13;
relieve and our* the more severe ratal to of&#13;
lun^trubles. What shall you^ dof Go to&#13;
warmer and more regular climate? Yet,&#13;
if possible; if not possible for you, then in&#13;
either case take the ONLY remedy that has&#13;
-baup intrfMlnnsdia all civilised countries&#13;
with success io severe tipoat and lung&#13;
trubles, '•Boscheiv Sefaan SyrupV*) It&#13;
.notAnJy heals an&lt;Latisaulates the tsaWel to&#13;
deetroy the germ disease, but allays inflammation,&#13;
causes easy expectoratioj^ giv^ a&#13;
good nights rest, and cores the pajjftnt.&#13;
Try one bbttf«V Rwometkh** many ^ears&#13;
by all druggists in the world. Sample' holies&#13;
at F. ^.-qig-^rfcr^; . '&#13;
* ; — ' « J U «&#13;
1.;: v * Subccribo- fdr Di&amp;pjftfch. 'I&#13;
1 &gt; - . . ^&#13;
T h e B e a t R e m e d y for S t o m a c h a n d&#13;
B o w e l T r o u b l e s .&#13;
••I have been in the drug business&#13;
for twenty years and have sold most&#13;
all of the proprietary medicines ot any&#13;
note. Among the entire list -I. have&#13;
never found anything to equal Chamberlain's&#13;
Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea&#13;
Remedy for all stomach and bowel&#13;
troubles," says 0. W. Wakefield, of&#13;
Columbus Ga. "This remedy cured&#13;
two severe-cases of cholera morbus in&#13;
my family and I have recommended&#13;
and sold hundreds of bottles of it to&#13;
my customers to their entire satisfaction,&#13;
It affords a quick and sure-cure&#13;
in a pleasant form." For sale by F.&#13;
A, Sigl.er Pinckney.&#13;
lican pasty to the minister? who set in&#13;
the audience.&#13;
A machine man called the meeting&#13;
to order, a machine man read the list&#13;
of delegates chosen by the Howell&#13;
machine, a machine man moved that&#13;
tbey be delegates, a machine man supported&#13;
the motion, a m chine man put&#13;
the motion, and the machine men hollered&#13;
at the top of their voices "Yes."&#13;
From the Herald :&#13;
To give a description of the events&#13;
of about an hour would need the power&#13;
ot imagination able to picture&#13;
"hell let lose."&#13;
From the Brighton Argus :&#13;
"A hot time" would describe in a&#13;
few words the Republican convention&#13;
-at-ftoweH Monday,—It was the hottest&#13;
ever held in this county. It was&#13;
anticipated that there would be more&#13;
or less trouble and the court house&#13;
was full of delegates and spectators.&#13;
HOW OTHERS SAW IT.&#13;
The following clippings show&#13;
how people in general looked upon&#13;
the row at Howell at the republican&#13;
convention. We do not&#13;
care which party it was, but any&#13;
body of men* who allowed themselves&#13;
to run wild over a "boodle&#13;
candidate," not only disgraced&#13;
their party but the county:&#13;
From the Republican:&#13;
The republican county convention&#13;
at Howell, Monday, was certainly no&#13;
honor to the people of Livingston&#13;
couoty. The trouble did not begin&#13;
in the convention but in the various&#13;
township caucuses.&#13;
At the appointed hour J. W. Edgar&#13;
chairman of the county commitee,&#13;
called the convention to order, read&#13;
the call and named Fred J. Cook as&#13;
temporary chairman. Here pandemonium&#13;
was let lose and it was almost&#13;
impossible for any one to hear&#13;
what was said foi nearly an hour.&#13;
The REPUBLICAN has no excuse or&#13;
apology to make for the peculiar&#13;
methods used in the township caucuses&#13;
and in the convention. Such methods&#13;
are a disgrace to the county.&#13;
— In the recent friendly contest between&#13;
members of the same party,&#13;
neither can shake the dust from their&#13;
shirts and repeat thePharisee's praver.&#13;
From the Democrat:&#13;
The convention was one of the most&#13;
disgraceful and blasphemous ever helo!&#13;
on Earth.&#13;
It was a slander to which the village&#13;
of Howell should bring an action for&#13;
exposing the corruption of the Repu b"&#13;
During last, Mav an infant-child of&#13;
our neighbor was suffering from cholera&#13;
infantum. The doctors had given&#13;
up all hopes of recovery, i took a bottle&#13;
of Chamberlain's Cphc, Cholera&#13;
and Diarrhoea Remedy to the house&#13;
telling them I felt sure it would do&#13;
good if used according to directions.&#13;
In two days time the child had fully&#13;
recovered. The child is now'vigorous&#13;
and healthy. I have recommended&#13;
this remedy frequently and have&#13;
never known it to fait.—Mrs. Curtis&#13;
Baker, Book waiter, Ohio. Sold by F.&#13;
A. Sigler Pinckney.&#13;
MORE LOCAL.&#13;
Geo. Sykes of Detroit, spent the&#13;
past week with his parents here.&#13;
Bert Hanmgan has been spending a&#13;
few weeks with friends and relatives&#13;
here^&#13;
Ye editor and family are again in&#13;
the D. Richards house on east Main&#13;
street;&#13;
Mrs. Andrew Tuttle and son of&#13;
LocKe and Geo. Chalker of Clinton,&#13;
Iowa, were guests of J. H. Barton and&#13;
wife this week.&#13;
In a case where a person wag injured&#13;
on a village sidewalk there is a&#13;
chance for a suit for damage. How&#13;
about a person injured by fire where&#13;
there is no protection?&#13;
H. G. Briggs and wife wbo have&#13;
been spending several weeks in the&#13;
northern counties returned home Saturday&#13;
last. They report an excellent&#13;
visit making over 400 miles with a&#13;
horse and buggy.&#13;
Harvey Harrington and wife will&#13;
soon&lt;be located at 1250 Fort street&#13;
west, Detroit, where tbey have gone&#13;
so that Mrs. H. can have treatment&#13;
for her health. The DISPATCH will&#13;
keep them company with best wishes&#13;
for her speedy recovery.&#13;
A large number attended the service&#13;
at the opera house on Sunday&#13;
afteanoon last when Rev. H. W. Hicks&#13;
ot Dexter preached a stirring wrmon&#13;
to the Mason and Eat tern Star&#13;
order. About 75 members of the orders&#13;
were out beside many of their&#13;
friends.&#13;
C. £. Depue, son and daughter of&#13;
Stock bridge were in town Monday.&#13;
Come and get one of those large&#13;
dishes of ice cream* July 6, at North&#13;
Hamburg, only 10 cents.&#13;
Mrs. Wescott and son of Virginia,&#13;
who have been visiting relatives in&#13;
Stock bridge is again visiting friends&#13;
here.&#13;
The C. E. Society of North _ Ham^.&#13;
hurg will give an ice cream social at&#13;
the residence of Jas. Borroughs, North&#13;
Hamburg, Friday evening, July 6th.&#13;
Everybody invited.&#13;
Mrs. S. Sykes has a Crimson Rambler&#13;
rose bush that is a sight worth&#13;
seeing. It spreads over several feet&#13;
and-hardly a branch or leaf is in^ig-hjbfor&#13;
the number of beautiful clusters&#13;
of roses*&#13;
The residence owned by B. J. Allen&#13;
in Marion, occupied by John Hassenschal,&#13;
was burned to the ground on&#13;
Friday last. Nearly all of the household&#13;
goods were saved. The house&#13;
was insured in the Liv. Co. Mutual.&#13;
THE JOURNAL'S FIRE.&#13;
A MARK IN HISTORY.&#13;
On Sunday morning last the Journal&#13;
building at Detroit was destroyed&#13;
by rire with a loss of about $65,000.&#13;
The burning of the Journal building&#13;
recalls to the mind3 of all the~&#13;
ful explosion in November, 1895.&#13;
When thifty-seven lives were lost and&#13;
the old Journal building wrecked.&#13;
Temporary headquarters for the&#13;
business office have been established&#13;
in a vacant building on the corner&#13;
oppisite the burned structure. Soon&#13;
after the extent of the damage became&#13;
apparent the use of The Free Press&#13;
building and plant was tendered Sir:&#13;
Livingstone and he gratefully accepted&#13;
the offer. So that the editorial&#13;
rooms of the Journal will be temporarily&#13;
located in The Free Press building,&#13;
whence the paper will issue.&#13;
* A&lt;l&lt;1reM Letters.&#13;
A g e n t l e m a n is entitled to the suffix&#13;
"Esq.," although "Mr." is a l w a y s used&#13;
on notes of invitation. Doctors are&#13;
addressed as "Dr. ," or "———'&#13;
M. D." The President of the United&#13;
States should be addresed "The President,&#13;
Executive Mansion, W a s h i n g -&#13;
ton."&#13;
A letter by one of her subjects to&#13;
Queen Victoria would be addres?e3&#13;
To the Queen's Most Excellent Majesty."&#13;
A cardinal of the R o m a n Catholic&#13;
Church: "To His Eminence (Christian&#13;
n a m e ) , Cardinal (surname)."&#13;
An archbishop is addressed: "The&#13;
Most Reverend Sir."&#13;
A bishop as: "The&#13;
On Thursday last the little village&#13;
of Three Oaks made a mark&#13;
in history un-parelled by any&#13;
village of its size in the United&#13;
States—that of unveiling the&#13;
Dewey Cannon. Preparations&#13;
had been made for months and&#13;
everything came off an akedule&#13;
time. 1&#13;
The exercises were opened by&#13;
music, a chorus of 225 voices assisting&#13;
and supporting Miss N.&#13;
Estella Harrington, soprano, of&#13;
Chicago. E. K» Warren, Mayor&#13;
of Three Oaks gave,- the -address&#13;
of Welcome and was followed in&#13;
addresses by Gen. R. A. Alger of&#13;
Detroit and Dr. W. E. Barton, of&#13;
Chicago.&#13;
After the addresses Miss Helen&#13;
M. Gould of New York stepped&#13;
forward and amid a round of&#13;
cheers and applause pressed an&#13;
eletric button and the tent-like&#13;
canvass that covered the cannon&#13;
dropped f-iom its support in five&#13;
sections each forming a point of a&#13;
star and the colors red, white and&#13;
blue. The national colors so appropriately&#13;
formed was enough to&#13;
stir the hearts of all "present and&#13;
10,000 voices were raised in a&#13;
cheer that could almost have been&#13;
heard in Pinckney and Chicago.&#13;
The entire day passed without&#13;
an accident and the mayor as well&#13;
as all who have labored so haid&#13;
for this object are to be congratulated&#13;
on its success. The advertising&#13;
Three Oaks has got out of&#13;
the affair will make the village&#13;
one of the best known in the&#13;
United States.&#13;
Werner's DWooirjof Syienpu* Antippi,&#13;
MTU*io*7mFi*iitaiPiia«. sY|&#13;
A book that tfaoold bein t h e r e *&#13;
st of every peraon, UojuAe It youjtt* /tat* W M M S S M .&#13;
o T w o W o r d i t o the BafUah&#13;
H*r# Kxaetly^tSe&#13;
_ ^ „ m o * n c t . Toflfcprvt&#13;
th« pucfie mttniBf tbftt on» intend*&#13;
to convey a dicttonuy of&#13;
~ Doorni li needed to iTolQlfepe*&#13;
on. n&gt;e itronnat ftdtat of&#13;
nfh in tntUhiJriiT In tnfedlfi&#13;
oauj the appended Antqm&amp;i&#13;
wlu, therefore,-Tie (bond eztatnely&#13;
, valuable. Contain! many other&#13;
'ftaturoi Bttoh at Mythology,&#13;
Familiar AHntV*"f *ndi&gt;4rorm&#13;
_ Pluruet, M&gt;f. lolattte's Memory&#13;
dothbind^an&lt;lientpoat|wldlbr|o.25. full&#13;
Xeather, | p edge, $0.40, tiottpaM. Ordft at&#13;
onoe. Send tat oar larjebook aiUlogue, ftta.&#13;
•ddrewaUocdento ^ , T THE WERNCR COMPANY,&#13;
' MOM, 'CNDO.&#13;
t4&#13;
SOME FACTS! BEAD f H f t&#13;
EUREKA SURE STOP TOOTHACHE POWDERS&#13;
Gives quick and sure relief.&#13;
EUREKA COMPLEXION OMTIENT&#13;
Kemoves Black-heads and Pimples.&#13;
EUREKA CORN CURE&#13;
Cures all Corns, Bunions, and Callous&#13;
places.&#13;
EUREKA 0. K. * W REMOVER&#13;
Is certain in its results.&#13;
Bach 10c, Coin OP Stamps&#13;
By Return Mali.&#13;
Agents wanted—write today,&#13;
iddress, EUREKA SUPPLY HOUS^,&#13;
Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
Railroad Guide.&#13;
tfrahd Trunk Bailwar Njdtem.&#13;
- d.44a&#13;
S&#13;
m.&#13;
8:45 p. m.&#13;
© 4:45 p. m.&#13;
'Jackson, Detroit, and"&#13;
intermediate atatloue&#13;
mail and exp.&#13;
Jackson. Lenox, and&#13;
Intermediate station*&#13;
mixed;&#13;
OTaTmT 5:15a. m. '7&#13;
7:5« p.m. S.&#13;
The 9:16 a. in. and 6:45 p. m. trains have through&#13;
coach between Jarkeon and Detroit.&#13;
flint, Ptnckner&#13;
Right Rhvcrrnd&#13;
A clergyman is addressed: "The&#13;
Reverend ——."&#13;
A ni( mber of Congrpps or a Senator&#13;
is addressed as "The. Honorable." By&#13;
common y s n s e the same title Is permitted&#13;
to State Legislators and ofllcials&#13;
of even lower rank.&#13;
.OTAHTKD-ftBViUUL&#13;
• •&#13;
. BBIGHt&#13;
AHD HOmBT powai to r«pr««it&#13;
m M Manager* la thb M 4 ttote by 000»&#13;
lift, flatary | M t a yaar and expanecti&#13;
itoait. boao-*da,a»Ban, a* lav. Po*&gt;&#13;
fkm pwawnat. Oar iaiai n, acy&#13;
^aak is any afvav ft fe atJaly oflU*&#13;
(Mat OMataatii at kaaav ataatotaaa.. Bit*&#13;
j a i a f i , T i B i&#13;
H e a r t b u r n .&#13;
When the quanity of food taken is&#13;
too large or the quality to rich heartbarn&#13;
id likely to follow, and especially&#13;
so if the digestion has been weakened&#13;
by .constipation. Eat slowly and not&#13;
too freei^^of easily digested food.&#13;
Masticate the food ' thoroughly. Let&#13;
six hours elapse oetween meals and&#13;
when you feel a fullness and weight&#13;
in the region of the stomach after eating,&#13;
indicating that you have eaten&#13;
too much, take one ot Chamberlain's&#13;
Stomach and Liver Tablets and tbeheartburn&#13;
rr.ay be avoided. For sale&#13;
ijy-FrA. Sigl.er, Pinckney.&#13;
Subscribe for the DISPATCH&#13;
WILL CURB&#13;
YOU&#13;
/&#13;
MILLS RED PILLS&#13;
w AH r a u r i i a -raieana weaav Kfletore&#13;
i, Vigor and Vitality, make old people look&#13;
04, feel yoon jf and act young. The great&#13;
od and Nerve Medicine.&#13;
MILL'S WHITE LIVER PILLS&#13;
Are the great Liver InVigorator, System Renovator&#13;
and Bowel Regulator. Yon can work&#13;
while they work, never gripe or make yon&#13;
«ick.&#13;
MULL'S BLUE KIDNEY PILLS&#13;
For backaches1 lame or tore, and all Kldnar&#13;
and Urinary irooblea. Only afte* box or flv*.&#13;
boxeall. Guaranteed by y o n dxttggttt to 4 o&#13;
aa a^arUaedWaoney refnadaa. .&#13;
AiVO STEAMSHIP USES*&#13;
Popular route for Ann Arbor, Toledo&#13;
and points East, South, and for&#13;
Howell, Owo8so, Alma, Mt Pleasant&#13;
Cadillac, Manistee, Traverse City and&#13;
points in Northwestern Michigan.&#13;
W. H. BENNETT,&#13;
G. P. A. Toledo&#13;
PERE MARQUETTE&#13;
B a i l i e a d j M a y 1 3 , 1 8 0 0 .&#13;
Lv&#13;
Ar&#13;
Lv&#13;
Ar&#13;
GOING EAST&#13;
Grand Rapids.&#13;
Ipnia&#13;
Lansing&#13;
HSoouwthe,l lL y on. . . .&#13;
Salem •&#13;
Plymouth.&#13;
Detroit?!*-.. r . . . . , .&#13;
• ! • » • * •&#13;
f 10&#13;
7 40&#13;
9 04&#13;
10 06&#13;
10 86&#13;
10 46&#13;
11 00&#13;
- « 4 0&#13;
oorwo WBST&#13;
Detroit....&#13;
Plymouth,.&#13;
Salem.&#13;
South Lyon.&#13;
Howell&#13;
Tensing....&#13;
Ionia.&#13;
Grand Rapids',&#13;
a m&#13;
a m&#13;
840&#13;
025&#13;
088&#13;
«4&amp;&#13;
10 28&#13;
11 88&#13;
18 50&#13;
1 80&#13;
p m&#13;
12 0S&#13;
12 20&#13;
1 45&#13;
2 85&#13;
8 04&#13;
3 25&#13;
405)&#13;
p m&#13;
1 10&#13;
148&#13;
906&#13;
886&#13;
8 SO&#13;
445&#13;
5 10&#13;
p m&#13;
T»&#13;
800&#13;
787&#13;
9 »&#13;
658&#13;
908&#13;
980&#13;
1065&#13;
P »&#13;
558&#13;
610&#13;
610&#13;
666&#13;
786&#13;
980&#13;
10 00&#13;
FBAMK BAT,&#13;
Agent, South Lyon.&#13;
H. F. MOELLER,&#13;
Acting G. P. A.,&#13;
Grand Haplda.&#13;
Y f A R r&#13;
EXPIRIENCf&#13;
JTRADK&#13;
MARKS&#13;
OCSIONS&#13;
Co^VRIOkT« 4%0.&#13;
Anrana aanding a eketeh and daaerli&#13;
gwefiy aaeertain onr optm« *&#13;
ihvengon li probably jpMf»&#13;
Uonajttrteqz oonfldentui Handbook on&#13;
daaerlptton maf&#13;
opinion frea whether aft&#13;
tblynytantawa. Convmantaa&gt;&#13;
_ „. tentui. HandbookonPataai&#13;
aent fra*. CRdeat aceaey for •eenrmrpatenta.&#13;
PatenU taken .through M o u JTCoT reoetf*&#13;
tptettufMCtoa, withoutchargarmthe Scientific Hnericaiu&#13;
• • • * ,&#13;
V/&#13;
, * ;&#13;
4.&#13;
A&#13;
'A.&#13;
.#&#13;
«&#13;
..,*•*&gt;*;, ' . • - " " ' •:-- . r&gt; . . J f S w v " . . v - / - . • • , • . • • . • : . ' • ' " • •" • • • . ' . *&#13;
*Z:\:&#13;
; ,i , : #J '7'/-i,"^ *Kv '/ '• , : • . • - • • • • ' -/./--&#13;
--,--r.-:r-«r&#13;
B«»WtJ-i,«MfcMt.,l, »,'- , , # F 4 M .&#13;
-~rrff/-x&#13;
' / • • • - ' , ; ' • •&#13;
:**&#13;
•jr&#13;
)&#13;
**•**&#13;
W. I, tbe aadereigned, do hereb.&#13;
agree to refund tbe money on&#13;
cent bottr* of ' Green's Warre*ted[~&#13;
Syrup of Tit if it (aits to cur*'your I f&#13;
cough or col.1. i also guarantee a lev&#13;
25 c&gt;nt I'IOMU to provM i»atiK&lt;actory or! In Sweden, in 2,200 out of 2^400&#13;
rural parishes the saloon ha* been&#13;
Edited by the W, O&#13;
Cv T. U: |&#13;
J. T V. of PlPCkney J&#13;
mortev ivtund^d' .(•SO&#13;
Will B. Dai-row.&#13;
[•_«&#13;
K &amp; K K u - K K ^ K K &lt;b&lt;&#13;
TU UuUig Spthlltts of&#13;
20 YEARS II DETROIT.&#13;
250,008 CURED,&#13;
WECURE EMISSIONS&#13;
Nothing pan be more demoralising to&#13;
iwodooe weclmeM. nervo_umes_, a feeling&#13;
of diigott and a whole tain of lynptonu.&#13;
They unfit a man for bualness, married&#13;
I life and social happiness. No matter&#13;
whether a ^ p evil habtt* in youth,&#13;
m w Method Treatment wfll podUvely&#13;
eureyott.&#13;
NO CURE* NO PAY , Boeder, Uter exce sysoeus mneaeyd h haevlpe. wEeaakrelyn eadb uyosen .o Ir I&#13;
[w airlel onoorte s yaoten .t ilYl coour rea n no risk.&#13;
2 5 0 , 0 0 0 CURED Young Man-You are pale, feeble)&#13;
| and haggard; nervous, irritable and excitable.&#13;
You become forgetful, morose,&#13;
aad despondent; blotches and pimples,&#13;
sunken eyes, wrinkled faoe, stooping&#13;
form and downcast countenance reveal I&#13;
the blight of your existence.&#13;
WECURE VARICOCELE&#13;
. Ho matter bow anions your ease may I&#13;
be. or how Jong you may have had it, onr&#13;
NEW METHOD TREATMENT will I&#13;
cure it. The "wormy veins" return to&#13;
their normal condition and hence the&#13;
sexual organs reoeive proper nourishment&#13;
The organs become vitalised, all&#13;
unnatural drains or losses oeaae and&#13;
manly powers return. No temporary&#13;
benefit, but a permanent cure assured.&#13;
NO CUKE, NO P A Y . NO OPERATION&#13;
NECB88ARY. „ NO DETEHTION&#13;
FROM BUSINESS. '&#13;
CURESGUARANTEED&#13;
We treat and cure SYPHILIS, I&#13;
GLEET, EMISSIONS. IMPOTENCY,&#13;
STRICTURE, VARICOCELE. SEMINAL&#13;
LOSSES. BLADDER AND KIDNEY&#13;
diseases. C O N S U L T A T I O N&#13;
FREE. BOOKS FREE. CHARGES&#13;
MODERATE. If unable to call, write&#13;
for a QUESTION BLANK forHOI&#13;
TREATMENT.&#13;
KENNEJTYTKERGAN&#13;
148 SHELBY STREET,&#13;
DETROIT, MIOH. K &amp; K K &amp; K K &amp; K K &amp;&#13;
A $ 4 . 0 0 BOOK FOR 75cts.&#13;
The Farmers' Encyclopedia. *&#13;
^¾&#13;
EverytUnf pertaining&#13;
to the affairs&#13;
of the farm,&#13;
h o u s e h o l d ana&#13;
6tock raising. Embraces&#13;
articles on&#13;
the horse, the colt,&#13;
horse habits.,diseases&#13;
of the noise,&#13;
the farm, grasses,&#13;
fruit culture, dairy,&#13;
ing.oookery.nealtn,&#13;
cattle, sheep.swine,&#13;
poultry, bees, the&#13;
dog, toilet, social&#13;
life, etc,, etc. One&#13;
of the most com*&#13;
p l e t e E n c y c l o -&#13;
pedias in existence.&#13;
A large book, 8x5*4&#13;
x 1% inches. 635&#13;
fully illustrated,&#13;
bound in&#13;
green cloth bind*&#13;
leg and equal to&#13;
other books costing&#13;
11.00. I/you desire this book send us our special&#13;
offer price, $0.75, and *U20 extra for postage and&#13;
we will forward the book to you. If It is not satisfactory&#13;
return it and we will exchange it or refund&#13;
your money. 8end for our special illustrated cata&#13;
loguc. quoting the lowest prices on books, FREE&#13;
we can save you money. Address all orders to&#13;
• THE WERNER COMPANY. •&#13;
RifcUihm and Kanufaetarcn.• Akron, OhlOi&#13;
(The Werner Company is thoroughly rehable.1—EdittH&#13;
suppressed. This is a remarkable&#13;
I showing, and contrasts strangely&#13;
with the showing in the eities.&#13;
Under the so-called "Gothenberg^&#13;
system, according to which the&#13;
government takes the management&#13;
of all sale of intoxicants, the&#13;
cities of Sweden are said to be the&#13;
most drunken in Europe.&#13;
The scorching, blistering shame&#13;
is the mere introduction of the&#13;
liquor traffic into this island. Example&#13;
counts more with inferior&#13;
races than does precept, and the&#13;
prevalence of the drink habit in&#13;
tbe army of occupation, even if&#13;
.confined to that army, would&#13;
^counteract a multitude of good inj&#13;
fluences.... The crime we are&#13;
| thus committing is the more hei-&#13;
| nous because we have, under the&#13;
plea of civilizing and moralizing&#13;
I them, constitued ourselves the&#13;
! guardians of the Filipinos. Yet&#13;
while treating them as wards to be&#13;
protected against political dangers&#13;
we leave them a prey to the American&#13;
saloonkeeper. It is a shameful&#13;
situation, the more because the&#13;
islands are under the military authority&#13;
which licences the liquor&#13;
traffic there by a mere order, can&#13;
by a similar order suppress it.—&#13;
New York Observer, Presbyterian.&#13;
We are informed by persons&#13;
who have come here from there&#13;
that before the American advent&#13;
there were but two saloons in Manila&#13;
and drunkenness on the&#13;
streets was so rare that many of&#13;
the natives hardly knew its symptoms.&#13;
Now there are some 400&#13;
saloons^&#13;
somewhat the characteristics of a&#13;
western "tough town." We don't&#13;
know what excuse there can be&#13;
for permitting this. The American&#13;
governor-general has practically&#13;
absolute power. He- was&#13;
able to prohibit the entrance of&#13;
Chinese into the islands "and to&#13;
prohibit the importation of arms&#13;
or any other article of commerce&#13;
* • - Eefittrattw Notice,&#13;
To the electors of the Village of. Hackney,&#13;
State of Michigan:&#13;
Notioe ia hereby given, that a meeting of&#13;
the Board of Registration of the Village&#13;
above named, will be held at the Town&#13;
Hall within said Village, on Saturday July&#13;
14, A. D. 1900, for the purpose of regiatering&#13;
the names of all such person who shall&#13;
be possessed of the necessary qualifications&#13;
of electors and who may apply for that^mrpose;&#13;
and that said Board of Registration&#13;
will be in. session on that day and at the&#13;
place aforeaaid from 9 o'clock, in the forenoon&#13;
until 8 o'clock in the afternoon, for&#13;
the purpose aforesaid.&#13;
Dated, this 5th day of July, A. D. 1900.&#13;
By order of the Village Board of Registration.&#13;
B. H. Teeple, Clerk.&#13;
•m m • o &gt; — ;&#13;
Tillage Election.&#13;
To the electors of the Village of Hackney,&#13;
Michigan:&#13;
Notice is hereby given that a special&#13;
election of said Village will be held at tbe&#13;
Town Hall, within said Village, on Monday,&#13;
July 16 A. D/1900—at which election&#13;
a proposition for the issuing of bonds&#13;
against said Village in the sum not exceedsng&#13;
One Thousad Dollars for the purpose&#13;
of securing fire protection will be voted upon.&#13;
The vote upon such proarosition shall be&#13;
by a printed ballot and shall be in the following&#13;
words:—For the issuing of bonds&#13;
for the purchase of fire protection " Y e s "&#13;
[ ] . For the isauing of bonds for the purchase&#13;
of tire protection " N o " [ ] .&#13;
The Polls of said election will beopened&#13;
at 7 o'clock in the forenoon and will remain&#13;
open untill 5 o'clock in the afternoon&#13;
of said day of election.&#13;
By order of the Board of Election Commissioners&#13;
of said Village.&#13;
Dated, this 6 day of July, A. D . 1900.&#13;
R. H . T E E P L E , Clerk.&#13;
F1LLIFINO GIRL'S, KIMO&#13;
A- sttdtev-iiwevites Rte First Experience&#13;
Witt* Title Article of Wearing Apparel.&#13;
It Is a shift waist with enormous&#13;
sleeves, and teaching the waist line,&#13;
but Is not belted down. It is made&#13;
without buttons, and until I got accustomed&#13;
to it was the most exasperating&#13;
article of feminine wearing apparel I&#13;
ever came across. The opening at tbe&#13;
top is cut square, and if the maiden&#13;
should hold her arms closely to her&#13;
body something Would surely drop.&#13;
My experience with the aforementioned&#13;
"kimo" was one evening I paid&#13;
my respects to an old genleman whose&#13;
acquaintance I had made and whose&#13;
daughter I had learned was one of tne&#13;
local belles. After the salutations and&#13;
introductions and a general conversation,&#13;
I asked the daughter of my host&#13;
to "play the piano" for me. The girl&#13;
about 18 years old, was rather a pretty&#13;
girl, but too decidedly.of the brunette&#13;
type to suit my Mississippi birth. Pbe&#13;
was in full evening costume, hut the&#13;
waist affair was what caught ray eye.&#13;
As long as her arms were rkiuibo or&#13;
her hands at some distance apart on&#13;
the keyboard the affair held up, but&#13;
when she crossed her hands I felt I&#13;
should sure have to make my naimbeg-&#13;
a-rabli (good night) with my back&#13;
turned. But your Filippino maiden&#13;
is equal to the occasion. With an involuntary&#13;
twitch of the arm she adjusts&#13;
the slipping "kimo" and a slight&#13;
exposure of a brown shoulder is all.&#13;
which it seemed wise to keep ~ofrt?-&#13;
He can send around to a newspaper&#13;
office and order it to retract&#13;
what it has published or sus-&#13;
JONES HC PAYS THE FREIGHT&#13;
"PERFECT"&#13;
WACOH SCALES&#13;
United States Standard. A11 Bizet. AllKlnds&#13;
Not made by a trust or controlled by a com&#13;
olnatton. For tree Book and Price List, address&#13;
40NKS OF aiNGHAMTON,&#13;
BINQHAMTON, N. Y&#13;
pend, and he has recently done so.&#13;
If be has this authority, he could&#13;
also forbid the importation of&#13;
liquors and the establishment of&#13;
saloons.—Buffalo Express, Ind.&#13;
Kep.&#13;
limiU«Hi™Hti.l&#13;
BEAR 15 MIND&#13;
that amongst tbe recent changes of&#13;
time on the Detroit &amp; Milwaukee and&#13;
Toledo, Saginaw &amp; Musbegon- Divisions&#13;
of Grand Trunk Railway System,&#13;
is that train number 20 on the D. &amp;&#13;
M.r which leaves Grand Haven at 8:45&#13;
a. m., Grand Rapids at 10:00 a. m. has&#13;
beep made a fast train and now arrives&#13;
Detroit 2:50 p.m. Connecting&#13;
with Lake Shore &amp; Michigan Southing&#13;
Detroit 3: p. m., making&#13;
the southern connections arriving&#13;
Toledo 4:40 and Cleveland 7:25 p. m.&#13;
Also bear in mind that the Fast&#13;
Steamboat Express No. 17, that leaves&#13;
Detroit at 4:05 p. m. has been made a&#13;
daily train, now leaving Sundays as&#13;
well as week days and connecting at&#13;
Grand Haven (daily) with Crosby&#13;
Transportation Company's Palatial&#13;
steamers for Milwaukee and the&#13;
Northwest.— t 28Q&#13;
A n O r d i n a n c e Forbidinsr m i n e r s U u -&#13;
Our fee returned if we fail. Any one sending&#13;
sketch and description of- any invention wiu&#13;
promptly receive our opinion free concerning&#13;
the patentability of same. "How to Obtain a&#13;
Patent" sent upon request. Patents* secured&#13;
through us advertised for sale nt our expense.&#13;
Patents taken out through us receive special&#13;
notice, without charge, in THE PATENT RECORD,&#13;
an illustrated and widely circulated journal,&#13;
consulted by Manufacturers and Investors.&#13;
Send for sample copy FREE. Address,&#13;
VICTOR J . EVAN8 &amp; CO»&#13;
(Patent Attorneys,)&#13;
I v a n s Building, WASHINGTON. D. « .&#13;
d e r t n e asre of 15 Y e a r * f r o m Berne;&#13;
U p o n t h e P n b t t c Streets a n d A l l e y *&#13;
of t h e V i l l a g e a f t e r C e r t a i n H o u r s ;&#13;
The Common Council of the Village of&#13;
Pinckney, ordain as follows:&#13;
Sec. 1:—No Minor under the age of fifteen&#13;
(15) years be or remain upon any of&#13;
the public streets or alleys, nor shall they&#13;
loiter or linger about any of the public or&#13;
private buildings of said village adjacent to&#13;
such public streets or alleys after the hour&#13;
of 9 o'clock, local time, in the evening of&#13;
any day, from the first day of April to the&#13;
first day of September and at 8 o'clock&#13;
from September first lo November first, at&#13;
7:30 from November first to April first in&#13;
each year, unless the said minor be in the&#13;
company of his or her parent, parents or&#13;
guardian, or in the company of some person&#13;
or persons of mature age, by the consent&#13;
and permission of the parent or guardian&#13;
of said minors, or except said minor&#13;
be passing directly along such street, alley&#13;
nr t h n m n g h f a r f t withfrnt t o p p i n g nr loiter.&#13;
Beauty's M o u t h .&#13;
The mouth is the frankest part of&#13;
the face. It can the least conceal the&#13;
feelings. We can neither hide illtemper&#13;
with it nor good. We may affect&#13;
what we please, but affections will&#13;
not help us. In a wrong cause lt_will&#13;
only make our observers resent the&#13;
endeavor to impose upon them. A&#13;
mouth should be of good natural dimensions,&#13;
as well as plump in the lips.&#13;
When the ancients, among their beauties,&#13;
made mention of small mouths&#13;
and lips, they meant small only as opposed&#13;
to an excess the other way, a&#13;
fault very common in the South. The&#13;
saying in favor of small mouths, which&#13;
have been the ruin of so many pretty&#13;
looks, are very absurd. If there must&#13;
be ah excess either way, it had better&#13;
be the liberal one. A .pretty, pursedup&#13;
mouth is fit for nothing but to be&#13;
left to its "complacency. Large mouths&#13;
are oftener found in union with generous&#13;
dispositions than very small ones.&#13;
The Pedal H o l d s Cigar*.&#13;
This odd table adorns the reception&#13;
room of a West Philadelphia "wheel"&#13;
club. The legs are made of the forks&#13;
of wheels, while the top represents the&#13;
wheel itself, having a real rubber tire.&#13;
The pedal holds cigars.&#13;
We carry a&#13;
stock of goo&lt;&#13;
$1,500,000.00&#13;
'''r.wA?" ^goods&#13;
W" valued at&#13;
We receive&#13;
from 10,000 to&#13;
25,000 letters&#13;
every day&#13;
I h t y l mm&#13;
&amp; .&#13;
ing, and by the express permission of the&#13;
parent or guardian of such minor upon&#13;
some errand or business of said parent or&#13;
guardian.&#13;
Sec. 2:—Any and all persons violating&#13;
any of the provisions of this ordinance&#13;
shall, upon conviction, be punished by tine&#13;
not exceeding $25.00 and costs of prosecution,&#13;
and by imprisonment in the village&#13;
lockup or county jail in said county until&#13;
the payment of such fine or imprisonment,&#13;
provided such imprisonment shall not exceed&#13;
the term of 60 days.&#13;
Sec. 3:—This ordinance shall take effect&#13;
from and after 20 days from the first publication&#13;
hereof.&#13;
Adopted July 2, 1900.&#13;
A. Mclntvre, Pres.&#13;
R. H. Teeple, clerk, j&#13;
Lip Salve T h a t Is H e a l i n g .&#13;
Take four ounces of spermaceti ointment,&#13;
which you can purchase at the&#13;
drug store, or, if you prefer, a good&#13;
cold cream will answer as well: one&#13;
dram alkanet. rot. Put the ointment&#13;
or cream into the inside kettle of a&#13;
custard boiler, Add the alkanet root.&#13;
Keep them at a gentle heat—not boiling—&#13;
until the ointment has acquired&#13;
a rich, deep red color; then pass it&#13;
through a coarse strainer. When the&#13;
liquid fat has colled a little add twenty&#13;
drops of balsam of Peru. Beat until&#13;
cold, and during the beating add also&#13;
eight drops of oil of cloves. This mnk?s&#13;
a very excellent lip salve and is also&#13;
healing.&#13;
We tbjjjiridersigned^dxtlggiitB, off*&#13;
er a rewa/d of 50 centilo any person&#13;
who pnrcnases of us, two 25o basts&#13;
of Baxter's Mandrak*Bitters Tablets,&#13;
if it fails to cure constipation, biliousness,&#13;
sick-headache, jaundice, loss of&#13;
appetite, sour stomachs, dyspepsia&#13;
liver complaint, or any of tbe diseases&#13;
for which it is recommended. Pries&#13;
25 cent* for either tablets or liquid.&#13;
We will also refund the money on one&#13;
package of either if it fails to give&#13;
satisfaction,&#13;
F. \ . Sigler,&#13;
W. B. Darrow,&#13;
rOBU&amp;BID S V » T THUaSDA* KOaffIXe BT&#13;
FRANK. L. ANDREWS&#13;
Editor and 2*ropri*lor.&#13;
Bnbscriptloa Price $1 In Advance.&#13;
Snterea at the Postofflce at Pinckney, Michigan,&#13;
a* aecond-dMs matter.&#13;
Advertising rates nude known on application.&#13;
Business Cards, $4.00 per year.&#13;
Peath and marriage notices published free.&#13;
Announcements of entertainments may be paid&#13;
for, if desired, by presenting the offlce with ticket*&#13;
of admission. In case ctcketa are not brought&#13;
to the offlce, regular rates will be charged.&#13;
All matter in local notice column win be charted&#13;
at 5 cents per line or fraction thereof, for each&#13;
insertion. where no time is specified, all notice*&#13;
will be inserted until ordered discontinued, and&#13;
will be charged for accordingly. 3F~All changes&#13;
of advertisements MUST reach this office as early&#13;
as TOXSSAT morning to insure an insertion the&#13;
tame week.&#13;
In all its branches, a specialty. We hare all klnda&#13;
and the latest styles or Type, etc., which enable*&#13;
us to execute all kinds of work, such as Books,&#13;
Ptunplets, Posters, Programmes, Bill Heads, Not*&#13;
Heads, Statements, Cards, Auction Bills, etc., in&#13;
superior styles, upon the shortest notice. Prices as&#13;
o~v as good work can be none.&#13;
«LL BILLS PAYABLE PlaST Of BV£B? MOSTH.&#13;
THE VILLAGE DIRECTORY.&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICERS.&#13;
PBBBIDBNT.. . _ &gt;MM. Alex. Mclntyre&#13;
TacsT£Bs £. L. Thompson, Alfred Monks,&#13;
Daniel Richards, lieo. Bowman, Samuel&#13;
Sykes, F. i). Johnson,&#13;
CLKBK - ...~~. ..,..R. EL. Teeple&#13;
TBJEASCKBB M .- ~...W. E. Murphy&#13;
Asssssoa &gt;MM .^. W. A. Carf&#13;
STBBBT'COMXMSIONBB.... J. Monks.&#13;
MABSAHL . . A . £, Brown.&#13;
HBALTHUrricRB Dr.H. P.aigler&#13;
ATTORNEY .W. A. Carr&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH.&#13;
Kev. Chaa. Simpson, pastor. Services every&#13;
Sunday morning at 10:&amp;/, and every Sunday&#13;
evening at 7:00 o'clock. Prayer meeting Thursday&#13;
evenings. Sunday ecuool at close of morning&#13;
service. LKALSIOLSB, Snpt.&#13;
CONGftEGAflONAL CHURCH.&#13;
Rev. C. VV. Rice pastor. Service every&#13;
Sunday morning at 10:30 and eretj Sunday&#13;
evening at 7 :OC o'clock. Prayer.meeting Thors&#13;
day evenings. Sunday school at jclose of morning&#13;
service. R. H. Teeple, Supt,, Maoel Swarthout&#13;
Sec.&#13;
ST. SIAKrS-«JATHOi.CC CHURCH.&#13;
Rev. M. J. Commerford, Pastor. Services&#13;
every Sunday. Low mass at 7:30 o'clock&#13;
high mass with sermon at 9:30 a. m. Catechism&#13;
at 3:00 p. m., vespers ana benediction at 7 :¾ p. m.&#13;
T&#13;
SOCIETIES;&#13;
he A. O. H. Society of this plaoo, moots every&#13;
_ third Sunday in tne Pr. M»ttaew Hail.&#13;
John Tuomey and M. T. Kelly, County Delegate*&#13;
EPWORTH LEAGUE. Meets every Sunday&#13;
evening at 6:00 oclock in the M. E. Church. A&#13;
cordial invitation is extended to everyone, especially&#13;
young people. Mrs. Stella Graham Pres.&#13;
CHRISTIAN ENDEAVOR SOCIETY:-Meet,&#13;
ingd every Sunday evening at 6:40. President,&#13;
Miaa Etta Carpenter; Secretary, Mrs. C. W. Kice.&#13;
THE W. C. T..U. meets the first Friday of each&#13;
month at 2:30 p, m. at the home of Dr. H. F.&#13;
sigler. Everyone interested in tetn'peranoe is&#13;
coadi&amp;Uy invited: Mrs. Ileal Sigler, Pres; Mrs.&#13;
Etta Durfee, Secretary.&#13;
'Sivqy&#13;
o&#13;
±t&#13;
W t M I t and occupy the tatles* mercantile building in the world. v&lt;'c have&#13;
over 1,000,000 customers. Sixteen hundred clerks are conatar. Ay&#13;
engaged, filling out-of-town orders.&#13;
OUR G E N E R A L C A T A L O G U E it the book of the people-i: quote*&#13;
Wholesale Prices to Everybody, has ever i.ooo pages, 16,000 illustration*, and&#13;
60,000 descriptions of articles with prices. It coats 73 cents to print and nail&#13;
each copy. We-want you to have one. SEND FIFTEEN CENTS to show&#13;
your good faith, aad we'll send you a copy FREE, with all charges prepaid.&#13;
MONTGOMERY WARD &amp; CO.M ichigan Ave. and Madison Street&#13;
O H I O A Q O&#13;
A t i o o d C o u g h Medtcitie.&#13;
Many thousands have been r^storac!&#13;
to health and happiness by the use of&#13;
Chamberlain^ Cough Remedy. Tf&#13;
afflicted with any throat or lung&#13;
iroub e, give it a trial for if is certain&#13;
to prove beneficial. Coughs that have&#13;
resisted all other treatment for vears&#13;
baveyeilded to this remedy and perfect&#13;
health been restored. Cases that&#13;
seemed hopeless, that the climate of&#13;
famous health resorts failed to benefit,&#13;
have been permently cured by its use.&#13;
For sale by E. A. 'Sigler, Pinckney.&#13;
I'lay Lesson*for C h i l d r e n .&#13;
Many enjoyable half hours may be&#13;
spent by children in playing at "nouns&#13;
and verbs," and a good deal of learning&#13;
unconsciously impressed \rpon the&#13;
young mind. __&#13;
."A noun is the name of a n y t h i n g " is&#13;
definition enough for a beginner. Then&#13;
with her box_ of letters she m a k e s 1&#13;
whoie list" of nouns which of course&#13;
are n a m e s of the things she sees&#13;
around '•&gt; r.&#13;
Ti:.1 m•:;•;;r^s and the . n a m e s a r ;&#13;
pr.:-' .1 ;.-v-aiily on checkered paper&#13;
or c..;;: •'•i LL W h e t r t r r e i n t t f r is-use d&#13;
the woivis 'ere afterward pricked jsvith&#13;
a cfMi ••:• needle and reproduced in&#13;
bright colored silks in kindergarten&#13;
fashion.&#13;
The C.T. A. and B. Society of this place, meet&#13;
every third Saturday evening in the Fr. Matthew&#13;
Hall. .fehn Donohue, President.&#13;
, : .»:«. , .i-* i t . , II&#13;
*we««t saiulul«'lui«*.&#13;
Cv:.'\?e and apricot marma'ade make&#13;
de}\ oi:s s.n.dwichca. The new gra'te&#13;
t'u/.u :rijuiv.;ii:ulc is a favorite of the&#13;
moment. Jams of various flavors are&#13;
B;SO iiked. strawberry uking the le.nl.&#13;
Aguirn at a delightful tea last week&#13;
the hostess offered a sandwich In&#13;
which one recognized some very delicious&#13;
grape jelly.&#13;
Apple butter was the combination&#13;
with which a Pittsburg woman scored&#13;
a hit Piquant, spicy, aromatic, Jt&#13;
made an ideal sandwich.&#13;
KNIGHTS OF MACCABEES.&#13;
Meetevery Friday evening on or before foil&#13;
of the moon at their hall in the Swarthout bldg.&#13;
Visiting brothers are cordially invited.&#13;
CHAS. CAMPBELL, Sir Knight Commander&#13;
• 1 Livingston Lodge, No. 7¾. ? A A. M. Regular&#13;
Communication Tuesday evening, on or before&#13;
the full of the moon. H. F. Sigler, W. St.&#13;
ORDER OF EASTERN STAR meets each month&#13;
the Friday evening following the regular F.&#13;
A A.M. meeting, Mas. MART RBAO, W. M.&#13;
RDER OF MODERN WOODMEN Meet the&#13;
nrst Thursday evening of each Month in the&#13;
Maccabee hall. C. L. Grimes V. C.&#13;
- - -I-' • • I I 1_I.IL I I _ l '. LADIES OF THE MACCABEES. Meet every 1st&#13;
and 3rd Saturday of eachmonth at a:30 p m. at&#13;
K.«). T. M, hall. Visiting slaters cordially invited.&#13;
LILA CONIWAY Lady Com. K KNIGHTS or THE LOYAL GUARD&#13;
meet every second Wednesday&#13;
evening of every month in the K. O.&#13;
T. M. Hall at 7:30 o'clock. All visiting&#13;
Guards welcome.&#13;
C. L. Grimes. Capt. Gen.&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
H. F. SIGLER M. 0- C, L, SIQLER to, D&#13;
DRS. SIGLER &amp; SIGLER,&#13;
PhyeiciausandshiriteJUS. Ail calls prompt]&#13;
attended today or night. Ouloe on Main »tr&#13;
Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
DR. A. B.GREEN.&#13;
DENTIST-Eyery Frld*j; and on Thursday&#13;
when having appointments. Otnceove*&#13;
Sigler's Drug Store.&#13;
VETERINARY S U R G E O N . /&#13;
Graduate of Ontario Veterinary College, alio of&#13;
the Veterinary Dentistry College&#13;
Toronto Canada.&#13;
Will promptly attend to all diseases of the domesticated&#13;
animal at a reasonable pilot).&#13;
Horses teeth examined Free,&#13;
OPP1CE at /AILL. P1NCKMEY.&#13;
:'o •. Zk&#13;
•'•'" y ' .. ., r J&#13;
M&#13;
•m&#13;
' * r ! : &lt; f&#13;
-,. •• - ' f w • '•'^f-»^wT",^,»y*"'^^,w«wBwy wL&lt;p.&lt;g»i&lt;y^^y^&#13;
W&#13;
__5__5f__,&#13;
*a____a____iyt i&#13;
^ • • * B&#13;
: # : • •&#13;
* * » ,&#13;
iMlIt;&#13;
• ' - • * - , -&#13;
••*$ .-far.&#13;
-¾ ' W^yfi1&#13;
^-f^-t W ' « 5 i-S-'rfV' ^¾&amp;¾ M&amp;&amp;*&#13;
"fJ^T&#13;
Sft-tf&#13;
^ ^ l ^ W m&#13;
-i^-ft W 2£.&#13;
i . „&#13;
w*t.; » ' • ' &gt;&#13;
•'i»-&#13;
fen HSfeBBS si&#13;
Jr.&#13;
few ".'•&#13;
fftv ' &lt;&#13;
s?&#13;
I&#13;
'&gt;'•• A&#13;
se*&#13;
gwrlutfy 'i&#13;
H U J W L. Airoitswstgablishe* .j.&lt;&#13;
" T H E MARRIAGE FEAST," LAST&#13;
PINCKNttV, • ^ MlcniOAH.&#13;
t^ V T 4 ^ ' &lt; " YJU". ','•' " ^ - ^ |&#13;
Three new&lt; novel*, on »o average, are&#13;
Issued daily toy. Lonafcn publishers.&#13;
The tallest man in Maryland lives in&#13;
Carroll county, near the town of Westminster,&#13;
and, with a strange appropriateness,&#13;
hi^ name ie Stilef Long.&#13;
The Englishman possesses on an&#13;
average S1.4S0; the Putchhian, 1720?&#13;
the Belgian and the German, $780; the&#13;
Austrian and the Italian, $500; itio&#13;
Russian, $200.&#13;
Oklahoma City is a thriving city of&#13;
upward of 15,000 people, with growing&#13;
industries, and has Just begun the&#13;
erection of a free library with the gift&#13;
of $25,000 from Andrew Carnegie.&#13;
Every year a number of boys are&#13;
sent from Siara by the king to England&#13;
to learn different things. One&#13;
learns upholstering, one learns typewriting,&#13;
one learns languages, one&#13;
learns science, and so on.&#13;
George W. Dart.who raised the Stars&#13;
and Stripes over the Confederate capital&#13;
at Columbia, S. C, at the end of&#13;
Sherman's march to the sea, has just&#13;
entered the Soldiers' Home of Iowa, at&#13;
Marshalltown. Hla home was at Attica.&#13;
N.Y.&#13;
The commission on the new East&#13;
River bridge between New York and&#13;
Brooklyn boroughs finds Itself compelled&#13;
to ask the institution for condemnation&#13;
. proceedings in regard to&#13;
some $2,000,000 of property needed&#13;
'or the Brooklyn approach. m Three&#13;
churches are among the obstacles.&#13;
Two sisters living in San Francisco&#13;
are achieving success in unusual occupations&#13;
for women. One is a carpenter&#13;
,the other a boss painter. The&#13;
former, a girl of 20, has built a fiveroom&#13;
house in which her family lives,&#13;
t h e father of the girls Is a carpenter&#13;
and conceived the idea of bringing his&#13;
daughters up as though they were boys;&#13;
giving them men's trades.&#13;
TALMAGE'S SERMON,&#13;
S U N D A Y ' S SUBUECT,&#13;
The. Christian ReUjrfe&gt;a, When Property&#13;
Practiced, the Aefage of the Forlorn&#13;
—The World Invited to m Feast of&#13;
Holy Joy.&#13;
A grim relic has Just been presented&#13;
to a San Francisco museum. It is a&#13;
"back-scratcher," once the property of&#13;
the wife of a Fijian chief, which is&#13;
made from the leg bone of a missionary&#13;
who was killed and eaten by the&#13;
islanders early in the century. The&#13;
„ato owner inherited the item from his&#13;
grandfather, but as his newly wedded&#13;
wife would not permit him to keep in&#13;
the house an article possessed of such&#13;
gruesome associations, and so it was&#13;
sent to the museum.&#13;
Twenty-one wagons passed through&#13;
the city of Wabash, Ind., the other day&#13;
in solemn procession. They were loaded&#13;
with the last marketable black walnut&#13;
^ogs in the county. The ceremony&#13;
would have been equally appropriate&#13;
in any other county o f tbe-gTear~cen^~ "the «ood wine until now." Beautiful&#13;
.tral states. The walnut, which half&#13;
a century ago was the most plentiful&#13;
and majestic tree of the region, is today&#13;
practically extinct. A stronger&#13;
argument for protective forestry laws&#13;
would be hard to find.&#13;
"A sympathetic strike" of a unique&#13;
kind occurred in New Jersey the other&#13;
day. A poor old horse was used in a&#13;
certain department of a glass factory,&#13;
but did not have the privilege which&#13;
his human fellow-workmen enjoyed of&#13;
"knocking eg"—when—the—whistle&#13;
sounded. The men ' tried unsuccessfully&#13;
to obtain shorter hours for the&#13;
old nag, and at last "struck," but gave&#13;
notice that they would gladly resume&#13;
work whenever the horse's hours of&#13;
labor should be made to conform to&#13;
their own. The newspapers are silent&#13;
as to the result, but it is to be hoped&#13;
.that matters have been settled to the&#13;
satisfaction of all—especially of the&#13;
horse.&#13;
$ ,&#13;
If the suggestions of Charles W.&#13;
Canfield of New York, are acted upon,&#13;
the statue of Liberty in New York&#13;
harbor will have a flaming torch&#13;
worthy of the name. At present the&#13;
giant lady bears a brilliant but tiny&#13;
.•park im her hand, which, whea the&#13;
outlines of the figure are obscured at&#13;
night, cannot be distinguished from a&#13;
low-hanging planet Mr. Canfield&#13;
suggests that a jet of steam be sent up&#13;
through the arm attcf\hand and, as&#13;
might settles down the cloud of vapor&#13;
"would v catch the glare of the arc&#13;
lamps and have alt the appearance of&#13;
a veritable flame. The idea was presented&#13;
to his mind by noticing the&#13;
'appearance of a cloud of steam from&#13;
;an elevated train upon which a searchlight&#13;
from one of the big dry goods&#13;
store* played. This arrangement for&#13;
increasing the effectiveness of the&#13;
great statue might he carried out withalmost&#13;
no additional expewse, a* the&#13;
government has its own plant on Bedloe's&#13;
UUad for making the light* in&#13;
the torch. A pipe carrying steam&#13;
4BM14 easily be rua from the boiler&#13;
to&#13;
(Copyright, 1800, by Louis Klopsch.)&#13;
A remarkable illustration of the ubiquity&#13;
of English speaking people is&#13;
furnished by the requests that have&#13;
reached Dr. Talmage in northern Europe&#13;
for a sermon in and out of the&#13;
way places where he did not expect to&#13;
find a single person who could understand&#13;
him. There, as here, he presents&#13;
religion as a festivity and invites&#13;
all the world to come as guests and&#13;
join in its holy merriment;' text, John&#13;
11, 10, "Thou hast kept the good wine&#13;
until now."&#13;
This chapter invites us to a marriage&#13;
celebration. It is a-ivedding in&#13;
common life, two plain people having&#13;
pledged each other, hand and heart,&#13;
and their friends having come in for&#13;
congratulation. The joy is not th.3&#13;
less because there is no pretension.&#13;
In each other they find all the future&#13;
they want. The daisy in-the cup on&#13;
the table may mean as much as a&#13;
score of artistic garlands fresh from&#13;
the hothouse. When a daughter goes&#13;
off from home with nothing but a&#13;
plain father's blessing and a plain&#13;
mother's love, she is missed as much&#13;
as though she were a princess. It&#13;
seems hard after the parents have&#13;
sheltered her for eighteen years, that&#13;
in a few short months her affections&#13;
should have been carried off by another,&#13;
but mother remembers how it was&#13;
in her own case when she was young,&#13;
and so she braces up until the wedding&#13;
has passed and the banqueters&#13;
are gone, and she has a cry ail alone.&#13;
"Well, we are today at the wedding&#13;
in Cana of Galilee. Jesus and his&#13;
mother have -been invited. It is evident&#13;
that there are more people there&#13;
than were expected. Either some people&#13;
have come who were not invited&#13;
or more invitations have been sent out&#13;
than it was supposed would be accepted.&#13;
Of course there is not a sufficient&#13;
supply of wine. You know that&#13;
there is nothing more embarrassing to&#13;
a housekeeper than a scant supply.&#13;
Jesus sees the embarrassment, and he&#13;
comes up immediately to relieve it. He&#13;
sees standing six water pots. He orders&#13;
the servants to fill them with&#13;
water, then he waves his hand over&#13;
the water, and immediately it is wine&#13;
—real wine. Taste of it and see for&#13;
yourselves. No logwood in ,it, no&#13;
strychnine in it, but first rate wine. I&#13;
will not now be diverted to the&#13;
question so often discussed in my own&#13;
country whether it is right to drink&#13;
wine. I am describing the scene as it&#13;
was. When God makes wine be&#13;
makes the-- very best wine, and 130&#13;
gallons of it standing around in these&#13;
water pots-rwine so good that the&#13;
ruler of the feast tastes it and says:&#13;
"Why, this is really better than anything&#13;
we have had. Thou hast kept&#13;
miracle! A prize was offered to the&#13;
person who should write the best essay&#13;
aboutthe miracle in Cana. Long&#13;
manuscripts were presented in the&#13;
competition, but a poet won the iJrize&#13;
by just this one line descriptive of the&#13;
miracle: "The conscious water saw&#13;
its God and blushed."&#13;
Hides Hla Own Griefs.&#13;
Jesus does not shadow the joys of&#13;
others with his own griefs. He might&#13;
have sat down in that wedding and&#13;
said: "I have so much trouble, so&#13;
much poverty, so much persecution,&#13;
and the cross is coming. I shall not&#13;
rejoice, and the gloom of my face and&#13;
of my sorrows shall be cast over all&#13;
this group." So said not Je3us. He&#13;
said to himself: "Here are two persons&#13;
starting out in married life. Let&#13;
it be a joyful occasion. I will hide my&#13;
own griefs. I will kindle their joy."&#13;
There are many not so wise as that. I&#13;
know a household where there are&#13;
many little children, where for two&#13;
years the musical instrument has&#13;
been kept shut because there has been&#13;
trouble in the house. Alas for the&#13;
folly! Parents saying: "We will&#13;
have no Christmas tree this1 coming&#13;
holiday because there has been trouble&#13;
in the house. Hush that laughing&#13;
up stairs! How can there be any joy&#13;
when there has- been so much trouble?"&#13;
And so they make everything&#13;
consistently doleful and send their&#13;
sons and daughters to ruin with the&#13;
gloom they throw around them.&#13;
Oh, my dear friends, do you not&#13;
know those children, will,have trouble&#13;
enough of their own after awhile? Be&#13;
glad they cannot appreciate all yours.&#13;
Keep back the cup of bitterness from&#13;
your daughter's lips. When your&#13;
head' is down in the grass of the tomb,&#13;
poverty may come to her, betrayal to&#13;
her, bereavement to her. Keep back&#13;
the sorrows as long as you can. Do&#13;
you not know that that son may after&#13;
awhile have his heart broken? Stand&#13;
betwen him and all harm. "You may&#13;
not fight his battles long. Fight them&#13;
while you may. Throw.not the chill&#13;
of your own despondency over his&#13;
soul. Rather, be like Jesus, who came&#13;
to the wedding hiding his own grief&#13;
and kindling the Joy* of others. So I&#13;
have seen the sun on a dark day,&#13;
struggling amidst clouds, blade, ragged&#13;
and portentous, but after awhile&#13;
the sun, with golden pry, heaved back&#13;
the blackness. And the sun laughed&#13;
to the lake, and the lake laughed to&#13;
the sun, and from horizon to horizon,&#13;
under the saffron sky, the water was&#13;
all turned into wine.&#13;
The Bight to Laug-h. •&#13;
I think the children of God have&#13;
more right to laugh than any other&#13;
people, and to clap their hands as&#13;
loudly. There is not a single joy denied'them&#13;
that is gives to any other&#13;
people. Christianity does not clip the.&#13;
wings of the soul. Religion does not&#13;
frost the flowers. What is Christianity?&#13;
I take it to be simply a proclamation&#13;
from the throne of God of&#13;
emancipation for all the enslaved,&#13;
and if a man accepts the terms of that&#13;
proclamation and becomes free has he&#13;
not a right to be merry? Suppose a&#13;
father has an elegant mansion and&#13;
large grounds. To whom will he give&#13;
the first privilege of these grounds?&#13;
Will he say: "My children, you must&#13;
not walk through these paths, or sit&#13;
down under these trees or pluck this&#13;
fruit. These are for outsiders. They&#13;
may walk in them." No father would&#13;
say anything like that. He would say,&#13;
"The first privileges in all the grounds&#13;
and all of my house shali be for my&#13;
own children.' And yet men try to&#13;
make us believe that God's children&#13;
are on the limits and the chief refreshments&#13;
and enjoyments of life are&#13;
for outsiders and not for his own&#13;
children. It is stark atheism. There&#13;
is no innocent beverage too rich for&#13;
God's child to drink, there is~ho robe&#13;
too costly for him to wear, there is no&#13;
hilarity too great Jor him to indulge&#13;
in and no house too splendid for him&#13;
to live in. He has a right to the joys&#13;
of earth; he shall have a right to the&#13;
joys of heaven. Though tribulation&#13;
and trial and hardship may come to&#13;
him,, let him rejoice. "Rejoice in the&#13;
Lord, ye righteous, and again I say&#13;
rejoice."&#13;
I remark again that Christ comes to&#13;
us in the hour of our extremity. He&#13;
knew the wine was giving out before&#13;
there was any embarrassment or mortification.&#13;
Why did he not perform&#13;
the miracle sooner? Why wait until&#13;
it was all gone, and no help could&#13;
comefrom any source, and then come&#13;
in and perform the miracle? This is&#13;
Christ's way, and when he did come&#13;
in, at the hour of extremity, he made&#13;
first rate wine, so that they cried out,&#13;
"Thou hast kept the good wine until&#13;
now." Jesu&lt;? in the hour of extremity!&#13;
He seems to. prefer that hour.&#13;
In, a Christian home in Poland great&#13;
poverty had come, and on the week&#13;
day the man was obliged *to move out&#13;
of the house with his whole family.&#13;
That night he knelt with his family&#13;
and prayed to God. While they were&#13;
kneeling in prayer there was a tap on&#13;
the window^ pane. They opened the&#13;
window, and there was a raven that&#13;
the family had fed and trained, and it&#13;
had in its bill a ring all set with precious&#13;
stones, which was found out to&#13;
be a ring belonging to the royal family.&#13;
It was taken UP to the king's&#13;
residence, and for the honesty of the&#13;
man in bringing it back-he—had a&#13;
house given to him and a garden and&#13;
a farm. Who was it that sent the&#13;
raven tapping on the window? The&#13;
same God that sent the raven to feed&#13;
Elijah by the brook Cherith. Christ&#13;
in the hour of extremity!&#13;
A Grander Wedding.&#13;
The wedding scene is gone now. The&#13;
wedding ring has been lost, the tankards&#13;
have been broken, the house is&#13;
down^-but Jesus invites us to a grander&#13;
wedding. You know the Bible says&#13;
that the church is the Lamb's wife,&#13;
and the Lord will after awhile come&#13;
tc&lt; fetch her home. There will be"&#13;
gleaming of torches in the sky, and&#13;
the trumpets of &lt;Jod will ravish the&#13;
air with their music, and Jesus will&#13;
stretch out his hand, and the church,&#13;
robed in white, will put aside her veil&#13;
and look up into the face of her Lord,&#13;
the King and the Bridegroom will say&#13;
to the bride: "Thou hast been faithful&#13;
through all these years! The mansion&#13;
is ready! Come home! Thou&#13;
art fair, my love." And then he will&#13;
put upon.her brow the crown of dominion,&#13;
and the table will be spread,&#13;
and it will reach across the skies, and&#13;
the mighty ones of heaven will come&#13;
in, garlanded with beauty and striking&#13;
their cymbal8, and the Bridegroom&#13;
and bride will stand at the head of&#13;
the table, and the banqueters, looking&#13;
up, will wonder end admire and say:&#13;
"That is Jesus, the Bridegroom! But&#13;
the scar on his brow is covered with&#13;
the coronet, and the stab in his side&#13;
Is covered with&gt; a robe!" And "That&#13;
is the bride! The weariness of her&#13;
earthly woe lost in the flush of this&#13;
wedding triumph!"&#13;
There will be wine enough at that&#13;
wedding; not coming up from the poisoned&#13;
vats of earth, but the vineyards&#13;
of God will press their ripest clusters&#13;
and the cups and the tankards will&#13;
blush to the brim with the heavenly&#13;
vintage, and then all the banqueters&#13;
will drink standing. Bather, having&#13;
come up from the bacchanalian revelry&#13;
of Ahasuerus, where- a thousand&#13;
lords feasted, will he there. And the&#13;
Sueen of Shaba, from the banquet of&#13;
olomon, will /be there. And the&#13;
mother of Jesus, from the wedding in&#13;
Cana, will be there. And they all will&#13;
agree that the earthly feasting was&#13;
poor compared with that Then, lifting&#13;
their chalices in that l'ffht, they&#13;
shall cry to the Lord of the feast,&#13;
"Thou haat kept the good wine until&#13;
now."&#13;
ess&#13;
JAPANESE WOMEN.&#13;
Bathing-, MtH»|* and Hal* Dressing;&#13;
Make Them Beautiful&#13;
The Japanese women who are considered&#13;
beautiful in their own coun*&#13;
l?3f W0UI4 a?_t always be so considered&#13;
in America^ They are nearly all very&#13;
small, with little noses seemingly&#13;
pressed into the face, drowsy, slanting&#13;
lidded eyes, and a walk that is simply&#13;
absurd, says the Detroit News-Tribune.&#13;
Their beauty, however, is a happy&#13;
combination of nature and art. Bathing&#13;
is with them almost a religion.&#13;
One bath a day is always in order, and&#13;
two is very common. Thus they lay&#13;
the foundation for good looks in the&#13;
way of complexion. Every house, no&#13;
matter how humble, has its bath, and&#13;
it has been asserted that some years&#13;
ago some of the Japanese ladies received&#13;
guests while in the bath. In&#13;
the country it is not an uncommon&#13;
sight to see a woman by the roadside&#13;
bathing herself from a little wooden&#13;
bowl holding about a quart. Among&#13;
the swelldom of Japan massage Is held&#13;
strictly necessary as an aid to beauty.&#13;
The accomplishments of the "blind&#13;
shampcoer" Include massage. He visits&#13;
the homes of the wealthy and&#13;
kneads the roly-poly little bodies, the&#13;
victim lying upon a mat on the floor&#13;
with her head on a block pillow. You&#13;
would think that this attitude would&#13;
give'her a stiff neck to say the least,&#13;
but It doesn't. The secret of this is in&#13;
being used to it. And anyway, the&#13;
little Japanese women are as docile as&#13;
dolls, and never think of even protesting.&#13;
The massage is applied with&#13;
the clothing on or off, according to&#13;
choice.&#13;
The hair dressing is also an elaborate&#13;
process, but fortunately for the&#13;
women there is never a change of&#13;
fashion In thhi respect. Once they&#13;
learn to manage their purplish black&#13;
tresses and lhey know how for all time.&#13;
A .great deal of rouge is1 used in the&#13;
make-up or a Japanese beauty. The&#13;
girls have to learn the facial applications&#13;
themselves, and. they make no&#13;
secret of it. Walking through the city&#13;
streets one often sees within some&#13;
house a little lady kneeling on a cushion&#13;
before her mirror, surrounded by&#13;
her cosmetics, flanked by a basin of&#13;
water and powder brushes.&#13;
BIBLE T R A N S L A T E D&#13;
S C O T C H .&#13;
I N T O&#13;
For the benefit of that portion of&#13;
the Scotch peasantry to whom ordinary&#13;
English is hard to read the Bible&#13;
has just been translated into the&#13;
Scotch dialect. It is about to be pub-&#13;
3.&#13;
4.&#13;
5.&#13;
hshed by Mr. Gardner of Paisley. Following&#13;
is a specimen passage as it appears&#13;
in the Scotch dialect, the matter&#13;
being a portion of the fifth chapter of&#13;
St. Matthew:&#13;
And, seem' the thrang o' folk, he gaed&#13;
up intil a mountain, and whan he&#13;
was sutten doon his disciples gather't&#13;
aboot.&#13;
2. And he open't his mooth, and instructs&#13;
them, and quo he:&#13;
"Happy the spirits that are lown&#13;
and cannie; for the kingdom o'&#13;
heeven is waitin' for them!&#13;
"Happy they that are makin' their&#13;
maen; for-they sal fin' comfort and&#13;
peace.&#13;
"Happy the lowly and meek o' the&#13;
yirth, for the yirth sal be their ain&#13;
hadden!&#13;
6. ^ a p p y they whase hunger and&#13;
drdugth are a' for holiness, for they&#13;
sal be stegh'd.&#13;
"Happy the pitifu' for they sal win&#13;
pitie theirsels!&#13;
"Happy the pure heartlt, for their&#13;
een sal dwell upon God!&#13;
"Happy the makkers-up o* strife,&#13;
for their sal be coon tit for bairns&#13;
o' God!&#13;
10. "Happy the ill-treatit anes 4or the&#13;
sake o' gude, for they'se hae the&#13;
kingdom o' God!&#13;
11. "Happy sal ye be when folk sal&#13;
mlsca' ye, and ill-treat ye, and a'&#13;
things again ye wrangouslie for my&#13;
sake!&#13;
12. "Joy ye, and be blythe! for yere&#13;
meed is great in heeven! for e'en&#13;
sae did they till the prophets afore&#13;
ye!&#13;
"The saut o' the yirth are ye; but&#13;
gin the saut hae tint its tang, hoo's&#13;
it to be sautit? Is it no clean useless&#13;
to be cuisten oot, and trauchl't&#13;
under folk's feet?"&#13;
7.&#13;
8.&#13;
9.&#13;
OP A FAMOUS FAMILY.&#13;
MRS. MARTHA DAVIS, BISTER&#13;
Ofr JQHfl *ROWNp&#13;
" i I «. I . . .&#13;
Ik* Is the Yoooffcwt of StztMB ChlHtraR&#13;
—Her Beeoltoctionf of Her Brother*-*&#13;
Hla Femotui Bald Was Mate for the&#13;
VarptMd of Stirring* Up seattmeat.&#13;
The sole surviving member of a family&#13;
famous l.n American history i$ Mrs,&#13;
Marth*;ifcyte of Sjfc. taw*- Mioh.,.siBter&#13;
of John Brown^ of Harper's, Ferry&#13;
fame. She is the,,youngest of tf'children&#13;
and her recollections qf her; early&#13;
association with her widely-known&#13;
tack on Harper'* Ferry,, wa* not, induced&#13;
by the belief that be could conquer&#13;
the south all by himself and thus&#13;
free the slaves, but that he did it to&#13;
crystallize sentiment into activity and&#13;
arouse the north to the wrong* gt slavery.&#13;
She has strong faith that her&#13;
brother will be Judged in the future&#13;
tar differently than he has been and&#13;
that eventually he will be ranked as a&#13;
courageous character who believed&#13;
•hat the only solution of the' t lavery&#13;
MRS. MARTHA DAVI3.&#13;
problem lay in war, which he brought&#13;
about to a great extent by striking a&#13;
blow.&#13;
The form of Mrs. Davis is now somewhat&#13;
bent by the 68 years she has&#13;
lived and the burden which she has&#13;
borne. Every dark hair has been silvered;&#13;
the mouth is firmly set, but the&#13;
eyes which have beheld so many tragic&#13;
scenes and the mind which has carried&#13;
for forty years the memory of her&#13;
brother's dramatic deeds and tragic&#13;
death, are as bright as on that day&#13;
when the national arsenal at Harper's&#13;
Ferry was taken. She lives her quiet&#13;
life on a farm three miles from town,&#13;
with no revengeful thoughts to embitter&#13;
her declining days. There, interested&#13;
in the common pursuits of life.&#13;
keeping herself Informed concerning&#13;
the best thought of the times, lives&#13;
the youngest and the last cf that historic&#13;
family which provided that first&#13;
aggressive martyr who carried war&#13;
into the southern states, and with but&#13;
twenty-one other men captured and_&#13;
held a United States arsenal for two&#13;
days against state and national troop:-&#13;
Sentiment Not Appreciated.&#13;
The prince of Wales can be cutting&#13;
as well as courteous, and when he isn't&#13;
in the mood for feminjne pleasantries&#13;
he will not take them even fronrsoeie^&#13;
ty beauties. Recently at a large bazaar&#13;
the prince, being tired, entered&#13;
the refreshment room and asked a certain&#13;
well-known society beauty, who&#13;
was performing the role of waitress,&#13;
for a cup of tea. This was soon&#13;
brought to his royal highness, who,&#13;
smiling, asked her how much he owed&#13;
hetvfor it. "The price of the cup of&#13;
tea, your royal highness, is half a&#13;
crown ordinarily, but (taking a sip&#13;
from the tea cup) when I drink from&#13;
it the price is one guinea." "I see," replied&#13;
the prince, quietly, placing a&#13;
guinea on the table. Then, placing half&#13;
crown beside it, he said: "The guinea&#13;
liquidates my first debt, and now&#13;
might I trouble you to bring me an ordinary&#13;
cup of tea, as I am thirsty?"&#13;
The social beauty was too crushed to&#13;
bring his royal highness the second&#13;
cup.—New York Press.&#13;
13&#13;
The Reason She Was Offended.&#13;
"I shall never speak to him again,"&#13;
she declared. "Why not?" her chum&#13;
asked. "When we were at'that concert&#13;
the other night I told him if he&#13;
didn't take me out of the crowd I&#13;
would faint, and he would have to&#13;
carry me away." "Yes!" "Well, you'd&#13;
have thought his life depended on&#13;
getting me out of there in a hurry!" .&#13;
Purple Ore from Asia. *&#13;
A Norwegian vessel has just brought&#13;
to Philadelphia a load of purple ore&#13;
taken from the site of the ancient&#13;
city of Telmessus, In Asia Minor. The&#13;
boat was loaded at Macri, or Makree,&#13;
a small port near the site of Telmessus&#13;
and about fifty miles from Rhodes.&#13;
The cargo, which will be used" ta "the&#13;
manufacture of paint, was dug from&#13;
the great amphitheater of Telmessus,&#13;
which historians say has a seating&#13;
capacity of 20,000 persons. A volcanic&#13;
umptlon destroyed the city'and It is&#13;
fiaid that the earth in the vicinity was&#13;
transformed into a mass of ore, for&#13;
Which there is now a demand frou; ail&#13;
parts of the world.&#13;
German Hen's Laying CaparUr.&#13;
The common German hen lays about&#13;
500 or 600 eggs in ten years. In the&#13;
first year the number is only ten to&#13;
twenty; in the seconJ, third and&#13;
fourth, 100 to 136 each,_whence it again&#13;
diminishes to ten i%*ke i**i year.—&#13;
V"1&#13;
wmmmmmmm&#13;
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T R A N S V A A L W A R I T f t M * .&#13;
L o r d R o b e r t s U M s e n t b u l l e t i n s o f&#13;
t w o s m a l l fights, oooorriatf o * J u n e 2o*&#13;
&amp;nd 87, In w h i c h tlift-Boers w e r e d i s -&#13;
aomflted, I n ^ d l s p s t j d i faom Pretoria,&#13;
fated J u n e 2ft, . s a y s . . . A s m a l l force o f&#13;
m o u n t e d troop*; W l t V t w o g u n s , comm&#13;
a n d e d b y L i e u t - C o X Dreiper, w a s a t - ,&#13;
t a s k e d b y tee* e n e m y u n d e r Prefers a n d&#13;
N e i , o n t h e avorafeostof J u n e 26, • s e v e n&#13;
m i l e s nortU.oi SenakaL T h e y beat off&#13;
t h e / e n e m y . / a n d b u r n e d t h e i r l a a g e r .&#13;
Our c a s u a l t i e s w e r e t h r e e w o u n d e d a n d&#13;
1 0 b i l l e d . H u n t e r , temporarily c o m -&#13;
m a n d i h g I a n H a m i l t o n ' s troops, made&#13;
t h e march''from! H e i d e l b e r g t o w a r d&#13;
F r a n k f o r t o n tlW 28th w i t h o u t m e e t i n g&#13;
a n y opposition.' T h e e n e m y a t t a c k e d&#13;
o q r R o o d e y a t Bprnit p o s t o n t h e railw&#13;
a y - t h e s a m e day, b u t w e r e e a s i l y&#13;
b e a t e n e t t ' b y a d e t a c h m e n t of t h e&#13;
D e r b y s h i r e l i g h t i n f a n t r y , t h e W e s t&#13;
A u s t r a l i a n m o u n t e d 15-pounder, a n d&#13;
ail armored train. B a d e n - P o w e l l reports&#13;
t h e capture of a n influential B o e r&#13;
n a m e d B a y , w h o w a s endeavoring t o&#13;
raise a c o m m a n d o i n t h e E n s t e n b e r g&#13;
district. A patrol b r o u g h t i n over 100&#13;
rifles. More t h a n 4,000 rifles a n d 1,000&#13;
' inferior pieces h a v e b e e n t a k e n d u r i n g&#13;
t h e last f e w d a y s . "&#13;
Lord Roberts' s i x c o l u m n s are c o n -&#13;
v e r g i n g a p p a r e n t l y s o a s t o close i n&#13;
upon t h e Free Staters, a l t h o u g h decisive&#13;
results c a n n o t b e e x p e c t e d for several&#13;
days. A n u m b e r of Boers w h o&#13;
w e r e supposed t o be w i t h i n t h e wide-&#13;
Hung n o t have broken, or rather s t o l e n ,&#13;
t h r o u g h y e n . Rundle's F i c k s b u r g - S e n -&#13;
ukal l i n e s .&#13;
E i g h t y H o l l a n d e r s h a v e been l o d g e d&#13;
in juil at S t a n d e r t o n f o r d e s t r o y i n g&#13;
property prior t o t h e B r i t i s h occup&#13;
a t i o n . ^&#13;
T h e f o r e i g n m i l i t a r y a t t a c h e s w h o&#13;
w e r e w i t h Lox-d R o b e r t s arg n o w i n&#13;
if Cape T o w n , e u route for Europe.&#13;
• fm • • • — - 11 11 1 •— • — - . . . • .&#13;
C H I N A W A R N E W S .&#13;
T h e chief developeinent at W a s h i n g -&#13;
ton on t h e 25th in t h e Chinese situat&#13;
i o n W a s t h e effort of t h e Chinese m i n -&#13;
ister, Wu T i n g F a n g , t o secure an armistice&#13;
in t h e operation of American&#13;
troops until Li H u n g Chang c o u l d&#13;
reach Pekin a n d - b r i n g a b o u t a cessation&#13;
of t h e disorder. T h e proposition&#13;
i s rather a novel o n e , a n d i s b a s e d&#13;
upon t h e r e p r e s e n t a t i o n s of t h e vicet&#13;
o y s of t h e i m i w r t a n t provinces of t h e&#13;
V a n g t s e K i a n g v a l l e y t h a t t h e y c a n&#13;
m a i n t a i n o r d e r w i t h o u t t h e aid of fore&#13;
i g n troops, a n d t h a t t h e presence of&#13;
the foreigners w o u l d a c t m e r e l y a s a n&#13;
incentive to disorder.&#13;
Seymourls e x p e d i t i o n h a s been relieved,&#13;
h a v i n g failed t o connect w i t h&#13;
Pekin. T h e r e i s n o n e w s from P e k i n&#13;
... i t t h i s date, J u n e 28. Russian Col.&#13;
Schteile, c o m m a n d i n g t h e c o m b i n e d&#13;
forces, of, 10,000 m e n , i s s u p p o s e d t o be,&#13;
proceeding t o P e k i n . Seymour's e x -&#13;
pedition is r e t u r n i n g t o T i e n Tsin.&#13;
His force h a s suffered g r e a t l y . I t is&#13;
estimated t h a t from 40,000 t o 6Q,000&#13;
Chinese troops are n o w before P e k i n .&#13;
Boxers from all s e c t i o n s arc s w a r m i n g&#13;
there.&#13;
Rear Admiral Kempff, reports by a&#13;
Japanese torpedo boat, t h a t t h e combined&#13;
forces e n t e r e d T i e n Tsin on J u n e&#13;
23, s u s t a i n i n g s m a l l loss. T h e y s t a r t e d&#13;
i&gt;n t h e f o l l o w i n g d a y t o relieve t h e&#13;
force w h i c h l e f t T i e n Tuin o n J u n o 10,-&#13;
and w h i c h is b e l i e v e d t o be surrounded&#13;
near Pekin. A c c o r d i n g t o J a p a n e s e&#13;
reports Admiral S e y m o u r h a s b e e n&#13;
captured and t h e m i n i s t e r s h a v e l e f t&#13;
lJ ekiu. guarded b y Chinese soldiers.&#13;
Their w h e r e a b o u t s is u n k n o w n .&#13;
B A S E B A L L .&#13;
Below w&lt;; submit the oSlslal standing of the&#13;
clubso( bhs National ani American league* up&#13;
loacd Including Friday, June 3tth:&#13;
Woo. Lost Per ct&#13;
Brooklyn 35 18 .660&#13;
.Philadelphia 33 22 .600&#13;
Boston 27 26 .509&#13;
PtttsjUurg £8 £8 .500&#13;
Cincinnati &amp;&gt; 20 .463&#13;
Chicago, 25 80 .455&#13;
St Louis 82 29 .431&#13;
New York 19 32 .373&#13;
AHBUICAN LKACCX.&#13;
Won. Lost. Per et.&#13;
Chteaso 37 23 .617&#13;
Indianapolis 32 S3 .682&#13;
Milwaukee....' 33 27 .550&#13;
Cleveland 29 28 .£09&#13;
Minneapolis 30 -31 .492&#13;
KansasCity 30 33 .476&#13;
Detroit.... 21 34 «414&#13;
Buffalo: • 22 38 .367&#13;
T H E M A R K E T S .&#13;
LIVE 8TOUK.&#13;
N«w York— Cattle Sheep Lamb*&#13;
Best prudes.. .$4 4u@a 80 94 75 «7 5.1&#13;
Lower grade*- a &amp;K4* *U 3 23 5 60&#13;
C h i c a g o —&#13;
Best grades..&#13;
Lower untiles.&#13;
.5 1035 75&#13;
.3 W&lt;*1 75&#13;
Detroit—&#13;
Best grades....3 75®•» 75&#13;
Lower grades, i 50jj»3 75&#13;
Buffalo—&#13;
Best erodes....5 0035 35&#13;
Lower grades -3 OJttS ft)&#13;
Clnelanftti—&#13;
Best grades....5 0OQ5 SO&#13;
Lower grades..2 25^4 5J&#13;
rutebarg,&#13;
Best grades....5 3005 8)&#13;
Lower grades. .8 &amp;UW6 00&#13;
5 03&#13;
4 40&#13;
453&#13;
3&amp;J&#13;
525&#13;
4 8o&#13;
4 05&#13;
3 86&#13;
470&#13;
4 4J&#13;
633&#13;
6 0S&#13;
700&#13;
553&#13;
7 00&#13;
5 75&#13;
675&#13;
509&#13;
SOJ&#13;
4 OJ&#13;
Hogs&#13;
»5 80&#13;
5 6J&#13;
5 25&#13;
500&#13;
5 35&#13;
6 10&#13;
550&#13;
&amp; 10&#13;
530&#13;
Br 00&#13;
5 45&#13;
515&#13;
G R A I N , KTG.&#13;
Wheat. Corn, Oats.&#13;
No. /red No. 2 mlr No, iwhite&#13;
New York 90$»» 47Q47!« tSOCSH&#13;
Chicago 8:d82X 41Q4I* &amp;££**&#13;
"Detroit 87QS7* 43^13 S8&amp;»*i&#13;
Toledo 87Q87* 43&amp;13K &amp;&amp;B&gt;&#13;
Cloolnnmtl .86^)5 4 4 ^ ( ^ *&lt;8k»6\&#13;
ritUburg: 80Q80K 4*&amp;» JO^IOS&#13;
Buffalo '—[0@88&gt;i ii&amp;U -—^ftd2»44V&#13;
•Detroit—Hav. No. I Timothy. II? 03 per ton.&#13;
Potatoen, \Oo per bu. LAv6 Poultry, sprint&#13;
••hlokcQK, »Hc per lb; fowls. 9o; turkoys, loo;&#13;
• UCKH. ¥^C. K&gt;rt(s, Mtrlotly fresh, 12c per doxoa.&#13;
cutter, bo^t dairy, ico per lb; ereanery, 18c&#13;
Tbor* U a Claat of Paoote&#13;
WHoaM« i n j u r e d b y t h e vm o f coffee.&#13;
Btfoently t h e r e h a s b e e n p l x w d i n a l l&#13;
t H « J T « » j a r s^re^.^/.iJiB^.prepftimtt©©.&#13;
C4*iled GEAIN-O, m a d e o f pure g r a i n s ,&#13;
t h a t t a k e s t h e p l a c e of coffee. T h e m o a t&#13;
dedicate s t o m a c h r e c e i v e s i t w i t h o u t&#13;
distress, a n d b u t f e w c a n t e l l i t f r o m&#13;
coffee. I t d o e s n o t cost o v e r o n e - f o u r t h&#13;
a s m u c h . Children m a y drink i t w i t h&#13;
g r e a t benefit. 15 c e n t s a n d 25 c e n t s&#13;
per p a c k a g e . T r y i t . A s k for G B A I N - O .&#13;
Booking Boats for Bowlag Boyalty.&#13;
It Is n o t g e n e r a l l y k n o w n t h a t w h e n&#13;
royal personages intend t o t a k e a l o n g&#13;
public drive, i n t h e course o f w h i c h&#13;
t h e y w i l l undoubtedly b e compelled t o&#13;
bow s e v e r a l hundred t i m e s , t h a t a&#13;
c o c k i n g s e a t i s arranged in t h e ear*&#13;
riage. Such a s e a t helps t h e perpetual&#13;
b p w i n g motion, w h i c h o t h e r w i s e w o u l d&#13;
produce a fearful headache, if n o t Injury&#13;
t o the spine. Queen Victoria used&#13;
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i n Dublin recently.&#13;
M E D I C A L B O O K F R E E .&#13;
"Know Thyself,*' a Book For Men Only,&#13;
sent Free, postpaid, sealed, to any male&#13;
reader mentioning this paper: 6c for&#13;
postage. The Science of Life, or Self-Preservation,&#13;
the Gold Medal Prize Treatise,&#13;
the best Medical Book of th s o r any age.&#13;
870 pp., with engravings and prescriptions.&#13;
Only 25c paper covers. Library Edition,&#13;
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ical Institute, No. 4 Bulfinch St., Boston,&#13;
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Write today for these books; keys to&#13;
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A g e d Literary Woman.&#13;
Julia Ward H o w e celebrated her 81st&#13;
b i r t h d a y t h * other day. In g i r l h o o d&#13;
she a n d her t w o sisters were k n o w n a s&#13;
t h e Three Graces, but in late life s h e&#13;
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Muses and h a s been a n important figure&#13;
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Knill's White Liver Pills, the it rent Liverlnvigorator.&#13;
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Taking a f a l l Out of Her Friend.&#13;
E t h e l (fishing for a c o m p l i m e n t ) —&#13;
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In l o v e w i t h ? " Clarissa—"That's w h a t&#13;
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In m e m o r y ' s c o n s e r v a t o r y f o r g e t - m e -&#13;
n o t a s h o u l d ever bloom.&#13;
F i d e l i t y , f a i t h f u l n e s s , f r i e n d s h i p —&#13;
w h a t a g l o r i o u s trinity.&#13;
I t i p a y s t o d o r i g h t , b u t o n e s h o u l d&#13;
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Bwevs1 taflviteSy WF &lt;&#13;
Ftnkham's VesjetsM* C«&#13;
Cm Female W a l r a i m&#13;
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No M a n L i k e s t o B e B a l d ,&#13;
The best way t o prevent it is to use Coke&#13;
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The advice of some people should be accompanied&#13;
with printed directions for taking.&#13;
Hall's Catarrh Cure&#13;
Is a constitutional cure. Price. 75a&#13;
Few people would be conceited if they could&#13;
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Mrs. Wlnslow's Soothing Syrup.&#13;
For children teething, softens the gams, reduces tn&lt;&#13;
flaaunaUon, allays pain.cores wind cduc 25c a bottle.&#13;
In Mexico children who have their lessons&#13;
well prepared arc allowed to smoke.&#13;
Fins; Salt Cares Headache.&#13;
A 10c trial package FREE. Address, The Flag&#13;
Salt Remedy Co.. Savannah, N. Y.&#13;
A mad dog never takes a drink. Some men get&#13;
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A Book of Choice Reel pies&#13;
Sent free by Walter Baker it, Co. Ltd.. Dorchester.&#13;
Mass. Mention this paper.&#13;
No mntter how homely a man is you can always&#13;
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A vigorous growth and the original Color glvea to&#13;
the batr.by PAKKXB'S HAIK BXLSAM. HtatpaacoBJis. too best care for corns. IScts.&#13;
A true kiss is the resultant effect of a combustion&#13;
of love and happiness.&#13;
I do not believe Piso's Cure for Consumption&#13;
has an equal for coughs and colds.—JOHN F.&#13;
BOYEB, Trinity Springs. Ind., Feb. 5, 1900.&#13;
Dreamy eyes are usually wide awake when&#13;
the possessor is wrathy.&#13;
Manlore Self Opening Gate.&#13;
Catalog tree. Manlove Gate Co., Milton, Indiana,&#13;
There is no need to borrow trouble; it usually&#13;
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Browm's Teething Cortf/al corrects disordered&#13;
bowels when babies are teething.&#13;
* * l h » v e b e e n t r o u b l e d w i t h f e m a l e&#13;
w e a k n e s s i n i t s w o r s t f o r m f o r&#13;
a b o u t t o n year*. I h a d l e n c o r r b e e a&#13;
a n d w a s s o w e a k t h a t I c o u l d n o t&#13;
d o m y h o u s e w o r k . I a l s o h a d fall-,&#13;
tag of t h e w o m b a n d i n f l a m m a t i o n o f&#13;
t h e w o m b a n d o v a r i e s&#13;
a n d a t m e n s t r u a l '&#13;
periods I suffered terribly.&#13;
A t t i m e s m y&#13;
b a c k w o u l d a c h e&#13;
v e r y hard. I c o u l d&#13;
n o t l i f t a n y t h i n g&#13;
o r d o a n y h e a v y&#13;
w o r k ; w a s n o t a b l e&#13;
t o s t a n d o n m y feet.&#13;
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t h e y d i d m e n o&#13;
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I c o n c l u d e d t o t r y y o u r m e d i c i n e a n d&#13;
I c a n t r u l y s a y i t d o e s a l l t h a t y o u&#13;
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V e g e t a b l e C o m p o u n d a n d s e v e n packa&#13;
g e s o f S a n a t i v e W a s h h a v e m a d e a&#13;
n e w w o m a n o f m e . I h a v e h a d n o&#13;
w o m b t r o u b l e since t a k i n g t h e fifth&#13;
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y e a r s ; c a n d o a l l m y o w n h o u s e w o r k ,&#13;
s l e e p w e l l , h a v e a g o o d a p p e t i t e a n d&#13;
n o w f e e l t h a t life i s w o r t h l i v i n g . I&#13;
o w e a l l t o L y d i a E. P i n k h a m ' s V e g e t a -&#13;
b l e Compound. I f e e l t h a t i t h a s saved&#13;
m y life a n d w o u l d n o t b e w i t h o u t i t for&#13;
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m e n d y o u r m e d i c i n e t o a l l m y s e x , for I&#13;
k n o w if t h e y f o l l o w y o u r directions,&#13;
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T H O M P S O N , S o u t h H o t S p r i n g s , A r k .&#13;
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W a s h i n g t o n a n d Oregon, a l t o prairie&#13;
a n d timber U n a s near railroad o r w a t -&#13;
e r communicaj5onr that c a n be b o u g h t&#13;
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Climate i n t h e United 8tates. N o f a i l -&#13;
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M. Gerome, t h e F r e n c h sculptor, h a s&#13;
been c o m m i s s i o n e d b y a F r e n c h m i l i -&#13;
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m o n u m e n t to be placed o n t h e field of&#13;
W a t e r l o o a t t h e s p o t where t h e l a s t&#13;
squares of t h e French army fell under&#13;
N a p o l e o n . I t will be t h e first F r e n c h&#13;
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H e w h o l o v e s p u r i t y u s u a l l y a d m i r e s&#13;
flowers also.&#13;
i m p o r t a n t t o M o t h e r s .&#13;
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Signatareof ^ ¾ ^ ¾ ¾ ^&#13;
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P o w e r i s e v e r s t e a l i n g from t h e m a n y&#13;
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L a n e ' s F a m i l y Medicine.&#13;
Moves t h e b o w e l s e a c h day. I n order&#13;
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Love i s n o t o n l y a s e n t i m e n t ; i t i s a n&#13;
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Cheap Excursions t o Colorado,&#13;
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p. m. Tickets will also be good on&#13;
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bastian, G. P. A.. Chicago.&#13;
Cool Air for Washington.&#13;
A m a n n r m e d P o w d e r m a k e r and h i s&#13;
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W a s h i n g t o n and lay* a n undergrouno&#13;
s y s t e m of pipes a n d conduits for t h e&#13;
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Ladle* Can W e a r Shoes.&#13;
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bunions. A l l d r u rgists and s h o e stores,&#13;
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A l l e n S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N . Y .&#13;
U S E - T M E ^ ' . ; G E f ^ . l l « e - MURRAY&amp; ; - -&#13;
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THE U N , V E R S A L P E R F U M E -&#13;
FOB THE HANDKERCHIEF&#13;
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W . N . U — D E T R O I T — N O . 2 7 - - 1 9 0 0&#13;
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SEWIN8 HACWIE&#13;
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make twenty-five different&#13;
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Deet; aad beat lowpriced&#13;
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Send for catalogue and&#13;
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i. B. AL0RICH. State • * . .&#13;
228 Woodward Ave.,&#13;
nrsrraorr, Mica.&#13;
When a small hoy loses his appetite, ft is in&#13;
order to call a doctor.&#13;
When cycling, take a bar of White's Yucatan.&#13;
You can ride further and easier.&#13;
Officers regard the quarrels of privates a s ;&#13;
rank affair*.&#13;
A man who lacks sense, bittsrly objects to it I—.&#13;
in others. | &gt;L&#13;
BUT WRETCHED Fight on for wealth, old "Money Bags,"&#13;
your liver is drying up and bowels wearing&#13;
out, some day you will cry aloud for&#13;
health, offering *&amp; y&lt;**r wealth, but you&#13;
will not get it because you neglected Nature&#13;
in your mad rush to get gold. No matter&#13;
what you do, or what ails you, to-day is&#13;
the day—every day is the day—to keep&#13;
watch of Nature's wants—ano help your&#13;
bowels act regularly—CASCAKETS will&#13;
help Nature help you. Neglect^neans bile&#13;
in the blood, foul breath, and awful pains&#13;
in the back of the head with a loathing&#13;
and bad feeling for all that is good in life.&#13;
Don't care how rich or poor you are, you&#13;
can't be well if you have bowel trouble,&#13;
you will be regular if you take CASCARETS—&#13;
get them to-day—CASCARETS—&#13;
in metal box; cost 10 cents; take one, eat&#13;
it like candy and it will work gently while&#13;
you sleep. It cures; that means it strengthens&#13;
the muscular walls of the bowels and&#13;
gives them new life; then they act regularly and naturally; that is what you want—&#13;
it is guaranteed to be found in—&#13;
a s ^ ^ * ^ THE IDEAL LAXATIVE .&#13;
10c&#13;
25c. 50c. S T F O R T H E ALL&#13;
DRUGGISTS&#13;
T o a n y needy mortal suffering from bowel troubles i n d toe poor to b o y CASCARETS w e will scad a box free.&#13;
Sterling R e m e d y Company, Chicago or N e w York, mentioning advertisement and paper.&#13;
HALF A TRAIN LOAD O repremnt* taepurcba** mn w df tOoOMPdTuUiCuSt, w eTekM, «wlh«exn&gt; wtael UpleaaceWd rolrod4eor*f fworl towu rt o•o bMvdycsmtoran oMf lcnofwfe. eb oattoorner*&#13;
U.a)!mib4a7fcSoperioroMeropSan»oe, wlh-t I . ITl »&gt;lb.lM6iM0la.ttL^Mort«r&gt;s*berTyJIt&gt;e.jeTb.||t47t&#13;
M lb. tl J&amp;i 1*» lb. «M.oa To tbe»e who do sot want to mart taetr own coffee*, we offer M M a M r i « M d bar*&#13;
•AtnelB routedooffeea,aafoliown- Splendtd oM tttoreeeted. ttlfe,SJ.ISi Nib. SVT&amp;iieelb.M1.3&amp;. Kto,extra&#13;
value, tft lb. jM.SOt M &lt;*»- Mi " • Ih, tl&amp;aV Golden We* ebokw, M lbV.sT.S3; 6© lb. *.*••, ice lfc IU.M. Saa»&#13;
tea. fancy. \5)V. SJL.47A » l b . . &lt; * ! M* lb. OUft Saaaoe. Peabeny. l*1bVtTi7i «• lb. *?.»i ia»)b. »14.40. Afrtraji&#13;
Jara.l*Ih.tl.a7iI&lt;LlbIjfc&amp;i 10» Ib.tlS.7* Speetalblend. Ja*» and Moeaa Savor. M foe*.??; »• !&amp;.•*.»;&#13;
10» lb. »17.7». In orderine frowtaay of the above, aav from S P I O I A L BARGAINS) IN CO*PCS. Order&#13;
Immediately, became there tea prooatrtltrjr of anoSwr rtae inpX^Cf^nmSS^SZiZiS^^Sameimut&#13;
ca*b to cover tranepottattoutibArrea, Batanee C, O. O. If deaireu ' &gt;. " T . M. I I O « | j r r s « SUPPLY HOUSIe M m M l A * O U S , MINN.&#13;
DOLLARS SAVED I W p a S t*-*we S w7-iol l« q•&lt;'b*o•t e«1 -ybou* M3otu rd *opornic ae^tt&#13;
each.&#13;
wbiiethcy laet win a5llai L _&#13;
„ Koll and Cap SooStif. eoai&#13;
laclnde one&#13;
W V w j » a f i n w &gt; *9f«Waw&gt;aW from as. ail|fh*»iia«iwinwowea» » » « «&#13;
Otber Kood*la proportion. Saadforprteesor*end o»your wtlmate •^^[J*"'J»'&#13;
•tOOPINO a n d S l D I N O . We aava eevera! cartbu««bla« • to********&#13;
fi3^o*MS^*rffilnRgw«d Brtek «•»"«. per eqo.re Sa^JS^Corrmfated -^^^^-}^^^^^&#13;
Bw»ded^elm&gt;^per»&lt;|ttar«.Sa.7S. 8Ui«Un«&amp;ea» Roeflftg. cowtpjete. S^^CjQ,.. Koll e^^Caj^oo»a»%coa»&#13;
He**. S 3 . 0 9 T Vr» &gt;*&gt;» «f* »e»&lt;»«wre» or more. 8e per «qaare fc». tbe»e pHcwa lac lode ooy.fcgg* wJ*w» aad&#13;
OMtSeuawrfwaibwUheacbjnnare. W A M T I D T Tbe aanesaad piwtoawwaw.jay^aM^wbowant* bay&#13;
V ^ a 4 » » r V l a U ? ! w b i ^ t e p r ^ w r w W ^ / a r S S ^ a g e O n S ^ ^ £ ^ ^ S * ^ Z 2 2 r l T « A T S i »&#13;
Benoa wbo i*nde tw%be names and add retwe* of 17 or roore reliebte J^omn^A •*\tfr &lt;wneabM*a,f OAnrCMt&#13;
FlSMx W e b « v e e v e T ^ f n r i a f l « h l i i w « W u a i r f w » r t ^ « ^ ^ S e B d *"°*™»t^J^LSS3^^vSSV&#13;
L O O w l •* uaasand Tentt coBtaJuina* » pegee, »ia» »H * Wi toebeej It will be a»at poaUce paid. FKISV&#13;
T•&gt; . «an. R«%OJ&gt;aBa—E mR^TtmSm' 9 8AUt iPnTaLvYa t HaaOMVUtaSt*S*, MWI lBmA rAeAaBpIoJHI . s, SHaWaav.&#13;
*-• ^ •» - 1 1 feSS 1¾^&#13;
H r &gt;'• rm** ' &lt; : &gt;: &gt; , " • • • • i , '•»''.*&#13;
•&lt;?'•'V&#13;
.'•4y/ *[1W&#13;
.fc'^j&#13;
•wy,m,&#13;
-.'i.'.'l.•/•»]&lt;••. '••.. ^&#13;
''•i , : ^ * ' v . , * . V'.&#13;
•'. / i '.&lt;.&#13;
fctf.&#13;
/ ,&#13;
m *&#13;
' v - &lt; • • ' • • ' * .&#13;
-¾ . - 7 .&#13;
m •j*te*&#13;
1¾&#13;
i - r *•;•&#13;
k-&#13;
T:&#13;
It:&#13;
V&#13;
1&#13;
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mw&#13;
ASK YOUR GROCER FOR UANDI TEA SOLD BY ALL FIRST-CLASS DEALERS.&#13;
IN SEALED PACK16ES ONLY-PURE AND FRA8RANT.&#13;
"IT COSTS MO MORE-TRY IT"&#13;
vjmm—mmm&#13;
HAMBURG.&#13;
Ruby Kiaby is visiting friends&#13;
in South Lyon.&#13;
Miss Winnie Burnett attended&#13;
the commencement at Howell last&#13;
week.&#13;
Frank Dunlavey was in Detroit&#13;
on business the later part of last&#13;
week.&#13;
Mrs. Chas. Dorr and daughter&#13;
of Brighton visited Mrs. Geo. Case&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. Grant Race and daughter&#13;
of Detroit are spending the summer&#13;
with Mrs. Truman Lake.&#13;
Mrs. Fred Qhewart 0f Dixborough&#13;
is visiting with her mother&#13;
Mrs. Wni. Featherly.&#13;
On Wednesday morning of last&#13;
week^ere-^was a class of nine&#13;
confirmed at the S t Stephens&#13;
church. \ ^&#13;
Owing to the pastor taking a"&#13;
vacation .there will be nomoreservice&#13;
at the Episcopal church until&#13;
further notice.&#13;
The Quarterly Conference will&#13;
be held at Whitmore Lake next&#13;
Sunday. In consequence there&#13;
wiU.be_.no service at the M. E.&#13;
church in this place.&#13;
L.&#13;
PARSHALLVILLE.&#13;
The WCTU met with Mrs.&#13;
Cleveland this week.&#13;
John Black and wife of Pontiac&#13;
are visiting at W. Wolverton's.&#13;
Miss Nellie Cole is visiting her&#13;
sister Mrs. M. G. Andrews, in&#13;
Owosso.&#13;
F r e d Reed is home again Having&#13;
Bold nnf, hifl lnnndry hnainoaa&#13;
in Dexter.&#13;
Pet Baistol and wife of Fenton&#13;
made us a pleasant call Sunday&#13;
afternoon.&#13;
George Dormire received quite&#13;
a severe fall in his barn one day&#13;
tlas week.&#13;
_ The many friends of A. C.&#13;
Wakeman will be sorry to learn&#13;
that he is failing quite fast&#13;
Little Mamie Cornell is making&#13;
a visit among her many friends&#13;
here—everybody is glad to see&#13;
her.&#13;
Miss Grace Tonkry and Miss&#13;
Estella Hill, of So. Lyon, were&#13;
guests of Miss-JJinnie Read the&#13;
past week.&#13;
Mrs. Davis, wife of Rev. Davis&#13;
of the Baptist church, has gone&#13;
for a few week's visit with Jackeon&#13;
and Hillsdale friends.&#13;
Tremaine Glaipie and Frank&#13;
Bravender, who have been running&#13;
a store here the past year,&#13;
have dissolved partnership, the&#13;
business going into the hands of a&#13;
receiver.&#13;
.¾1&#13;
h,T&lt;,!&#13;
PETTYSVILLE.&#13;
A good rain would be appreciated&#13;
in these parts.&#13;
Mr. Charles Mercer is in Pon -&#13;
tiac on business.&#13;
»&#13;
. Mr. Octave Girard is visiting&#13;
hieHousin, Hiram Gardner.&#13;
"Mia*- Mattt Larkin spent the&#13;
,|»*tweek visiting her sister in&#13;
Ann Arbjor.&#13;
M r * &amp; Gardner is entertaining&#13;
her brotkto and his wife from Aibioa&#13;
this w*dkv&#13;
Bert Hooker and "friend" were&#13;
in Dexter Saturday.&#13;
Miss Ella Melvin was home&#13;
from Hamburg Sunday.&#13;
Ed. Mercer, wife and son spent&#13;
Sunday at Wm. Mercer's.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Gardner&#13;
visited at J. W. Placeway's the&#13;
first of the week.&#13;
The North'Hamburg C. E. society&#13;
will serve ice cream at Jas.&#13;
Borroughs Friday night of this&#13;
week.&#13;
Mrs. Lyman Peck and daughter&#13;
Ethel spent last week visiting&#13;
friends and relatives in White&#13;
Oak and Marion.&#13;
The June meeting of the farmers&#13;
club was held at G. P. Lambertson&#13;
last Saturday and a good&#13;
time was enjoyed by all present.&#13;
EAST PUTNAM.&#13;
Albert Mills spent Sunday at&#13;
this place.&#13;
Fred Fish and sister Mabel were&#13;
in Howell Thursday last.&#13;
Fred Lake and wife, of Marion,&#13;
spent Sunday with relatives here.&#13;
Mrs. Geo. Brown and daughter&#13;
Kate visited in Hamburg last&#13;
week.&#13;
Miss Mame Fish, of Bancroft,&#13;
is spending her vacation in this&#13;
place.&#13;
Mrs. J. R. Hall, and Misses Flo&#13;
and Nettie Hall visited relatives&#13;
in Chilson Monday.&#13;
Prof, and Mrs Bennett, of the&#13;
Iowa Agricultural College are visiting&#13;
at W. H. Placeway's.&#13;
The Farmers' Club held a pleasajit&#13;
meeting at the home of G. P.&#13;
Lambertson on Saturday last&#13;
"UNADILLA.&#13;
The Farmers are Busy haying&#13;
this week.&#13;
Frank Barnum was in, Fowlerville&#13;
Monday last&#13;
Miss Gertrude Webb Sundayed&#13;
under the parental roof.&#13;
Miss Gertrude Mills from Chelsea&#13;
was home over Sunday.&#13;
Mi88 Fannie Laverock was quite&#13;
sick the latter of last week.&#13;
Chas. Mole from Pinckney called&#13;
at Jas. Hoards last Sunday.&#13;
Mr. M. C. Weston is spending&#13;
the week with friends in Pinckney.&#13;
Ben , Morris from Chelsea is&#13;
spending the week at A. C. Watson's.&#13;
^&#13;
Mrs. Eugene Smith from Ionia&#13;
is visiting at R. Barnums fo r a&#13;
few days.&#13;
Mrs. Liga Hudler from Lyndon&#13;
Emmet Hadly has a new Columbia&#13;
Cbainless wheel.&#13;
Arthur Allyn of North lake visited&#13;
relatives here Saturday.&#13;
Wirt Barnum and wife visited&#13;
her parents in Munith hst week.&#13;
The Plainfield ball team failed&#13;
to put in an appearance Saturday.&#13;
The people in this vicinity celebrated&#13;
the Fourth at North lake.&#13;
Bert Hadly from Waterloo visited&#13;
his parents here over Sunday.&#13;
Jennie Watson is spending a&#13;
few days with her sister in Durand.&#13;
-,-&#13;
Chas Hartsuff had P; new drive&#13;
well put down at his residence last&#13;
week.&#13;
Mrs. Secor from Detroit visited&#13;
her son Will at this place last&#13;
week.&#13;
Miss Eleanor Bird of Stockbridge&#13;
called on friends here Wednesday.&#13;
Ann Liza Gilbert is now doing&#13;
the jaitor work of the Presbyterian&#13;
church.&#13;
Miss Nora Durkee from Anderson&#13;
visited her aunt Nancy here&#13;
Tuesday.&#13;
Jean Pyper started for Wequetotsing&#13;
-Northern Michigan last&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
Bert Bullis from Stockbridge&#13;
called on friends in this place last&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
Fred Durkee of Anderson spent&#13;
the latter part of last week at&#13;
Arthur Mays.&#13;
Mrs. 4. C. Watson and son,&#13;
John are spending the week with&#13;
friends in Durand.&#13;
Rev. Horace Palmer wife and&#13;
son Archie spent last week with&#13;
friends at Portage Lake.&#13;
The Misses Flora and Minnie&#13;
Grimes former of Munith visited&#13;
at Wm. Pyper's last Saturday.&#13;
Frank Marshall wife and family&#13;
from Stockbridge spent the first&#13;
of the week with his mother here.&#13;
An aged father and mother will&#13;
mourn a dutiful son;*sister* and brothers,&#13;
a kind, and generous brother;&#13;
A young wife and baby girl a tender&#13;
loving husband and fatber.&#13;
After an eloquent and touching sermon&#13;
by Fr. Com 'ford, the remains&#13;
were laid to rest u cemetery at Pinckney,&#13;
near the home of bis childhood.&#13;
GREGORY.&#13;
Mrs. M. E. Kuhn is very ill at&#13;
the present time.&#13;
Young America has been celebrating&#13;
with much noise a full&#13;
week.&#13;
There was a general and widespread&#13;
despersion of our citizens&#13;
to spend the Fourth.&#13;
J. C. Dickinson and daughter&#13;
were callers in * this village Sunday,&#13;
from Stockbridge.&#13;
James Burden is raising the&#13;
barn on the Webb place and putting&#13;
a basement under it and othimprovements.&#13;
While neighboring places report&#13;
good rains, they seem to pass&#13;
by Gregory and the drouth is already&#13;
very sore.&#13;
OBMTOiBY*&#13;
Died, in Lansing, on Tueseay, June&#13;
26, 1900, ot typhoid fever, Richard&#13;
Kuen, aged 32 years, 6 months and&#13;
16 days.&#13;
Deceased was born in Patnam, Livingston&#13;
county, Mich., December 10,&#13;
1867, where be spent the first 22 years&#13;
ot his pcacful life on the farm and in&#13;
school both as pupit and teacher. In&#13;
1890 he left the school room and en*&#13;
tere4 the hardware business at Howell&#13;
in tbe-empioy of C. G. Jewett. After&#13;
n've years of faitbinl, continued&#13;
service, he severed his connection with&#13;
Mr. Jewett to take a better position&#13;
with the firm or Benedict &amp; fiatz.&#13;
i. a 1 •*!_ ^ • ^ - w While with them, on June 15, 1897,&#13;
spent Sunday with her sister Mrs^ he was united in marriage to Miss&#13;
LOCAL.&#13;
Lyle Young love of Detroit, spent&#13;
the Fourth with his parents»in Marion.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Nixon of Fmdlay, 0.,&#13;
are stopping at the Travis cottage, oo&#13;
portage.&#13;
Mrs. b\ Travis and children of St,&#13;
Johns, are spending the summer at&#13;
their cottage on Portage.&#13;
A colt belonging to T. Birkett,&#13;
which Matt Brady was training on&#13;
the track, died very suddenly Tuesday.&#13;
The vault door of the bank which&#13;
was ruined by burglars a few weeks&#13;
ago was replaced the past week by a&#13;
new one.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Hettler and&#13;
son of Fowler, ^ave been the guests of&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Toncker at Portage the&#13;
past week.&#13;
Vesper services will be held at the&#13;
Cong'l churdh Sunday evening. Responsive&#13;
readings with hymns interspersed,&#13;
also a short address. The&#13;
service will be brief, pointed and practical.&#13;
N. JB. Mann and family, who have&#13;
been enjoying their usual week's outing&#13;
on Portage, break camp today.&#13;
Their mandolins and guitars furnished&#13;
fine music and was much appreciated.&#13;
SPSP « ^&#13;
Gnat. Teeple and family spent part&#13;
of this week with friend* in Detroit.&#13;
Miss Marion Clark of Blva, Mich.,&#13;
is spending the week with her parents&#13;
here.&#13;
The insurance company settled on&#13;
Tuesday with Mrs. £. W. Martin for&#13;
damage%y Thursdays tire.&#13;
Fred VanFleet of the Detroit Tribune&#13;
was the guest of relatives near&#13;
here over Sunday. He was a pleasant&#13;
calbr at this office.&#13;
At the social at John M. Harris'&#13;
last Friday evening, St. Mary's society&#13;
cleared over 140. Everyone reports&#13;
an excellent time.&#13;
The usual family picnics were held&#13;
at Portage lake this year and the day&#13;
was enjoyed by all although it registered&#13;
96 in the shade. The day was&#13;
fittingly closed by fireworks furnished&#13;
by N. B Mann. The array was exceptionally&#13;
fine.&#13;
week in going to press and may not&#13;
reach our readers on time. This is&#13;
the first time they have failed to reach&#13;
the post office Thursday morning in&#13;
nine years. Promptness is one of&#13;
our hobbies.&#13;
Resolutions for Special Election.&#13;
Be it resolved by the Common Council&#13;
of the Village of Pinckney, that a special&#13;
election be called to be held in the village&#13;
of Pinckney on the 16th day of July,&#13;
A. D., 1900, for the purpose of voting&#13;
upon a proposition to issue bonds against&#13;
said Village of Pinckney, in the sum not&#13;
exceeding One Thousand Dollars, for the&#13;
purpose of securing fire protection.&#13;
The vote upon such a proposition shall&#13;
be by a printed ballot, and shall be in the&#13;
following Words:—For the issuing of Village&#13;
Bonds for the purchase of fire protection&#13;
"Yes" [] For the issuing of Village&#13;
Bonds for the purchase of fire protection&#13;
"No" []&#13;
• ALEXANDER MCINTYRE, Pres.&#13;
R. H. TEIPLB, Clerk.&#13;
Adopted July 2, 1900.&#13;
ButlntM Locals.&#13;
'iftH'.'H"&#13;
Horse, Carriage aad Harness. : In?t&#13;
Owing to the Fourth and the: i*rf|%™n o f H - S* B e e d o r W* a 8 a , e g&#13;
that two correspondence came £$4|fcv ^ ' ' W T '&#13;
the DISPATCH is a few hours' latf-¾¼] EUjs saves your money at the Sur&#13;
prise Store.&#13;
For Sale.&#13;
My property on Main&#13;
cheap.&#13;
for sale&#13;
Delan&#13;
Ferry Mills.&#13;
Miss Bernice Allyn from North&#13;
Lake called on friends in this&#13;
place Monday.&#13;
- Wm. Pyper nearly lost a valuable&#13;
cow last Sunday by getting&#13;
mired in the Portage.&#13;
spent a few days the first of the&#13;
week with friends in this vicinity.&#13;
8eymour May from Grand Rapids&#13;
is spending a few days with&#13;
his Mother and sister at this&#13;
place.&#13;
Wm. Laverock was called Tuesday&#13;
to the bedside of his Mother&#13;
who lives in Owosso and in serriously&#13;
sick.&#13;
Mrs. Flora Watson, formerly of&#13;
this place and J. D. Coulton of&#13;
Jackson were nnited in marriage&#13;
at her residence in Chelsea, Friday,&#13;
June 29, Bey. O. 8. Jones&#13;
officiating.&#13;
Important Notice.&#13;
Commencing Friday, July 20, we shall close our store each Friday afternoon&#13;
at 12:30 o'clock during the balance of July andfor the entire month of August.&#13;
This we do to give our clerks a half holiday eac^kweek during the hot weather.&#13;
L» H . F i e l d .&#13;
The Red MapK.Sale.&#13;
It is now under full headway. It will be a sale uf surpawing&#13;
•interest; stimulated by more vigorous piice louU' than any previous Bee Hive Hale.&#13;
Tothose who have seen f h^workihg of "form er RexhMark sale8~tbe~wordr"RechMarkw&#13;
alone would be sufficient to carry the idea of phenomenal bargains. Particulars, however,&#13;
are always interesting, and especially to those of j^ou who have more recently&#13;
moved to Jackson and vininify. We, therefore, shall try to give you an idea of some&#13;
of the bargains offered by our various departments.&#13;
Julia Crawford and their union was&#13;
a happy one. In January, 1898. he&#13;
accepted a position then offered him,&#13;
as head salesman with the firm of C.&#13;
W. Norton &amp; Co., of Lansing and&#13;
moved to that city, taking with him&#13;
the confidence and gratitude of bis&#13;
late employers, and the respect of all&#13;
who knew him. Conscientious, ener-&#13;
Rev. Williams from Ann Arbor_getic and intelligent, he bad gained&#13;
bis promotions by honest, manly efforts&#13;
and his success seemed assured.&#13;
Cherishing always the truths learned&#13;
at his mother's knee, bis life was a&#13;
model of virtue. Cheerful, generous&#13;
and self sacrificing, devoted to bis&#13;
wife and little one, he was realizing&#13;
the dreams ot a happy home and life&#13;
was very dear. Bat the angel of&#13;
death hovered near. With patience&#13;
and fortitude born of an abiding faith&#13;
he bore the sufferings of his final illness.&#13;
God willed it so and on the 26th&#13;
day of June, 1900, attended by the&#13;
prayers and tears of those he held&#13;
nearest and dearest, he closed his&#13;
eyes forever, and; a nobis life was ended.&#13;
Ended here bat to begin in eternity.&#13;
'&#13;
L a dies' U n d e r w e a r ,&#13;
Ladies' Vests, white and ecru, Bed&#13;
Mark 12c.&#13;
Ladies' 19c Vests, various styles in white&#13;
and ecru, Red Mark, 15c.&#13;
Ladies' 25c Vests, long and short sleeves&#13;
high or lov necks, and sleeveless, Bed&#13;
Mark, 12c.&#13;
Elegant line of fancy White Vests in&#13;
Lisle and Swiss Ribs, prettily trimmed in&#13;
lace—3d and 39c values for, Red Mark 25c&#13;
Big assortment 50c fine Vesta for, Bed&#13;
Mark, 39c.&#13;
Ladies'Ecru Union Suits sold for 39c.&#13;
each, at Red Mark, 19c.&#13;
50c Union suits, white and ecru, Bed&#13;
Mark, 42c. .'&#13;
- Munsing Union Suits, 75c kind, Bed&#13;
Mark, 58c •&#13;
Munsing Union Suits, 89c and $1.00&#13;
kind, Bed Mark, 75c.&#13;
Munsing Suits, pure Lisle, $1.25 kind,&#13;
Bed Mark, 97c.&#13;
Munsing Union Suits, silkoline, blue,&#13;
flesh and white, extra fine value, $2.00&#13;
Bed Mark, $1.48.&#13;
Men's U n d e r w e a r ,&#13;
• Good 25c Plain and Fancy Balbriggans.&#13;
Bed Mark, 19c.&#13;
Men's extra good Balbriggans, really&#13;
worth 50c, for. Bed Mark, 35c.&#13;
Men's fine Bibbed Brown Bal., all sizes&#13;
shirts and drawers, 50c kind, Bed Mark 39&#13;
Men'*fine Casper Derby Bib., in mode&#13;
shades, $1.25, price for all sizes, Bed&#13;
Mark, 98c.&#13;
Munsing Union Suits for men one-onarter&#13;
and full sleeves, Balbriggan, $1.25&#13;
kind, for, Bed Mark 98c.&#13;
The best Overall in Jackson, Red Mark,&#13;
48c.&#13;
Men's 50c Work Shirt, Bed Mark, 45c.&#13;
Men'i $1.50JFlag Brand «Union Suit,&#13;
Balbriggan, Red Mark, $1.19.&#13;
Men's American Hosiery Co. Bicycle&#13;
knee length. Fine Balbriggan Drawers,&#13;
sell regular for $1.00 to $1.25, Bed Mark,&#13;
49c.&#13;
Regarding Domestics,&#13;
In the face of the big advances in the&#13;
price of cottons, we will during the month&#13;
of July, make a lower price than ever befdtit?&#13;
We bought these goods very early,&#13;
before any advance took place, and ara&#13;
prepared to give our customers the benefit.&#13;
This is the way the prices range in the&#13;
Bed Mark Sale:&#13;
All Best Dress Prints, worth today 6c.&#13;
Bed Mark 4}.&#13;
All Best Shirting Prints^ worth today&#13;
5c, Bed Mark 4c.&#13;
All best 12* Percales, Bed Mark 10c.&#13;
All best 15c Cambrics, Bed Marked. 12}e&#13;
The very best 12Jc Dress Ginghams, Bed&#13;
Marked 7$c.&#13;
A fine lot of Cheviots, Madras Cloths,&#13;
Empress Cords, Victory Zephyrs, Japanese&#13;
Crinkles, and Corded Percales. Goods&#13;
in values up to 20c yard, Red Mark 12Jc.&#13;
S h i r t W a i s t s .&#13;
Our full line of 98c Colored Shirt Waists&#13;
consisting of endless variety of styles and&#13;
cloths, Bed Mark 79c.&#13;
Our line of $1.25 Shirt Waists, Bed&#13;
Bark 98c.&#13;
$1.50 and $1.75 Shirt Waists, $1.25.&#13;
Our line of White Shirt Waisla is very&#13;
large and complete itfjvery way. We&#13;
have Bed Marked our $•* «nea to 79c.&#13;
Our $1.25 numbers to 9$o.&#13;
Our $1.75 values to $1J$.&#13;
Our $2.00 Waists to $1.6$.&#13;
Oar $2.50 ones to $2.19.&#13;
And all higher priced ones correspondlasjf.&#13;
L. H. FIELD.&#13;
»Utah.&#13;
v-4&#13;
• -&#13;
. *&#13;
«+ #..-&#13;
0 i » '</text>
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              <text>Use the Windows Snipping Tool to capture the area of the document you want to save. If you want multiple pages printed please see staff to print the pages you want. &lt;a href="https://howelllibrary.org/technology/#print" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View the library's printing information.&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch July 05, 1900</text>
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                <text>July 05, 1900 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>No Copyright - United States</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="6591">
                <text>1900-07-05</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="6592">
                <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>voLf.attin: PINOENBY, LIVING-STOW OO., MIOH., THURSDAY, JULY 12.1900.&#13;
I . I * a. u. Special Sale&#13;
Friday and Saturday&#13;
-i—&lt;-&#13;
.01&#13;
.01&#13;
.01&#13;
.01&#13;
.02&#13;
.02&#13;
.08&#13;
.03&#13;
/&#13;
/&#13;
•y&#13;
15 Marble* .&#13;
Good lead Pencils&#13;
6 Bbeeta Paper&#13;
1 Tablet&#13;
1 Pea Tablet&#13;
1 Spool tfCK&amp;tf thread&#13;
1 Flying Machine&#13;
1 Bottle Good Ink&#13;
Good Curling iron&#13;
1 Good Oil Can&#13;
3 Bart Good Toilet Soap.&#13;
3 Bars Laundry 8oap&#13;
Mens 10 cent Half Hose&#13;
Ladies Bose 15 cents Quality&#13;
hildrens Hose x&#13;
Stick Pins&#13;
Beauty Pins&#13;
Shirt Waist 8ets&#13;
Set White Metal Knives and Forks .75&#13;
Stag Handle Carving Set 1.50&#13;
Wbite Metal Sugar Spoons .05&#13;
) Metal Batter Knife .05&#13;
Set Nut Picks .15&#13;
1 Glass^utter .10&#13;
Good Whips .10 and 15&#13;
Pocket Sowr^rlver .05&#13;
A Good Tin Coffee or Tea Pot .10&#13;
A Good Nickel Coffee Pot .45&#13;
A Good Nickel Tea Pot .89&#13;
Large Size Boaster .25&#13;
Ladies Fancy Hose .10&#13;
Mens Double Knee Extra Heavy&#13;
Overalls .75 cent Quality .49&#13;
Mens Fancy Dress Shirts Latest&#13;
Styles and-Sbades .23 and .25&#13;
A Good Towel .05&#13;
A Better Towel .10&#13;
Extra Quality Towels .13 to .25&#13;
Ladiesu^rons .10&#13;
Our rafts on China and Glass Ware&#13;
are Right.&#13;
Cuff Buttons Per Pair .05 to .50&#13;
Belt Buokles .10 to .50&#13;
Collar Button, Gold Plate 2 for .05&#13;
Belt Rings 2 for .05&#13;
Brooches .10 to .50&#13;
Second-hand Cook Stove&#13;
H. W. Bl»L&gt;IS, Prop.&#13;
LOCAL NEWS. I DO YOUR BUTT.&#13;
Chas. Teeple is clerking for F, G.&#13;
Jackson.&#13;
H. G. Briggs and wife were in flowell&#13;
on Saturday.&#13;
Anew roof is being pat on the&#13;
Mann block this week.&#13;
Mr. Harry Goean visited friendt in&#13;
Ann Arbor over Sunday.&#13;
This vicinity was visited the last of&#13;
last week with excellent showers,&#13;
. Dr. W. B. Watts of Jackson, was a&#13;
caller in this place the last of last&#13;
-week. /&#13;
Mary May Cooper of Fowlerville is&#13;
the guest of her friend, Mi38 Ethel&#13;
J.005if t)orfee.&#13;
.05&#13;
.05&#13;
.07&#13;
.10&#13;
.05&#13;
.01&#13;
.01&#13;
.25&#13;
Bert Green and family of Stockbridge&#13;
8pent the pasc week in camp&#13;
at Portage.&#13;
S. Duri'ee, wife and daughter spent&#13;
part of last week with friends near&#13;
Fowlerville.&#13;
Miss Flora Culhane of Dexter spent&#13;
a couple of days last week with her&#13;
parents here.&#13;
Geo. Sigler and family and S. Durfee&#13;
and family are camping at Portage&#13;
this week.&#13;
Mrs. Alice Greer and Grand-daughter,&#13;
Miss Mabel Decker visited in&#13;
Iosco last week.&#13;
The Misses Kittie Brokaw and Madge&#13;
Van Winkle of Howell are visiting&#13;
at C. V. Van Winkle's.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Cbas. Field and son&#13;
of Whitmore lake spent Sunday with&#13;
Will Dunning and family.&#13;
On Friday evening, July 13, there&#13;
will he an ice cream social at the home&#13;
of E. P. McCluskey for the benefit of&#13;
St. Mary's church. A cordial mvatation&#13;
is extended to all.&#13;
Roy Hoff who has been the efficient&#13;
clerk in F. G. Jackson's store for several&#13;
years, severed his connection&#13;
there the past week to accept a position&#13;
with Holmes and Dancer of Stockbridge.&#13;
TEEPLE &amp; flfflwELt^-&#13;
General Hardware,&#13;
Have as complete an assortment of heavy and shelf hardware&#13;
as eaa befound in the county, and 1900 finds us&#13;
more thoroughly equipped than ever before.&#13;
Builders Hardware a Specialty.&#13;
Doors and Common Sash always in stock.&#13;
Complete line ofJBuggies, Wagons and&#13;
Heating Stoves, Ranges, Wood Stoves&#13;
Wood and Coal.&#13;
Saturday July 14 We Offer:&#13;
Good Salmon&#13;
Arm and Hammer Soda&#13;
\ lb Cake Chocolate&#13;
Canned Corn&#13;
Canned Pumpkin&#13;
1 Pint Mustard&#13;
Olives&#13;
9 lbs Boiled Oats&#13;
10c&#13;
5c&#13;
14c&#13;
7c&#13;
7o&#13;
8c&#13;
22c&#13;
25c&#13;
*&#13;
Kj&#13;
New crop, package Tea. Try a package Saturday at 2$c&#13;
15 per cent discount will be given on Ladies'&#13;
Men's and Boys'Shoes&#13;
Saturday, July 14.&#13;
15 percent reduction on Dimities, Organdies,&#13;
andPiqrus. s&#13;
On Monday of next week will occur&#13;
the special election to bond the village&#13;
for 11,000 to be used for dre protection.&#13;
Every business man with whom | *&#13;
we have talked is in iavor of the bond&#13;
and we hope every citizen will study&#13;
the matter well before voting against&#13;
it &gt; Nearly every village around us&#13;
has some kind of protection and are&#13;
well satisfied with what they have.&#13;
Let Pinckney now swing into line and&#13;
be prepared for the next blaze.&#13;
Since Writing the above we have&#13;
found those who, while not in favor&#13;
of a small hand engine or other cheap&#13;
appliance would be glad to vote for a&#13;
bigger bond to furnish the village&#13;
with a system of water works. It is&#13;
thought that a system could be put in&#13;
at a cost of not more than $2,500&#13;
using it simply for fire protection and&#13;
lawns, taking the water from the&#13;
pond. This would Save the expense of&#13;
wells as in the case where the water is&#13;
used for drinking purposes.&#13;
Of course the above would be more&#13;
expensive on the start but would&#13;
prove much more effectual in th e end.&#13;
One of the necessities at a fire is water&#13;
and lots of it, which only can be&#13;
had by a good system of water works.&#13;
Would it not be a good plan for the&#13;
oouncil to investigate and ascertain&#13;
what could be done in this direction.&#13;
It arrangements could be made for&#13;
power from, the mill the expense&#13;
would be but little more than the expense&#13;
of a pump and piping. There&#13;
are enough citizens who would take&#13;
water for lawns etc. probably to pay&#13;
the running expense after it was in&#13;
operation. If we are going to have&#13;
protection let us have something that&#13;
will protect.&#13;
The DISPATCH has worked hard for&#13;
the past ten years to get the village&#13;
to adopt some effectual means of protection.&#13;
There are several, like ourselves,&#13;
whose entire belongings are in&#13;
personal property and loss of that&#13;
means the loss of a living. Of course&#13;
all keep insured but the rates are&#13;
higher than as though we bad good&#13;
water works as fire protection.&#13;
m t i&#13;
OBITUARY.&#13;
DAN JACKSon.&#13;
Dan J ackson died at the home of&#13;
his son, just south of this village, on&#13;
Sunday last, July 8,1900, aged 81.&#13;
Dan Jackson was born in Lyons,&#13;
Wayne county, N. Y., July 2, 1819.&#13;
In May 1843 he came to Michigan and&#13;
for nearly a year he lived with his&#13;
brothers in Unadilla, then marrying&#13;
Miss Julia Backus Jan. 1, 1844, he&#13;
moved on to a farm of four—eighties,.&#13;
P r o d u c e W a n t e d&#13;
Suftar S o l d Cheap. F. G. 3ACKS0N.&#13;
near Stockbridge the land then being&#13;
wild. This he cleared up and erected&#13;
a large brick bouse, among the first&#13;
in that county. He afterwards sold&#13;
the farm and went east for a couple of&#13;
years. Returning he purchased a&#13;
farm near Hamburg and lived there&#13;
for eleven years. April 27, 1865 he&#13;
moved to Pinckney and in '66 bought&#13;
the John Sigler farm, now owned by&#13;
O. B. Jackson. Mrs. Jackson died&#13;
April 16,1873 an$ five years later Mr.&#13;
Jackson married Mrs. Jenette Wood,&#13;
who died June 29,1893.&#13;
For vears Mr. Jackson had been a&#13;
member of the M. E. church at this&#13;
place, and until his health failed he&#13;
was among the most faithful, his&#13;
pew seldom beinar vacant. He was a&#13;
patient sufferer and although urged&#13;
to do so he would not give up and take&#13;
to the bed but was up and down every&#13;
tlay. He had often expressed the wish&#13;
that tt e messenger might came suddenly&#13;
and on Sunday his wish was fulfilled&#13;
as he was feeling quite well and&#13;
was able to walk about the room&#13;
which he was doing when be was called&#13;
home. He sank to the floor and&#13;
died instantly. A sheaf has been&#13;
gathered home, fully'ripened—ready&#13;
for the harvest.&#13;
The funeraj was held Tuesday afternoon,&#13;
Rev. W. 6. Stephens of Plymouth&#13;
officiating, assisted by Rev.&#13;
j Chas. Simpson.&#13;
.—55TT" T&#13;
W. J. Black ana family spent Sun&#13;
day with relatives^ Plainfield.&#13;
6. W. Teeple has a new typewriter,&#13;
added to the bank fixtures and Miss&#13;
Maude will act as stenographer for&#13;
him.&#13;
The population of Brighton is not&#13;
as mnch into 82 as it was in 1894.&#13;
The census enumerator gives the&#13;
number as 781.&#13;
H. W. Kllis of the Surprise store has&#13;
moved his household goods from Oak&#13;
Grove to this place and is settled in&#13;
Mrs. Grahams house on Mill street.&#13;
R. Glenn has our thanks for four&#13;
quarts of fine whoortleberries. The&#13;
harvest of this excellent crop has jnst&#13;
commenced and promises to be a good&#13;
one.&#13;
Miss Lillian Boyle spent the Fourth&#13;
with friends in Leslie. MissIva Halstead&#13;
who has been absent all the season,&#13;
returned with her and will now&#13;
remain.&#13;
We w441 deliver flour&#13;
direct to ths people&#13;
at&#13;
50 cents for a 25-pound sack&#13;
95 cents for a 50-pound sack&#13;
$3.80 for a barrel.&#13;
10 pounds Graham 15 cents.&#13;
10 lbs. granulated meal lOcts&#13;
Seed Buckwheat.&#13;
•m&#13;
«?•.&#13;
T e r m s , Cash.&#13;
R. H. ERWIN.&#13;
Specials For This Week:&#13;
L»adtes' S h o e s&#13;
All Three Dollar Shoes $2.50&#13;
All Two-fifty ••" 2.00&#13;
All' " " 1.65&#13;
M e n ' s S h o e s&#13;
All Three Dollar Shoes $2.50&#13;
All Two-fifty " 2.00&#13;
All Two " " 1.65&#13;
B o y s ' S h o e s&#13;
All Two Dollar Shoes 11.65&#13;
All One seveDty-five Shoes $1.45&#13;
All One twenty-five Shoes $L00&#13;
M i s s e s ' S h o e s&#13;
All'One-fifty Shoes $1.20&#13;
All One seventy-five Shoes $1.45&#13;
All Two Dollar Shoes $1.65&#13;
All Odds and Ends in Shoes for what they will bring.&#13;
Cottons and Prints are all on sale this wesk at special prices.&#13;
S p e c i a l s o n G r o c e r i e s f o r S a t u r d a y :&#13;
1 pkg Yeast Foam 3c or 2 for 5c&#13;
Armours Key Soap 2c per bar&#13;
1 Can Salmon 7c&#13;
1 lb Baking Powder 4c&#13;
1 Can Best Tomatoes 7c&#13;
1 Can Best Peas 8c&#13;
"• • " ; &gt; ' .&#13;
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • A&#13;
OUR LADDER TO SUCCESS&#13;
Progressive Methods&#13;
Courtesy&#13;
Cleanliness&#13;
Complete Slecfc&amp;l&#13;
Accurate Compooittt^&#13;
Pure Drugs&#13;
Facilities&#13;
Experience&#13;
Knowledge&#13;
Skill&#13;
Study&#13;
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P o w d e r s ,&#13;
We have&#13;
Secured the&#13;
Agency&#13;
For them.&#13;
§ Prescriptions&#13;
Carefully&#13;
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Blew tli» Roof Off a Big Dry&#13;
tibodr Store. "'•• • I ' I - (&#13;
10SS ESTIMATED AT $100,000,&#13;
T i r o S t o r m i Ifat Over t h e B a i l a e u Dist&#13;
r i c t o f t b e C i t y — E l e v a t o r a n d O t h e r&#13;
P r o p e r t y Destroyed by F i r e a t B i r c h&#13;
b u o ^ - G a o a e Warden'* J a n e B e p o r t .&#13;
Cyclone a m i Cloudburst-&#13;
T h e c l i m a x o f o n e o f t h e m o s t t e r r l *&#13;
b l e w i n d a n d r a i u s t o r m s w h i c h e v e r&#13;
o c c u r r e d i n K a l n m u / o o c a m e a t 3&#13;
o'clock o n t h e a f t e r n o o n of t h e 7 t h ,&#13;
w h e n in t h e m i d s t o f a p o u r i n g d e l -&#13;
u g e t h e ' w i n d l i f t e d t h e r o o f off t h e&#13;
s t o r e of J o s e p h ttpeyer, c o r n e r o f M a i n&#13;
a u d R o s e s t r e e t s , a n d c a r r i e d i t a w a y&#13;
a s if i t h a d b e e n s o m u c h ' p a p e r T h e&#13;
d a m a g e t o t h e b u i l d i n g a n d c o n t e n t s ,&#13;
w h i c h w a s o n e o f t h e m o s t v a l u a b l e&#13;
s t o c k s of d r y g o o d s in t l i c c i t y , w i l l&#13;
a m o u n t t o m a u y t h o u s a n d s of d o l l a r s .&#13;
T h e l o s s wi o t h e r p a r t s of t h e c i t y w i l l&#13;
a l s o b e g r e a t . T h e d a m a g e t o w i r e s&#13;
o f e v e r y d e s c r i p t i o n t h r o u g h o u t t h e&#13;
c i t y w a s s e v e r e in t h e e x t r e m e . M a n y&#13;
t e l e p h o n e s w e r e p u t o u t of u s e o n&#13;
a c c o u n t of i t . The d e s t r u c t i o n of t r e e s&#13;
w a s w i d e s p r e a d , four or Gve great, o a k s&#13;
in H r n p s i m p a r k b e i n g a m o n g t h e m&#13;
T h e a s y l u m e a r t r a c k w a s b l o c k e d&#13;
w i t h s t r e a m s o f r u n n i n g w a t e r a n d&#13;
d r i f t i n g s a n d w h i c h c o m p l e t e l y b l o c k e d&#13;
t r a f f i c T h e l o c a l oflicc of t h e Postal"&#13;
T e l e g r a p h Co. w a s e n t i r e l y c u t off f r o m&#13;
t h e w e s t , a n d i t w a s s u p p o s e d t h e&#13;
w i r e s l e a d i n g t o t h e t o w n s in t h a t dir&#13;
e c t i o n a r e all d o w n . It. i s e s t i m a t e d&#13;
t h a t t h e d a m a g e w i l l b e b e t w e e n S l o o ,&#13;
000 a n d $i 50,000. T h e s t o r m w a s in&#13;
r e a l i t y t w o s t o r m s , omt c o m i n g f r o m&#13;
t h e n o r t h w e s t , m e e t i n g d i r e c t l y &lt;»ver&#13;
t h e b u s i n e s s p a r t o f t h e c i t y [ l a i n&#13;
f e l l in t o r r e n t s a n d t h e c i t y w a s a s&#13;
•dark a s n i g h t .&#13;
— - * • — .&#13;
F l o o d at lir»n«l lt*pld«.&#13;
T h e c i t y r e s e r v o i r a t (Jrand R a p i d s&#13;
•broke a t 5 o ' c l o c k o n t h e m o r n i n g of&#13;
t h e 2d a n d f l o o d e d a n a r e a p e o p l e d by&#13;
-9,000 p e r s o n s in t h e n o r t h e a s t e r n s e c -&#13;
t i o n o f t h e t o w n . T h e l o s s t o p r o p e r t y&#13;
w i l l r e a c h h u n d r e d s of t h o u s a n d s of&#13;
- d o l l a r s . H o u s e s w e r e s w e p t Trom t h e i r&#13;
f o u n d a t i o n s a n d c a r r i e d a w a y b y t h e&#13;
flood, a n d t h e n c r u s h e d l i k e s o m u c h&#13;
p a p e r . S t r e e t s w e r e l o r n u p t o a d e p t h&#13;
o f 40 f e e t . W a t e r m a i n s w e r e b r o k e n ,&#13;
a n d s t r e a m s 100 f e e t h i g h p o u r e d i n t o&#13;
t h e a i r , a n d t h e h i l l d i s t r i c t i s p a n i c -&#13;
s t r i c k e n . T h e d i s t r i c t s w e p t by t h e&#13;
flood i s o c c u p i e d by w o r k i n g m e n , m a n y&#13;
o w n i n g l i t t l e h o m e s , a n d t h e l o s s t o&#13;
t h e m m e a n s t h e s w e e p i n g a w a y of t h e&#13;
s a v i n g s of a l i f e t i m e T h e g r e a t e s t&#13;
d a n g e r h a s p a s s e d , a s t h e r o s e v o i r is&#13;
n o w e m p t y , b u t a d i s t r i c t c o v e r i n g l'J&#13;
b l o c k s i s p r e t t y t h o r o u g h l y d e v a s t e d&#13;
F o r t u n a t e l y n o l i v e s w e r e l o s t , aud&#13;
o n l y o n e f a t a l i t y of a u y i m p o r t a n c e occ&#13;
u r r e d .&#13;
K l o t a t M o a t a f e e o a t h e V a o v t h .&#13;
T h e F o u r t h , q f J u t e o e l f l ^ r f t i o u fit&#13;
M o n t a g u e , a v i l l a g e U m t l e * *ttt!U*'. Of&#13;
M u s k e g o n * w * | p r o c i p l U t e d l I n t o a&#13;
r i o t o n t h e F o u r t h . A b i g c r o w d f r o m&#13;
M u s k e g o n a t t e n d e d t h e b l o w o u t * b u t&#13;
b e f o r e t h e c e l e b r a t i o n h a d p r o g r e s s e d&#13;
v e r y f a r t r o u b l e r e s u l t e d o v e r t h e mar*&#13;
s h a l ' s a t t e m p t t o a r r e s t s e v e r a l M u s k e -&#13;
g o d y o u t h s . T h e r o w s o o n a s s u m e d&#13;
t h e p r o p o r t i o n s o f a r i o t , s e v e r a l h u n -&#13;
d r e d m e n p a r t i c i p a t i n g i n i t , M u s k e -&#13;
g o n b e i n g o n e o f t h e w a r r i n g f a c t i o n s !&#13;
a n d M o n t a g u e t h e o t h e r . S e v e r a l '&#13;
M u s k e g o n b o y s w e r e a r r e s t e d , b u t i t i s&#13;
r e p o r t e d t h a t t h e d o o r o f t h e j a i l w a s ;&#13;
b a t t e r e d d o w t o ' a n d t h e p r i s o n e r s re*&#13;
l e a s e d . A l a r g e n u m b e r o f t h e r i o t e r s&#13;
we're b a d l y i n j u r e d , ^several f r o m M u s -&#13;
k e g o n r e c e i v i n g p a i n f u l c u t s a n d&#13;
b r u i s e s .&#13;
8 2 0 , 0 0 0 F i r e at Kirch R a i w&#13;
T h e w o r s t fire t h a t h a s v i s i t e d - t h e&#13;
v i l l a g e o f D i r e h R u n s i n c e t h e f o r e s t&#13;
c o n f l a g r a t i o n s 85 y e a r s a g o o c c u r r e d&#13;
o n t h e a f t e r n o o n o f t h e 5 t h F l a m e s&#13;
w e r e s e e n in t h e c u p o l a of_ t h e ~ u e w l y&#13;
c o n s t r u c t e d e l e v a t o r a n d i t t o o k b u t a&#13;
f e w m i n u t e s for t h e e n t i r e s t r u c t u r e&#13;
t o b e a m a s s o f flames. T h e lire l e a p e d&#13;
f r o m t h e r e t o t h e c h e e s e f a c t o r y a n d&#13;
t h e n a c r o s s t h e - s t r e e t t o a s t o r e o w n e d&#13;
b y G e o r g e F i s h e r , t h e b u i l d i n g s w i t h&#13;
c o n t e n t s b e i n g e n t i r e l y d e s t r o y e d&#13;
D w e l l i n g s o w n e d b y . W m F i s h e r a n d&#13;
J o h n D o b b s w e r e a l s o d e s t r o y e d , a n d&#13;
b u i l d i n g s t o t h e s o u t h w e r e s a v e d w i t h&#13;
m u c h d i f f i c u l t y . W i n d b l o w i n g f r o m&#13;
t h e w e s t w a s a l l t h a t - s a £ c d t h e e n t i r e&#13;
v i l l a g e , a s i t is w i t h o u t a u y lire prot&#13;
e c t i o n . T h e t o t a l p r o p e r t y l o s s i s est&#13;
i m a t e d a t 820,000, w h i c h is o u l y a b o u t&#13;
h a l f c o v e r e d b y i n s u r a n c e .&#13;
U n c l a i m e d LanrU In t h e (J. P.&#13;
T h e r e p o r t o f t h e II. S.«iaud office a t&#13;
M a r q u e t t e , m a d e p u b l i c o n I h e 5 t h ,&#13;
s h o w s t h a t t h e r e a r e s t i l l »51.557 a c r e s&#13;
i n t h e p u b l i c d o m a i n in u p p e r M i c h i -&#13;
g a n . A y e a r a g o , t h e r e w a s 288,458&#13;
a c r e s . N e a r l y :17,000 a c r e s h a v e b e e n&#13;
t a k e n u p d u r i n g t h e p a s t y e a r . T h e&#13;
m o s t l a n d h a s b e e n p r e - e i n p t e d i n M a r -&#13;
q u e t t e , H o u g h t o n a n d O n t o n a g o n&#13;
c o u n t i e s , i n t h e t w o l a s t b y r e a s o n of&#13;
t h e c o p p e r b o o m , e v e r y p i e c e t h a t&#13;
p r o m i s e d t o o b t a i n c o p p e r b e i n g h o m e -&#13;
s t e a d e d . C h i p p e w a h a s t h e l a r g e s t&#13;
a c r e a g e o f u n c l a i m e d l a n d s , 69,208;&#13;
M a r q u e t t e c o m e s s e c o n d w i t h 50.284.&#13;
G o g e b i c c o u n t y h a s t h e l e a s t , 944 a c r e s .&#13;
T h e t o t a l f o r t h e l o w e r p e n i n s u l a w h i c h&#13;
i s a l s o b a n d i e d t h r o u g h t h e M a r q u e t t e&#13;
l a n d office i s 250,000 a c r e s b u t s p r e a d&#13;
t h r o u g h m o r e c o u n t i e s ' t h a n i n t h e up*&#13;
p e r p a r t o f t h e s t a t e .&#13;
G a m e Warden** R e p o r t for J a n e .&#13;
' S t a t e G a m e W a r d e n M o r s e r e p o r t s t o&#13;
t h e s e c r e t a r y of s t a t e , t h a t d u r i n g t h e&#13;
. m o n t h o f J u n e h e c a u s e d 56 a r r e s t s for&#13;
v i o l a t i o n s o f t h e fish a n d g a m e l a w s ,&#13;
a l l b u t t w o o f t h e c a s e s b e i n g i n f r a c -&#13;
t i o n s o f t h e t a w s r e g u l a t i n g fishing.&#13;
T h e s e a r r e s t s r e s u l t e d i n 48 c o n v i c t i o n s&#13;
a n d 4 a c q u i t t a l s . T w o c a s e s w e r e d i s -&#13;
m i s s e d a n d , t w o a r e p e n d i n g F i n e s&#13;
a n d c o s t s c o l l e c t e d a m o u n t e d t o 9487.40.&#13;
T h e r e w e r e 18 s e i z u r e s of h s h n e t s of&#13;
u n l a w f u l s i z e , a n d t h e v a l u e of p r o p -&#13;
e r t y c o n d e m n e d w a s $288.56. T h e w a r -&#13;
d e n a n d h i s d e p u t i e s i n v e s t i g a t g a t e d&#13;
147 c o m p l a i n t s o f v i o l a t i o n s of t h e a s h&#13;
t a w s ' ' • ' • w&#13;
G o o d K e * e For t h e BItittle&#13;
Q u a r t e r m a s t e r G e n e r a l A t k i n s o n , o n&#13;
t h e 6 t h , s a i d t h a t in v i e w o f t h e o p i n -&#13;
i o n of t h e a t t o r n e y - g e n e r a l d e c i d i n g&#13;
t h a t t h e s t a t e m i l i t a r y f u n d i s e n t i t l e d&#13;
t o a g r e a t e r p o r t i o n of t h e m o n e y ?e&#13;
t u r n e d t o t h e s t a t e b y t h e H e n d e r s o n -&#13;
A m e s c o m p a n y , h e had n o d o u b t a&#13;
s t a t e e n c a m p m e n t of t h e n a t i o n a l&#13;
g u a r d w o u l d he h e l d . (Jen A t k i i * o n&#13;
s t a t e d f u r t h e r t h a t t h e m i l i t a r y U&gt;ard&#13;
w o u l d d o u b t l e s s s o o n h o l d a m e e t i n g&#13;
a n d m a k e a r r a n g e m e n t s for t h e e n -&#13;
c a m p m e n t w h i c h w i l l p r o b a b l y b e h e l d&#13;
a t I s l a n d L u L c a b u u t t h e m i d d l e of&#13;
A u g u s t .&#13;
M I C H I G A N M i W j j I T E M S .&#13;
F-arl J o h n s o n , a f a r m e r l i v i n g n e a r&#13;
O r i o n , t h i n k s h e h a s d i s c o v e r e d g o l d o n&#13;
h i s p r o p e r t y .&#13;
T h e n e w t a x d e a l i n c r e a s e d Vielisb&#13;
u r g ' s roll «65,DIM), all b u t SJ.UU0 of&#13;
w h i c h w a s p e r s o n a l&#13;
T h e V o l u n t e e r Iron Co. hr\s r l o s e d&#13;
d o w n i t s m i n e a t T u l a s , t h r o w i n g 3Uu&#13;
UM'U out of e m p l o y m e n t . .&#13;
Tl is s a i d t h a t t h e c e n s u s o f 1900 w i l l&#13;
s h o w a d e c r e a s e in t h e p o p u l a t i o n of&#13;
- M a r s h a l l of 200 ovoi t h a t of 18«J4&#13;
T h e t r i a l of W a r d e n C h a m b e r l a i n of&#13;
t h e Jaclk.son p r i s o n w a s a g a i n a d j o u r u e d&#13;
o n t h e Mli T h i s t i m e u n t i l J u l y 13&#13;
i T I i e w a t e r w o r k s a t T r a v e r s e Otty i s&#13;
n o w r u n u n d e r m u n i c i p a l c o n t r o l , t h e&#13;
p l a n t h a v i n g p a s s e d i u t o t h e c i t y ' s&#13;
b a u d s&#13;
T h e s t a t e d a i r y a n d food c o m m i s -&#13;
s i o n e r ' s b u l l e t i n , i s s u e d o n t h e 2d, s a y s&#13;
t h e d e p a r t m e n t h a s m a d e a d i s c o v e r y&#13;
w h e r e b y b o g u s v i n e g a r c a u h e r e a f t e r&#13;
be d e l e c t e d .&#13;
T h e s u p e r v i s o r s of D e l t a c o u n t y h a v e&#13;
v o t e d t o b u i l d a n e w jail a t a n e x p e n s e&#13;
of $20,000 if t h e p e o p l e of t h e c o u n t y&#13;
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of t h e b a b y , w a s t h e o n l y w i t n e s s .&#13;
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m a c h i n e r y .&#13;
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r e m a r k a b l e b o d y o f w a t e r in o n e r e&#13;
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1111CU IS&#13;
Of the Democratic Ticket at Kansas&#13;
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l a r a t l o a w a s A d o p t e d by A c c l a m a -&#13;
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o t h e r g i e a t i s s u e s of t h e d a y .&#13;
T i c k e t C o m p l e t e d .&#13;
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n o t t o m a k e h i m t h e n o m i n e e .&#13;
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m o r e or l e s s s e r i o u s l y h u r t . T h e y a r d s&#13;
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t o t h e d o o r s a n d e v e r y i n c h o f s p a c e o n&#13;
t h e p l a t f o r m s w a s t a k e n a n d m e n h u n g&#13;
o n t o t h e r a i l i n g s . C o n l l i c t i n g s t o r i e s&#13;
a r e t o l d a s t o h o w t h e a c c i d e n t h a p -&#13;
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t h a t t h e i n o t o r m a n fell a s l e e p a n d neg&#13;
l e c t e d t u r n i n g off t h e c u r r e n t w h e n&#13;
r o u n d i n g a c u r v e .&#13;
0 0 P e o p l e Slulo.&#13;
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o n a c a r b o u n d for T a c o m a , W a s h ,&#13;
w e r e p l u n g e d d o w n a g u l c h w i t h i n t h e&#13;
c i t y l i m i t s o n t h e 4 t h . T h o s e w h o&#13;
w e r e s t a u d i n g o n t h e p l a t f o r m d r o p p e d&#13;
off o n l y t o b e b r u i s e d a n d w o u n d e d b y&#13;
t h e h e a v y b o d y of t h e c o a c h , w h i l e&#13;
o t h e r s i n s i d e w e r e k i l l e d a n d m a i m e d&#13;
b e f o r e t h e y k n e w w h a t h a d h a p p e n e d .&#13;
T h e c a r j u m p e d t h e t r a c k a n d w a s&#13;
s m a s h e d t o k i n d l i n g w o o d i n t h e bott&#13;
o m o f t h e c h a s m o v e r 100 f e e t b e l o w .&#13;
T h e d e a d w i l l n u m b e r n e a r l y t h r e e&#13;
s c o r e , f o r t h e r e a r e m a n y of t h e i n j u r e d&#13;
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c i a n s . •&#13;
C H I N A W A f l N E W * .&#13;
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p e n d e n c e d a y c e l e b r a t i o n a c c i d e n t s .&#13;
d a y , J u l y 9, g i v e s t h e g l a t o f * w o e d i c t e&#13;
o f \ h e i d o w a g e r e m p r e s s d e a l i n g w i t h&#13;
t h e " $ o x e r s , " t h e a t t a o k o f t h e f o r e i g n&#13;
p o w e r * o n C h i n a a n d t h e l a t t e r ' * p o s i -&#13;
t i o n . j T b e e d i c t s d e o U r a t h a t oreoonc&#13;
l l i a t u &gt; n w i t h C h r i s t i a n a , a g a i n s t&#13;
w h o m t h e w h o l e n a t i o n , i n c l u d m g t h e&#13;
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n o b l e s w e r e u n i t e d a n d a r e n o w s t a m p -&#13;
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sertejd t h a t t h e p o w e r s b e g a n t h e fight*&#13;
i n g b y t h e a t t a c k o n T a k u , t h e r e b y e n -&#13;
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f o r e i g n e r s , s a y i n g t h a t a n y a t t e m p t t o&#13;
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o u s , a n d a d d i n g : " T h e r e f o r e , i t s e e m s&#13;
e x p e d i e n t a t p r e s e n t t o u t i l i s e t h e a n t l -&#13;
f o i c i g n m o v e m e n t . " T h e e d i c t , a v e r s&#13;
t h a t t h e d o w a g e r e m p r e s s i s r e a d y t o&#13;
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of t h e i r d i s t r i c t s its t h e y w i l l b e h e l d&#13;
r e s p o n s i b l e for l o s s of t e r r i t o r y . "&#13;
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o f t h e w h i t e s a t I'eUin arc; n o w a d d e d&#13;
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c o m e s in a S h a n g h a i d i s p a t c h o f J u l y&#13;
5, w h i c h o n l y a d d s l o t h e t c p o r t s g i v e n&#13;
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l l y r u n n i n g w i t h b l o o d , T h e y c o n -&#13;
l i n n n u m e r o u s ' s t o n e s o f e x e c u t i o n s&#13;
a n d u n t o l d t o r t u r e s of t h e i s o l a t e d fore&#13;
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o c a t c d m o d e r a t i o n , w a s k i l l e d by&#13;
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Jabe? Hutchinson received our hero&#13;
with a face as dark as a thundercloud,&#13;
but It seemed that, when he heard&#13;
' Alan's news, he'considered it important&#13;
enough to warrant his intrusion&#13;
on his privacy. It appeared to Alan&#13;
that, of whatever importance it was&#13;
to the ^rm._it_wasof...otlll greater to&#13;
Hutchinson, which confirmed him' in&#13;
his suspicions that i e ' had % private&#13;
dealings which had nothing to* do with&#13;
the firm.&#13;
Alan talked the matter over, and&#13;
Hutchinson was impressed with his&#13;
/./^ clear-headedness and *the concise way&#13;
ji r be had of stating thf.igs. Little by&#13;
little he looked upon ^ftan with a more&#13;
favorable eye. and in, the end invited&#13;
Um to stay and dine. Although Alan&#13;
did not want to prolong his interview&#13;
. .With the brute, he accepted the invitation,&#13;
th.'aking that he would then see&#13;
the girl who had taken his fancy before.&#13;
Herein he was mistaken. To all&#13;
intents and purposes it was a bachelor&#13;
establishment, and the Spaniard who&#13;
came in to smoke a cigar with Hutchinson&#13;
after dinner ..evidently came&#13;
without expecting to see ally ladies.&#13;
* Alan rode home. It was a perfect&#13;
moonlight night, and the road was as&#13;
clear as if it had been day. Hutchinson&#13;
had told him before he left that&#13;
he should be glad to see him again,&#13;
Vs and the young nicta was revolving in&#13;
his mind how he could accept the invitation,&#13;
and yet not play the part of&#13;
traitor to his host. He felt.sure that&#13;
Hutchinson was not acting square by&#13;
\ the firm; he also felt sure that he&#13;
would try and gain him over to his&#13;
si,de. Instinct told him to beware of&#13;
the man; but, ca the other hand, there&#13;
was the girl, who had touched the&#13;
young man's heart by her loneliness&#13;
,and her unhappiness and by her beauty.&#13;
If he did not go back to La Paz&#13;
•all chance of sseing the girl again&#13;
was at an end, and she had made such&#13;
a«a impression upon his rather suseep-&#13;
.tible heart that he was willing to&#13;
chance many things, but not the risk&#13;
&gt;of never seeing her again.&#13;
He was riding alongJuLJthe moonlight;&#13;
he was young, and adventurous&#13;
blood was in his veiniB. The brilliant&#13;
beauty of the night, the strong scent&#13;
of the flowers, all intoxicated him.&#13;
Suddenly a white figure flitted before&#13;
him. He Reined in his horse sharply,&#13;
feeling sure that this was the girl he&#13;
was thinking of, and so it proved.&#13;
In the clear, cold moonlight her face&#13;
looked white, and the shadows round&#13;
her eyes deep. She had a soft, cooiag&#13;
&gt; voice. Alan thought she was more&#13;
beautiful than he had even at first imagined&#13;
her to be.&#13;
"I have watched for you," she said&#13;
softly. ' There was not a trace of coquetry&#13;
in her voice and she was simply&#13;
stating a fact. "You were so long that&#13;
I grew anxious."&#13;
He could see that she wanted to say&#13;
comething, and yet was half afraid.&#13;
She looked round nervously. "No one&#13;
is about," he said, reassurtagly.&#13;
"No." She still hesitated and still&#13;
looked around her. "Mr. Mackenzie,"&#13;
she said at last desperately, "do not&#13;
think ill of me. I do not want to say&#13;
what I am going to say, and I know&#13;
a child ought to reverence her father,&#13;
but——*' She gave a long, shuddering&#13;
sigh.&#13;
"I understand," he said, quickly.&#13;
"No, you do not!" she answered&#13;
quickly. "It Is not because he has&#13;
struck me—he did it before, and I&#13;
never mended it until today. You see,&#13;
fee still thinks I am a child, but I am&#13;
afraid for you. Oh, I must warn you!&#13;
Do not come here again!"&#13;
. '"Why not?'^ he asked. "I am not a&#13;
( c h i l d to be told to do a thing without&#13;
'* a reason."&#13;
"There was a young English clerk&#13;
who used to come out here to see my&#13;
father," she said, very slowly, "and&#13;
after six months he had embezzled&#13;
some money or something, and ki tho&#13;
end he eould not face the inquiry;&#13;
he "&#13;
She stopped; ho could see the horror&#13;
In her face.&#13;
"What did he do?" asked Alan, in&#13;
his'quiet, man}y voice.&#13;
"He committed suicide," said the&#13;
girl.&#13;
"But I am not of that sort," said&#13;
Alan. "I have my eyes open, and&#13;
never do anything without a reason."&#13;
"There have been men—young ^men&#13;
—coming backwards and forwards to&#13;
jthe house, and there always has been&#13;
one end to it all, and I cannot bear it&#13;
My father ruins them sooner or later.&#13;
At soon as they know too much something&#13;
happens."&#13;
"What do you want me to do then?"&#13;
asked Alan.&#13;
* "Don't come back here," she begged.&#13;
' "I cannot promise that," he said&#13;
quietly. And in the moonlight he looked&#13;
into her dark eyes.&#13;
' "'Why not?" she asked, but she lowered&#13;
her lids.&#13;
"Because," he said boldly, "it will&#13;
be my caly chance of seeing you&#13;
again."&#13;
There was a little silence and then&#13;
the girl spoke. "But if it should&#13;
prove dangerous to y o u l should never&#13;
forgive myself!"&#13;
Then Alan laughed a good, frank&#13;
laugh. "The one thing that will be&#13;
dangerous to me is you," he said, "and&#13;
I am going to court that danger."&#13;
She laughed, too. Alan looked so&#13;
brave and bonny that any woman&#13;
would have loved to have been courted&#13;
by him. "Very well," she said, "Mr.&#13;
Mackenzie;- you have been warned,&#13;
and. so have I."&#13;
"Tell me your name," he said.&#13;
"My name? It is a common enough&#13;
one here—it is Veronica."&#13;
"It is a very beautifful one," he&#13;
said. And then he took off his cap&#13;
and bade her good night; and his&#13;
dreams that night were full of moonlight&#13;
and a dark-eyed, slim girl, and&#13;
all the sort of thing that a young man&#13;
dreams about when for the first time&#13;
he enters upon-" the realms of romance.&#13;
He remembered the financial crisis&#13;
only the next morning, when he saw&#13;
Hutchinson again. He told Dempster&#13;
of his interview; but here he found&#13;
himself in a difficulty. It was difficult&#13;
to t^tlk to his chief of the man he mis-j&#13;
trusted, and yet to know that he was&#13;
valuable to the firm and knew many of&#13;
its secrets. He could not tell Dempster&#13;
that what he suspected was that&#13;
Hutchinson had secret dealings with&#13;
the government, and that he mostly&#13;
knew of events beforo they became&#13;
public property, and so could buy and&#13;
sell to greater advantage, using the&#13;
capital of the firm for his own purpose,&#13;
for that was what Alan suspected.&#13;
Richard Dempster saw that the&#13;
young man was keeping something&#13;
back, although of course he could not&#13;
guess what it was.&#13;
"Look here, Mackenzie," £e said. "I&#13;
don't want to force your confidence.&#13;
I can see you have something on your&#13;
mind; but I can trust your father'd&#13;
son sufficiently to know that if it&#13;
ought to be brought to my notice you&#13;
would not hesitate to do so."&#13;
"The fact is, sir," said Alan, "that I&#13;
have as yet nothing tangible to lay before&#13;
you; but that, not having any&#13;
proof at -all, It is rather difficult to&#13;
come to you and to say, 'Do you trust&#13;
this man or that man.' "&#13;
"Quite right," said Dempster. And&#13;
then they began talking of something&#13;
else, and had a good long consultation&#13;
on the present state of affairs. It&#13;
was only when he was leaving that&#13;
his chief said to him: "By the way,&#13;
did you have any difficulty in finding&#13;
Hutchinson's little cottage. He tells&#13;
me that it is some way out; he prefers&#13;
the country."&#13;
Alan looked at Dempster to &amp;e if&#13;
he were speaking jestingly; but no,&#13;
his words were evidently uttered in&#13;
perfect good faith. He believed in&#13;
Hutchinson's cottage. "I had no difficulty,&#13;
sir," bsj replied. '.'Any one could&#13;
tell you it Is not a cottage, but a fine,&#13;
large place."&#13;
"Oh," said Dempster, laughing,&#13;
"then that is Hutchinson's modesty,&#13;
is it? I must chaff him about it!" .&#13;
' "I hope you won't, sir!" said Alan&#13;
quickly. "Please say nothing about&#13;
it!"&#13;
Dempster looked at the young man&#13;
curiously. "I will say nothing if you&#13;
do not wish it; but I own that your&#13;
manner makes me strangely uneasy."&#13;
"I want it to do that," said Alan,&#13;
and left him.&#13;
MatteW, however, grew very disturbed,&#13;
and Dempster had reason to&#13;
believe that the government was very&#13;
unstable. Alan Mackenzie was sent&#13;
backwards and .forwards to La Paz. It&#13;
began to be very exciting, for every&#13;
day he seemed to see mpre clearly&#13;
that Hutchinson was playing a double&#13;
game. He had Dempster's confidence.&#13;
Alan knew that, among other&#13;
things the firm was importing, there&#13;
were firearms, and he felt almost sure&#13;
that Hutchinson was in league with&#13;
some malcontents, and that these&#13;
anna were meant for U&amp;m. Life&#13;
grew very interesting, and every day&#13;
seemed big with chances; and every&#13;
evening that he made his way to La&#13;
Pax he found Veronica awaiting him.&#13;
First of all she came to warn him,&#13;
then she came because she feared him,&#13;
and lastly she came because she loved&#13;
him. And he—he felt that he loved&#13;
her, too. It was not the same tender,&#13;
all-enduring affection that he would&#13;
have given, to an English girl, not the&#13;
love that desires nothing except to be&#13;
loved In the tame absorbing way; but&#13;
Vfc **r. wro ftp te*fl«w gvpfeettrt ,^M&#13;
that a man gives to one weaker than&#13;
himself. Veronica was not hte equal&#13;
in mental power he knew.&#13;
She had had very little education,&#13;
and could hardly do more than read&#13;
and write. She sang in a sweet, full&#13;
voice without any art, because singing&#13;
came.natural to her, and she played&#13;
a guitar by ear; but she had no accomplishments&#13;
nor any learning.&#13;
She was a pure, jnnocent, beautiful&#13;
child, who wanted to be loved and&#13;
cherished. Her father had been cruel&#13;
to her, and she feared him. Alan had&#13;
been good to her, and she loved him&#13;
passionately, and would have gone&#13;
through fire and water to serve him.&#13;
And so weeks went .by, and at last&#13;
there came a day when the proofs of&#13;
Hutchinson's double dealing were in&#13;
Alan's hands. He must go with them&#13;
to Dempster o r tlre~ ruin of the firm&#13;
might ensue. If by any chance the&#13;
existing government learned that the&#13;
respected English firm was providing&#13;
the insurgents with firearms there&#13;
would be an end to the house that&#13;
Richard Dempster had built up with&#13;
so much care. *&#13;
But. then there was Veronica. Alan&#13;
knew that she must participate in her&#13;
father's ruin. The thought of the&#13;
poor, gentle girl, made to suffer by her&#13;
father, without a soul to help her, was&#13;
too much for the young man. He&#13;
loved her quite sufficiently to want to&#13;
shield her from any harm. There was&#13;
only one thing to do: 'He must tell&#13;
Dempster of Hutchinson's treachery,&#13;
and he must persuade Veronica to become&#13;
his wife secretly. It must be&#13;
secretly, for no one knew either of&#13;
Veronica or of anything else. And so,&#13;
went to his chief.&#13;
Richard Dempster looked very grave&#13;
indeed at the news. The two men sat&#13;
up all night in consultation. Hutchinson&#13;
was to be dismissed at once;&#13;
there was nothing else for it. And&#13;
then Alan made a request. "Will you&#13;
send me to Santa Rosa at once?" he&#13;
said; "T~~aon*t care to stop~on"lrereafter&#13;
I have been the means of getting&#13;
rid of Hutchinson; I don't want to&#13;
benefit by his fall."&#13;
"I shall miss you, my lad," said&#13;
Dempster. "I had hoped you would&#13;
have settled among us; but I suppose&#13;
you have other plans."&#13;
He looked at Alan, who reddened.&#13;
The young man had known for some&#13;
time that even his chief's daughter&#13;
would not have denied him; but then&#13;
he thought of his lovely, dark-haired&#13;
Veronica, who had no one but himself.&#13;
No, he had ruined her father,&#13;
she must be his care—and a very&#13;
sweet care, too! Perhaps not the&#13;
ideal, the perfect marriage he had&#13;
dreamed of in other days, when soul&#13;
goes out to soul, and man and woman&#13;
have but one idea,, one thought; but&#13;
a -marriage born of love and respe&#13;
a protective, not a passionate love,&#13;
although Veronica was beautiful&#13;
enough to cause many a. man's heart&#13;
to beat quickly.&#13;
The very, eveaing he had his talk&#13;
with his chief he rode cut to La Paz,&#13;
but this time not to see Hutchinson.&#13;
Veronica would be in the avenue, and&#13;
Veronica must be wooed to give her&#13;
consent; the two had but a short time.&#13;
"You will trust me, Veronica?" he&#13;
asked.&#13;
"To the death," said the girl; "but&#13;
Alan, I am afraid if he hears of your&#13;
part in his ruin he will kill you sooner&#13;
or later." *~-&#13;
. "Efa will hear of It," said Alan&#13;
gravely. "I am not the man to let&#13;
another do my dirty work. And will&#13;
you wait for me at Santa Rosa, my&#13;
darling? I will make all necessary&#13;
arrangements, and will be married the&#13;
day I come."&#13;
And so matters were arranged, and&#13;
Veronica promised; and this was the&#13;
end of Alan Mackenzie's life in Rio.&#13;
(To be continued.)&#13;
Parlor Ma ate.&#13;
A feat which any one can perform&#13;
with little or no practice is that of&#13;
placing fourteen matches upon a table&#13;
and lifting them all up upon one of&#13;
the matches. This is how it is done:&#13;
Pick out one match—the one that has&#13;
the flat est surface^—and then place six&#13;
of the other matches about one-fourth&#13;
each across the first one, each of the&#13;
six being parallel to each other and&#13;
the thickness of a match distant from&#13;
each other. Next place six other&#13;
matches one-fourth each across the&#13;
first match, but from the other side,&#13;
all parallel and In the spaces left by&#13;
the arrangement of the first six&#13;
matches. Now take the fourteenth&#13;
match, lay it over the twelve matches&#13;
where they intersect, and by carefully&#13;
lifting match No. 1 and holding match&#13;
No, 14 in place you will accomplish&#13;
without difficulty the feat—Adelaide&#13;
Herrmann in the June Woman's Home&#13;
Companion.&#13;
E •&#13;
Imperialism Called the Paramount&#13;
Issue—-Militarism Denounced.&#13;
16 TO 1 FINDS A PLACE ALSO.&#13;
* * • Foerto Bteo Law end the Philippine&#13;
Policy of the Admtnlatratlpn&#13;
aire Denounced—An And-Trott Plank&#13;
1» Also Incorporated la, tpe Platforaa.&#13;
Ireland Loses Population,&#13;
The population of Ireland still appears&#13;
to be on the decline; The Quarterly&#13;
return of the registrar-general up&#13;
to the last day of March shows a decrease&#13;
of 10,155, of whom 5,802 was&#13;
debited to emigration. The estimated&#13;
population of Ireland" is now 4,504,000,&#13;
or little more than half what it was&#13;
in 1841. when it stood at 8,175,000,&#13;
Following u the official text of the&#13;
platform as agreed upon by the committee&#13;
on resolutions and adopted by the&#13;
convention:&#13;
We the representatives of the Democratic&#13;
party of the United States assembled&#13;
in national convention, on the anniversary&#13;
of the adoption of the declaration&#13;
of independence, do reaffirm our faith&#13;
in that immortal proclamation of the Inalienable&#13;
rights of men, and our allegiance&#13;
to the constitution framed in&#13;
hurmony therewith by the fathers of the&#13;
republic. We hold with the United States&#13;
supreme court that the declaration of Independence&#13;
is the spirit of our government,&#13;
of which the constitution is the&#13;
form ana letter.&#13;
We declare again that all governments&#13;
Instituted among nlen derive their just&#13;
powers from the consent of the governed;1&#13;
that any government not based upon the&#13;
consent Of the governed is a tyranny and&#13;
that to impose upon any people a government&#13;
of force is to substitute the methods&#13;
of Imperialism for those of a republic. We&#13;
hold that the constitution follows the flag&#13;
and denounce the doctrine that an executive&#13;
or congress deriving their existence&#13;
and their powers from tho constitution&#13;
can exercise lawful authority beyond it.&#13;
or in violation of it. We assert that no&#13;
nation can long endure half republic ana&#13;
half empire, and we warn the American&#13;
people that imperialism abroad will lead&#13;
quickly and inevitably to despotism at&#13;
home.&#13;
P u e r t o R i c o L a w .&#13;
Believing in these fundamental principles&#13;
we denounce the Puerto Kico law,&#13;
enacted by a Rpublican congress against&#13;
the protest and opposition of the Democratic&#13;
minority as a bold and open violation&#13;
of the nation's organic law and a&#13;
flagrant breach of the ntional good faith.&#13;
it imposes upon the people of Puerto Rico&#13;
a government without their consent and&#13;
taxation without representation. It dishonors&#13;
the American people by repudiating&#13;
a solemn pledge made in their behalf&#13;
by the commanding general of our army,&#13;
-which- the Puerto Rieans welcomed to a&#13;
peaceful and unresisted occupation of&#13;
their land. It doomed to poverty and. distress&#13;
a people whose helplessness appeals&#13;
'with peculiar force to our justice and&#13;
magnanimity. In this, the lirst act of Its&#13;
imperialistic programme, the Republican&#13;
party seeks to commit the United .'States&#13;
to a colonial policy, insistent with republican&#13;
institutions and condemned by the&#13;
supreme court in numerous decisions.&#13;
P h i l i p p i n e P o l l e r .&#13;
We demand the prompt and honest fulfillment&#13;
of our pledge to the Cuban people&#13;
and the world that the United States&#13;
has no disposition nor intentfbn io exercise&#13;
sovereignty, jurisdiction or control&#13;
over the island of Cuba except for its&#13;
pacification. The war ended nearly two&#13;
years ago, profound peace reigns all over&#13;
the island and still the administration&#13;
keeps the government of the island from&#13;
its people, while Republican carpet bag&#13;
otlicials plunder its revenues and exploit&#13;
the colonial theory to the disgrace of the&#13;
American people. We conderrtn and denounce&#13;
the Philippine policy of the present&#13;
administration. It has involved the&#13;
republic in unnecessary war. sacrificed&#13;
tho lives of many of our noblest sons&#13;
and placed the United States, previously&#13;
n and applauded throughout the&#13;
world as the champion of freedom in the&#13;
the false and un-American position of&#13;
crushing with military force the efforfs&#13;
of our former allie? tu achieve liberty and&#13;
' self-Rovornment. Tho Filipinos cannot be&#13;
citizens without endnnyering our civilization;&#13;
they cannot be subjects without&#13;
imperiling onr form of government and&#13;
as » c are not willing to surrender our&#13;
civilization or to convert the republic into&#13;
an empire, we ' favor an immediate&#13;
declaration of the nation's purpose to&#13;
give to the Filipinos first, a stable form&#13;
of government; second, independence, and&#13;
third, protection from outside interference,&#13;
such as has been given for nearly a century&#13;
to the republics of Central and South&#13;
America.&#13;
The greedy commercialism which dictated&#13;
the Philippine policy of the Republican&#13;
administration attempts to justify it&#13;
with the plea that it will pay. but even&#13;
this sordid and unworthy plea fails when&#13;
brought to the test of facts. The war of&#13;
criminal aggression against the Filipinos*&#13;
entailing an annual expense of many millions,&#13;
has already cost more than any&#13;
possible profit that could accrue from the&#13;
entire Philippine trade for years to come.&#13;
Furthermore, when trade is extended at&#13;
the expense of liberty the price Is always&#13;
too high.&#13;
T e r r i t o r i a l Eipnn»IOB.&#13;
We are not opposed to leriitortal expansion&#13;
when it, takes in desirable territory&#13;
which can be erected Into states in the&#13;
Union and whose people arc willing and&#13;
fit to become American eiltxens.&#13;
We favor expansion by every peaceful&#13;
and legitimate means. Rut we are unalterably&#13;
opposed to seizing or purchasing&#13;
of distant islands to be governed outside&#13;
the constitution and whose people can&#13;
never become cltisens. We are in favor&#13;
of extending the lepublic's Influence&#13;
among the nations, but believe that influence&#13;
should be extended, not by force&#13;
and violence, but through the persuuasive&#13;
power of a high and honorable example.&#13;
The Importance of other questionst-norr&#13;
pending Iwforc the Ajnericau people is m&gt;&#13;
wise di'mHiiFlied and the Democratic party&#13;
takes no.backward step from its position&#13;
on there, but the burning Issue of imperialism&#13;
growing out of the Spanish war Involves&#13;
the very existence of the republic&#13;
and the destruction of our free institutions.&#13;
We regard it as the paramount&#13;
issue of the campaign.&#13;
M o n r o e IJoolrlue.&#13;
We insist on the strict maintenance of&#13;
the Monroe doctrine and in all its integrity,&#13;
both in, letter and spirit, as necessary&#13;
to prevent the extension of European authority&#13;
on tins continent and as essential&#13;
to our supremacy in American affairs At&#13;
the same time we declare that no American&#13;
people shall ever be held by force in&#13;
unwilling subjection tc European authority.&#13;
We oppose militarism. Tt means con-&#13;
Qtiest abroad and intimidation and oppression&#13;
at home it means the strong&#13;
arm which has even been fatal to free&#13;
Institutions It is what millions or our&#13;
citizens hare fled from in Europe. It will&#13;
impose upon our peace-loving* people a&#13;
large standing army and unnecessary&#13;
burden of taxation. A small standing&#13;
army ami a well disciplined ttate militia&#13;
are amply sufficient in time of peace. This&#13;
republic has no place for a vast military&#13;
service and conscription.&#13;
In danger the volunteer soldier 1» his&#13;
country's best defender. The national&#13;
guard of the United States should ever btt&#13;
cherished in the patriotic hearts of a free&#13;
people. Such organizations are ever an&#13;
element of strength and safety. For the&#13;
first time in our history and co-eval with&#13;
the Philippine conquest, has there been&#13;
a ^wholesale departure from our tlmt-hon.&#13;
ored and approved system of volunteer&#13;
organisation. We denounce It aa un- Amerlcan and as a subversion or the aueteat&#13;
and ffr-at prtadpkii pt 4,&#13;
pie* . . •»» A. &gt; ..«i'i - v . . 4&#13;
P H v a t o Jt0BT#9«lf«*v&#13;
control the price of all material. a»d o f&#13;
the finished faftfett thus rejardins both,&#13;
.producers ami consumers. They lessen&#13;
t h e employment of labor, and arbitrarily&#13;
nx the terms and conditions thereof an&lt;*&gt;&#13;
deprive Individual energy and small cap!-,&#13;
tal of their opportunity for betterment.&#13;
They are the most efficient means y e t&#13;
devised for appropriating the fruits o f&#13;
industry to the benefit of the few at thV&#13;
.expense of the, many, and unless their in*&#13;
satiate greed is checked ail wealth will boaggregated&#13;
In a few bands and the re-;&#13;
public destroyed.&#13;
The dishonest paltering with the trust&#13;
evil by the Republican party, in state and,&#13;
national platforms. In conclusive proof of&gt;&#13;
the truth of the charge that the trusts&#13;
are the legitimate product of Republicanpolicies,&#13;
that tltey a r e fostered by Republican&#13;
laws and that they are protected*&#13;
by the Republican administration in re-,&#13;
turn for campaign subscriptions and political&#13;
support.&#13;
W a r Aa-afriii Tramis.&#13;
We pledge the Democratic parly to tin&#13;
unceasing warfare in nation, state and)&#13;
city against private monopoly in every:&#13;
form. Existing laws against trusts must,&#13;
be enforced and more stringent ones must&#13;
be enacted providing for publicity as to.&#13;
the affairs of corporations engaged in interstate&#13;
commerce and requiring all corporations&#13;
to show before doing business,&#13;
outside of the state of their origin, that&#13;
they have no water In their stock and&#13;
that they have not attempted and are not&#13;
attempting, to monopolize any branch of&#13;
business or the production of any article,&#13;
of merchandise. The whole constitutional&#13;
power of congress over interstate commerce,&#13;
the mails and all modes of interstate&#13;
communication should be exercised&#13;
by the e.naclment of comprehensive laws&#13;
on trusts. Tariff laws should be amended&#13;
bv putting tho products of trusts upon&#13;
the "free list to prevent monopoly under&#13;
the piea of protection.&#13;
Dinarley TarlST C o n d e m n e d .&#13;
We condemn the Dingley tariff law a s&#13;
a trust-breeding measure skillfully devised&#13;
to give to the few favors whi*"h&#13;
they do not desire and to place upot* tho&#13;
many burdens which they should ajfft&#13;
bear. ,&#13;
We favor such an enlargement of the&#13;
scope of the interstate commerce jmw a s&#13;
will enable the commission to prosjeet Individuals&#13;
and communities from disrilps*&#13;
inations and the public from unjust and&#13;
unfair transportation rates.&#13;
T h e F i n a n c i a l P l a n k .&#13;
We reaffirm and indorse the principle*&#13;
of the national Democralic platform&#13;
adopted at Chicago in 18&amp;t&gt; and we reiterate&#13;
the demand of that" platform for an&#13;
American financial system made by the&#13;
American people for themselves, which&#13;
shall restore and maintain a bimetallic&#13;
price level and a s part of such system,&#13;
the immediate restoration of the free and&#13;
unlimited coinage of silver and gold at&#13;
the present legal ratio of 16 to 1 wilhout&#13;
waiting for the aid or consent of any&#13;
other nation.&#13;
C u r r e n c y B i l l D e n o u n c e d .&#13;
We denounce the currency bill ona'ctecj&#13;
fit the last session of congress as a step&#13;
forward in the Republican policy which&#13;
aims to discredit the sovereign right of&#13;
the national government to Issue all&#13;
money, whether ecin or paper, and to bestow&#13;
upon national banks the power to&#13;
issue and control the volume of paper&#13;
money for their own benefit. A permanent&#13;
national bank currency secured by&#13;
the government bonds, nnist have a p e r -&#13;
manent debt to rest upon and if the bank&#13;
currency is to increase with population&#13;
and business the debt must also increase.&#13;
The Republican currency scheme Is theretorp&#13;
a scheme for fastening upon t h e&#13;
taxpayers a perpetual and growing debt.&#13;
We are opposed to this private corporation&#13;
paper circulated as money but without&#13;
legal tender qualities, and demand&#13;
the retirement of the national bank noiesas&#13;
fast as this government paper or silver&#13;
certificates can be substituted for&#13;
them.&#13;
D e p a r t m e n t of L a b o r .&#13;
Tn the interest of American Jabor n n *&#13;
Ihe uplifting of the worklngman as the&#13;
cornerstone of the prosperity of our&#13;
country we recommend that congresscreate&#13;
a department of labor In charge&#13;
of a secretrwy with a seat in the cabinet.&#13;
We are proud of the courage and fidelity&#13;
of the American soldiers and sailors&#13;
in all our wars; we favor liberal pensions&#13;
to them and their depeiwleiUs urt*&#13;
we reiterate the position taken in the Chicago&#13;
platform in 189« that the fact of enlistment&#13;
nnd service sli»ll be deemed&#13;
conclusive evidence against disease ant*&#13;
di&amp;ubtiity before enlistment.&#13;
M c a r a f f n a n C a n a l .&#13;
We favor the Immediate construction,&#13;
ownership and control or the Nicaragua&#13;
canal by the United States and we denounce&#13;
the insincerity of the plank in&#13;
the national Republican platrorm for ai»&#13;
isthmian c&gt;»nal In face of the failure of&#13;
the Republican majority to pass the bill&#13;
pending in congress.&#13;
We condemn the Hny-Panncefote&#13;
treaty as n surrender of American rights&#13;
and interests, not to be tolerated by the&#13;
American people.&#13;
We denounce the failure of the Republican&#13;
party to carry out its pledges; to&#13;
grant statehood to the territories of Arizona,&#13;
New Mexico and Oklahoma, and we*&#13;
promise the people of those territories&#13;
immedtate statehood and home rule during&#13;
their condition as territories and wo&#13;
favor home rule and a territorial form of&#13;
government for Alaska and Puerto likix&#13;
I m p r o v e m e n t of Arid Land*.&#13;
' W e favor an Intelligent system of im-r&#13;
proving the arid lands or the west, storing&#13;
the waters for pnrjwsos of irrigation&#13;
and the holding of such lands for actual&#13;
settlers. We favor the strict enforcement&#13;
of the ('h'lursc exclusion IMW and its application&#13;
to the same classes of alb&#13;
Asiatic races&#13;
No AHInnre W i t h rynftland.&#13;
.Tofferson said: "Peace, commerce anrr&#13;
honest fuendship with all nations; entanulinu&#13;
alliances with none."' We approve&#13;
this wholesome doctrine and earnestly&#13;
protest against the ttcmihlican ricpaiture&#13;
which has involved us in s o -&#13;
called world politics, includinjr th*» diplomacy&#13;
of Kuropo and th«* intrigue nnd«&#13;
land grabbing of Asia.'and we especially&#13;
condemn the ill-concealed Republican,&#13;
.alliance with England which must mcam&#13;
discrimination against other friendly nations&#13;
and which has already stiflod the&#13;
nation's voice, while liberty is being&#13;
strangled in Africa.&#13;
S y m n n t h y f o r the Boers*&#13;
Relieving In the principle* of seW-governineni&#13;
an:l rejecting as did our fore-*-&#13;
fathers the claim of monarchy, w e vitir&#13;
with indignation the purpose of England"&#13;
to overwhelm with force the South African&#13;
republics. Speaking as we do for t h o&#13;
entire American nation except its Republican&#13;
officeholders, and for all free men*&#13;
everywhere, we extend our sympathies tothe&#13;
heroic burghers In their inequal si niggle&#13;
to maintain their liberty and indepondenea.&#13;
L a v i s h A p p r o p r i a t i o n s D e n o n n e e d .&#13;
We denounce the lavish appropriations&#13;
of recent Republican conjrresars which&#13;
have kept taxes high and whicjr threaten&#13;
the perpetuation or the oppressive war&#13;
levies We oppose the accumulation of a&#13;
surplus to be squandered in aucb barefreed&#13;
frauds upon the taxpayer* a s the&#13;
shipping subsidy bill, which, under the&#13;
false pretence of prospering American&#13;
shipbuilding, would put unearned millions&#13;
into the pockets of favorite contrU&#13;
butors to the Republican campaign fund.&#13;
We favor the reduction and speedy re*&#13;
peal of the war taxea and a return t o&#13;
the time honored Democratic policy of&#13;
strict economy in governmental e x p e n d s&#13;
tures. /&#13;
• » • '&#13;
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L. ANQR&amp;A&amp;&#13;
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E«fjo.&#13;
THURSDAY, JULY 1¼ 1900.&#13;
EXCURSIONS&#13;
VI* TUB&#13;
MACHINERY AND iTHANSPOHTATION BUtl WN* "f.'I-AMEBIMM EXPOSrriWT'&#13;
. '„,.{ *" •"•• ' ' i ".;,"'—•—-, " "t r\&lt; nt '.'.V&#13;
1 A - - • • ' " * • - • ' • . ' &gt;' i * M &gt; &lt; ' * i&#13;
Sunday. July 22 island Lake; Grosal&#13;
Ledge &amp; (fraud Rapids.&#13;
Troiii will leave South Lyon at&#13;
8:45 a. m. Leave Grand Rapids&#13;
6:30 p. m,, Grand Ledge 8:00 p.&#13;
m. Bound trip to Grand Rapids&#13;
$1.60, Grand Ledge 10.75. t-29&#13;
When you want a modern, up-todate&#13;
physic try Chamberlain's Stomach&#13;
and Liver Tablets. They are easy to&#13;
take and pleasant in effect. Price. 25&#13;
cents. Samples free at F. A. Sigler'e&#13;
drugstore.&#13;
Some of the patrons of&#13;
Stockbridge School are trying to&#13;
get the principle out of the school&#13;
but has been re-engaged at an increase&#13;
of salary of $100.&#13;
Tsw Peat g^sssfdF for stomach *Bd&#13;
SoMPtt Troubles.&#13;
"I have bee* in the drug business&#13;
for isMftty years and have sold most&#13;
all of the proprietary medicines ot any&#13;
note. Among the entire list I have&#13;
never found anything to equal Chamberlain's&#13;
Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea&#13;
E9medy for all stomach and bowel&#13;
troubles/' says O. W. Wakefield, of&#13;
(Join m bus 6a. "This remedy cured&#13;
two severe cases of cholera morbus in&#13;
my family and I have recommended&#13;
and sold hundreds of bottles of it to&#13;
my customers to their entire satisfaction,&#13;
It affords a quick and sure cure&#13;
in a pleasant form." For sale by F.&#13;
A, Sigler Pinckney.&#13;
There is an abundant qnanity&#13;
of marl near Fenton and Holly&#13;
and cement factories will be built&#13;
at both places. It looks a though&#13;
Brighton's factory would not&#13;
materialize. Those who investigated&#13;
the beds here say there is&#13;
not enough to warrent the building&#13;
of a factory. They claim they&#13;
must nave at least 100 acres of&#13;
marl to^tart with.—Brighton Argus.&#13;
\&#13;
During last'May an infant child of&#13;
our neighbor was suffering from cholera&#13;
infantum. The doctors had given&#13;
up all hopes of recovery. 1 took a bottle&#13;
of Chamberlains Colic, Cholera&#13;
and Diarrhoea Remedy to the house&#13;
telling tbem I fert sure it would do&#13;
good if used according to directions.&#13;
In two days time tbe ehild had fn 1 Jy&#13;
recovered. The child is now vigorous&#13;
and healthy. I have recommended&#13;
this remedy frequently and have&#13;
never known it to fail.—Mrs. Curtis&#13;
Baker, BboFwalter, Ohio. SoldTbyFT&#13;
A. Sigler Pinckney. T&#13;
Copyright, 1900, fay t h e Pan-American Exposition Co. . .&#13;
This big structure ia 500 by 350 feet, with a central court 100 by 175 feet. Its type of architecture is the SpanV&#13;
lsh renaissance, modified to suit the conditions of the Exposition. The roofs are laid with red tile and the cementejf&#13;
walla are brilliant with color. The colors are to be reds and yellows in light tints. The facades will present an arcaded&#13;
effect, with broad, overhanging eaves, In imitation of the old mission buildings in California and Mexico.&#13;
The Central Court will be a veritable tropical garden, with a long, narrow pool, containing interesting specimens of&#13;
aquatic life, and will nave seats, where the weary visitor may rest a moment The Exposition is to be held in&#13;
in 1901 from May 1 to NOT. 1.&#13;
LOTION FOR TAN&#13;
Chicks and Warmth.&#13;
., Whenever chickens droop always&#13;
look closely for the large body-lice on&#13;
the heads and- necks; but supposing&#13;
there are no lice, the cause may be lack&#13;
of warmth in the brooder. Young&#13;
chicks are as tender as. babies, and&#13;
must never get chilled. Whenever you&#13;
notice that they crowd, and some are&#13;
found dead under the brooder in the&#13;
-morning, it indicates that there was&#13;
not enough heat. The floor should be&#13;
only lukp-wann, as the heat should&#13;
.come over the chicks. Of course, the&#13;
food is important, and should be varied.&#13;
Uncooked oatmeal, hard-boile&lt;V&#13;
eggs and too much meat will cvssv&#13;
bowel disease.&#13;
'v,&#13;
When the qnanity of food taken is&#13;
too large or the quality to rich heartburn&#13;
is likely to follow, and especially&#13;
so if the digestion has been weakened&#13;
by constipation. Eat slowly and not&#13;
too freely of easily digested food.&#13;
Masticate the food thoroughly. Let&#13;
six hours elapse between meals and&#13;
when you feel a fullness and weight&#13;
in the region of the stomach after eating,&#13;
indicating that yon have eaten&#13;
too mneb, take one ot Cn amber Iain's&#13;
How t o Enjoy Cotdoor Lifo Without Injuring&#13;
th« Skin.&#13;
HE remedies employed for keeping&#13;
freckles !n t h e . background&#13;
are not always .effective in sun.'&#13;
biirn.&#13;
Where the subject tans gradually,&#13;
the skin taking On a healthy&#13;
brown, through which t h e red glow of&#13;
health shows delightfully in the&#13;
cheeks, I should advise my readers not&#13;
to attempt to defeat a really becoming&#13;
condition.&#13;
"A summer girl is never more irresistible&#13;
than when s h e looks brown&#13;
and rosy from long days spent in the&#13;
open.&#13;
It is to the unhappy matrons and&#13;
girls who blister and peel and get red,&#13;
swollen noses I offer a little advice&#13;
and some simple remedies. First of&#13;
these is a wash which is particularly&#13;
useful during the summer months in&#13;
exposed situations, as, for example, at&#13;
the seaside, where the skin frequently&#13;
becomes irritable and much inflamed.&#13;
Formula for Lotion for Sunburn.—&#13;
Milk, 1 pint; carbonate of soda, 1 oz.;&#13;
glycerine, 1 oz.; powdered borax, %&#13;
oz. Use several times a day. if required^&#13;
An emulsion easily made and frequently&#13;
successful in arresting the&#13;
burning sensation produced by the sun&#13;
is prepared as follows^&#13;
Sweet almonds, blanched, 1 oz.; bitter&#13;
almonds, 1-3 oz.; pound the almonds&#13;
to a paste in a mortar with&#13;
pestle; add rose water, S ozs.; strain&#13;
through cheesecloth and add benzoate&#13;
of soda, 15 grains.&#13;
An emollient poultice will work&#13;
almost a miracle with a half-blistered&#13;
face. The poultfce must * be renewed&#13;
before it begins to get dry, and ia composed&#13;
of equal parts of rye and linseed&#13;
meal, with enough warm water to&#13;
make a rather this paste. A mask is&#13;
made of this same taste also and worn&#13;
for several hours at a stretch. It has&#13;
a wonderfully healing effect. It is indispensable&#13;
that the poultice or mask&#13;
should be kept moist.&#13;
A preparation called milk of roses&#13;
is excellent and if used every day will&#13;
keep the sunburn from ever becoming&#13;
painful. Make it as follows: Blanched&#13;
almonds, 1½ oz.; oil of almonds and&#13;
white soft soap, of each, 1 dram; rose&#13;
water, 12 ozs.—Make an emulsion; — To-&#13;
1&amp;p3!r on a*H6t dish and garnlsb&#13;
with parsley.&#13;
Masb one pound or tne puip oi boiiea&#13;
potatoes; add the yoke of two eggs, set&#13;
the bowl over the fire, stir until the&#13;
potatoes are quite dry. Form it into&#13;
a case or shell, brush it over with the&#13;
yolk o f . a n egg, put it into the oven&#13;
and bake to a light brown. Meantime&#13;
put one gill of white sauce into'a sauce&#13;
pan and mix in one teaspopnful of&#13;
lemon juice, half a teaspobnful of essence&#13;
^f anch70vteB~and the flesh~~of"a&#13;
lobster. Heat the mixture without letting&#13;
it boil. Pour this thick sauce Into&#13;
potato case and serve.&#13;
.ft* «(1 4&#13;
IB.V&#13;
Bio«f and&#13;
KNIU'S WHI1&#13;
AMtSftfeMBt&amp;rfttfti&#13;
orator aad Bowal ,R&gt;x -&#13;
jWejthfr. work, MV« gripe or sake yon&#13;
- MILL'S BtKHnmn PILLS&#13;
For baotaobpy I una or tore, and all gjdnay&#13;
SaaS*SaSdwWti*R«ldt rotoowswdteoyT rTef^udnfda*g.g lam do&#13;
**&amp;!*• Liu" mm*- r/Syttam 8ra-&#13;
Yo&amp;ean work&#13;
V 90«&#13;
A'$*e*'BQ9*«M)!t ffSco.&#13;
t 1h« ught*.&#13;
:&#13;
We do not make our thoughts;&#13;
they grow in use,&#13;
* Like grain in wood; the growth is'&#13;
• of the skies,&#13;
• Which are of nature; nature is of&lt;&#13;
God.&#13;
t The world is full of glorious like- negses.&#13;
—Bailey.&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
the strained emulsion add a mixture&#13;
of essence of roses, tt fluid dram; alcohol,&#13;
2½ ounces; rose water sufficient&#13;
to make the whole measure 1 pint&#13;
More alcohol is often ordered and used,&#13;
but too much of it is apt to cause a&#13;
separation of the ingredients.&#13;
\ Four Way* or Cook lug-the I'otolo.&#13;
Boll some veal bones, a knuckle bone&#13;
of ham and a bunch of vegetables in&#13;
three quarts of water until reduced to&#13;
about half. Chop an onion finely and&#13;
add to the stock. Peel and boil&#13;
three large potatoes, and when cooked&#13;
mash them, mixing in gradually one&#13;
breakfast cupful of cream or cream&#13;
and milk. Mix the potato cream with&#13;
the stock; strain it through a colander&#13;
into a soup tureen, season with&#13;
salt, pepper and one tablespoonful of&#13;
finely chopped parsley.&#13;
THE GARDEN.&#13;
The First Requisite for Socceurnlljr Cul.&#13;
m a t i n * riant* la a Froper Soiir&#13;
The first requisite for successfully*&#13;
cultivating plants of any kind, either&#13;
indoors or out, is a properly prepared&#13;
soil.&#13;
Don't scratch the face of the soil, an&#13;
inch or two in depth, but dig deeply,&#13;
pulverize finely, and give as much in&#13;
the way of enrichment as may be needed.&#13;
It is the plant which can send its&#13;
roots down into the soil that gives me&#13;
quickest returns in the form of crisp,&#13;
tender vegetables, or. the luxuriant i'olfage&#13;
and profuse blossoms, if the plant&#13;
Is a flowering one.&#13;
When sowing seeds have the bed&#13;
fine, then drop the seeds upon it and&#13;
cover ligntly. For fine seeds a saltshaker&#13;
is a great help toward even distribution,&#13;
and in the case of very fine&#13;
seeds it is a good plan to mix them&#13;
thoroughly with some fine sand.&#13;
When watering seedlings great care&#13;
is needed that they are not washed&#13;
Whaf *is true o r t h e vegetable plants&#13;
is even more so when the very fine&#13;
flower seeds are the ones to be watch-&#13;
When the pla'nts are well established&#13;
in the gardens and the dry times come,&#13;
do not sprinkle the surface of the soil&#13;
every night and coax the roots all to&#13;
the surface of the soil in their search&#13;
for moisture, but rather give a •- good&#13;
soaking, less often. A bottomless pall&#13;
sunk in the centre of melon or cucumber&#13;
hills may be filled with water, and&#13;
when given in this way it goes down,&#13;
where it is most effectual instead of&#13;
running off and doing very little, if&#13;
any, good.&#13;
In this connection let me say that&#13;
the soapy water, or, in fact, any w^*&#13;
ter that Is filled with lumpy refuse,&#13;
is better for the garden than clear water&#13;
as the soap and other stuff acts as&#13;
fertilizers.&#13;
More than that, it saves drawing&#13;
many a pail of water and makes a&#13;
good way of disposing of the water&#13;
that too often is thrown in one place&#13;
until the soil becomes sour and offensive&#13;
to both sight and smell.&#13;
Have the hoe and rake where it must&#13;
be passed on every trip to the g a r d a n ^ ;&#13;
As a companion for tnem'have aTiaskefT&#13;
containing some old gloves, hammer&#13;
and nails, trowel, strings and everything&#13;
needed for garden Work, not for*,&#13;
getting a pair of shears. When start-'&#13;
ing out to look the garden over, pick&#13;
up the basket and carry it along—the"&#13;
chances are that a lot of work will be&#13;
done ahat would not be if it was necessary&#13;
to go back for the implements&#13;
to work* with. Eva Gaillard;&#13;
One&#13;
com.&#13;
elo&gt;&#13;
ftHf' lllos-&#13;
OOQXM 19 E' i etoth bindasd&#13;
equal ta&#13;
r books costing;&#13;
factory return it and we will asena&amp;ie it or refund Emoney. aasdSjr.os&gt;Sfa«Jainustta|adoatee.&#13;
q u o ^ t h e k&gt;we*i*iMfon ,^0^,1111-.&#13;
aui iaYajou money. AdoSaaiallordento&#13;
• THE WERNER COMPANY, •&#13;
ruUikn aai aUwArtama. JJofen, Ohiaj&#13;
SOME FACTS!'BEAD THEM!&#13;
• &gt;+»! •&gt;!*&#13;
Stomach and Liver Tablets and the&#13;
heartburn may be avoided. For sale&#13;
by P. A. 8igler, Pinckney.&#13;
Subscribe for Dispatch.&#13;
Cut four good-sized potatoes into&#13;
shreds; sprinkle salt and pepper over&#13;
these. Butter lightly some tartlet&#13;
moulds, cover the bottoms wih grated&#13;
Parmesian cheese, arrange a layer_of&#13;
potatoes on the top, sprinkle more&#13;
cheese over themuAnd continue till all&#13;
are filled, finishing by sprinkling&#13;
cheese over the top ahdputting a' little&#13;
clarified butter over all. Set on a very&#13;
hot stove for two minutes, then bake&#13;
for twenty-five minutes i n a hot oven.&#13;
Serve on a folded napkin.&#13;
Bake some large potatoes in the&#13;
oven. When tender cut a slice off the&#13;
top of each and carefully scoop out&#13;
some bf the enterior. Rub this through&#13;
a fine sieve and mix with it one ounce&#13;
of butter, one tablespoonful of cream,&#13;
salt and pepper. Stir in stewpan over&#13;
the fire till h o t Then move it on one&#13;
side and add the beaten whites of two&#13;
eggs. Fill the potato skins with this&#13;
mixture and brush them over with&#13;
JaOT^bjgtt0&amp;..£ljU* Ibm.ou a fancy&#13;
lose from their hold in the soil.&#13;
There Is no better seed-pan known&#13;
than wooden boxes about three inches&#13;
deep. When the seedlings are growing&#13;
their third pair of leaves transplant to&#13;
another such box, placing the plants&#13;
farther apart&#13;
Have the soil damp when transplanting&#13;
and if the little plants are very&#13;
close together, take two or more up as&#13;
one, and after they are well set, pinch&#13;
off all but one. In this way the plants&#13;
are disturbed less than when trying to&#13;
divile more closely. In case of very&#13;
rare or scarce plans every one counts&#13;
and this rule is not supposed to apply.&#13;
When the plants are ready for second&#13;
transplanting and thumb pits are&#13;
in demand, good substitutes can be&#13;
made from triangular shaped pieces of&#13;
stiff paper, rolled into cornucopiashaped&#13;
tube and pinned together with&#13;
slivers. When ready to put the plants&#13;
In the open ground, just unpin the paper&#13;
and the work is done without disturbing&#13;
the roots of the plant. Egg&#13;
shells also make good things for the&#13;
purpose, but when these are used it Is&#13;
needed o lodk out for the chickens if&#13;
the plants are set out in the sun.&#13;
Sometimes fine seeds, like onions or&#13;
parsnips,will fail to germinate because&#13;
the soil is too dry on the surface and at&#13;
others because a heavy rain, just after&#13;
sowing, will cause a crust to form over&#13;
the surface which the little sprouts&#13;
cannot break through.&#13;
A light mulch of some kind scattered&#13;
over the bed as soon as the seeds&#13;
are sown Will many times save the&#13;
seeds from failure,&#13;
Clover Hay.&#13;
It is within bounds to say that twentynflve&#13;
per cent of tike value of our annual&#13;
clover bay crop is lost through&#13;
delay in harvesting. This loss amounts&#13;
to a very large sum of money, and yet&#13;
we farmers have no money to throw&#13;
away. Much has been written On this&#13;
point, and it must be that many do&#13;
not believe that the claims for earlycut&#13;
clover hove foundaYfon'is fact tcan&#13;
see no other grounds for accounting,&#13;
for much negligence and delay in&#13;
the matter of starring the mower at&#13;
the right time. Formerly I cut clover&#13;
rather late, and in recent-years I have&#13;
made it a point to cut early. The difference&#13;
in value of the hay is so marked&#13;
that once more I urge the wisdom&#13;
of harvesting clover as'soon as it ceeihs&#13;
to be in full bloom, or, at least, that&#13;
those who arc doubtful should experiment&#13;
with one field, putting up a few&#13;
tons as a test. Idle horses fatten in&#13;
winter upon clover hay alone when&#13;
made right, though I am not recommending&#13;
exclusive- feeding of hay.&#13;
When in full bloom clover is full of&#13;
digestive nutriment: later is loses its&#13;
value rapidly, becoming less digestiable,&#13;
less palatable and more dusty.&#13;
Why not prove this oft-repeated assertion&#13;
by experiment?—W. A Lomax.&#13;
EUREKA SURE STOP TOOTHACHE POttDEftS&#13;
Gives quick_and_anrs.reliefi'&#13;
EUREO coiPLEiidli oimimT&#13;
fiembves Black-heads and Pimples.&#13;
, EURWCOW CURE ,!;&#13;
Cures all Corns, Bunions, and Callous&#13;
places.&#13;
EUREKA 0. K. WART REMOVE&#13;
Is certain in its results.&#13;
Bach 10c, Coin or Stamp*&#13;
By Return Mat!. -,&#13;
Agents wanted—write today.&#13;
Address, EUBSKA SUPPLY Horjsa,&#13;
Pinckney, Mich. &lt;i&#13;
tfrand Trunk Railway System.&#13;
- 9.44 a. p .&#13;
* 4:45 p. m.&#13;
£ 4:45 p. m,&#13;
Jacluon, Det'r*o*i-t., aad&#13;
Intermediate ttaUooe&#13;
mail and asp.&#13;
Jackeon, Lenox, and&#13;
intermediate station*&#13;
mixed.&#13;
Oi&#13;
9:1* a. m. 3»&#13;
5:15a. m.&#13;
7:55 p.m. £&#13;
The 846 MJm^ui Srti p. *0fro*m hare through&#13;
cpoan batwaen-Jatksbn and Detroit.&#13;
W. J. Mask,&#13;
Hofs In the Orchard.&#13;
The hogs should have undf ' ed&#13;
sway in the orchard during the .nilt&#13;
season, and they will eat up all he&#13;
failed and wormy apples, and hunt out&#13;
many of the grubs, etc., which are injurious&#13;
to the trees. In this way thev&#13;
destroy many of the enemies of sound&#13;
m a t and sound trees'and in other ways&#13;
sjrestlv benefit the orchard.&#13;
35&#13;
Werner's Dictionary rtSynoijmjft Weipju,&#13;
lytieiasr u i Fiiui^i^am&#13;
book that tbooid beta thereat&#13;
t ^ o W e r t s l n J h s BnsUsh&#13;
Popular route for Ann Arbor, Toledo&#13;
and points East, South, and for&#13;
Howell, OwoBso; Alma, Mt Pleasant&#13;
Cadillac, Manistee, Traverse City and&#13;
points in Northwestetfc Michigan.&#13;
W. fl, BUUNJCVT,&#13;
P^MABaUETTg&#13;
13, 1SOO.&#13;
OOCTOSAtr&#13;
brand Bapida&#13;
Ionia.,..,,,&#13;
Ar&#13;
Sooth Lyon.,,, ,,,&#13;
. . . . . . . * . , . . . a . Plymouth&#13;
DotroH&#13;
Detroit.&#13;
Flrmoot*&#13;
n u s x B a x ,&#13;
.Agent, Sooth Lyon.&#13;
Boats jbyon&#13;
BowoQ&#13;
QwodBantde&#13;
H. F. MOBXLBB,&#13;
Aettas G. P. • . ,&#13;
Grand Beplda.&#13;
We read of co-operation in almost&#13;
every line of work, so why not fn the&#13;
way of gardening? Let one neighbor&#13;
ralss a quantity of tomato plants, another&#13;
cabbage, or celery, or some of her&#13;
sort and so on through a circle of&#13;
friends, and titan divide. It surely&#13;
would be easier than fussing with so&#13;
BngUsn&#13;
ths preciM moasing* that o S ? S&#13;
tends to convey a dictionary of&#13;
8yooayB»la neaded to aToid raps,&#13;
tMon. Tna atfoageat agora of&#13;
apeeeh la anttthona. IntLiidkv&#13;
"joo ' "wej«"k&#13;
COMFANV,&#13;
•O YIAM?&#13;
ATENTS&#13;
TftADc M A M S&#13;
OtSWNS&#13;
Coovmotrra 46.&#13;
' . • &gt; • ' • V&#13;
• "!t'i ' • ' t i i , /&#13;
•&gt;&#13;
r*&#13;
* )&#13;
••'•: J \&#13;
.*''•' ••••?' V •'&lt;•.&#13;
" • » ' * ' ''• '-.••' £ ' , : :.^*V"',;:&gt;,, v.J'.'..'•;•'• .; •••,'.• ; : ^ ' ' 3 n ' 0 . , . / &gt; ; ^ v ". •&lt;- •'&#13;
• V - y ^ : : . • • • . • • / : • • . • ; V : . v * ' . &gt; ^ . - , - - . - ^ *•.-,»',-• : . . . - ^ ' • • , • • ; v ** • • '.•'• • / . - - • - v . ' V • ••'••?•.• ••••• •' . \ . \&#13;
? ; •&#13;
, ^ * #&#13;
, *J' , %*ftl% ,1 alto jpar*a|e* a&#13;
^ ^ Will B. Dtirpw.&#13;
'•&gt;&#13;
At the great ecumenical miaroaary&#13;
conference iu New Tqrk&#13;
recently, Bar. Dr. &amp;RMer*&lt;iit«,&#13;
aftexihia own and fefc congre^t.&#13;
i o n ^ t l f ^ v na4 bWfatirredi by&#13;
J&gt; w%Nh^9wv-7*',«^P^4iar'*T'- ^i^fclBP*** ""*• "**•- ~.«BiejsBBBeB*«ajs».^BL&#13;
(^f t^ie a^ppfea^On &lt;rf tfaiJ paoo until&gt;p^&gt;k»k 1*41» ejtenwoa, fcs, j * * of tin body.&#13;
t r a m in the New Bebri-&#13;
H p « « d «dd: -Wi\liam Me&#13;
JMfclflfI* 'r*""** Xpn have&#13;
bS|j£i)(^n^t^ere to atop, l o t&#13;
there^i^|a&lt;^er blot that could&#13;
be placed^ipon our flag than that,&#13;
~In a lecture at Tre mont Temple&#13;
Boaton, recently on "Scientific&#13;
~'em1&#13;
iCJSSa," Joeepk&#13;
v . - .&#13;
.'•U",11',"!'!1! I ' ^ U J ^ J&#13;
Tola*&#13;
ney, 8U4« otMiahigaa:&#13;
Nolio* b )JMy (too, th*t« nMliaf ol&#13;
th*Boiidot^#''c a t i o * o£ $bow tmax&amp;ipn at Uld » *t {•fc eV t&amp;ow*i*&#13;
BaU wUhiw^a Village oo8aHwUyJoly&#13;
14, *. D. SOO, *« tlw puriK^^irjrtiM*-&#13;
inf the 4fca*f of all nek pnion wboiMtt&#13;
W poytpiwd of 0 ^ n w w i y W»fto»riopoM)&#13;
sod thatmrid Boud of RilpiaHoa&#13;
Willbe4BMpioooatt«t 4»y and at M _ _&#13;
alaaa afoMMld frtw ft o'ciogk \n tht ftTf" J-.-tMliw^t:^*^'""&#13;
^ O f ^ o&lt; (ha Vllbfo B w i o i ftajM&#13;
B* H. T&gt;f 1&gt; filtiV&#13;
S5IBfcw i.imiiiip ,&#13;
* * ©• of tht &lt;roalfr 4* • rettablo&#13;
lad«x to tht general condition of&#13;
tae body. When you ftnd tbe&lt; comb&#13;
looking Uoodlesa, light eoloral and&#13;
llatpf yon know you have an anaemic&#13;
Mid, On the contrary, when ypn see&#13;
the eomb dark colored, purple and,&#13;
tense in tnbstance, you have tbei opposite&#13;
plethora, Between these owo extreme*&#13;
yon will find in perfect birds a&#13;
comb with plumb look and healthy col*&#13;
or. The condition of wattles &amp;qd earlobes&#13;
will confirm your opinion a s&#13;
'formed from the comb. Change*- in&#13;
0 ^ aj^njifjj^ip doa to aom* dm-&#13;
»- -^- Jttl ^jama other&#13;
wyiajBa BsBettsjaA&#13;
To taa^o^iaof the Vrtge^of,:,&#13;
heyv)UehigaB:&#13;
Notioeia hereby grren that a speeial&#13;
al«aoa6tttidVm»«ewmbeheld&lt;fl»4&#13;
Town Hall, Within aaid Village, on Moo-&#13;
0&gt;y, Jpfar Id A. P. IWO-atwhkh ek^om&#13;
" ~ • afasiaaid-iVllfafe in Ike sum not *&#13;
14 » a rare dliease In this&#13;
. hut Is seen at tln*t», 1¾ birds&#13;
eltj bam bsfoaajntt. l i t in&#13;
..,. t, cnnjjgtons, bnt ^&#13;
•urnagaents&#13;
at} nrst&#13;
lings on.thejcomb&#13;
) / hard to the touch.&#13;
*UJUeJj«Uaf in.a^dayor two*grow&#13;
m a x -d^scajging a yellow&#13;
ore. these aorea heal other&#13;
pointa-appear, |gy&lt;agfeand foJJow the&#13;
f^pftwdntt.&#13;
^ W % » ^ » U a i 4 » A do hereby&#13;
turret la refund the mofay on a »&#13;
pant bottle of Don^VJttisJr if it deaf&#13;
notasfftany eonfb, enW, whoopin#&#13;
oengh»or throat tronbla. We alto&#13;
gnarantaa Down's BUxir la eureooa&gt;&#13;
a™^ptesja»||,.»? sjan^anjas^ ao^asjnnnn&gt; 10 wr&#13;
reetfons, onnneeyjjaek. M full dote&#13;
o».gate to b n t M ^ ^ a ^ detes^ dw-&#13;
^&#13;
l i e ^ wJ^l^rvtbe ineat^seftre&#13;
and atop the moat diatrmiag&#13;
coogb.;&#13;
P. \.9&gt;gltr,&#13;
W. B.Oarrpw,&#13;
mg^ta said: Mf5wt, I&#13;
them vagaries. They have aa&#13;
; many sides as a rolling-pin. ^Se&#13;
advances, retreats and hedges.&#13;
He has no definition for food.&#13;
He does not cover the whole case.&#13;
His staifimeois we limited i a&#13;
scope. He acknowledges that he&#13;
has not studied the effect of alcohol&#13;
upon the nervous or circulatory&#13;
organs. That is like 'Harney&#13;
with Hamlet left out&#13;
A strong testimony concerning&#13;
theeyiljefifectsiof cigarette amok- BEABDrMOB&#13;
k g comes from Chief Willis L . t b a t g m o l I g l l t t h e reCent cbanfla. of&#13;
w t W t W d n W r f d l n f&#13;
aketeh and detctiption of any invention win&#13;
pRMBptly receive OUT opinion free concerning1&#13;
the patentability of atme, "How to Obtain a&#13;
Patent;' sent upon request Patent* mcured&#13;
through na adtertiaed for sale at aux expeaae.&#13;
Patents taken out throupb ui receiTe apeejal&#13;
notice, without charge, in THE PATHKT Rscoas^&#13;
an illustrated and widely circulated ionraal,&#13;
consulted by Manufacturers and Investors*&#13;
Send for sample oopyPUK. Address,&#13;
VaCTOJt tf.TO*v)«S*CO.&#13;
(AUeatAttoraciya)) •f^ajtajM1^!^ WAJSHJNOTOH. o, a.&#13;
Pttftadatatst ** * "•*Un&amp;•*te—at . A*l*lK••m•—da-&#13;
Not made by a tonat or eontroued by a com&#13;
ttnajtonTFor rrwa Book sod Pries Lltt,addre«a&#13;
**+•&#13;
Moore, of the United States weather&#13;
bureau, who has issued an&#13;
order prohibiting their use by all&#13;
employees. Mr. Moore gives bis&#13;
reasons as follows:" The order was&#13;
j^sped after .ear, eful consideraftpn&#13;
and a thorough investigation of&#13;
the evils resulting from cigarette&#13;
smoking. In this service we are&#13;
compelled to maintain a very&#13;
strict discipline in order to secure&#13;
satisfactory service. Some of our&#13;
men, who Were regarded as the&#13;
most thorough and competent,&#13;
doing every detail of their work&#13;
with the utmost promptness and&#13;
, gradually became careless&#13;
and lax. I sent inspectors to&#13;
investigate, and in a number of&#13;
cases it was found directly attributable&#13;
to the use of cigarette.&#13;
Cigarette smoking must cease."&#13;
A G e e * C#»a*li Btettcilie.&#13;
Many thousands have been restore d&#13;
to health and happiness by the nse of&#13;
. Cbamber)ain,s Cough Remedy. If&#13;
JONES o p sAtisfitRiUTG^'M. Y 1*****^ w i t b a n y t h r o a t o r l n n *&#13;
troub'e, give it a trial for it is certain&#13;
to prove beneficial. Coughs that have&#13;
resisted all other treatment for years&#13;
haveyeilded to this remedy and per*&#13;
feet health been restored. Cases that&#13;
seemed hopeless, that the climate of&#13;
famous health resorts failed to benefit.&#13;
ik*! have, been per me ntly cured by itsuse.&#13;
For sale by E. A. Sigler, Pinckney.&#13;
The vote upon each proaroaition shall be&#13;
by a printed ballot and ahall be in the following&#13;
words:—For the issuing of bonds&#13;
for the purchase of fire protection "Tee"&#13;
Q. For the issuing of bonds for the purchase&#13;
of fire protection "No" [ ] •&#13;
The Polls of said election will be opened&#13;
at 7 o'clock in the forenoon and will remain&#13;
open until! 5 o'clock in the afternoon&#13;
of aaid day of election.&#13;
By order of the Board of Election Commissioners&#13;
of said Village.&#13;
Dated, this 6 day of July, A. D. 1900.&#13;
ST.H.TnxPLi, Clerk.&#13;
time on the Detroit &amp; Milwaukee and&#13;
Toledo, Saginaw &amp; Mnsbegon Divisions&#13;
of Grand Trunk Railway System,&#13;
is that train number 20 on the *D. £&#13;
M., which leaves Grand Haven at 8:45&#13;
a.m., Grand Rapids at 10:00 a. m. has&#13;
been made a fast train and now arrives&#13;
Detroit 2:50 p. m. Connecting&#13;
with Lake Shore A Michigan Southern&#13;
Ry. leaving Detroit 8: p. m., making&#13;
the southern connections arriving&#13;
Also bear in mind that the Fast&#13;
Steamboat Express No. 17, that leaves&#13;
Detroit at 4:05 p. m, has been made a&#13;
daily train, now leaving Sundays as&#13;
well as week days and connecting at&#13;
Grand Haven (daily) with Crosby&#13;
Transportation Company's Palatial&#13;
8teftmers for Milwaukee and the&#13;
Northwest. 128&#13;
giving an unsightly appearance to the&#13;
bird. Yon are nolllkely to see „this&#13;
disease among your own birds, unless&#13;
in some extraordinary way it has been&#13;
Introduced from outside. Persons who&#13;
care enough for hens to take a poultry&#13;
paper or attend instruction In poultry&#13;
culture will not so feed and care for&#13;
birds as to get them in condition to develop&#13;
fungoid. Birds with this disease&#13;
are net fit to eat, and if in a badly debilitated&#13;
state should be killed and&#13;
burned. On the other hand, if your&#13;
birds are in good health, and yet there&#13;
are a few cases of this diseases, you&#13;
can probably handle it without great&#13;
trouble. All sick birds should be quarantined.&#13;
Tie the legs of each bird together&#13;
just loose enough oo alio*&#13;
walking, but tight enoi-gh to stop all&#13;
scratching of head. Sponge the sort*&#13;
with a wash of carbolic acid crystals,&#13;
five grains to a pint of water. Fred&#13;
DISEASES OF POULTRY.&#13;
Subscribe for the DISPATCH&#13;
f&#13;
The fissm latum of BpmltU te tha F»«*k-&#13;
Th# Caora at Fowls.&#13;
CHICKEN POX.&#13;
Chicken pox rarely attacks mature&#13;
birds, but ta seen on half-grown stock,&#13;
and during the fall of the year. A wet,&#13;
dark season seems to cause an increased&#13;
number of cases, and a most severe&#13;
type of dSese: The prominent feature&#13;
of chicEen pox is the sores of ulcers&#13;
that appear upon the bird. These at&#13;
first are little red points; then matter&#13;
forms, and the spots have a white&#13;
appearance. The center dries a little&#13;
leaving a depression. The scabs are&#13;
scratched or rubbed and drop off, leaving&#13;
a raw surface. If the ulcer forms&#13;
near and extends to the eyes, the sight&#13;
of one or both may be lost In severe&#13;
cases, where there are large numbers&#13;
of the ulcers, the bird loses appetite&#13;
and strength. Chicken pox commonly&#13;
runs a mild course and the birds recover&#13;
with liUle or no treatment. The&#13;
ulcers ordinarily appear on the head,&#13;
face and udderside of wing, "but in&#13;
some epidemics are found on all parts&#13;
of the body. To save irritation apply&#13;
carbolated vaseline to the ulcers every&#13;
day. Keep the sick birds indoors on&#13;
wet days, and in a dry house. Feed&#13;
lightly a mash that is made largely of&#13;
animal food, such aa, meat-meal and&#13;
ground grain, mixed with boiling milk.&#13;
Coop in orchard, if possible, in summer,&#13;
and in the cold shut-in days do&#13;
not forget to give cloyer.&#13;
ECZEMA.&#13;
This is a disease showing itself by an&#13;
eruption on the skin, and is apparently&#13;
caused or aggravated by too much&#13;
stimulating food. It is not contagious.&#13;
The eruption appears first on the wattles&#13;
and may only be noticed there.&#13;
First,'you notice white points, thtn&#13;
they.grow larger, run together, burst&#13;
and discharge a thin liquid that dries,&#13;
forming a crust The sick bird has little&#13;
appetite and movea about aimlessly.&#13;
Two grains calomel and one each&#13;
of citrate iron and Quinine, given,&#13;
morning and night, tor ten days, will,&#13;
do for internal medication. To tht&#13;
wattles and other parts having the&#13;
etwptkm, at»ply an ointment of the&#13;
as»ats&gt;of sine. Feed plain food,, with&#13;
~ er, or grass, and give the bfeda&#13;
a s m roomy house and '&#13;
to add black pepper to the mash.&#13;
WHITE COMB.&#13;
White comb, like fungoid, is a tl.sease&#13;
of city rather than country, and hence&#13;
not likely to be met on a poultry farm.&#13;
It is also caused by bad air, little or no&#13;
sunlight and fostered by the lack of&#13;
(green food. It makes its appearance&#13;
on the comb in the shape of lit I? white&#13;
pin-head points, that soon break down,&#13;
run ogether and form a hisk, whiU&gt;&#13;
ish crust, that comes off in flakes.&#13;
When the disease extends to neck, the&#13;
feathers come*, off, giving a grotesque&#13;
look to the bird. These cas?s cannot&#13;
be cured unless removed from the dark&#13;
basement to green fields and this can&#13;
seldom be done. Like fungoid, the&#13;
single cases that may now or then&#13;
creep into an otherwise healthy flock,&#13;
can be cured by a like treatment, but&#13;
I doubt whether it will pay xor the&#13;
time needed.&#13;
Neither the atmosphere nor electricity&#13;
have direct effect in souring milk&#13;
but the bacteria to which we now attribute&#13;
this change grow and mul iply&#13;
best during the warm, sultry period&#13;
immediately preceding electrical&#13;
storms.&#13;
3 : *t '•&#13;
: • • * ? •W*m.Mm&amp;&gt; tfiwwt^rpj^Ay SPSSfS ST&#13;
FRANK L. ANDREWS&#13;
ChiMves)** Saylsjfs.&#13;
"Why, Freddie," exclaimed the&#13;
mother of a precocious five-year-old,&#13;
"aren't you ashamed to call auntie&#13;
stupid? Go to her at once and tell her&#13;
yon are very sorry."&#13;
'Aunty." said the little fellow a few&#13;
minutes later, "I'm awful sorry you&#13;
are so stupid.'*&#13;
A teacher said to a boy who had the&#13;
reputation of being very bad: "How&#13;
many bad boys does it take to make a&#13;
good one?**&#13;
"One, sir, if yon treat him well," was&#13;
the answer.&#13;
"How are Susie and Emma getting&#13;
along in cooking school V*&#13;
"They're progressing: wonderfully.&#13;
They have learned how to make cunning&#13;
little turtles out of raisins and&#13;
cloves."»&#13;
t He wouldn't pay an architect,&#13;
It was a simple waste:&#13;
A He'd go ahead and just erect.&#13;
T A house to suit his taste. ~&#13;
* He did, and now the neighbors find]&#13;
A cause to slop and grin;&#13;
For, dont you know, it slipped his]&#13;
mind&#13;
To put a chimney in.&#13;
—-Chicago News.&#13;
i When yon think the cow has a hol-&#13;
, |ow horn, let the horn alone, but feed&#13;
bring up the general system te a&#13;
healthy condition.&#13;
Saeacriptton Pries $1 in AAvasot.&#13;
sttMaaF eoetctooasdt'octletifst wae altmtare.r , Mieeicse,&#13;
AsrertiaiBf teles autds known oa sftliaatisa.&#13;
Baataase Cards, StOO par yaax.&#13;
Death sad B M R U M nodosa paSUaasd bee,&#13;
jinnna nnamaals ftraitlartainmaata I S T h» MM&#13;
£ o ^ d ^ s ^ a y p r W ^ ™ o S t e a ^ S S :&#13;
•UofadHlsaioo. In ca—tkltatsata nMstejtaat&#13;
to U»a*»oa,rag^ra*iairWba charted, ^ ^&#13;
t^^SSJS* saSS^B^^^^s^S ais^a ^SSw^S^BSBaW^S^SaSa^SF^n*W VS^BaSB WBwBVSS^BI^•BBBIBSB^&#13;
edASmtepatUM et frsettoajhajra^.foTSeh&#13;
wiBbrtsaerteauttl ordsraddSSSinttad.and&#13;
wUl&gt;• oaaTssaferaonoiillsjilj fly^ttlrtsaiaa&#13;
efadTartlsaisate MCTSTraack thTToffloa as early&#13;
MTuBasAYttomlmg to lassie aaiaaertteatae&#13;
weak.&#13;
J OH PBlXXMVGf&#13;
Wsharsallklada&#13;
w&amp;iea en shies&#13;
)&#13;
XaaUitabiaa«aas,asMclaUy. V&#13;
and the latast styles of Type, ate.,&#13;
oa to exeeata all kinds of work,&#13;
Pffaiatsanptle, tan,t fsolasMteresii,l i1,&#13;
iOSTP afrsi gao*o fdfy wleotriikip eoaaa bJa ohouaa_.&#13;
kk, soeh as&#13;
BUI Haade,*eto&#13;
Btlis.^ta&gt;.U&#13;
ica. Priosssa «LL MlhlS fATAMUW f IBS* OF B V S a r MOSTSU w m&#13;
THE VILUGfi DIRECTORY.&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICERS. ~&#13;
Paaan»sjn.»MMM...^-M.M.......... alas. Kclntjro&#13;
TACSTSBS E. L. fhompaon, Alfrad Monks,&#13;
Daniel Bkaards, Geo. BOWBUB, Sassae!&#13;
Bykaa, 9. D. Johnson,&#13;
v L S S S . . . . . . . H I i i . . n u n ~ . i n . . . . » . , . . A . H . T S S P l S Tajuspnaa , , ^^^..^^.,. W. B. Manky&#13;
ABsWWJOsa&gt;aa a a « a »« * « • — — » • m &gt; — i usst &lt;•**•» W^ a A * OftsT SwuTCosnusatovsji....^ ....J. Monks.&#13;
H j u i / n u m o u Dr.H. '.dialer&#13;
anoBKBT..MMM....MWMMMH....MM..M...W. A. Oarr&#13;
s&#13;
CHUBCHE8.&#13;
MMTHOD18T IPESOOPAL CHOBCH.&#13;
BAT. Chas. Siaspaon, oaator. Sasvloae Sfary&#13;
Baaday motalaa: at IQttu, and avary Sahday&#13;
STsnlna at 7:00 0^61008:. Prayer sisatlniThBradaye^&#13;
Mlaga. Sanday school at ek&gt;ee of norn-&#13;
Ingssrrloa. LSAI. SIOLBB, Sept.&#13;
CoNuaseAXioMAi. CHURCH.&#13;
BOT. 0. W. Bios pastor. Sarrka arary&#13;
Bandar ^ornteg at 10:W aa4 every BaBday&#13;
sTsnlnx at7:ero'clook. PrayetlinaatlngThBra&#13;
day ataaJnc*. BSBdaj senool afJ6)osa of awrainsserrlvs.&#13;
B.H.Taspla, Bopt^ Maoal SwarthuDiBac&#13;
ST; MAUrB 'JATHOUC CHUBCH.&#13;
BBT. M. J. Coaaarford, Pastor, darvloaa&#13;
every Sunday. Low mass at7:SUo'cloek&#13;
aifh saaaa with aarmon at 9:8Ca&gt; m. Catoehiaai&#13;
at S :00 p. nu, veapara and benediction at 7:80 p. a .&#13;
SOCIET1E8;&#13;
rnhe A. O. H. Society of this placatmaets every&#13;
1 third Bonday lntne ft. BUt&amp;awMaU.&#13;
JOBB Taomey and M. T. KLaUy.Goaaty Doisgates&#13;
• s a a a a B B ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^&#13;
fjtPWOBTH LBAOJDE. Meats avery Sunday&#13;
IlSmniBg at M0 oelock la the M. S. Cnarch, A&#13;
eordlal invitation la extended to everyone, aspedally&#13;
young people. Mrs. Stalls flrahassAaa^—&#13;
nHBISTIAN ENDBAVOB 80CIBTT:-Meet.&#13;
VJlnga evory Sunday evening at 9x89. President.&#13;
MiafStt*Carpenter; SeeriSry, Mrs. C. W.Rice.&#13;
mHB W. a T. D. meets the first Friday of eaoh&#13;
1 month at S:S0 p. m, at tbe hoese of Dr. H. F.&#13;
Ngler. Everyone intesested la temparaneo is&#13;
eoadlallyinTtted. Mrs. Veal Blglar, Pras; Mrs.&#13;
Btta Dmrfse, Secretary.&#13;
Tw C T . A . and B. Society of tola place, neat&#13;
every third Satoroay evening in the Pr. Matthew&#13;
Hau. John Donohaa, P reaident,&#13;
NIGHTS OF MACCABBB8.&#13;
Meetererr Friday evening on or before fall&#13;
of tha moon at their hall in the Swarthoat bldg.&#13;
VUitlBg heathers are cordlaUy iavlted.&#13;
CHAS. UaHraaxL, Six knight Commander&#13;
Tivingatoa Lodge, No. 7S,P 1 1 , 1 . Begolar&#13;
J j Cosmmnnlcation Taesday evening, on or before&#13;
thefoll of the moon. H. F. Blglar, W. M.&#13;
BDBB OF BA8TESN STAB saeeta each month&#13;
the Friday evening following the regular F.&#13;
" MABT BBAD, W. M. 0&#13;
r\RDER OF MODBEN WOODMBN Meet the&#13;
Worst Thursday evening of each Month in the&#13;
ftttoabeeaaU. 0. L. Grimes V. C.&#13;
T ADIES OF THE MACCABEES. Meet every let&#13;
oardlaUy In-&#13;
Jja&amp;dSrdBatnrdayofaachmonth atS&amp;Sp auat&#13;
CTo.T. M. halL Visiting sisters ot&#13;
vlted. Lxuk COBZWAT Lady Com.&#13;
KNIGHTS or ras LOYAL GUABO&#13;
meet every second Wa&#13;
*^ TT NIGHTS T&#13;
I S J W •*• .*"&amp; • * • "&#13;
^BBBk evanlngof every&#13;
A1^ k V T.M.HaUat7:So W^GaardswalotMna.&#13;
evaslng of every month In the E.&#13;
T.M.HaUat7:So o'elock. AUvialtlaf&#13;
Cvl* Grimes. Cap*. Gen.&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
H.F.SWLta M.O. e«US»BLtJ|M,0&#13;
DRS. SIGLER &amp; SIGLER,&#13;
Physld ana sad Burgeon*. All onus prompt!&#13;
•tundad today or night. Oolee oa Maiattr&#13;
Plnokaey, Mieh.&#13;
DR. A. B. GREEN.&#13;
DENTlST-fivary Friday; and on Thursday&#13;
when having appolatsienu. Otteeover&#13;
Slgkc*a Drue Store.&#13;
^ 1 ¾ \rv. •• X #e Mr**** ,&#13;
VETERINARY 8URQEOM* Graduata of Ontario Veesriaary Oolmga, asm of&#13;
the Veterinary DenUatry CoUaga&#13;
Toeeate Oaases*&#13;
W1U promptly attend to sjl itiiassai 1 the S*&gt;&#13;
atsi&#13;
. •••••;•&lt; •&#13;
• '•'•'J': i'•'••;&#13;
ornccatniLL. PINCKIHCY.&#13;
• »i&#13;
m&#13;
F&#13;
• -'. Js&#13;
.J&#13;
£V&lt;.&#13;
' r « i M&#13;
l^^^ff^^^. ISB^SBafii AUSBBBBBS&#13;
• # ^ / '&#13;
v : ^ : : ' " '&#13;
• V ' " . / : ' / . "&#13;
f.&#13;
;t:'':;~V"\&#13;
-.1&#13;
»0&#13;
• ,--.-^. ^ - : ' - . • •&#13;
•...*' -,&#13;
. I ' . v&#13;
ItVi',^,''..."'. :.&#13;
-•Mi&#13;
&gt; ';.'&#13;
..37&#13;
* : * » • ;&#13;
*•' •tfv;-&#13;
• ? • • &lt; " ,&#13;
•. v • • • • • . ^ .&#13;
^ . -&#13;
giuchtteg&#13;
r s a n L. ANDBBira, Pnbmhe*&#13;
c Mr. Gladstone's, jitfatue. Is to be setW?&#13;
at Athens, OB tbo gardens of Zappeioi,&#13;
in recognition of hi* services to Greek&#13;
Independence.&#13;
Even in these.days, of higk power,&#13;
email caliber rifle*, the smooth bore&#13;
*ith a big mouth Is a bad weapon to&#13;
run up against' ' :*"'".&#13;
A ragged coat cfteit covers a warm&#13;
t^act, while many an embroidered&#13;
waistcoat has nothing better under it&#13;
than heartburn.&#13;
Queensland is being converted Into&#13;
a large orange orchard. The Australian&#13;
orange ripens at a time when&#13;
other countries cannot provide fruit&#13;
Telegraphic wires are better conductors&#13;
on Monday than on Saturday,&#13;
on account of their Sunday rest, and&#13;
a rest of three weeks adds 10 per cent&#13;
to the conductivity of a wire.&#13;
Recent explorations show that Brazilian&#13;
resource^, if pressed, could lurnish&#13;
50 per cent more raw rubber than&#13;
at present. Investigations in Africa&#13;
have disclosed a supply which is practically&#13;
limitless.&#13;
Gen. Andre, the new French war&#13;
minister, had his measures on taking&#13;
office cancelled pending military punishments&#13;
and rescinded Gen. Galliffet's&#13;
prohibition of the wearing of civi]&#13;
dress by officers when off duty.&#13;
There is a horse in Havana, Cuba,&#13;
which probably has saved the lives of&#13;
1,800 persons. He is kept in Havana's&#13;
bacteriological laboratory, which, like&#13;
the Pasteur Institute of Baltimore, was&#13;
founded by a newspaper. This horse&#13;
was given to that institute in 1S95.&#13;
From that year up to date, it is said&#13;
to have furnished 74,000 cubic centimeters&#13;
of anti-diphtheria serum, with&#13;
a record of 1,800 cures.&#13;
Special trains on the Siberian railroad&#13;
certainly possess everything for&#13;
the comfort of travelers. There is a&#13;
library, piano, writing conveniences,&#13;
barber shop, gymnasium, ice water,&#13;
hot water, dials which indicate the&#13;
next station and the length of the stop,&#13;
double windows to protect the passengers&#13;
from dust and the extreme Si-/&#13;
berian cold, and an observation car at&#13;
the rear. There is no charge for medical&#13;
attendance, but baths cost $1. There&#13;
are attendants on the train speaking&#13;
English, French and German/ The&#13;
time from St. Petersburg to Irkutsk is&#13;
seven days. , e&#13;
The famous Trans-Missouri Freight&#13;
association decision of the Supremq&#13;
Court was said to have thrown the&#13;
railroads back into a "competitive"&#13;
state. But a railroad passenger association&#13;
has decreed that any road running&#13;
a train between New, York and&#13;
Chicago in less than twenty-eight&#13;
hours must charge $4 above the regular&#13;
fare. That does not look like competU&#13;
Jjon^An association sufficiently power--&#13;
TAXMAN'S SEit^JS.&#13;
RELIOION A PREVENTATIVE Ot?&#13;
THE WORLD'S ILLS.&#13;
« : t , h | ; . ... V i&#13;
It b an Aothw Principle, gags Dr. T*J?&#13;
•avge, Which C&lt;M»t»ntljr, Work* f«r&#13;
tb» Welfture at the 8*&gt;4ar« **»* »a4&#13;
BpuL :i&#13;
(Copyright, 1000, by LoUl* Klopseh.)&#13;
. Dr. Talmage is now traveling in&#13;
Norway; where he has been deeply&#13;
interested in the natural phenomena&#13;
and the attaint social life of that won*&#13;
derful land. In his * discourse, thin&#13;
week he argues, contrary to the opinion&#13;
of many, that religion is an active&#13;
principle which works constantly for&#13;
the welfare of body and mind and&#13;
soul, His text is Luke siv.. 34, "Salt&#13;
is good."&#13;
The Bible is a dictionary of the&#13;
finest similes. It employs, among living&#13;
creatures, storks and eagles and&#13;
doves and unicorns^and sheep and cat*&#13;
tie; among trees, sycamores and terebinths&#13;
and pomegranates and almonds&#13;
and apples; among jewels,&#13;
pearls and amethysts and jacinths and&#13;
chrysoprases. Christ uses no stale&#13;
illustrations. The lilies that he plucks&#13;
for his sermons are dewy fresh; the&#13;
ravens in his discoursss are not stuffed&#13;
specimens of birds, but warm with&#13;
life from wing tip to wing tip; the&#13;
fish he points to ^are not dull about&#13;
the gills, as though long captured,&#13;
but a-squirm In the wet net jU3t&#13;
brought up on the beach of Tiberias.&#13;
•In my text, which is the peroration of&#13;
one of his sermons, he picks up a&#13;
crystal and holds it before his congregation&#13;
as an illustration cf divine&#13;
grace In the heart, when he says, what&#13;
,we all know by experiment, "Salt is&#13;
good."&#13;
• I shall try to carry out the Savior's&#13;
idea in this text and in the first place&#13;
say to you that grace is like salt in&#13;
its beauty. In Galicia there are mines&#13;
'of salt, with excavations and underground&#13;
passages reaching, I am told,&#13;
280 miles. Far under ground there&#13;
are chapels and halls of reception, the&#13;
columns, the altara and the pulpits of&#13;
salt. When the king and the princes&#13;
come tp visit these* mines* the whole&#13;
place iis Illuminated, and the glory of&#13;
crystal walls and crystal ceilings and&#13;
crystal floors and crystal columns,&#13;
under the glare of the torches and the&#13;
lamps, needs words of crystal to describe&#13;
it. But you, need not go so&#13;
far as that to find the beauty of salt.&#13;
You live in a.land Which producesmillions&#13;
of bushels of it in a jfear, and&#13;
you can take the morning rail train&#13;
and in a few hours get to the salt&#13;
mines ^and salt springs. And you&#13;
have this article morning, noon and&#13;
night on your table. Salt has all the&#13;
beauty of the snowflake and water&#13;
foam with durability added. It is&#13;
beautiful to the naked eye, but under&#13;
the glass you see the stars and the&#13;
diamonds and the white tree branches&#13;
and the splinters and the bridges of&#13;
fire as the sun glints them— ThereJsmore&#13;
architectural skill in one of these&#13;
ful to compel the rich and enterprising&#13;
roads to forego the advantage of their&#13;
enterprise is hardly the shorn, crippled&#13;
and decrepit creature that its members&#13;
have represented it as being.&#13;
A recent visitor to an astronomical&#13;
observatory looked through the great&#13;
telescope, and reported a remarkable&#13;
appearance in the sky. The professor,&#13;
standing near, was incredulous; the&#13;
looker persistent. The man of science&#13;
took his turn at the instrument, and&#13;
then quietly remarked: "There is a&#13;
cobweb forming across the glass. That&#13;
accpunts for your vision of the extraordinary&#13;
object." Observers in various&#13;
departments of human • thought&#13;
and activity, who report the coming of&#13;
wonderful or threatening things into&#13;
view may, so to say, have only a cobweb&#13;
to thank for what they see. The&#13;
business, the political or the religious&#13;
firmament has really ho such occupants&#13;
of its space.&#13;
England's patent office has just is**&#13;
sued its report for 1S99, and it appears&#13;
that there has been a falling off during&#13;
the past twelve months, as there is a&#13;
diminution of about 1,000 in the number&#13;
of the year's complete specifications.&#13;
The outbreak of the war occasioned&#13;
the invention of several shields&#13;
and cuirasses for soldiers; the abnormal*&#13;
heat during the summer resulted&#13;
in many applications for patents&#13;
for headgear for horses; and the passing;&#13;
of the "Shop Assistants' Seats Act/'&#13;
by which every employer must provide&#13;
his' assistants with seats during their&#13;
work, reacted in the granting of patents&#13;
for over fifty various kinds of&#13;
seats. The largest number of applications&#13;
in one day was m , and toe&#13;
smallest fifty. Women were responsible&#13;
for 574 specifications, 149 of which&#13;
were in connection with articles of&#13;
dress and forty-two related to cycling.&#13;
The general diminution Is attributed&#13;
to the great decline of Invention la&#13;
connection with ths cycling industry.&#13;
crystals of salt than human ingenuity&#13;
has ever demonstrated* in an Alhambra&#13;
Or St Peter's.&#13;
Ood'i Merclee Innomerftble.&#13;
It would take all time, with an in**&#13;
fringement upon eternity, for an angel&#13;
of God to tell one-half the glories&#13;
in a salt crystal. So with the grace&#13;
of God. It is perfectly beautiful. I&#13;
have seen it smooth out wrinkles of&#13;
care from the brow. I have seen it&#13;
make an aged man feel almost young&#13;
again. I have seen it lift the stooping&#13;
shoulders and put sparkle into the&#13;
dull eye. Solomon discovered its&#13;
therapeutic qualities when he said, "It&#13;
is marrow to the bones." It helps to&#13;
•digest the food and to purify the&#13;
"blood and to calm the pulses and quiet&#13;
ihe spleen, and instead of Tyndai's&#13;
prayer test of 20 years ago, putting a&#13;
man in a philosophical hospital to be&#13;
experimented upon by prayer, it keeps&#13;
him so well that he does not need to&#13;
be prayed for as an-Invalid.. I am&#13;
speaking now of a healthy region—not&#13;
of that morbid religion that sits for&#13;
"three hours on a gravestone reading&#13;
Harvey's "Meditations Among the&#13;
•Tombs''—a religion that prospers, best&#13;
In a bad state of the liver I I speak&#13;
of the religion that Christ-preached. 1&#13;
suppose when that religion has conquered&#13;
the world that disease will be&#13;
banished and that a man a hundred&#13;
years of age will come in from business&#13;
and say: "I feel tired. 1 think&#13;
it must be time for me to gp," and&#13;
without one physical pang /heaven will&#13;
have him, ?&#13;
But the chief beauty of grace is m&#13;
the soul. It takes that- which was&#13;
hard and cold and repulsive and&#13;
makes It all over again. It pours&#13;
upon one's nature what David calls&#13;
"the beauty of holiness." It extirpates&#13;
everything that Is hateful and&#13;
unclean. If jealousy and'pride and&#13;
lust and worldlIn«ss lurk about, they&#13;
are chained and have a very small&#13;
sweep. Jesus throws upon the sou J&#13;
the fragrance of a summer garden as&#13;
he comes in, saying, "I am toe rose&#13;
of Sharon," and he submerges it with&#13;
the glory of a spring morning as he&#13;
•&amp;m a r ' i&#13;
iHat grace did for the three Johns! j nation's wealth.- To get to the t o s f c i * ^ '•T *«*r&#13;
; *#v-Vl#*w^. «•*-*-*&gt;**&#13;
It took John Bupyan,, the foul mouthed*&#13;
and made John Bunyan, the immortal&#13;
dreamer. It took John Newton,&#13;
the infidel sailor, and In the midst&#13;
of the hurricane made him cry out,&#13;
"My mother's God, have mercy upon&#13;
me!" It took John Summerfleld from&#13;
a life of sin, and, by the hand of a&#13;
Christian maker of edge tools, led him&#13;
into the pulpit that burns still with&#13;
the light of that Christian eloquence&#13;
which charmed thousands to the Jesus&#13;
whom he once despised. Ah, you may&#13;
search all the earth over for anything&#13;
eo beautiful or beautifying as the&#13;
-ffraee of God. Go all through the deep&#13;
mine passages of Wlellczka and amid&#13;
the underground kingdoms of salt in&#13;
Hallstadt, and show me anything so&#13;
exquisite, so transcendently beautiful&#13;
as this grace of God fashioned and&#13;
hung in eternal crystals.&#13;
A &gt;T«ceMlty of Life.&#13;
Again, grace is like salt in the fact&#13;
that it is a necessity of life. Man&#13;
and beast perish without salt. What&#13;
are those patb3 across the western&#13;
prairies? Why, they were made there&#13;
by deer and buffalo going and coming&#13;
away from salt ,,licks." Chemists and&#13;
physicians all over the world tell us&#13;
that salt is a necessity of life. And&#13;
so with the grace of God; you must&#13;
have it or die. I know a great many&#13;
speak of it as a mere adornment, a&#13;
sort of shoulder strap adorning a&#13;
soldier, or a l i g h t - f r o t h i n g dessert,&#13;
brought in after the greatest part of&#13;
the banquet of life is over, or a medicine&#13;
to be taken after powders and&#13;
mustard plasters have failed to do&#13;
their work, but ordinarily a mere&#13;
superfluity, a string of bells around a&#13;
horse's neck while he draws the load,&#13;
and In nowise helping him to draw it,&#13;
So far from that, I declare the grace&#13;
cf God to be the first and the last necessity.&#13;
It is food we must take or&#13;
starve into an eternity of famine. It&#13;
is clothing without which we freeze&#13;
to the mast of infinite terror. It,is&#13;
the plank, and the only plank, on&#13;
which we can float shoreward. It is&#13;
the ladder, and the only ladder, on&#13;
which we-can climb up into the lignt.&#13;
It Is a positive necessity for the toul.&#13;
You can tell very easily what the effect&#13;
would be if a person recused to&#13;
take salt into the body. The energies&#13;
would fail, the lungs would struggle&#13;
with the air, slow fevers would crawl&#13;
through the brain, the heart would&#13;
flutter, the life would be gone. Salt&#13;
a necessity for the life of the body;&#13;
the grace of God a necessity for the&#13;
life of the soul.&#13;
Again I remark that grace Is like&#13;
salt in abundance. God has strewn&#13;
salt In vast profHaion all over the continents.&#13;
Russia seems built on a saltcellar.&#13;
There is one region in that&#13;
country _that turns out 90,000 tons a&#13;
year. England and Russia and Italy&#13;
have inexhaustible resources in this&#13;
respect. Norway and Sweden, white&#13;
with snow above, white with salt beneath.&#13;
Austria yielding 900,000 tons&#13;
annually. Nearly all the nations rich&#13;
in-it—rock salt, spring salt, sea salt.&#13;
Christ, the Creator of the world, when&#13;
he uttered our text, knew it would become&#13;
more and more significant as the&#13;
shafts were sunk and the springs were&#13;
bored and the pumps were worked&#13;
and the crystals were gathered. So&#13;
the grace of God is abundant. It is&#13;
for all lands, for all ages, for all/conditions.&#13;
It seems to undergtrd everything,&#13;
Pardon for the vorst sin, comfort&#13;
for the sharpest suffering, brightest&#13;
light for the thickest darkness.&#13;
Around about the salt lakes of Saratov&#13;
there are 10,000 men toHing- day ana&#13;
night, and yet they never exhaust the&#13;
saline treasures. And if the 1,600,000,-&#13;
000 of our race should now cry out to&#13;
God for his mercy there would he&#13;
enough for all—for those farthest&#13;
gone in sin, for the murderer standing&#13;
on the drop of the gallows. It is an&#13;
ocean of mercy; and if Europe and&#13;
Asia, Africa, North.and South America&#13;
and all the islands of the sea went&#13;
down in it today they would have&#13;
room enough to wash and come up&#13;
clean. Let no man think that his&#13;
case is too tough a one for God to&#13;
act upon. Though your sin may be&#13;
deep and» raging, let me tell you that&#13;
God's grace is a bridge not-.built-on&#13;
earthly piers, but suspended and spanning&#13;
the awful chasm of your guilt,&#13;
one end resting upon the rock of eternal&#13;
promises and the other on the&#13;
foundations cf heaven. Demetnu3&#13;
wore a robe so incrnsted with'Jewels&#13;
that no one after him ever flared to.&#13;
wear it, but our King, Jesus, take3 off&#13;
the robe of His righteousness, a robe&#13;
blood-dyed and heaven-lmpearled, and&#13;
reaches it out to the worst wretch in&#13;
all the earth and says: "Put that on!&#13;
Wear it now! Wear it forever;*'&#13;
Pure B a t o w t h e 8orfftc«.&#13;
Again, the grace of God is like salt&#13;
in the way we come at It The salt&#13;
on the surface is aimost always impure—&#13;
that which lncrusts the Rocky&#13;
mountains and the South American&#13;
pampes-and in India; but the miners&#13;
go down through the shafts and,&#13;
through the dark labyrinths and alomg&#13;
by galleries 01 rocfc and with torekes&#13;
and pickaxes find their way under the&#13;
very foundations , of tne earth, to&#13;
sillne ftp#B8? of- the taUfc .fcy^ m**&#13;
chlnery goes down, boring depth be*&#13;
low depths djspth below depth, until,&#13;
from under the very roots of thcmountains,&#13;
the saline^ water supplies&#13;
the aqueduct This water Is broatht&#13;
to the surface and is exposed in tankr&#13;
to the sun for evaporation, or itN li&#13;
put in betters mightily heated, and tne&#13;
water evaporates, and the salt gathers&#13;
at the bottom of the tank—the work&#13;
is completed and the fortune made.&#13;
So with the grace of God. It is to be&#13;
profoundly sought after. With all tha&#13;
concentrated energies of body, mind&#13;
and soul we must dig for i t No man&#13;
stumbles accidentally on i t We need&#13;
to go down to the very lowest strata&#13;
of earnestness and faith to find It&#13;
Superficial exploration will not turn&#13;
it up. We must strive and Implore&#13;
and dig until we strike the spring&#13;
foaming with living waters. Then ths&#13;
work of evaporation begins, and as&#13;
when the salfne waters are exposed to&#13;
the sun, the vapors float away, leaving&#13;
nothing but the pure white Bait&#13;
at the bottom of the tank, so, whsa&#13;
the Christian, soul is exposed to the&#13;
Sun cf Righteousness, the vapors of&#13;
pride and selfishness and worldliness&#13;
float off, and there is chiefly left beneath&#13;
pure white holiness of heart&#13;
Then, as In the case of the salt, the&#13;
furnace is added. Blazing troubles,&#13;
stirred by smutted stoker3 cf darkness,&#13;
Jiuicken the evaporation of worldliness,&#13;
a*d the crystalization of grace.&#13;
* * «&#13;
T i e Pivotal Battln,&#13;
When Gov. Geary of Pennsylvania&#13;
died, years ago, I lest a good friend.&#13;
He impressed me mightily with the&#13;
horrors of war. In the eight hour3&#13;
that we rode together in the cars he&#13;
recited to me , the scenes through&#13;
which ho had passed in the civil war.&#13;
He said that thero came one battle&#13;
upon which everything seemed to&#13;
pivot. Telegrams from Washington&#13;
said that the life of the nation depended&#13;
on that struggle. He said to&#13;
me:. "I went into that battle, sir,&#13;
with my son. His mother and I&#13;
thought everythTng of hlmT YoiTEnow"&#13;
how a father will feel toward his son&#13;
who is coming up manly and brave&#13;
and good. Well, the battle opened ancL.&#13;
concentrated, and it was awful.&#13;
Horses and ridfrs bent and twisted&#13;
and piled up together. It was awful,&#13;
sir. We nult firing and took to tho&#13;
point of the bayonet. Well, sir, I&#13;
didn't feel like myself that day. I&#13;
had prayed to God for strength for&#13;
that particular battle, and I went Into&#13;
it feeling that I had in my right arm&#13;
the strength of ten giants." And as&#13;
the governor brought his arm down&#13;
on the back of the seat it fairly made&#13;
the car tremble. "Well," he said,&#13;
"the battle was desperate, but after&#13;
awhile we gained a little, and we&#13;
marched on a little. I turned round&#13;
to the troops and shouted: 'Come on,&#13;
boys!' and I stepped across a d&lt;*ad&#13;
soldier, and, lo! it was my. son! 1&#13;
saw at. the first glance he was dead,&#13;
and yet I did not dare to stop a minute,&#13;
for the crisis had come in the battle.&#13;
So I just got down on my knees,&#13;
and I threw my arms around him, and&#13;
I gave him one good kiss and said,&#13;
'Goodby, dear,' and sprang up and&#13;
shouted, 'Come on, boys!'" So it is&#13;
in the Christian conflict—it is a fierce&#13;
fight. Eternal ages seem depending&#13;
on the strife. Heaven is .waiting for&#13;
the bulletins to announce the tremendous&#13;
issue. Hall of shot, -gash of&#13;
saber, fall of battle-ax, groaning on&#13;
every side. We cannot stop for loss&#13;
or bereavement or anything else. With&#13;
one ardent embrace and one loving&#13;
kiss we utter our farewells and then&#13;
cry: "Come on, boys! There are&#13;
other heights to be captured; there^&#13;
are other ioes to be conquered; there&#13;
are other crowns to be won."&#13;
Yet as one of the Lord's surgeons,&#13;
I must bind up two or three wounds.&#13;
Just lift them now, whatever they be.&#13;
I have been told there is nothing like&#13;
salt to stop the bleeding of a wound,&#13;
and so I take this salt of Christ's&#13;
gospel and put it on the lacerated&#13;
soul. It smarts a little at first but&#13;
see—the bleeding stops, and lo, the&#13;
flesh comes again as the flesh of a little&#13;
child. "Salt is good." "Comfort&#13;
one another with these words."&#13;
, • • • * &gt; .&#13;
**N^a*$ Aa«ft#Mitst,. J-U» -4¾.¾¾^ So&#13;
Scott'for Wert*'* iiedewhlp—fiaif. of&#13;
•"•"•^T^"&#13;
iabwaam 0» this skis •* i h * waterever&#13;
became so well known as Steward'&#13;
3-qtfftt$*i^ of&#13;
the, wojw, and pue of the ..best, men&#13;
whO:tefer ;eat: i« j t y * * ^ I»t*r**t is,&#13;
now j p M i ^ t n th^es^hs^ipWai'from&#13;
to his old antagonist, • Jake Gaudaur,&#13;
for a race in Boston. Although many&#13;
years at the game tBanlan is still «b!e&#13;
to 4 6 a, fast sprint :&#13;
Ned Hanten Is now 44 years of ago.&#13;
E a r l y P o s t a g e in England.&#13;
Articles of value could be sent if an&#13;
account of them were given at the&#13;
office. In 1711 an act was passed abolishing&#13;
the penny post. They were taxed&#13;
with the rates and stamped with the&#13;
mark of the general postofflce, and&#13;
the rate was 1 shilling per ounce.for&#13;
parcels. Letters could be* -carried&#13;
eighty miles for 2 pence^ letters more&#13;
than eighty miles, 3 pence and 6 peace.&#13;
A letter to Dublin cost 6 penes single,&#13;
and double letters 1 shilling, and 1&#13;
shilling and 6 pence an ounce.' Foreign&#13;
postage was not expensive. In&#13;
1706, for instance, a letter of a single&#13;
sheet could be carried to the West Indies&#13;
for 1 shilling and 3 pence, and In&#13;
1708 Mr. Povey established a foot post&#13;
carrying letters in ths London district'&#13;
only, for half a penny; It was not&#13;
long, however, before the postal authorities&#13;
stopped him.&#13;
EDWARD HANLAN.&#13;
(As the once famous oarsman appearstoday.)&#13;
He was born in Toronto, Ont., and&#13;
learned to row almost as early as he&#13;
did to w,alk. His racing career dates&#13;
from 1872, whc.n he won , two single&#13;
scull races. Hanlan rowed his first&#13;
race out of his own country in 1876 at&#13;
Philadelphia,-and .won three heats in&#13;
as many days. He also cut down the&#13;
record for-the three-mile course toittm.&#13;
9s. In 1878 he won the championship&#13;
of America by defeating Evan Morris&#13;
Over the Hulton course at Pittsburg.&#13;
He also defeated Charles Courtney the&#13;
same year.&#13;
The next year Hanlan. journeyed to&#13;
England and Africa. He surprised the&#13;
people of the other side by defeating&#13;
their crack professionals, Hawdon and&#13;
Elliott In England, in 1879, he gave&#13;
his first exhibition as a sculler. Over&#13;
a five-mile course he. cut the record&#13;
from 35m. 10s. to 33m. 56%s.&#13;
The next year Hanlan won the&#13;
championship of the world and the cup.&#13;
The next year he won from Laycock of&#13;
Australia, previously defeated by him,&#13;
and became the owner of the famous&#13;
Sportsman's cup. In July, 1S83, he&#13;
broke the world's record for four&#13;
miles, making It in 27m. 67½s. In 1884&#13;
Hanlan met his first defeat at the&#13;
hands of Beach,' losing the championship,&#13;
of the world through! the- interference&#13;
of the steamer Tonki. He was&#13;
defeated for the second tjme by Beach&#13;
the same year.&#13;
Hanlan went after the three-mile&#13;
record the next year and succeeded in&#13;
lowering it from 19m. 54s. to 19m. 23s.&#13;
In 1887 Hanlan lost the championship&#13;
of America to Gaudaur at Lake Calumet,&#13;
Pullman, 111., A return match was&#13;
later made with Gaudaur and again&#13;
Hanlan won the championship of&#13;
America; Going to Australia once&#13;
more, Beach again won from him and&#13;
turned the title over to Kemp, who was&#13;
successful in defending it. Since 1893&#13;
Hanlan has done little rowing, barely&#13;
enough to keep himself in condition,&#13;
most of his time being devoted to&#13;
coaching. He is now coach for the&#13;
Union boat club of Boston.&#13;
During his career as a sculler Hanlan&#13;
has rowed in 200 races, and of thess&#13;
only four were lpst by him through&#13;
out-and-out rowing. In nearly every&#13;
case in which he failed to finish first&#13;
it was through some accident. In Australia&#13;
he was defeated by Beach, but&#13;
the latter was so rowed out at the finish&#13;
that he was carried from, his boat,&#13;
and this in his own climate and on the&#13;
river in which he had been accustomed&#13;
to row. Nearly 100 of Hanlr.n's races&#13;
have been for the championshi?. In&#13;
these matches alone his earnings were&#13;
over $80,000, and these and other races&#13;
and exhibitions netted him at least&#13;
$350,000.&#13;
I n t h e P u l p i t a t 9 8 .&#13;
Although 98 years of age, the Rev.&#13;
R. C. Chapman continues to preach&#13;
regularly! Seventy-eight years ago he&#13;
gave up a lucrative practice as a solicitor&#13;
inXondon and started religious&#13;
work in connection with the Plymouth&#13;
brethren at Barnstaple. Since then he&#13;
has preached regularly, and ea« age&#13;
has in no way diminished his vigor —&#13;
London Express.&#13;
Senator Hoar** Beading.&#13;
Senator Hoar of Massachusetts, when&#13;
asked recently what he had been reading&#13;
of late, replied: "For serious Work,&#13;
'David Harum'; for light reading and&#13;
amusement, I've been going through&#13;
Gibbon again."&#13;
3,&#13;
mn&#13;
iLi^ttlii ^samm^m&#13;
• V&#13;
• •*:?&#13;
*;&lt;*'':r • • • ! • ' ' ' ^ ' • • • ^ ' v - r - ^&#13;
,. - . t ' y J &gt;&#13;
* ' , ' • •&#13;
• / * , • ' • ' ! ; » "&#13;
^WuflsSVlfi?&#13;
'••M&#13;
'1- '&#13;
• ' I I &lt;l • w.&#13;
' • / . ' • ' • ' • '&#13;
J C ' . ^&#13;
I;' »•' '?.*-&gt;&#13;
j&#13;
OUR CALENDAR&#13;
» i t #•&gt; * • #&#13;
3 * = MINOR [VIHIS OF 1 I K&#13;
Sterns of Genera! Interest Told in&#13;
Paragraph Si&#13;
COMPLETE NEWS SUMMARY.&#13;
Secord of Happenings of Much or Little&#13;
Importance from All Parte of the Civilised&#13;
World-£rict)s of Farm Product*&#13;
In Western Markets.&#13;
•All the charity of the vrorld will be&#13;
needed in India for the next four&#13;
months to save millions from death,"&#13;
^aid Dr. Louis Klopech, who has 'Just&#13;
returned. "I expect that 2,000,000 will&#13;
starye to death anyhow."&#13;
Dr. G. R. WIeland of Yale found a&#13;
turtle in Black Hills that lived tans of&#13;
millions of years ago, which proves&#13;
that region was once an ocean.&#13;
Deep waterways commission^ report&#13;
favors a twenty-one-foot .channelnfrom&#13;
lakes to ocean, which would cost&#13;
$190.183,386.&#13;
Sultan has promised to pay $100,000&#13;
indemnity in settlement of American&#13;
missionary claims in ninety days.&#13;
New Porto Rican tariff has more&#13;
than doubled exports and nearly doubled&#13;
imports.&#13;
After Nationalist attack on Minister,&#13;
French Chamber adjourned in /Usorder&#13;
and a free fight followed. Lasies tried&#13;
to strike Premier Waldeck-Rouaseau,&#13;
who was defended by Socialists.&#13;
Augusta Cottlow, a Chicago pianist,&#13;
won high praise from London critics.&#13;
Greece may raise funds by lottery&#13;
to make its navy as strong as Turkey's.&#13;
Boer envoys arrived in Paris.&#13;
Eleven persons killed and twenty-five&#13;
others prostrated by Friday's heat in&#13;
Chicago.&#13;
Belgians fear the wrath of Britons&#13;
over the acquittal of Spido for his attempt&#13;
to kilt the prince of Wales may&#13;
cost the former nation much trade.&#13;
In five days Roosevelt traveled 2,000&#13;
miles and spoke forty-one times in&#13;
forty towns.&#13;
Funeral of seventy-six victims of&#13;
Hoboken fire was, held. Cortege was a&#13;
mile long.&#13;
Three of the eight regiments in Cuba&#13;
were ordered home by Secretary Root.&#13;
Fourth of July celebrations killed 59&#13;
and injured 2,767 people.&#13;
Heat caused five deaths and fourteen&#13;
prostrations in Chicago Thursday.&#13;
Dr. Robinson Tripp of Chicago.aged&#13;
95 years,' died-&#13;
National Education Council, which&#13;
meets at Charleston, S. C, is expected&#13;
to stimulate educational activity in&#13;
South.&#13;
Great crowd will visit Canton on&#13;
July 12, when McKinley is notified of&#13;
renomination. *&#13;
Public opinion in France regards&#13;
General Jamont's resignation as a national&#13;
disaster. Senate sustained ministry.&#13;
On account of his youth Belgian&#13;
caurt acquitted Sipido, who tried to&#13;
kill Prince of Wales.&#13;
London critics .say Jean de Reszke's&#13;
voice is a wreck.&#13;
N. W. Harris &amp; Co. of Chicago have&#13;
financed a loan of $3,344,000 for the&#13;
Chicago &amp; Northwestern Railway company.&#13;
Because of the poor wheat crop numerous&#13;
orders for rolling stock have&#13;
fceen countermanded by northwestern&#13;
railways. • '&#13;
Gov. Roosevelt gets a telegraphic&#13;
call *o Canton from President McKinley&#13;
while homeward bound from Oklahoma.&#13;
President McKinley delivered Fourth&#13;
•of July address to the .people of Canton.&#13;
Forty-eight yachts take part in the,&#13;
Columbia Yacht. Club.'s regatta.&#13;
Crowds greeted Gov. Roosevelt at&#13;
Kansas and!"Missouri towns' and he&#13;
spoke briefly^ .^. . . . '. :&#13;
Western railroads are to vote on a&#13;
^propositibivto increase excursion rates&#13;
made on the certifk te plan.&#13;
Filipino leaders take the oath of&#13;
uicKiancc end puch tho v;ork for ponce.&#13;
TH« TRAMP* F1AHQ.&#13;
^ H * — T - «*•*•»•*«&#13;
A- SUrf Wtwm fcJaw FMSSSS •* jPjjJUrl.&#13;
^TT"" "^" Wiitfl 'OH B«g1—*• - - — .&#13;
! "Th* story o* -Bo**1 Shepherd's pt--&#13;
too In the mountains o* Mexico reeglk&#13;
an incident of the Pennsylvania oil regions,"&#13;
remarked- a gentleman connected&#13;
with the Tide Water Pipe Line&#13;
company. 4^he Humboldt , winery&#13;
was; one of the first oil refineries built&#13;
In the oil region. It was located at&#13;
Flummery a village in the woods of&#13;
Venango county, and owned by Boston&#13;
capitalist*. Money had not been'&#13;
spared in its construction, and everything&#13;
connected with It was on an extensive&#13;
scale. The officers of the com;&#13;
'pany had fine houses furnished in an&#13;
I up-to-date manner. The refinery had&#13;
bean established to refine oil by a special&#13;
process, which proved to be unprofitable,&#13;
although the high price of&#13;
crudo at that time may have had something&#13;
to do with it, but in any event&#13;
the whole enterprise was suddenly&#13;
shut down for good on telegraphic orders&#13;
from Boston. Nearly everything&#13;
was left just as it was when the order&#13;
,came to shut down. Even one of the&#13;
houses was left with the furniture ia&gt;&#13;
It, including a piano. When the refinery&#13;
was abandoned there was nothing&#13;
else in that neighborhood except woods&#13;
to speak of. The refinery and buildings&#13;
fell into decay, but the piano remained&#13;
for a long-time. When the tramps&#13;
came through that country they soon&#13;
found this house and Its abandoned&#13;
musical instrument, and it wa3 decidedly&#13;
weird at night to hear the strains&#13;
of the piano coming through the solitude&#13;
of the woods. There was one&#13;
musical tramp in a party of nomads&#13;
who made that place their rendezvous&#13;
for a time, and the 'musicalcs' they&#13;
'had were unique." ^ ^&#13;
Shooting E m u .&#13;
• The Australian emu is described as&#13;
a yellowish-brown bird, seven feet in&#13;
height, with wings so rudimentary that&#13;
it makes no use of them for flight. It&#13;
is so swift on foot, however, that oniy&#13;
the very fleetest horse can overtake it.&#13;
Like the enrich, the emu feeds upon&#13;
[whatever comes under its beak. Wood,&#13;
pebbles, scraps of iron, or anything&#13;
else that it can swallow, will answer&#13;
its purpose, although it shows a&#13;
marked preference for bread and&#13;
cooked meat A French explorer describes&#13;
his experience in shooting one&#13;
of these birds. He was accompanied&#13;
by a white companion, and by an Australian&#13;
black who acted as guide. "I&#13;
am going to bring them up," said our&#13;
savage companion. "You will have to&#13;
'shoot while they are on the run, but&#13;
take your time and aim well. They&#13;
won't get off this time." So saying, he&#13;
!began to whistle as if he Were calling&#13;
a dog. The emus lifted their heads,&#13;
listened for an instant, then started to&#13;
run. It is strange that this was not to&#13;
jget away, but rather to circle about us&#13;
.without stopping, all the time narrowing&#13;
the circle so as to aproach us.&#13;
When they were not more than forty&#13;
yards distant, still running with incredible&#13;
swiftness, we brought them&#13;
into line and fired. One fell with a&#13;
bullet in his heart. The others fled,&#13;
all the time in single file, and presently&#13;
they disappeared. In reply to a question,&#13;
our guide told us that the emus&#13;
always acted in this way whenever&#13;
they heard whistling, and that one can&#13;
call them by this means from far away,&#13;
"I think, he added, "it is because they&#13;
believe their little ones are calling&#13;
them." As the little emus do not&#13;
whistle, this explanation does not seem&#13;
to be conclusive. But who will suggest&#13;
a better one?&#13;
Soldiers' Honestead Claims.&#13;
The friends of the veterans of the&#13;
Civil War are complaining of the unfortunate&#13;
delay of the General Land&#13;
Office in acting on the applications for&#13;
soldiers' additional homestead rights.&#13;
Senators and Representatives in Congress&#13;
who are friendly to the old soldiers&#13;
should inquire into this matter.&#13;
M0M*SE*KEftcV EXCURSION*&#13;
Department 8tores in Germany.&#13;
The department store tax bill as laid&#13;
before the Prussian landtag divides&#13;
retailers into four classes. They may&#13;
sell either groceries, liquors, tobaccos&#13;
apd chemicals or dry goods and clothing&#13;
or furniture and household utensils&#13;
or cutlery, jewelry, art goods, stationery&#13;
and musical instruments, without&#13;
paying the department store tax. But&#13;
shops combining these different classes&#13;
must pay a gra%iated tax, provided&#13;
their annual sales exceed 500,000&#13;
marks. Starting with 7,500 marks for&#13;
annual sales of 500,000, the tax in*'&#13;
creases, to 20,000 for sales of 1,000,0001.&#13;
Then it adds 2,000 for each additional&#13;
100,000. Mutual associations are exempt&#13;
Wis CMesf* * Jtoetsta fWaols&#13;
On the first and third Tuesdays of&#13;
July and August the Qhlcago ft&#13;
Batters Illinois Railroad will place on&#13;
tale, Homeseekers' Excursion tickets 1&#13;
to various points in Alabama, Arkansas,&#13;
Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana,&#13;
Mississippi, Missouri, North&#13;
Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee,&#13;
and Texas* ,.&#13;
One fare plus $2.06 for the round&#13;
trip.&#13;
Tickets, are limited on going trip&#13;
fifteen days from date of - sale with&#13;
stop over privileges in Homeseekers'&#13;
territory. Returning tickets are limited&#13;
twenty-one days from date of sale.&#13;
Remember that "wc~ now hare in servlce&#13;
a new wide vestibuled train between&#13;
Chicago &amp; Waco ft Ft Worth,&#13;
Texas, leaving Chicago daily at 1:50&#13;
p. m. Through Pullman sleeping cars&#13;
and free reclining chair cars. For&#13;
further particulars call on or address&#13;
any agent Chicago ft Eastern Illinois&#13;
Railroad or C. L. Stone, G. P. &amp;T. A..&#13;
Chicago. * j$&#13;
————-•——-——-———• ^^mmm^^m&#13;
Compulsory Pleasure.&#13;
Aimee—What- is classical music?&#13;
Maimee—Oh I Don't you knowt It's&#13;
the kind that you have to like whether&#13;
you like it or not,—Collier's Weekly.&#13;
WANTED OOO&#13;
Men, Women and Children to try the best&#13;
and cheapest preparations ever offered the&#13;
public. You don't take any chances in trying&#13;
them, as vour druggist guarantees Knill's Red&#13;
Pills for Won People. "Pale and Weak," the&#13;
women's remedy or the day (the only genuine).&#13;
Knill's White Liver Pills, the great L'ver Invigorator,&#13;
System Renovator and Bowel Ragulator.&#13;
25 doses, 25c. You can work while they work.&#13;
Never gripe or make you sick, Knill's Blue Kidney&#13;
Pills cure all Kidney Ills, Backache, etc.&#13;
Knill's Dyspepsia Tablets cure Indigestion, correct&#13;
all Stomach Troubles, destroy all foul gases,&#13;
make pure sweet stomachs and breaths. To do&#13;
as advertised or money refunded. The only&#13;
guaranteed preparations on the market. KniU's&#13;
Pills or Tablets cost 25c. Half price of others.&#13;
Every one has a wallet behind for his own&#13;
failings, and one before the failings of others.&#13;
The advice of some people should be accompanied&#13;
with printed directions for taking.&#13;
Ladies Can Wear Shoes.&#13;
One size smaller after usiagAHen's Foot-&#13;
Ease, a powder. It makes tight or new&#13;
shoes easy. Cures swollen, hot, sweating,&#13;
aching-feet, ingrowing- nails, corns and&#13;
bunions. All druggists and shoe stores,&#13;
25c. Trial package FREE by mail. Address&#13;
Allen S. Olmsted, LeRoy, N.Y.&#13;
If a woman thinks she knows more than her&#13;
husband she never ceases to tell him so.&#13;
Hall's Catarrh Care&#13;
Is taken internally. Price, 75c&#13;
There is nothing more gratifying than the&#13;
consciousness of doing good.&#13;
Car* that Dandruff&#13;
by ncjttfg-rviirn Dandruff fin™. We guarantee&#13;
it to cure or refund the money.&#13;
Society is not Christian and Christianity is&#13;
not simply "good society."&#13;
FITS Permanently Cured. No fits ernsnronmeM after&#13;
first day's we of Dr. Kline's Great Nervd Restorer,&#13;
fiend for FREE 9 2 . 0 0 trial bottle and treatise.&#13;
Da. E. H. XMIHK, Ltd., »31 Arch St., Philadelphia, Pa.&#13;
The man who turns from evil companions&#13;
does himself a good turn.&#13;
Mrs. Whitlow's Soothing Byron.&#13;
For children teething, sof teni the gams, reduces f n*&#13;
flam IBStIan, allafi psia.cores wind colic *ic a bottle.&#13;
Truth may be bruised and laid up, but it&#13;
never gets heart failure,&#13;
Carter's Ink Is Csed by the&#13;
greatest railway systems of the United States,&#13;
They would not use it if it wasn't the best.&#13;
yoverty drives some men to drink and keeps&#13;
others from drinking.&#13;
Flag* Salt Cares Headache.&#13;
A 10c trial package FREE. Address, The Flag&#13;
Salt Remedy Co., Savannah, N. Y.&#13;
The way to fame is the way to heaven,&#13;
through much trouble.&#13;
Send for "Choice Recipes,"&#13;
by Walter Baker &amp; Co. Ltd., Dorchester, Mass.,&#13;
mailed free. Mention this paper.&#13;
I am sure Piso's Cure for Consumption saved&#13;
•j my life three years ago.—MRS. THOS. ROBBXNS,&#13;
Maple Street, Norwich, N. Y., Feb. 17,1900.&#13;
Nothing is so disappointing as the effort to&#13;
be good without God.&#13;
The favorite for restoring life and color to the hair&#13;
ISPAKKKB'S HAIB BALSAM.&#13;
HIHDUCOKSS, the best cure for corns. lScts.&#13;
Religion can be no more a Sunday coat than&#13;
can honesty or truth.&#13;
Brown's Teething Cord/af heals irritated&#13;
gums, and gives babies rest day and night.&#13;
When the wish is father to the thought they&#13;
both will look alike.&#13;
Manlore Self Opening Otic,&#13;
Catalog free. Manlove Gate Co., Milton, Indiana.&#13;
Officers regard the quarrels of privates as&#13;
rank affairs.&#13;
Baseball players; Golf players; all players&#13;
chew White's Yucatan whilst playing.&#13;
Hell is a hole with a great big entrance but a&#13;
very small pit.&#13;
.Wheji Wagner's energy was not expsfeM&#13;
to Ws art work, say* Gnatarf&#13;
Kobbe In "Wagaer's Personality," in&#13;
the Form* 1 Mound rent in many humoroijsjiallles,.&#13;
He once quoted his&#13;
teacher's remark that he would never&#13;
learn to play the piano. "Bat,-' he&#13;
added, "I play a great deal better than&#13;
Bertie*'**- The waggishness of this remark&#13;
lies ft* the fact that Berlios could&#13;
not play at alL During a rehearsal of&#13;
the "Bienxi" overture in Dresden, the&#13;
trombones were too loud. Instead of&#13;
rebuking them angrily; he said, with a&#13;
laugh: "Gentlemen, we are in Dresden,&#13;
not marching around the walls of&#13;
Jericho." After "Tannhauser" was&#13;
brought out, a German composer of&#13;
little note, named Chellard, said that f&#13;
the "Song of the Evening Star" was&#13;
"wrongly harmonized," and suggested&#13;
certain harmonies which should be&#13;
substituted for those employed by&#13;
Wagner. When Wagner was among&#13;
friends It was one of his favorite diversions&#13;
to seat himself at the piano&#13;
and sing the "Song of the Evening&#13;
Star," a la Chellard.&#13;
. The interest that Shylock had at&#13;
heart was about 37 per cent.&#13;
Good looks are often a great drawback&#13;
to a man in business.&#13;
I^E^Bf5ij553555S&#13;
Cheap Excursions to Colorado,&#13;
Salt Lake City, and Ogden, Utah, win&#13;
leave Chicago, June 20; July 9 and&#13;
17, and August 1st, via GREAT ROCK&#13;
ISLAND ROUTE. Rate of one regular&#13;
fare, plus $2, for round trip. Return&#13;
limit October 31st, 1900. Special trains&#13;
one night to Denver, Colorado Springs&#13;
and Pueblo, will leave Chicago&gt;at*4:4&amp;&#13;
p. m. Tickets will also be good on&#13;
regular trains. For full Information&#13;
and free book, "COLORADO THE&#13;
MAGNIFICENT," address John Sebastian.&#13;
G. P. A., Chicago.&#13;
Give your friends credit for most any&#13;
good thing1—but money.&#13;
Are Ton Cuing Allen's Foot-Kane?&#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 to be shaken into&#13;
the shoes. At all Druggists and Shoe&#13;
Stores, 25c. Sample sent FREE. Address&#13;
Allen S. OlmetPd. LeRoy, N. Y.&#13;
How nice it is to have a chum with&#13;
a sweet sister.&#13;
A wise man never considers a woman's&#13;
age.&#13;
Her husband should be true wife's&#13;
ideal.&#13;
ABSOLUTE&#13;
SECURITY.&#13;
Genuine&#13;
Carter's&#13;
Little Liver Pills.&#13;
Must Bear Signature of&#13;
See Pfi'Slwiln Wrapper Below.&#13;
to take aa&#13;
CARTIRS&#13;
.a&gt; est tkoesaadsdrpsoele•stsftttoeMCVy.aa«s&amp;niTar&amp;MiSCeney taaa&#13;
FOR HEADACHE.&#13;
FOB DIZZINESS.&#13;
FOH BILIOUSNESS.&#13;
FOl TORPID LIVER.&#13;
FOR eOMSTIPATIOI.&#13;
FOR SALLOW SR1R.&#13;
FOITHECOHFLUIOR&#13;
U..&#13;
SAYS&#13;
"iOootovlwhhtwoai&#13;
thQbe&amp;tdoatomlnthQoity&#13;
fortwoyo*n and had mm&#13;
rmiM mrtH I umed Um&#13;
•fV.; * &amp;&#13;
S$5&#13;
'.,&lt;'}'•[&#13;
—A&#13;
"My trotMbie warn uloorationofthauiarusm&#13;
iauffered&#13;
terribiy, ootdd not&#13;
miaan nlghia and thought&#13;
aomatinaaa that daath&#13;
would ha suoh a reiiaf*&#13;
"To-dayJam awall woman,&#13;
abla to do my own&#13;
work, and have notanainm&#13;
"fused four bottles of&#13;
Lydla £# Ptnkham's Vegetable&#13;
Compound and threo&#13;
packages of Sanative&#13;
Wash and cannot praise&#13;
tho modkUnas onoughm"—&#13;
MRS. ELIZA THOMAS,&#13;
034 Pine St; Easton, Pa*&#13;
Mrs. Plnkham advises&#13;
Buffering women without&#13;
ohargom&#13;
Lydla E. Pinkham Med. Co., Lyaq, Mass.&#13;
'M&#13;
THE STANDARD&#13;
SEWING MACHINE&#13;
G0SPAIY&#13;
make twenty-five different&#13;
styles, including-toe highestpriced&#13;
beat; and best lowpriced&#13;
machines.&#13;
Send for catalogue sad&#13;
prices.&#13;
J. B. ALDRICH, State Mgr.*&#13;
238 Woodward Ave.,&#13;
DrrsoiT, Mica.&#13;
m&#13;
$&#13;
CURE SICK HEADACHE.&#13;
USE THE GENUINELA* * MURRAY &amp;&#13;
LANMAN'S Florida water "THE UNIVERSAL PERFUME** r Forth© Handkerchief.&#13;
Toilet and Birth. ' V&#13;
. . . REFUSE ALL SUBSTITUTES!&#13;
New&#13;
Railroad to&#13;
San Francisco&#13;
9&#13;
Santa Fe Route, by&#13;
its San Joatjuin-&#13;
Valley Extension.&#13;
The only line with&#13;
track and trains under&#13;
one management all&#13;
the way from Chicago&#13;
to the Golden Gate.&#13;
Mountain passes,&#13;
extinct volcanos,&#13;
petrified forests,&#13;
prehistoric ruins,&#13;
Indian pueblos,&#13;
Yosemi4e,-G«md&#13;
Canon of Arizona,&#13;
en route.&#13;
Same high-grade&#13;
service that has made&#13;
1&#13;
i. J#.&#13;
the Santa Fe the&#13;
favorite route to&#13;
Southern California.&#13;
Fast schedule; Pullv&#13;
«&#13;
InarTand Tourist&#13;
sleepers daily; Free&#13;
reclining chair cars;&#13;
Harvey meals&#13;
throughout.&#13;
General Passenger Of oe&#13;
The AtchUaa, Tepeka ft Santa Fe R*y,&#13;
CHICAGO. a&#13;
•3f&#13;
WHEN ANSWERINO ADS.PLEASE&#13;
MENTION THIS PAPER.&#13;
taan all etaer dealers em*&gt;&#13;
' "- lNaaesaeMs. as we&#13;
• MtaNrtor nate of! _&#13;
2 mac* for atovs was M years \^wjn7£&amp;*x^tt£z~ TENTS aae^areBeesfsrlsssatwitsos,aswetefeseMSkates* | « E r l « I • ! » • * •&#13;
wew&#13;
from&#13;
jsea/B^sadterm; we dopotest far n«, us-e-iiote&#13;
fscwrwe&#13;
purchase&#13;
f»i IT tbey do net verk&#13;
'taketaenabsekaod&#13;
nt-i-hoie&#13;
K&lt;£ US-4-hoW .._&#13;
T. M. ROBERTS* SUPPLY MOUSE* tbfcwfsmNii.&#13;
The department at Washington was&#13;
advised on the 20th that Admiral Remey&#13;
on the Brooklyn had arrived at Hong*&#13;
Kong, en route to Taku.&#13;
The government of Queensland has&#13;
offered the British admiralty a gun-&#13;
' boat for-service in Chinese waters.&#13;
OwaOstalof^ ceetalajne »t&#13;
aauamattfon asd teats taaa ALL Y N J S t W t O f T I&#13;
• - " " — T. • . Roberts' Supply Nous*, I n a s s p o l h ,&#13;
ptoe CUB estalofee. H e&#13;
k&#13;
W . N . U — D E T R O I T — N 0 . 2 6 - - l&amp;OO&#13;
O ' S C U R E F C R m®ms£®t&#13;
MONEY FOR&#13;
SOLDIERS' HEIRS Beire of TJnloa Soldiers who made homesteads of&#13;
less than itt acres before Jane 33,1874 (no matter&#13;
abSBdoeed)&#13;
not said i -&#13;
— " H E&#13;
w a w arvAWV vaaasv —*\ ivcw \ u v issieweja .11 the additional homestead rtrtl&#13;
or ased, should sdoress. with full&#13;
M R Y l l . COPPTw^sMste»,aVC&#13;
PENSIONS Writs C APT. O'P ARRELU1&#13;
uaiNnrYoffkAwtnaw. WASrONQTON. OJfc -,&#13;
eetyotrPestlMi&#13;
DOUBLE QUICK&#13;
Aasvetiag Mvc&#13;
. Mestiofl TWs fasts.&#13;
PPH'I." • • • P I . I I&#13;
K&#13;
•r&lt;&#13;
•\ti&#13;
fv..&#13;
?Vit .'it '•''•'•'• '&#13;
4T- ,'!»•&gt; T^&#13;
:...., •--^r-^-.m.-,:, "-. v -.';:,,;^.. - . ^ : :V'" ---4--,,&#13;
^&#13;
'Mwm&#13;
I F F&#13;
•Si-&#13;
.;*M * -W&#13;
W * « P P P « P I M P&#13;
-W. •V':&#13;
. . . . . . , ) • « . . , ' . . . ' • • . &gt;&#13;
^ i - T&#13;
— „ &lt; ^ '&#13;
- A -&#13;
£&#13;
, /.-&#13;
kr •4v.&#13;
PA&#13;
PURE AND FRAGRANT&#13;
SOLO IN SEALED PACKAGES ONLY&#13;
~«*F OOS79 MO BORE-TRY IT"&#13;
PARSHALLVILLEA&#13;
fine pole and flag was ra ised&#13;
here on the Forirth. Glad to say&#13;
it is a genuine libei ty pole.&#13;
Miss Nellie Cole has returned&#13;
home from Owosso where she has&#13;
^een visiting the past week.&#13;
Mrs. Scully wife of the late Dr.&#13;
Scully of Ovid is visiting her&#13;
niece Mrs. Waien Cole this week.&#13;
A real peanut stand with music&#13;
and soft drinks. By the noise in&#13;
the evening some think the drinks&#13;
were not all soft.&#13;
T T l i s s ^ a ^ i e " Walker has~~g6ne&#13;
to the upper peninsula to visit&#13;
her Brother and sister who are&#13;
teaching at Republic.&#13;
EAST PUTNAM.&#13;
Mrs. Harriet Brown is visiting&#13;
relatives in Holly.&#13;
Wm. Dardee and family spent&#13;
the Fourth near Webberville.&#13;
Jay Shehan and family of Detroit&#13;
spent Sunday at T. Shehan's.&#13;
Miss Florence Cook is spending&#13;
a couple of weeks with her grandmother.&#13;
Mis. G. W. Brown and daughter&#13;
Kate visited in Oak Grove the&#13;
first of the week.&#13;
Miss Clella Fish visited Miss&#13;
Iva Placewayof Pettysville the&#13;
first of the week.&#13;
A party of ladies were entertained&#13;
at the home of E. G. Fish&#13;
Thursday afternoon.&#13;
WEST PUTNAM.&#13;
L. E. Smith has just finished&#13;
painting the new barn of John M.&#13;
Harris.&#13;
Miss Mabel Tripp and friend of&#13;
Detroit visited her parents here&#13;
last week.&#13;
Irwin Kennedy is visiting&#13;
friends in Ann Arbor and Ypsilanti&#13;
this week.&#13;
John Dunn sold and delivered&#13;
a team of horses last Tuesday to&#13;
parties in Jackson.&#13;
Master John Hacket of Detroit&#13;
is visiting at the home of his-&#13;
TJncle, D. M. Monks.&#13;
Ella Murphy who has been&#13;
visiting friends in Jackson return-&#13;
1S&#13;
a&#13;
ed home Thursday last.&#13;
W. VanCamp and wife of Leslie&#13;
called on G. W. Bates and&#13;
family the first of the week.&#13;
T. C. Cooper is home from&#13;
Waterloo, where he has been&#13;
working the- past twoinonths.&#13;
Miss Mabel Monks is home&#13;
from Canada where she has been&#13;
visiting friends and relatives the&#13;
past two weeks.&#13;
Mrs. D. Carpenter who has&#13;
been visiting her sister Mrs. Wm.&#13;
Gardner returned to her home in&#13;
Fehtonlast Friday.&#13;
NORTH HAMBURG.&#13;
Mrs. Rodman Case is very low.&#13;
Miss Sadie Hodgeman is visit -&#13;
ing her aunt, Mrs. James Nash.&#13;
The ice cream social at the&#13;
church was a success—nearly $11&#13;
was raised.&#13;
' TheO.'E. society elected officers&#13;
as follows: Pre*. B. 0. Haddock;&#13;
vice Pre*. Jttrs. Arthur&#13;
Schoenbalsj Sec. Claude Bollison;&#13;
Tres*. Wheeler Martin; Organist&#13;
GraoeNash.&#13;
HAMBURG.&#13;
Miss Myra Bice of Manton&#13;
visitiugatMrs. Jas. Starks.&#13;
The Episcopate organized&#13;
Sunday School last Sunday.&#13;
E. Bennet is building a new&#13;
barn on his lot in the village.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. M. J. Kapler visited&#13;
relatives at Pittsfield the 4th.&#13;
Mrs. Grant Beader of Lansing&#13;
is visiting at her parents, H. De&#13;
Wolfs.&#13;
Francis Dunlavey is spending&#13;
the week with her grandmother in&#13;
Dexter.&#13;
Mrs. Geo. Case went to Chilson&#13;
Sunday to stay the week with her&#13;
mother.&#13;
Nearly everybody in this place&#13;
celebrated the Fourth at Whitmore&#13;
Lake.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. McGaffey and&#13;
daughter spent part of last week&#13;
with their son in Toledo.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Jas Hayner entertained&#13;
company from Howell a&#13;
couple of days last week.&#13;
A large company came from&#13;
Toledo last Sunday and spent the&#13;
day at Silver Lake. That Mr.&#13;
3each has a very pleasant resort&#13;
is shown by the large number of&#13;
city people who come there.&#13;
U NADU-LA.&#13;
Ben Westfall is quite sick again.&#13;
James Little visited his brother&#13;
in Jackson Sunday.&#13;
Fred Mackinder and wife visited&#13;
his parents here Sunday.&#13;
A. C. Watson and wife called&#13;
on friends in Detroit Monday.&#13;
Edd. Scripter visited friends in&#13;
White Oak Sunday and Monday.&#13;
Seymour May visited his sister&#13;
in Webster last Friday and Saturdry.&#13;
Jennie Harris from Chelsea&#13;
spent last week under the parental&#13;
roof.&#13;
Mrs. Mabel Grimes~frbm Stockbridge&#13;
visited Mettle Daneils last&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Miss Inez Marshall visited&#13;
friends and relatives in Jackson&#13;
last week.&#13;
Edd. Cranna and wife visited&#13;
friends in Lima Center the first&#13;
of the week.&#13;
Nancy , May spent Sunday in&#13;
Anderson.&#13;
Belle Birme from Olivet is&#13;
visiting relatives here.&#13;
• George Black and wife spent&#13;
the 4th in WilUamston.&#13;
F. L. Merrell of Iosco called on&#13;
Anderson friends Sunday.&#13;
Mr. J. D. Eamon of Detroit is&#13;
visiting Anderson friends.&#13;
•- M m James Durkee—was- 4a&#13;
Chelsea one day last week.&#13;
Little Eliza Hayner is visiting&#13;
her grand parents near Howell.&#13;
Chas Stephenson of Jackson&#13;
spent the 4th with his family here.&#13;
Floyd Durkee spent Sunday&#13;
with his mother Mrs. James Durkee.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. H* G. Briggs called&#13;
at Mrs. Jas. Durkees on Tuesday.&#13;
Harry Moore and wife visited&#13;
her parents in this place a part&#13;
of last week.&#13;
Dr. Wm. Wylie of this place is&#13;
located for practice in Waterloo—&#13;
sucoess to him.&#13;
Several of the young people&#13;
from this place spent the Fourth&#13;
at North Lake.&#13;
Will Durkee and wife entertained&#13;
Mr. Lech from Tuscola county&#13;
the first of the week.&#13;
L. E. Howlett wife and son&#13;
Wilson spent the Fourth at the&#13;
home of A. G. Wilson.&#13;
Mrs Frank Worderi of T3regor y&#13;
visited at the home of Mrs. C. M.&#13;
Wood one day last week.&#13;
Clara and Myra Williams of&#13;
Stockbridge spent the Fourth&#13;
with their sister Mrs. Fred Mac-&#13;
Kinder.&#13;
Chas. Bullis and family spent&#13;
Sunday with his sisters Mrs. Arthur&#13;
and Ben Montague at Chubbs&#13;
Corners.&#13;
ANNUAL 15 DAY EXCURSION TO&#13;
FRANKFORT, CRYSTAL LAKE&#13;
AND TRAVERSE CITY.&#13;
Thursday, July 26, the Ann Arbor&#13;
R. R. will sell excursion tickets to the&#13;
above resorts, good for return until&#13;
August 9 incrusrve. Watch next&#13;
week's papers for time of special train&#13;
and low rates. t-20&#13;
MORE LOCAL.&#13;
Martin Messenger from Stockbridge&#13;
visited at Byal Barn urns&#13;
last Sunday.&#13;
Wirt Barnum and wife visited&#13;
her parents in Munith last Sunday&#13;
and Monday.&#13;
Philip Mackinder and wife from&#13;
Chicago are spending a few days&#13;
with his parents here.&#13;
Wheat is a failure in this part&#13;
of the country again some will not&#13;
get their seed back.&#13;
Mrs. Edson May and family&#13;
from Grand Bapids are spendin g&#13;
a few days with relatives here.&#13;
Mrs. Daman and family from&#13;
Lansing are spending a few days&#13;
with her Mother Mrs. Siegrist.&#13;
ANDERSON.&#13;
Mr. Collins is very sick at the&#13;
present writing.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Hoff spent&#13;
a few days last week with Lansing&#13;
friends.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Smith&#13;
spent Saturday and Sunday in&#13;
White Oak,&#13;
Mont Avers is the guest of relatives&#13;
in this vicinity.&#13;
Homer Reason of Howell, was home&#13;
the first of the week.&#13;
The Unadilla Farmers' club will&#13;
meet at the home of Mr. and Mrs. 0.&#13;
B. Arnold on Saturday afternoon,&#13;
July 21.&#13;
Fred Hecox of Jackson, spent the&#13;
psat week in this vicinity. Being a&#13;
printer we had a very pleasant visit&#13;
with him. He is connected with the&#13;
Jackson Corset Co. printery.&#13;
The society of Church Workers will&#13;
hold their monthly tea at the home of&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. A. Francis next Wednesday,&#13;
July 18, from 5 till .all are&#13;
served. A cordial invitation to all.&#13;
Drs. Sigler and Watts performed a&#13;
serions surgical operation on Mr*. C.&#13;
P. Sykes on Thursday of iasi week.&#13;
Her many friends will be pleased to&#13;
learn that she is making a good recovery.&#13;
,&#13;
Rev. A. G. Blood of Marion will&#13;
preach at the M. E. church on Sunday&#13;
morning next, Rev. Simpson being.in&#13;
Marion holding quarterly meeting.&#13;
Rev. Simpson will preach as usual in&#13;
the evening. Epworth League at&#13;
the regular hour—6:30. • An earnest&#13;
effort will be made to make these services&#13;
of the League interesting.&#13;
Subject at the Cong'l church next&#13;
Sunday morning, "Rath, a story, of&#13;
the Bethlehem harvest time.1*&#13;
ing the summer the C. E. will hold&#13;
warm weather meetings beginning at&#13;
7 o'clock and continuing only half an&#13;
hour. This meeting and the Vesper&#13;
service following (on alternate evenings)&#13;
will together not be more than&#13;
an hour in length. All are cordially&#13;
invited to these summer evening meetings.&#13;
' •— -r— — TMrs.&#13;
W, W. Barnard is viiiting ber&#13;
mother in Howell.&#13;
Rev. Fr. Comtr ford wao' in Detroit&#13;
the first of the week.&#13;
Mrs. Rheozky nf Jackson, is visiting&#13;
at Onas.. WelkerV in Marion.&#13;
Mrs. J. M. Smith and children are&#13;
visiting ber parents in Uohoctah.&#13;
Over $50 was sent by the oitizens of&#13;
this place to the famine sufferers in&#13;
India.&#13;
-Qhas.-dottier-of HeweHr was here&#13;
Tuesday to attend the fnneral of Dan&#13;
Jackson.&#13;
Ellen Carrol of Ann Arbor is spending&#13;
a few weeks with her parents&#13;
near. here.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. John Jackson of Unadilla,&#13;
visited at Chas. Love's Tuesday&#13;
afternoon.&#13;
E.;L. Thompson is in Fowlerviile&#13;
assisting in shipping the Royal Freezer&#13;
from that place.&#13;
Mrs. Delia Magoon, of Manistee who&#13;
has been visiting at the home of airs.&#13;
C. VV. Haze returned home Monday.&#13;
Rev. W. G. Stephens, wife and son&#13;
of Plymouth spent part of the week&#13;
with their daughter, Mrs. F. G. Jackson.&#13;
Miss Jessie Markham, who has been&#13;
spending some time ' with the Wylie&#13;
family family, went to Walled Lake&#13;
Tuesday.&#13;
We just learn that Chas. Miller,&#13;
formerly of the place, now near Toledo,&#13;
Ohio, had his hand badly smashed one&#13;
day last week while handling steel&#13;
rails.&#13;
The Columbia Giants, formerly the&#13;
Page Fence Giants, will meet the&#13;
Brighton ball team at Brighton on&#13;
Thursday, July 26. The game will&#13;
be a good one.&#13;
School meeting passed off very&#13;
quietly last Monday evening. From&#13;
the attendance one would think there&#13;
was no interest in the school in the&#13;
district. The terms of C. L. Campbell&#13;
and D. W. Murta expired and&#13;
they were both re-elected.&#13;
«SnM&#13;
jEtev. Simpson and sitter spent the&#13;
past week in Mt. Olemans. Mrs. Simp*&#13;
ion, who bas been there several weeks&#13;
with their daughter, returned to this&#13;
plate with him.&#13;
Mary Love started, July 5 for Marquette.&#13;
She went with relatives from&#13;
Howelt and will spend several weeks&#13;
with P. G, Tee pie and family near the&#13;
shore of Lake Superior.&#13;
Resolutions for (Special Election.&#13;
Beltjetolyed by. the Common fioiinfiil&#13;
of the Village of Pinokney, that a special&#13;
election be called to be held in the village,&#13;
of Pinckney on the 16th day of July,&#13;
A. DM 1900, for the purppee of voting&#13;
upon a proposition to issue bonds against&#13;
sai4 Village of Piuckney, in the son not&#13;
exceeding One Thousand Dollars, for the&#13;
purpose of securing fire protection.&#13;
(The vote upon such a proposition shall&#13;
be V a printed ballot, and shall be in the&#13;
following words:—For the issuing of Village&#13;
Bonds for the purchase of fire protection&#13;
"Yes" [] For the issuing of Village&#13;
Bonds for the purchase of fire protection&#13;
"No" []&#13;
ALKXANBEB MOIKTY&amp;X, Pres.&#13;
R. H. TEIPLX, Clerk.&#13;
Adopted July 2,1900.&#13;
Business Locals.&#13;
XotloJ&#13;
Sealed bids will *e received trom&#13;
now until A u g . ^ for the furnishing&#13;
of 25 tons of fomace coal for Sobool&#13;
District No 2, to be delivered in the&#13;
JuLS&amp;mentof the school house on or&#13;
before Sept. 1,1900.&#13;
D. W. Murta, Sec.&#13;
Timothy Hay for sale^-inquire of&#13;
George W. Clark.&#13;
For Sale.&#13;
Horse, Carriage and Harness. Inquire&#13;
of H. S. lieed or W. H. Sales,&#13;
Gregor&#13;
Ellis saves your money at the Surprise&#13;
Store.&#13;
For Sale.&#13;
My property on Main&#13;
cheap.&#13;
St.&#13;
M.&#13;
for sale&#13;
Dolan&#13;
Important Notice.&#13;
Commencing with Friday, July 20th, this store&#13;
will close at 12:30 p. m., each Friday during the&#13;
remainder of July and each Friday during the&#13;
month of August.&#13;
!»• rl«&#13;
This Red Mark Sale&#13;
Is a bargain sale well worth your attention. Hundreds&#13;
of customers from all parts of Jackson county claim&#13;
that the saving is enough to pay them to drive or come by&#13;
rail for considerable distance. Ton get such good trades&#13;
here as to make you remember your visits to this store w^ith&#13;
great pleasure.&#13;
Basement Savings.&#13;
In no department are the saving prices more real&#13;
than in the basement. The housekeeping goods. Bed&#13;
Mark prices there make buyers happy. Look for such&#13;
goods as these:&#13;
Set of 6 Cups and 6 Saucers for 35c.&#13;
Set of 6 7-inch Plates, 35c.&#13;
Wash Bowl and Pitcher, 69c.&#13;
12-piece Toilet Set with jar, 12.50.&#13;
101-piece White Semi-Porcelain Dinner&#13;
Set for $4.89.&#13;
\ gallon Glass Pitchers, 10c.&#13;
8-inch Glass Berry Bowl, 10c.&#13;
Covered Glass Butter Dishes, 10c.&#13;
Covered Glass Sugar Bowls, 10c.&#13;
Glass Hand Lamp complete, 18c.&#13;
White Porcelain Can Fillers, 9c.&#13;
Mrs. Dover's Egg Beaters, 9c.&#13;
Mrs. VanDflzen'e Cake Pans, 10c.&#13;
Heavy Polished Silver Coffee Pots, 10 c.&#13;
Garden Trowels, 3c.&#13;
Glass Lemon Juicer, 3c.&#13;
50-foot Clothes Lines, 8c.&#13;
Glass ^Measuring Cup, 5c.&#13;
Granite Iron Wash Basins, 10c.&#13;
Granite Iron Bread Pan s, 10c.&#13;
Granite Iron Handled Stew Pan, 10c.&#13;
Granite Iron Dippers, 10c.&#13;
A Busy Notion&#13;
Counter. -&#13;
Made busy by the power of price. You can bay&#13;
all the little handy things here so easy.&#13;
Spool Sewing Silk, lc.&#13;
Corset Lacer, lc.&#13;
nvisible Hair Pias, lc.&#13;
Dor-i&lt;Mte Fairy Soap, lc.&#13;
Stocking Darner, with handle, 2c.&#13;
ldoz. Hat Pins for 2c.&#13;
8 dot. Agate Buttons, 2c.&#13;
1 Hong Kong Ironing Wax, 2c.&#13;
1 Cake Wool Soap, 3c.&#13;
1 bottle Carter's Ink, 3c.&#13;
1 good Tooth Brush,. 3c.&#13;
1 Fine Tooth Comb, 3c.&#13;
1 box Talcum Powder, 3c.&#13;
1 box Rising Sun Stove Polish, 3c.&#13;
1 5c bottle Vaseline, 3c.&#13;
1 bottle best Machine Oil, 3c.&#13;
IJ. H. F IE L D.&#13;
Jackson, Mioh.&#13;
1,&#13;
V&#13;
1&#13;
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              <text>Use the Windows Snipping Tool to capture the area of the document you want to save. If you want multiple pages printed please see staff to print the pages you want. &lt;a href="https://howelllibrary.org/technology/#print" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View the library's printing information.&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch July 12, 1900</text>
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                <text>July 12, 1900 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>1900-07-12</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>lot. xvin. •3SS PINOKNEY, LIVINGSTON 00., MIOH.,| THURSDAY, JULY 19.1900. No. 2 9&#13;
Prices are right at&#13;
The&#13;
Surprise&#13;
1 Good Oil Can .05&#13;
Ladies Hose 15 cents Quality .10&#13;
Shirt Waist Sets 6 .25&#13;
Set White \Ibtal Knives and Fom.75&#13;
Stag Handle Garvin? Set 1.50&#13;
White Mefal'Sugar Spoons .05&#13;
WhitH Metal Butter Knife .05&#13;
Set Nut Picks .15&#13;
Good Whips .10 and 15&#13;
Ladies Fancy Hose .10&#13;
Mens Double Knee Extra Heavy&#13;
Overalls .75 cent Quality .49&#13;
Mens Fancy Dress Shirts Latest&#13;
Styles and Shades .23 and ,25&#13;
Good Clothes basket 25c&#13;
Bushel Basket 13c&#13;
Second-hand Cook S t o v e&#13;
Eggs Taken&#13;
S a m e a s Cash,&#13;
LOCAL N E W S . I L08T.&#13;
H. W. ELLIS, Prop.&#13;
H. W. Ellis pnt np bis awning Saturday&#13;
last.&#13;
Thos. Read is giving his bouse a&#13;
coat of paint.&#13;
Perry Blunt was in Ann Arbor&#13;
Saturday last.&#13;
Geo. Hendee and wife spent the past&#13;
week in Dansville.&#13;
If rs. Chris. Brown is visiting friends&#13;
in and near Ann Arbor.&#13;
G. W. Teeple was in Detroit on&#13;
business the last oT last week.&#13;
It required nearly 50 extra copies&#13;
of the DISPATCH this week to fill one&#13;
order.&#13;
Mrs. Florence Garry of Ann Arbor&#13;
was visiting friends in this place the&#13;
last of last week.&#13;
Roy Hon* took advantage of the&#13;
Sunday train to run down from&#13;
Stock bridge and vieit.&#13;
By ryquest we republish the obituary&#13;
notice of Dan Jack&amp;on this week. The&#13;
obituary will be found on page 4.&#13;
Miss Mabel Tripp returned to her&#13;
work in Detroit after a two weeks&#13;
vacation with her parents near here.&#13;
It is expected that the state troops&#13;
will go into camp at Island Lake,&#13;
August 7. Comments are unnecessary.&#13;
jirs. F. D. Johnson had the misfortune&#13;
one day last week to sprain&#13;
her ankle PO badly that she had to use&#13;
a crutch.&#13;
G. A. Sigler has recently shipped&#13;
more tine furniture to Ed. T. Kearney&#13;
of Jackson, Neb. Ed. is a good judge&#13;
of furniture and evidently knows when&#13;
he can buy right.&#13;
The Beil Telephone Co. are going&#13;
through the state putting up new&#13;
lines. They use tents and board&#13;
their own men as it is much cheaper&#13;
than putting up at a town from which&#13;
they get their support. This is how&#13;
they are able to reduce telephone&#13;
rates. (?)&#13;
In Plnckney, Monday, JULY 16,&#13;
Protection.&#13;
Fire&#13;
M M « a B i n . B^B^h Bl B M ^ H V 4 B B I sM M ^ S | M SJ Sjsjsj an 0&#13;
General Hardware, —&#13;
Have as complete an assortment of heavy and shelf hardware&#13;
as can be found in the county, and 1900 finds us&#13;
more thoroughly equipped than ever before.&#13;
Builders Hardware a Specialty.&#13;
Doors and Common Sash always in stock.&#13;
Complete line of Buggies, Wagons and&#13;
Heating Stoves, Ranges,&#13;
• (&#13;
Wood Stoves&#13;
Wood and Coal.&#13;
^5=F&#13;
This Week's Specials:&#13;
50c Silk Dress Ginghams, at 29c&#13;
18c Dress Ginghams, at 15c&#13;
15c Dimities and Organdies, at 12c&#13;
Ladies' Tan Shoes, at $1.75,12.25, $2.50 and $3.00&#13;
Gents' Tan Shoes, $2.00, $2.50, $2.75 and $3.00&#13;
Mes1&gt; and Boys' Straw Hats, at 22c, 45c, 65c and 85c&#13;
After the ballots were counted Monday&#13;
it was found that the question of&#13;
bonding the village for f 1,000 for&#13;
fire protection bad been lost by a vote&#13;
of 64 to 27.&#13;
Knowing the desire of, many to see&#13;
any improvements added to our village,&#13;
we were not much surprised at&#13;
the result. However the matter is&#13;
not dead yet and will come up again&#13;
sooner or later, probable in the shape&#13;
of a bond for water works. Many of&#13;
the business men are in for a system&#13;
of fire protection and may purchase&#13;
something for their own protection&#13;
yet.&#13;
Several havj told us that if they&#13;
burned out they should never rebuild&#13;
and this would mean a serious loss to&#13;
the village.&#13;
The ceuncil have done their duty by&#13;
submitting the matter to the people&#13;
instead of taking it into their own&#13;
bands and if any citizen now bnrns&#13;
out there is no blame on the council.&#13;
The idea that the council was tied to&#13;
any system or agent as some intimated&#13;
was laughable. Had the question&#13;
carried there would have been tests&#13;
of different machines and the best&#13;
would have won out. Any kind of&#13;
talk goes however to defeat a question&#13;
where a little money is to be expended.&#13;
NOTES. f&#13;
Never mind, it may rain when your&#13;
building catches on fire^&#13;
Wool was cheap Monday and some&#13;
had it pulled over their eyes.&#13;
If your bouse ever burns you will&#13;
remember how you voted on the protection&#13;
question.&#13;
The idea got out that If the bond&#13;
question of $1,000 was carried it would&#13;
nean not Idas than $4,000. Who&#13;
started it?&#13;
Some one said be voted against the&#13;
bond Monday because Le did not want&#13;
water works as they cost too much—&#13;
the bond was for $1,000—no more.&#13;
It is fun now to stand-by and listen&#13;
to the different talk about fire protection.&#13;
Nearly everyone believes we must&#13;
have something but the hand engine&#13;
must have cisterns-, the book and iao&gt;&#13;
der must have an expert, the chemioal&#13;
engine is no ..good, and water works&#13;
too expensive. So they voted t j go&#13;
back to the old way, each one taking a&#13;
tin pail full of water to the next fire.&#13;
A PLEASANT MEETING.&#13;
Enjoyed by tbe Michigan Press Club.&#13;
&lt;+\ -&#13;
Groceries for Saturday July 21,&#13;
Full Cream Cheese&#13;
\ Arm and Hammer Soda*&#13;
Canned Corn&#13;
9 &amp;tf Silk Soap&#13;
2 lbs Broken Bice&#13;
Produce Wanted&#13;
10c&#13;
5c&#13;
7f&#13;
7c&#13;
AOn&#13;
Friday, last the Eastern Michigan&#13;
Press clul held their regular&#13;
quarterly meeting at Detroit and devoted&#13;
the time to recreations almost&#13;
entirely. At 2:30 p. m. about 70 of&#13;
them hoarded the Toledo, of the&#13;
White Star Line, going to tbe St.&#13;
Claire Flats where they were tendered&#13;
a "fish supper" by Mrs. James Slocum&#13;
of the Star Island House. Every&#13;
courtesy was tendered the guests and&#13;
the supper will long be remembered&#13;
by the club.&#13;
At 6:80 the club returned on the&#13;
T&amp;shmoo which is one of the largest&#13;
and finest passenger boats which&#13;
floats on tbe lakes—it being a veritable&#13;
floating palace. On arriving at&#13;
the city at S: 00 the entire clab went&#13;
to wonderland where box seats had&#13;
been reserved for them by maoager&#13;
Moore and a fine program was rend*&#13;
erod for their benefit.&#13;
At a short business session held on&#13;
the boat the club gave a vote of thanks&#13;
to the WbireStar Line, to Mis. James&#13;
Slocum, and manager Moore, for courtesies&#13;
extended. They also accepted&#13;
the resignation of president B. Smiley&#13;
and elected A. £. McKinnon, of the&#13;
Parmington Enterprise, to fill tbe&#13;
cancy.&#13;
Altogether the meeting was a sucrioeas&#13;
«nd all members are interested in&#13;
its-welfare. Secretary, F. S. Neal of&#13;
tbe Northville Record is a hustler and&#13;
the society owe him much for its sue*&#13;
cess. A good program has been arranged&#13;
for fhe October meeting.&#13;
- 7 — * ' i !*'&#13;
Perry Blunt is in Detroit this week.&#13;
A fine and much needed rain Tues-&#13;
Richard Roche was in town the first&#13;
of tbe week.&#13;
Special communication of Livingston&#13;
Lodge F. &amp; A. M. Tuesday evenin&#13;
g next—M. M. degree.&#13;
Master Luke Cole ot OWOSSD is&#13;
spendingja couple of weeks with his&#13;
uncle F. L. Andrews and family.&#13;
There will be an Illustrated Cfauldren8'&#13;
Sermon at tbe Cong'l church&#13;
next Sunday morning. The younger&#13;
classes with tbe teachers are requested&#13;
to occupy the front seats in the middle&#13;
block and the aiults may listen&#13;
over the cbildrens shoulders. Vesper&#13;
service in the evening.&#13;
We will deliver Hour&#13;
direct to th9 people&#13;
at&#13;
50 cents for a 25-pound sack&#13;
95 cents for a 50-pound sack&#13;
$3.80 for a barrel.&#13;
10 pounds Graham 15 cents.&#13;
10 lbs. granulated meal lOcts&#13;
Seed Buckwheat.&#13;
••-•-htf&#13;
• " 7 ^&#13;
,#'•?&#13;
Terms, Cash.&#13;
R . H . B R WIN.&#13;
Specials For This Week:&#13;
•&gt;v&#13;
15 per cent discount on all Men's S h o e s&#13;
15 per cent discount on all L»adies' S h o e s&#13;
15 per cent discount on all Boys' S h o e s&#13;
10 per cent discount on all S u m m e r Underwear&#13;
10 per cent discount on all Corsets.&#13;
Groceries:&#13;
T r y o u r I d e a l M o c h a a n d J a v a C o f f e e ,&#13;
1 lb. Package, the Best 125c Coffee in the county&#13;
every pound warranted to pleaRe if not your&#13;
money back.&#13;
Salmon&#13;
Peas&#13;
Corn&#13;
Beans&#13;
8c&#13;
Sc&#13;
8c&#13;
8e $&#13;
W. W.BARNARD.&#13;
• •&#13;
OUR LADDER TO SUCCESS&#13;
|Accarate Compound'g|&#13;
Progressive Methodr|&#13;
Courtesy&#13;
Cleanliness&#13;
Complete Stock&#13;
Pure Drags&#13;
Facilities&#13;
Experience&#13;
Knowledge&#13;
Skiil&#13;
Study&#13;
Your Patronage, when In need of Drug*,&#13;
Patent Medicine*, etc, t» aollc.ted.&#13;
V.&#13;
Give your&#13;
Horse&#13;
S p e a r s '&#13;
Worm&#13;
P o w d e r s ,&#13;
We have&#13;
Secured the&#13;
Agency&#13;
For them.&#13;
8 Prescriptions&#13;
S Carefully&#13;
Compounded.&#13;
V*.&#13;
rf&#13;
F. A&#13;
I&gt;ru|nrl»t*&#13;
^knii.':'^M.' ": S 'V ^ ^ ^&#13;
. • * •&#13;
&amp; ^ ' • • • '&#13;
• ' » ! • '&#13;
. ; . * • •&#13;
P:':- '"&#13;
r&#13;
" . v " • i' ' • • . . • ' . . • • • • • . • • • • . • • • , ; « • • • • . * * ' • , , • • . * • . . . . " • • ( . , . . '&#13;
. • /&#13;
T^te&#13;
M#HIG&#13;
*£**&#13;
ThfmBmMmtT C&lt;me*e» Leave th« Track&#13;
at Laastaf—Womas'f Press&#13;
tloa Kleet Oacen—Michigan Vtil»f«&#13;
itlon Org shUed*&#13;
Michigan Crop Report.&#13;
The Michigan crop report for July&#13;
says that the June temperature was&#13;
.three degrees below normal This retarded&#13;
corn and beans, but was bene*&#13;
ficial to w h e a t Hail storms have dam*&#13;
aged fruit in some sections and high&#13;
winds have blown down some fields of&#13;
wheat that were badly affected by the&#13;
Hessian fly. The wheat crop does not&#13;
promise as well this year as in 1S99.&#13;
The average estimate!! yield in the&#13;
southern counties is six; bushels, central&#13;
counties nine bushels, northern&#13;
counties nine bushels, and the entire&#13;
state seven bushels. The condition of&#13;
corn for the state as compared with an&#13;
average year is 89; oats, OS; beans, 94;&#13;
potatoes, 95; pastures, 93. The hay&#13;
crop has been shortened somewhat by&#13;
t h e dry weather,yet in mostjnstances&#13;
the yield exceeds that of last year, the&#13;
average yield for the state being 1.42&#13;
tons per acre. The prospect for apples&#13;
i s better than one year ago. The peach&#13;
crop promises to be a large one in some&#13;
sections.&#13;
*&#13;
Michigan Disabled.&#13;
The old man:of-war Michigan, having&#13;
on board the Michigan Naval Reserves&#13;
on their annual cruise, had been&#13;
out of port just one hour when an accident&#13;
was met with that caused the&#13;
Michigan to turn back. As the manof-&#13;
war was abreast of the head of Belle&#13;
Isle it was discovered that something&#13;
wa^ wrong with her steering gear! An&#13;
examination showed that the rudderpost&#13;
was bent and she was forced to return&#13;
to Detroit. Repairs were at once&#13;
begun and she was able to resume her&#13;
journexon the following daj*, the 10th.&#13;
The cruise will last-*0-days.&#13;
Traveling library Report.&#13;
Mrs. Mary C. Spencer, state librarian,&#13;
has prepared a report covering the&#13;
work in connection with the Michigan&#13;
traveling library system for the period&#13;
• ending with the close of the fiscal year&#13;
. June 30. The report indicates a large&#13;
increase in the circulation of solid&#13;
reading matter, ethics, biography,&#13;
travel and history having more than&#13;
held their own with fiction. The report&#13;
shows a circulation of 56,306 with&#13;
10,443 readers, as compared with a circulation&#13;
of 32,915 with 4,673 readers&#13;
for the previous year.&#13;
Vlllafe AMovlatioD Organized. '&#13;
The Michigan Village . association&#13;
w a s permanently Organized in Detroit&#13;
o n the Uth with a total membership&#13;
of 30 and with the following officers:&#13;
President, Fred M. Warner, of Farraington;&#13;
vice-president, D. N. Lowell,&#13;
&lt;tf ftraiwy «H&gt;rptAry-t,i-easurcr. W. H.&#13;
Marvin, of Utica; executive committee,&#13;
foregoing officers, nnd C. E. Godfrey,&#13;
of Bancroft, and Eli Brew baker, of&#13;
Alma. The first annual meeting of&#13;
the association will beheld in Lansing,--&#13;
o n the first Tuesday after the second&#13;
Monday in May, 1901.&#13;
Woman's Vren Association's New officer*.&#13;
The Michigan Woman's Press association&#13;
has elected the following officers:&#13;
President, Mrs. Thomas Appleigate,&#13;
of Adrian; vice-presidents, Miss&#13;
Emma.E. Bower, of Ann Arbor; Mrs,&#13;
Belle M. Perry, of Charlotte, and Mrs.&#13;
Mary E. H. Coville, of Belding; recording&#13;
secretary* Mrs. Stella Marie&#13;
Williams, of Battle Creek; corresponding&#13;
secretary, Miss Ida Wain, of Detroit.&#13;
•&#13;
They Get a Ilalne.&#13;
The following Michigandcrs are effected&#13;
by the recent promotions in the&#13;
interior department: Frank E. Potts,&#13;
$1,400 to $1,600; Miss Kate F. Spencer,-&#13;
$900 to $1,000. Pension office—Henry C.&#13;
Workman,, fourth assistant examiner&#13;
at $1,200, to third assistant at $1,400:&#13;
Miss Alice B. Simmons. $1,200 to Sl.-&#13;
400, and Miss Gertrude Withington.&#13;
$900 to $1,000 in the patent office.&#13;
MICHIQAN N E W S ITEMS.&#13;
.The eornerfttone of t h e , * e w Presbyterian&#13;
church, at Mason, was laid o n t h e&#13;
• T &amp; p ^ j f t f e ^ t d ^ w o t f t , Clinton&#13;
$6unty, h|*nN#&amp; d t a o n t l r t e &amp; Mail&#13;
goes to Elsie. ^ ** ' \&#13;
T G^ib- Ru^bertprd^ department com-&#13;
JXbaiMJerof^haaA. H / i i 1|*8, fljed on&#13;
ttfe 9th at Hart.' x&#13;
Edward Keeler, of Vicksburg, has&#13;
-been elected superintendent of schools&#13;
at Glendine, Mont&#13;
• Hon.' W. C. Slay bury, of Detroit, is&#13;
aaid^t© be &gt;the choke of Eaton, county&#13;
Democrats for governor.&#13;
The Eaton county Democratic convention&#13;
haa beep called to meet at&#13;
Charlotte on the July 21.&#13;
The Michigan Women's .Press association&#13;
opened its 11th annual convention&#13;
in Battle Creek on the 10th.&#13;
The Republican convention for the&#13;
13th congressional district has been&#13;
called to meet at Calumet on July 26.&#13;
The trial of Warden Chamberlain of&#13;
the Jackson prison was again adjourned&#13;
o n the 5th. This time until July 13.&#13;
A. B. Darragh, of St. Louis, defeated&#13;
Rep. Mesick for the Republican congressional&#13;
nomination in the "11th district.&#13;
Farmers around Middleville say the&#13;
grasshoppers are cleaning up more&#13;
pasture land than are all their live&#13;
stock.&#13;
Sugar beet weeding in Bay county is&#13;
about ended. The crop looks 100 per&#13;
cent better than it did last year at this&#13;
season.&#13;
The First Baptist church of Owosso,&#13;
has extended a call to Rev. Frank&#13;
Lyon, of Cleveland, to become its&#13;
pastor.&#13;
The taxpayers of Olivet have defeated&#13;
the proposition to bond for $20 -&#13;
000 for an electric light and waterworks&#13;
plant.&#13;
A special election will be held on&#13;
July 30 at Holland to vote on a proposition&#13;
to bond the city for $10,000 for a&#13;
sewerage system.&#13;
A four-year-old son of Mr. Hassanzall,&#13;
living two miles east of Grass&#13;
Lake, was kicked by a horse and&#13;
fatally injured. -&#13;
G. T. Hargreaves, recently assistant&#13;
managtng editor of the Detroit Evening&#13;
News, has purchased the Lapeer Democrat&#13;
and Press.&#13;
Albert Horner,, aged 35 years, committed&#13;
suicide by drowning at Millington.&#13;
Disappointment in love was tho&#13;
cause of his act.&#13;
Joseph Greise, _fireman on the tug&#13;
Ralph, disappeared on the 7th. Two&#13;
days later his body was found in the&#13;
river at Alpena.&#13;
Wm. Henke has been postmaster of&#13;
River Raisin for 34 years. He was appointed&#13;
by President Johnson is 1866.&#13;
He is 78 years old.&#13;
There are now_iLfI28 men and officers&#13;
in the newly organized Michigan National&#13;
Guard, which is about 200 less&#13;
than two years ago.&#13;
The first week of the U. of M. summer&#13;
school shows a registration of 300;&#13;
which is 88 more than the total registration&#13;
last summer.&#13;
Joseph L. Cox, state commissioner of&#13;
labor,, and his brother, Paul T. Cox,&#13;
have decided to start a new morning&#13;
paper in Battle Creek.&#13;
Bishop Foley, assisted by 15 priests&#13;
from the Detroit diocese, confirmed a&#13;
class of 27 at St. Mary's Catholic&#13;
church at Royal Oak on the 9th.&#13;
A Barry county farmer's hired man&#13;
painted one of his employer's horses&#13;
a bright green and it cost him $20 and&#13;
costs to keep out of jail for doing it.&#13;
The Lansing Arbeiter society cele-&#13;
A Basted Trait.&#13;
The plaster trust has gone up the&#13;
•pout, and its affairs arc being wound&#13;
up. Threatened competition hastened&#13;
the end. On August I the Grand&#13;
Rapids office will be closed and the&#13;
plants will be operated individually.&#13;
Several plaster . mills and gypsum&#13;
works, closed lu Grand Rapids by the&#13;
trust, will reopen.&#13;
Railroad Aeelitoat at Lansing.&#13;
The east bound fast express on the&#13;
C. &amp; G. T. left? the. tracks just as it entered&#13;
Lansing on the night of the 8th.&#13;
Three sleepers and three day coaches&#13;
were derailed. No one was killed and&#13;
« o one seriously injured. A broken&#13;
.switch was the cause.&#13;
Clifford is to have a bank at last,&#13;
sifter wishing in vain foi one for a&#13;
long time.&#13;
The eight-year-old son of Ira Brake,&#13;
of Marine City, was drowned on the&#13;
12th i n t h e St. Clair river.&#13;
Delegates were present, from Grand&#13;
Rapids, South Haven and other cities.&#13;
Rev. Archibald Wheaton, of Mystic,&#13;
Mass., has been called to the pastorate&#13;
of the First Baptist church at Jackson.&#13;
He will begin his new duties in September.&#13;
Out of 83 applicants for certificates&#13;
at the June examination of teachers at&#13;
Kalamazoo, only 25 per cent passed the&#13;
requirements, 22 certificates being&#13;
granted.&#13;
Herman Kalbfleisch, 27 years old,&#13;
sent to Iopia from S t Clair county in&#13;
October, 1898, for three years, for larceny&#13;
from the person, died there on&#13;
the 11th.&#13;
Wallace Allen, of Hartford, was&#13;
killed while driving an omnibus near&#13;
Watervliet. A dozen passengers were&#13;
also more or less injured. The 'bus&#13;
was overturned.&#13;
Unless some unforeseen conditions&#13;
arise the various companies of the national&#13;
guard will leave for camp at Island&#13;
Lake on Aug. 7, and will remain&#13;
in camp five days. .&#13;
The residence of&#13;
Bay City, burned on&#13;
with its contents.&#13;
Mutart and his two&#13;
selves with difficulty.&#13;
Gov. Pingree has appointed W. E.&#13;
Callendcr. of Bay City, agent of the&#13;
state board of corrections and charities&#13;
for Bay county, to succeed the late&#13;
Judge J. W. McMath.&#13;
Gov. Pingree has appointed^ W. E.&#13;
Callender. of Bay City, agent of the&#13;
state board of corrections and charities&#13;
for Biiv county, to succeed the late&#13;
Judge J. W. McMath.&#13;
" The farmers of Branch county loat&#13;
thousands of dollars by the storm on&#13;
the 10th, They had just cut a fins&#13;
crop of hay and none of it had been&#13;
stored when the storm came.&#13;
The last bit of work at tj&amp;e big&#13;
Wheeler plant at West Bay City was&#13;
completed on the 11th, inventory&#13;
taken, the workmen discharged and&#13;
the works closed indefinitely.&#13;
The prospect of Mr. F. S. Neal, of the&#13;
Northville Record, receiving the nomination&#13;
for representative to the legislature&#13;
is more than good. Good fox&#13;
the district to nominate a good man.&#13;
David Reed, a farmer living at&#13;
Adamsville, has received a message&#13;
stating that J. J. Reed, his son, ha&amp;&#13;
son, has been murdered at Seattle.&#13;
The remains will be shipped to Adamsville.&#13;
The board of Tcontrol of the state&#13;
house of correction has appointed&#13;
Prof. C. A. Gower, of Lansing, and D,&#13;
C. Crookshank, of Ionia, as appraisers&#13;
of the annual inventory of that institution.&#13;
The total increased valuation in&#13;
Washtenaw county this year amounts&#13;
to $5,300,240, which places the county's&#13;
valuation at 834,303,013. Of the increase&#13;
the city of Ann Arbor furnishes&#13;
$2,747,148.&#13;
Director Smith, of the state agricultural&#13;
experiment station, says that the&#13;
deer are devouring the crops on the&#13;
upper peninsula station to such an extent&#13;
that it will be necessary to fence&#13;
the preserve in.&#13;
A cigar box containing $568 in notes&#13;
and bills has been found on the estate&#13;
of the k\$e Swan Munson, a farmer&#13;
who livea two miles north of Montague.&#13;
The box was found in a barrel&#13;
filled with corn.&#13;
Chas. H. Hackley, Muskegon's benefactor,&#13;
has presented that city with a&#13;
gift of 825,000 to be utilized in the construction&#13;
of an addition to the Hackley&#13;
manual training school, which is at&#13;
present cramped for room.&#13;
The state tax commission has received&#13;
reports from every city in tht&#13;
state. With the townships already&#13;
reported the commission reports an increase&#13;
in the .assessed valuation of the&#13;
state over l a s t year of $231,000,000.&#13;
While trying to catch a. log train at&#13;
Woodville Crossing, John McDonald,&#13;
aged eight years, was thrown undei&#13;
the cars. One leg was cut off below&#13;
the knee and the other foot badly&#13;
smashed. His condition is critical.&#13;
The 25th annual campmeeting of the&#13;
Methodists at Bay View has opened.&#13;
At the first meeting nearly 450 were in&#13;
attendance—the largest number present&#13;
at the opening service. The meet&#13;
ings will be continued until July 18.&#13;
The Michigan Millers' association&#13;
held its annual meeting in Lansing on&#13;
the 11th and 12th with GO delegates i s&#13;
attendance. The association had an&#13;
increase of 00 per cent in membership&#13;
last year and is in excellent condition.&#13;
Oscar F. Lewis, of Calumet, Mich.,&#13;
and James B. Gilman, of Rochester,&#13;
N. Y., who were students at Oberlin&#13;
university, Marquette, were found dead&#13;
there on the 11th, overcome by the&#13;
fumes of charcoal from the Carp furnace.&#13;
John N. Alexander, of Lansing, manufacturer&#13;
of the—Alexander 'furnace,&#13;
Afctbe Paris Exposition and Many&#13;
* People Were Injured,&#13;
100f PERSONS MADE VICTIMS&#13;
Of&#13;
A&#13;
Oil Tank Explosion in i&#13;
ofcmiettes Towa—Sx plosion&#13;
Basalt of • Firs In the&#13;
Yard*—Other Item*.&#13;
was the&#13;
XUilroad&#13;
Panic at the Paris Exposition.&#13;
The only regretable incident in con*&#13;
nectlon with the national fete at the&#13;
Paris exposition on the 14th occurred&#13;
at the conclusion of the fireworks at&#13;
the Place de la Concorde, which was&#13;
filled with a dense crowd of people.&#13;
When the* crowds tried to disperse&#13;
along the neighboring thoroughfares&#13;
they found it impossible to move, and&#13;
they were packed like herrings in a&#13;
barrel. Men, women and children began&#13;
pushing, and a panic- occurred.&#13;
Women fainted by scores, and many&#13;
children were trodden under foot At&#13;
least 100 women were carried t o the&#13;
cafes in the neighborhood. It is impossible&#13;
to tell how many were injured]&#13;
fell from a wheel while learning to&#13;
ride on the 13th, and died instantly.&#13;
He had been in poor health for some&#13;
months, and death was probably due&#13;
to heart disease.&#13;
The huckleberry crop is now being&#13;
gathered through northern Michigan&#13;
at a rapid rate. Large numbers of&#13;
buyers are on the ground aircl~expTess&#13;
cars are being filled with this fruit at&#13;
many stations. The price is now Si.75&#13;
to $2 per bushel on the ground.&#13;
Wm. Sanford Neye and Samuel Van&#13;
brated its 20th anniversary on the 7 t h ^ Guilder, farmers who live near Edger-&#13;
John Mutart, of&#13;
the 9th. together&#13;
Loss 91,500. Mr.&#13;
sons saved thornton,&#13;
Kent county, were arrested on the&#13;
10th, charged with being responsible&#13;
for the numerous attempts at train&#13;
wrecking near that place which have&#13;
taken place during the past year.&#13;
Reports to the state board of health&#13;
show that rheumatism, neuralgia, diarrhoea,&#13;
tonsillitis and bronchitis, in&#13;
order named, caused roost sickness in&#13;
Michigan, during the past week. Cerebrospinal&#13;
meningitis was reported at&#13;
4 places, smallpox at 8, diphtheria at&#13;
17, whooping cough at 19, typhoid&#13;
fever at 25, scarlet fever at 48, measles&#13;
at 66 and consumption at 171.&#13;
The following commissions were issued&#13;
by the adjutant-general on the&#13;
11th: George Barger, Detroit, second&#13;
lieutenant Co. A, First infantry; Frank&#13;
J. Cook, Detroit, first lieutenant and&#13;
battalion adjutant, First infantry;&#13;
Harry U. Kies, Tecumseh, first lieutenant&#13;
and battalion adjutant, First infantry;&#13;
Charles H. Miller, Big Rapids,&#13;
first lieutenant and battalion adjutant,&#13;
Second infantry; Fred Brewer, Ironwood,&#13;
first lieutenant Co. I, Third infantry;&#13;
Frank T. Freitag, Adrian, second&#13;
lieutenant Co. A, First independent&#13;
batalion.&#13;
The following corporations filed articles&#13;
of association with the secretary&#13;
of state during the past week; Ann&#13;
Arbor Driving club, Ann Arbor, $5,000;&#13;
Zuber-Lefever Co., Capac, $5,000; Hathaway,&#13;
Graphite Manufacturing Co.,&#13;
L'Anse, 835,000; Grain and Seed Separator&#13;
Manufacturing Co., Evart, 310*000;&#13;
Continental Varnish &amp; Paint Co., Detroit,&#13;
$10,000; Wallace Stone &amp; Lime&#13;
Co., Bayport, $50,000; William Mueller&#13;
Co., Kaber, $100,000; Wisconsin Land &amp;&#13;
Lumber Co., Hermansville, $220,000.&#13;
Steamer Ida Wrecked.&#13;
The little steamer Ida of Mt. Clemens&#13;
was wrecked off Kelley's island in&#13;
Lake Erie, on the morning of the 8th&#13;
in a heavy squall, The Ida was bound&#13;
for the island to load stone. When the&#13;
gale struck her she became unmanageable&#13;
and the crew tried t o anchor their&#13;
craft, because she could not steam&#13;
against the sea. At daylight the crew&#13;
of the tug Monk and the lifesavers at&#13;
Marblehead saw the Ida dragging onto&#13;
the beach, and they went to the rescue.&#13;
The steamer's crew were taken ©if in&#13;
safety and brought to Marblehead.&#13;
They had suffered severely. ."&#13;
Nearly 100 Periom Injured.&#13;
By the explosion of an oil tank in&#13;
Somerville, Mass., on the 13th, nearly&#13;
100 persons were injured and two&#13;
killed. In the yard of the Boston &amp;&#13;
Maine railroad, among more- than a&#13;
thousand freight cars filled with, coal&#13;
and general merchandise,- were three&#13;
oil tanks of the Union Oil Co. One of the&#13;
cars caught tire, and hundreds of persons&#13;
flocked to the the yards. A huge&#13;
oil tank, which had been on a car., blew&#13;
up, scattering blazing oil in all directions,&#13;
upon meny women and children&#13;
in the throng. —&#13;
Train Robbera Get 910,000-.&#13;
The Illinois Central ^express, from&#13;
New Orleans to Chicago, was held up&#13;
and robbed of about $10,000 on -the&#13;
11th, two miles south of Wickliffe, Ky.&#13;
The train was flagged. The fireman&#13;
was badly beateftr while the express&#13;
messenger was driven from his car at&#13;
the point of a Title. The robbers, six&#13;
in number, cut off the engine and express&#13;
car and ran a mile and a half to&#13;
Fort Jefferson. There they blew open&#13;
the express safe, secured all the valubles&#13;
it contained, and crossed into Missouri.&#13;
Two 111* Fight*.&#13;
between first-class pugilists were arranged&#13;
on the 10th to take place before&#13;
the repeal of the Horton boxing law in&#13;
New York, which goes into effect September&#13;
1. The first match will be on&#13;
August 10, between Bob Fitzsimmons&#13;
and Gus Ruhlin. who lately defeated&#13;
Sharkey, and the second will be between&#13;
Fitzsimmons and Tom Sharkey,&#13;
on or about -Augus't 25.&#13;
AIcKlnley and Roosevelt Notified.&#13;
William McKinley was officially notified&#13;
of his second nomiuation by the&#13;
republican party for the highest office&#13;
in the civilized world at Canton, on the&#13;
13th. Theodore Roosevelt received the&#13;
official notification of his nomination!&#13;
for Vice-President at his summer home&#13;
at Oyster Bay, L. I., on the same day&#13;
CHINA WAR N E W S .&#13;
A dispatch from fit Petersburg, via&#13;
Paris J u l y 14, oonjicms. .thfl horrible&#13;
d « U m ' o f W ^Ssassinattoa of M. De&#13;
Iffifffli ti\tftieiBinhfli rr1*?****^** Pekin,&#13;
which in the form of rumors had * V&#13;
reao&gt; reacha# « u s a h v £nej3ftiapate&gt;&#13;
^ e e l a ^ s t h 4 | thf Rnssian etfvoy was&#13;
dragfod-throitf* the streets by the&#13;
boxers, insulted, beaten and tortured,&#13;
and even thrown Iptp.a great Kettle&#13;
a n d . b o i l e d to,,;fleattt&gt; Then t b i re&lt;&#13;
mains were thrown to the dogs. While&#13;
&amp; De Qiew was bj&amp;Rg. disposed p i the&#13;
mob danced around the caldron. Kme«&#13;
D e Giers suffered a fate worse than&#13;
death and was- beaten and tortured&#13;
with sharp sticks until life was ex-&#13;
4 i n c t The legation o-fnoials are said&#13;
to have been tortured fiendishly until&#13;
death ended their sufferings. M. De&#13;
Giers and his legation officials resisted&#13;
desperately and bis brave bodyguard&#13;
killed many of the attacking mob.&#13;
According a special Che Foo dispatch&#13;
the fighting around Tien Tsin on the&#13;
3d and 4th was the severest yet experienced.&#13;
The British losses alone were&#13;
30 killed or wounded. The Chinese&#13;
had 75,000 men attacking simultaneously&#13;
from the west, north and east,&#13;
and made excellent practice with over&#13;
100 guns. The defenders numbered&#13;
14,000, with scant supplies, and it was&#13;
only the presence of the newly arrived&#13;
Japanese and Russian guns that prevented&#13;
a disaster. One Russian company&#13;
of infantry^ numbering 120 men,&#13;
had 115 killed or wounded. The German&#13;
contingent also suffered heavily.&#13;
The allies narrowly escaped total defeat.&#13;
Still another forerunner of the uprisings&#13;
in China is contained in a communication&#13;
to the state department&#13;
from Consul - General CJoodnow at&#13;
Shanghai regarding the situation in&#13;
Kiang Su province. Mr. Uoodnow&#13;
states that the accountability for the&#13;
agitation prevailing in northern China&#13;
cannot be laid to the destitution and&#13;
poverty, as the crops in that region&#13;
are abundant, the inhabitants prosperous&#13;
and new machines and methods of&#13;
transportation may have not yet&#13;
thrown any of the people out of work,&#13;
thus intimating that some other and&#13;
more serious cause existed for the unsettled&#13;
conditions in that section.&#13;
The following dispatch from Admiral&#13;
Seyaaour, dated Tien Tsin, July&#13;
9, says: The enemy's position southwest&#13;
of the settlement was attacked at&#13;
4 o'clock this morning. The Japanese&#13;
by a flank movement drove the enemy&#13;
out and captured four guns. Cavalry&#13;
pursued and completed the rout of the&#13;
enemy, killing large numbers of&#13;
soldiers and boxers. The allied forces&#13;
shelled and occupied the western arsenal,&#13;
capturing t w o guns. The arsenal&#13;
was burnedva&amp; the allies were unable&#13;
to hold it. The enemy's loss was 150&#13;
killed. Tire loss of~the allied forces&#13;
was small.&#13;
iThe fate of the legations at Pekin&#13;
continues to absorb almost undivided&#13;
interest in Great Britain. As.tiie days&#13;
of silence drag into weeks the public&#13;
tension and anxiety increase. There.&#13;
i s a feeling of gratitude at London for&#13;
the strenuous efforts the United States&#13;
is making to eompel China to give&#13;
M'wis^y Conger a A a n c e to cable a&#13;
BRIEF N E W S P A R A G R A P H S .&#13;
The army transports plying betweea&#13;
San Francisco and the east h a w been&#13;
again placed on a war basis.&#13;
The North German Lloyd steamship&#13;
Bremen, burned at Hobokea, N. Y.,&#13;
will be repaired. The burned, steamer&#13;
Main is a hopeless, wreck.&#13;
The American hospital ship Maine,&#13;
which has been placed at the disposal&#13;
of the British government by the&#13;
ladies executive committee* sailed on&#13;
the 12th from Southampton for China.&#13;
The Blanket Indians at Red Lake,&#13;
Minn., are reported in a troublesome&#13;
mood.. The government is erecting a&#13;
$30*000 school at ~ that point and the&#13;
Indians object to any attempt at civilizing&#13;
them.&#13;
Deputy Mtfrshal John McArthur shot&#13;
and killed Win. Welch at Antigo, Wis.,&#13;
on the 8th. Welch, with others, was&#13;
charged with burglary and the shooting&#13;
occurred during an attempt to capture&#13;
the thieves.&#13;
An empty car on the Dayton, Springfield&#13;
&amp; Union Traction line collided&#13;
with one filled with Sunday school ex-?&#13;
cursionists at the bottom of a hill at&#13;
Springfield on the 11th. Fifteen persons&#13;
were badly injured.&#13;
The steamship Ahgolia cleared on&#13;
the Oth from New Orleans for Cape&#13;
Town with 1,000 mules for the, British&#13;
army,&#13;
message fness Pekin and while faint&#13;
hopes are entertained that they will be&#13;
successful i t is generally felt thai&#13;
such effort might well have been &gt; attempted&#13;
by t h e British foreign office.&#13;
The German consul at Tien Tsin&#13;
cables that the foreign settlements&#13;
were continually bombarded by the&#13;
Chinese tsnaa July 5 to July S. On&#13;
July 6j. 2;0O0 Boxers attacked the&#13;
French.settlement, but were routed by&#13;
the Russian, the latter, however, having&#13;
200 men killed in the engagement.&#13;
The British and Japanese forces, July&#13;
7,. bombarded the Chinese batteries.&#13;
Ani official telegram „ was received&#13;
ftcom the governor-of Shan Tung, on&#13;
the lftth, stating that a breach, was&#13;
made in the wall of the British legation,&#13;
a t Pekin, after a gallant defense&#13;
and; when all the ammunition had&#13;
given ont. All foreigners were killed.&#13;
Eaperor William dispatched the German&#13;
warship Bursard from Kiel for&#13;
Cfcina on the 10th, while the German&#13;
cruisers Geier and Seeadler have been&#13;
i ordered to proceed to China as rapidly&#13;
as possible from the American and&#13;
Australian stations respectively.&#13;
T w o couriers arrived at Tien Tsin on&#13;
July 1 from Pekin. One brought a letter&#13;
from Sir Claude Mac Donald, t h e&#13;
British minister, confirming the i t -&#13;
ports of the death of&#13;
teler, German&#13;
Dr. Mr mm v&lt;&#13;
been appointed A t t n e * minister to&#13;
China, in succession t o the late Baron&#13;
von Ketteier.&#13;
%&#13;
1&#13;
Frank Stewart suicided in the room&#13;
at the Sloane house in Sandusky on the&#13;
6th by shooting himself in the mouth&#13;
with a dueling pistol. Stewart w a s *&#13;
contractor for .railroad ties, and hadhad&#13;
some reverses lately, which-preyed&#13;
upon his mind. He was a son of the&#13;
late J. H. Stewart, a prominent rail*&#13;
road man.&#13;
George Schsening and Wm. Grab&#13;
were killed and Fred Frige was probably&#13;
fatally injrured at Columbus, 111.,&#13;
on the 8th. The three men were in a&#13;
W g g y that was' ctembfliihed by a train:&#13;
at a Baltimore &amp; Ohio Southwestern&#13;
railway cros&amp;ing. K&#13;
t2fc&#13;
&amp; ; ^* •s-.'l''.*'&#13;
j'1 v.^i^fwaga&#13;
: £ • « &amp; • ; :^f: -««££ I "fl'UP T"F •*.".WW!Mfi illP&#13;
'/•v&#13;
A J - V ' v.v-t. ".-&#13;
V,-'&#13;
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*&#13;
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w.&#13;
\1&#13;
TA wmm&#13;
i&#13;
\u. 52 A Fwcmating&#13;
Romance&#13;
Alan Adair*»0 *0&#13;
mm&#13;
\ - ' r CHAPTER III.&#13;
Richard Dempster had never entirel&#13;
y trusted Heftchinaon. Although he had&#13;
been a meafcer of his firm for years&#13;
he had never made him a partner, and&#13;
the utmost he had done was- to allow&#13;
htm a very libera) salary, and a commission&#13;
on what he had made. Theretore&#13;
it was hot a difficult matter to get&#13;
rid of fcim; but tho interview between&#13;
the three men was one which neither&#13;
forgot.&#13;
Alas Mackenzie, who, as he told&#13;
Veronica, wanted no one to do his&#13;
dirty work, was present, and unfolded&#13;
document after document of incriminating&#13;
matter. If ho had not made J&#13;
the discovery it would have come to!&#13;
it ithat the Brazilian government&#13;
would have arraigned the firm of&#13;
IBempster on the charge of selling firearms&#13;
to the insurgents. Richard&#13;
Dempster knew that the confidence in,&#13;
rthem would be shaken unless he be-i&#13;
Uiaved firmly. He dismissed Hutch-:&#13;
; inson, offering him no consolation;;&#13;
'the man, must consider himself disgraced.&#13;
His imprecations against&#13;
Mackenzie were deep and terrible.&#13;
Alan wotrld not have cared IX it had&#13;
not been for Veronica. After all, the&#13;
man was Veronica's father, although&#13;
the girl had never rightly understood;&#13;
why she had never been acknowledged.&#13;
There was a mystery which Hutchinson&#13;
alone knew,. but he was a quiet&#13;
and reserved man, steeped,to the torim&#13;
in plots, and he could be dangerous, .as&#13;
quiet people alone can.&#13;
" Dempster's adieux to Hutchinson&#13;
were short. "You would have betrayed&#13;
me," he said to the man wiho .had&#13;
been in his employ for years, .more&#13;
years than he cared to think, "if iilhad&#13;
not been for Mackenzie! My ^word has&#13;
always been well thought of trntilJiow,&#13;
my firm an honorable (m*; but .'you&#13;
would have dragged me dowaiT"&#13;
Hutchinson said nothing, hut glared&#13;
at Mackenzie. "That young cur.?" he&#13;
said; "but I will be even with rhim&#13;
yet!" '&#13;
When it came to sayying soodbye^ to&#13;
Alan it was another auaix. The elder&#13;
man had taken 'a great 'li*fc*£ WO.Aian;&#13;
he had full confidence in him.&#13;
"Look here, my lad," he saiC, ~I&#13;
sha'n't leave you at Santa Hosa-il'm&#13;
not sure it will be worth your powder&#13;
and shot; but go there now,, and ;I will&#13;
move you on to San Lag© in a .little&#13;
while."&#13;
Alan thanked him and erceiit. ;His&#13;
head was full of Veronica. The ftirl&#13;
was about to show her confidence in&#13;
him in the fullest way a woman r^n.&#13;
True she was leaving nothing 'hut iin&#13;
kindness'and tyranny; but Veronica&#13;
was young and very beatfrtfui, ^and&#13;
many men would have rejoiced tolhave&#13;
secured her for life.&#13;
He had made all arrangements f for&#13;
the girl. She was to leave jRio sat conce&#13;
and go and wait for him at Santa Jlesa.&#13;
He had sent her money, and had .fraud&#13;
a lady who wouid-fook aftsrlhar Jinfll&#13;
he came to claim her for himself. They&#13;
would be married at onea, JBBfi Jie&#13;
would begin his life there &amp; married&#13;
man. He was looking forward tiwthls&#13;
new life. He wanted a eompafitan—&gt;&#13;
a woman. Sometimes he Celt ihat, if&#13;
ift had been possible, he would aave,&#13;
preferred a woman who would {-de-!&#13;
mand more of him, for as long aslhe&#13;
was simply joined to Veronica tfhe&#13;
was perfectly happy. Poor child! $he&#13;
had had so mutih unkindness in her&#13;
short life, for she was but sevantaKn!&#13;
' Alan Mackenzie was not a man w&amp;o&#13;
makes plam that tome to tuwaght. Before&#13;
another throe months were lower&#13;
he was established at' Santa Ross,&#13;
married to Veronica- She had a surprise&#13;
in-store for htm. She told him&#13;
V. that Hutchinson had come home from.&#13;
J the momentous Interview vehement i&#13;
abusing Alan. "~~&#13;
Sho had stood up for him, and then!&#13;
tee had flown into a violent rage and&#13;
fead' ftbtfsta her, telling her that she.&#13;
. was •otTA.cWId, and that she had no&#13;
claim «90» Jbs% In.some strange way&#13;
this rathe* ptsased Alan. He had very j&#13;
, definite ideas as to duty, and it had&#13;
-vexed him that it was his fate to unmask&#13;
the father of the girl he was to&#13;
jnarry. Therefore, Hutchinson's&#13;
^words that she was not his* child&#13;
rather relieved him.&#13;
And now' there began some months&#13;
of quiet, uneventful, pleasurable life.&#13;
"Veronica was sweet, "gentle, loving,&#13;
and T«ry beautiful. It was impossible&#13;
not to become fond of her; and though&#13;
Alan knew that there were possibilities&#13;
of love within him which she&#13;
never drew out, yet he never regretted&#13;
his chivalry. She was not very useful,&#13;
bur she made a home. She always&#13;
vooked charming and made the rooms&#13;
pretty with flowers and ornaments.&#13;
She was always.there, too, to talk to.&#13;
him when he wanted to talk, to ride&#13;
with him when he wanted to ride. She&#13;
j t s a c d to live limply to jtfyt him&#13;
pleasure. .True, be never discussed&#13;
any serious topic with her, and there&#13;
was a part of his nature that was a&#13;
sealed book to her; but that did not&#13;
prevent its being a happy, easy life.&#13;
But it only lasted four months. Alan&#13;
and his chief corresponded two or&#13;
three times a week, hut only on business&#13;
affairs! If Richard , Dempster&#13;
heard a rumor of Alan's living at Santa&#13;
Rosa as a married man he did not&#13;
attach much importance to.it. Alan&#13;
was doing such good work that he was&#13;
almost wasted at' such a small center&#13;
as Santa Rosa. He knew it himself,&#13;
but he had been grateful for the opportunity&#13;
of establishing himself&#13;
there. .Now Richard Dempster wished&#13;
him to go further down the coast, to&#13;
the growing town of San Iago, to establish&#13;
a branch of his business there.&#13;
It was four days' journey by steamier,.&#13;
and Alan thought thit the best plan&#13;
would be to leave Veronica in her own&#13;
comfortable little house, with her own&#13;
servants, until he could find a suitableplace&#13;
for her in the new town.&#13;
The news of this separation was like&#13;
a blow to Veronica. She clung so to&#13;
Alan that it seemed to him that she&#13;
led no life apart from him. But she&#13;
made no demur; everything that he&#13;
aaid was law to her. She only lifted&#13;
••'a pale face, down which tears were&#13;
streaming, to her husband, and said:&#13;
"'But not for long, Alan—not for long!"&#13;
""Not for a- week longer than I can&#13;
help, darling," he said fervently. He,&#13;
.too, would feel the separation; he&#13;
loved her as one does an affectionate&#13;
child who idolizes one. She never pretended&#13;
to be on equality with him, and&#13;
she was quite content to be just loved&#13;
;by him and petted; but she loved him&#13;
with all the force of her nature. She&#13;
saw that if she made any difficulties&#13;
it would only worry him, and so she&#13;
•made none; but Alan could not but&#13;
notice that she grew thinner day by&#13;
day. "Do you mind my going so much,&#13;
dear little one?" he asked her, on the&#13;
eve before his departure. They were&#13;
sitting on the verandah together, on&#13;
one of those moonlight nights which&#13;
always reminded Alan of the first&#13;
time he had seen Veronica. He, too,&#13;
was feeling sad. His poetical nature&#13;
was easily touched, and his wife's&#13;
quiet, dignified grief made it more difficult&#13;
to leave than any noisy demonstration&#13;
of woe.&#13;
"Mind it?" she said, her wnice vibrating&#13;
with passion. "Mind it? You&#13;
don't know whet it is to mei It is like&#13;
tearing soul from fcody!"&#13;
He had not thought she had real&#13;
dpirnh within her.—"If jou tool it like&#13;
suit Veronica. He only placed the&#13;
necessities of life in it, knowing that&#13;
it would please her to make it pretty.&#13;
He sot servants, and saw that the&#13;
place was full of flowers-; and though&#13;
his work engrossed htm to the utmost,&#13;
yet he began to look forward to the&#13;
pleasant home life he had enjoyed in&#13;
Santa Rosa.&#13;
"I must not become selfish," he said&#13;
to himself. '.'A wife like Veronica, so&#13;
loving and yielding, makes a man selfish;&#13;
but I will not he- that." He&#13;
thought bow he could make her life&#13;
fuller, by encouraging- her to read and&#13;
to know more of the outside world.&#13;
"Just now I fill up her life," he&#13;
thought. "I may not always be&#13;
enough for her."&#13;
that you will make me miserable," hesaid'.&#13;
"Will I?" She smiled, as if pleased ;&#13;
that she could mates him fuel miser-1&#13;
able. "You will understand when I&#13;
say that I am pleased., won't you,&#13;
Alan?"&#13;
- "My dear child, s'4 is only &amp; matter&#13;
of weeks! I don't suppose that I .shall&#13;
have been there a fortnight hefore I&#13;
shall have found aocnething suitable&#13;
for you. And then, srcau know:, I hare&#13;
arranged for this brass to be tt&amp;ken off&#13;
your hands, so that you may ami have&#13;
any trouble."&#13;
tit is a dear little iionse!" ^he *uid,&#13;
with half a sign. "I shall always be&#13;
grateful to it. It is £he only ;piace I&#13;
have ever been happy in."&#13;
He pinched her cheei. Men do itot&#13;
always understand why—a—woman&#13;
And then at last the day for her departure&#13;
came. He had booked her&#13;
berth for her in one of the best of the&#13;
little coasting steamers—the best was&#13;
bad, as we reckon steamers—and then&#13;
he waited for his wife. The weather&#13;
was stormy, and he was rather uneasy.&#13;
Veronica would surely be a bad&#13;
sailor, and she was not very strong&#13;
just then. He was so little used to&#13;
think of weather and winds that he&#13;
was rather astonished to think how&#13;
nervous he had become. He put it&#13;
down to his love for Veronica.&#13;
Anyhow, he was down at the quay&#13;
early on the fourth morning, and was&#13;
still more uneasy at hearing that there&#13;
was no news of the steamer. He&#13;
haunted the quay all the next day,&#13;
rather to the detriment of his work,&#13;
and at night he could not sleep.&#13;
Thoughts of Veronica's fears and sufferings&#13;
obtmded themselves. He&#13;
blamed himself for leaving her, for&#13;
not having returned to fetch her, although&#13;
he could not well have left.&#13;
She had always hated the water and&#13;
feared it, and he had loved it. The&#13;
next day he was down at the quay&#13;
again, trying to get some information&#13;
about the steamer. In a little while&#13;
not he alone, but the owners of/ the&#13;
boat, began to get frightened. They&#13;
could get no news. No other boat&#13;
seemed to have seen anything of her.&#13;
By and by there were stories of some&#13;
of the wreckage of a steamer being&#13;
washed ashore, and rJt the end of a&#13;
fortnijght the haggard man who spent&#13;
his days at the quay looking out for&#13;
the boat which would never return to&#13;
the towji had to give up all hope. The&#13;
steanyer had assuredly gone down, and&#13;
all hands with.it; and Veronica, his&#13;
wife, was lost with ;the others!&#13;
And sO ended thte-brief little episode.&#13;
Alan had been very happy with his&#13;
gentle wife, and South America was&#13;
loathsome to hrm now. He began to&#13;
long, with a longing that had been&#13;
stilled during his brief married life by&#13;
the drawing'out of other parts of his&#13;
nature, for ."England and things English.&#13;
The "white, clear moonlight, the&#13;
scent of tttae ttropical flowers, the soft,&#13;
dark •eyes and liquid accents of the&#13;
Spanish women, the songs they sang,&#13;
the very guitars they played, reminded&#13;
him &lt;of ^his poor Veronica, now lying&#13;
fathoms deep under the restless&#13;
-sea. . ;&#13;
likes one house and not another.. "I&#13;
shall. remember that you like a verandah&#13;
with flowers rouad it," he' said.&#13;
"Have you any other likings about a&#13;
house, Veronica?"&#13;
"Only that you must be inside It,*'&#13;
she laughed, with rather a pitiful'attempt&#13;
to be merry. "Alan, you must&#13;
write ;the instant you arrive, and you&#13;
must not mind if my letter* are short;&#13;
I write «uch bad letters."&#13;
"But taine must be long—is that it,&#13;
little one?"&#13;
She ila.ughed again and then she&#13;
stopped. "How many days before you&#13;
get there, .Alan, four or five? And you&#13;
will be on that horrid black water at&#13;
night.' Oh, I hate the thought, of it!"&#13;
lie Jaughed ,outright at this. "And&#13;
IA !«ea captaiw's son.! Why, I love the&#13;
water, Veronica!—I could willingly&#13;
spend my life on it!**&#13;
The very nex/. day he left. Veronica&#13;
ha* exercised all her strength and&#13;
coojoage, and she nerved herself to wish&#13;
him goodbye; but she had dreamed of&#13;
the man who she had known as father,&#13;
and that always alarmed her. Still,&#13;
though she was nervous, she was no&#13;
coward, j o she kept her fears to herself,&#13;
only she prayed earnestly that no&#13;
harm might come to her beloved, and&#13;
she showed him a bright face before&#13;
she left Alan accomplished Ms four&#13;
days' voyage in safety, and wrote&#13;
home to his wife constantly. As he&#13;
had predicted, there was no great difficulty&#13;
in finding a home which would&#13;
Bat-are ;3he had never stirred the&#13;
passionate^depth of his nature, so her&#13;
death never drew out passionate grief.&#13;
He feft lonely, ithat was all; and the&#13;
Slowing land, where everything was so&#13;
beautiful and .yet seemed so ephemeral,&#13;
Vaeame .distasteful to him, so he&#13;
gladly aaaentefl :Richard Dempster's&#13;
offer to manage the export part of his&#13;
business in ILondon,. and to return to&#13;
flngltwh -shores.&#13;
In z, fihxiirt:trra«!his South American&#13;
experiences ; almost faded out of his&#13;
mind. 'Veronica ;hecame a sweet memory&#13;
to him, which moonlight nights&#13;
freshened. He was very successful in&#13;
h3s vrofx, and iin four :years time had&#13;
gained a ^ood position for himself. He&#13;
was amfcitious, toq, and began reading&#13;
for the bar, which he found he could&#13;
dt) together with his work for the firm.&#13;
And four years .after he left South&#13;
America saw him -respected and much&#13;
made of a« any young man of twentysix&#13;
might lb© who is beginning to be&#13;
known as a man who may become important&#13;
fTo be continued.)&#13;
Debarred from Royal Presence.&#13;
New and then one hears of society&#13;
ladies being offered large sums—and&#13;
accepting them—for presenting an ambitious'&#13;
woman t£ a drawing room;&#13;
fcut money will mot always secure of&#13;
of the lord chamberlain's cards of admission.&#13;
For example, the wife or&#13;
daughter of a retail tradesman, however&#13;
large his business and however&#13;
wealthy he may be, is never allowed&#13;
to enter the royal presence, and twe&#13;
or three other classee are rigorously&#13;
barrecT. There is also an objection to&#13;
the wives of company promoters. Indeed,&#13;
when there is a drawing room&#13;
announced the clerks in the lord chamberlain's&#13;
office have^qulte an exciting&#13;
time in Inquiring into the position of&#13;
those desiring to attend.—London&#13;
Chronicle.&#13;
The Nine IJttle Goblins.&#13;
They all climbed up on a high board&#13;
fence-&#13;
Nine little goblins with green-glass&#13;
eyes—&#13;
Nine little goblins that had no sense,&#13;
And couldn't tell coppers from cold&#13;
mince pies;&#13;
And they all climbed up on the fence&#13;
and sat,&#13;
And I asked them what they were&#13;
staring at. .&#13;
The first one said, as he scratched his&#13;
head&#13;
With a queer little arm that reached&#13;
out of his ear,&#13;
And rasped its claws in his hair so red,&#13;
"This is what this little arm is for!"&#13;
And he scratched and stared; and the&#13;
next one said:&#13;
"How on earth do you scratch your&#13;
head?"&#13;
And he laughed like the screech of a&#13;
rusty h i n g e -&#13;
Laughed and laughed Until his face,&#13;
grew black;&#13;
And when he choked with a final&#13;
twinge&#13;
Of his stifling laughter, he thumped&#13;
his back&#13;
With a fist that grew on the end of his&#13;
tail&#13;
Till the breath came back to his lips&#13;
so pale.&#13;
And the third little goblin leered&#13;
round at me—&#13;
And there were no lids on his eyes&#13;
at all;&#13;
And he clucked one eye, and he says,&#13;
says he:&#13;
"What is the style of your socks this&#13;
fall?"&#13;
And he clapped his heels and I sighed&#13;
to see&#13;
That he had hands where his feet&#13;
should be.&#13;
Then a bold-faced goblin, gray and&#13;
grim,&#13;
Bowed his head, and I saw him"slip&#13;
His eyebrows off as I looked at him,&#13;
And paste them over his upper lip;&#13;
And he moaned in remorseful pain;&#13;
"Would, ah! would I'd my brows&#13;
again!"&#13;
the classroom to play with the sralliag&#13;
patriarch.&#13;
Jules Verne is a very busy mas. He&#13;
gets up every day with the sun, and&#13;
after a light breakfast works steadily&#13;
at his stories till 11 o'clock. That is a&#13;
very common lunch hour in France,&#13;
and it is then that the children get tbd&#13;
flbt glimpse of "Papa Jules." He&#13;
gathers round the table all the boys&#13;
and girls that he can get hold of; the&#13;
little ones of the quiet, old-fashioned&#13;
town have all at one time or another&#13;
had their place at his table and enjoyed&#13;
his funny sayings and his little&#13;
bits of queer, suggestive information.&#13;
He Js not easily satisfied with hi*&#13;
work. Every book of his has been rewritten&#13;
several times before it has*&#13;
finally reached the public. And benever&#13;
begins a book without studying&#13;
thoroughly and very deeply everything&#13;
that can make the subject familiar to&#13;
him. From about 12:30 to 5 every day&#13;
he spends in this kind of reading.keeping&#13;
himself thoroughly posted in all&#13;
sorts of new scientific discoveries and&#13;
expeditions and in the latest information&#13;
about newly explored and strange&#13;
lands. He reads, too, for purposes of&#13;
comparison stories of adventure int&#13;
several languages. He IB especiallyfond&#13;
of the books of this kind.in which&#13;
the English language is rich. M. Verne*&#13;
has read "Robinson Crusoe" five orsix&#13;
times, and can recite by heart&#13;
whole pages of "Treasure Island." Hethinks&#13;
"The Swiss Family Robinson'*"&#13;
one of the best boys' books ever written,&#13;
and loves Fennimore Cooper..&#13;
Walter Scott's vorks are always within&#13;
reac'i of his hand in his study, and*&#13;
Captain Marryat's breezy sea stories*&#13;
are almost worn away by long handling.&#13;
Jules Verne i3 naturally very fondt&#13;
of the immense success his works havehad.&#13;
He delights in the fact that he*&#13;
possesses more than 600 letters writtenr&#13;
to him at various times by boys and&#13;
girls to express the pleasure they have&#13;
had in reading hia bookSi These letters,&#13;
which are all docketed and classed&#13;
by the author himself according tt&gt;&#13;
the age of the writers and their nationality,&#13;
make a very curious and interesting&#13;
collection. There are letters-,&#13;
in French, in Russian, in Italian, int&#13;
Spanish and in English. There is one&#13;
And then the whole of the goblin band&#13;
ROcked on the fence top to and fro,&#13;
And clung in a long row, hand in hand I in Pojish. The letters in English come&#13;
„,__,__ .*__ ^-± *u-.. ..^^i *~ m o s t i y from English colonies and from&#13;
the United States. One of the American&#13;
letters is from a little girl in Bal-&#13;
Singing the songs that they used to&#13;
. know—&#13;
Singing the songs that their grandsires&#13;
sung&#13;
In the gro-gro days of the goblin&#13;
—— tongue. :&#13;
And then they kept their green-glass&#13;
eyes&#13;
Fixed on me with a stony stare,&#13;
Till my own grew glazed with a dread&#13;
surmise,&#13;
And my hat whooped up on my lifted&#13;
hair&#13;
And I felt the heart in my breast snap,&#13;
too,&#13;
As you've heard the lid of a snuff box&#13;
do.&#13;
And they sang "You're asleep! There&#13;
is no board fence.&#13;
And never a goblin with green-glass&#13;
eyes!&#13;
'Tis only a vision the mind invents&#13;
After a supper of cold mince pies;&#13;
And you're doomed to dream this&#13;
way," they said,&#13;
"And you shan't wake up till you're&#13;
clean plum dead!"&#13;
—James Whltcomb Riley.&#13;
Jonathan Edward** Mttaarial.&#13;
The First Church of Northampton,&#13;
Mass., will, on June 22, piece a tablet&#13;
upon the walls of its senctuary la&#13;
memory of Jonathan Ed;tads, who&#13;
was pastor of this church ttma 1726 to&#13;
1760.&#13;
Jol^ft Verne a t Home.&#13;
What boy is there—or what girl, for&#13;
that matter—who has not sat entranced&#13;
over the wonderful adventure books&#13;
of Jules Verne? They have been&#13;
translated .into every language and devoured&#13;
by several generations of&#13;
young people all ov'-er the world.&#13;
Yet the veteran author is alive to&#13;
enjoy his wide fame, and to compose&#13;
new books for the children of all lands.&#13;
He is now 75 year3 of age. but he is&#13;
vigorous and upright still and has all&#13;
the heart of youth.&#13;
"I can't climb trees myself any&#13;
more," he said the other day, "but I&#13;
can enjoy seeing my grandchildren&#13;
climb them. And they are all glad to&#13;
play with the old man on the level&#13;
ground, where he is still good for&#13;
something."&#13;
But the Interviewer was able to judge&#13;
of that for himself; For at that moment&#13;
a smaH crowd of boys and girls&#13;
rushed out of the house, into the garden&#13;
where the old man was talking to&#13;
his visitor. They poured down on the&#13;
veteran writer like an avalanche.stumbllng&#13;
over each other in their eagerness&#13;
to be first into his outstretched&#13;
hands. They were grandchildren and&#13;
nephews and nieces and grandnephews&#13;
grandniecea all mixed up together,&#13;
a doatn or so of them, pouring out of&#13;
timore, who writes tQ aay that* shewishes&#13;
she were a boy, so that she&gt;&#13;
might go under the sea in the .Nautilus.&#13;
And if she could, she adds, her&#13;
first voyage would be to Mr. Verne's&#13;
home, if he would .like her to come.&#13;
Mr. Verne tells with a Chuckle that howrote&#13;
to his little correspondent, assuring&#13;
her that nothing would give&#13;
him more pleasure than to receive her&#13;
at his home, whether she came in the&#13;
Nautilus or down the chimney. But&#13;
he advised her to stay in Baltimore&#13;
and learn to be a good American Mttle&#13;
girl, for she could not be anything,&#13;
better, however hard she tried.&#13;
A Ride on a Torpedo.&#13;
Captain Tremont, of the torpedo'&#13;
boat "Porter," tells this story about a&#13;
heroic act performed by Ensign Gillis&#13;
during the blockade. He says: "A&#13;
torpedo was coming toward the 'Poster.'&#13;
'I have to watch,Gillis all the&#13;
time, but that time he was too quick&#13;
for me. The torpedo was coming&#13;
slowly; if it touched, a bed under the&#13;
water would be our doom. He had his&#13;
shoes and coat off before. I knew it.&#13;
•Dcn't do it. Gillis; she's got her war&#13;
nose on!' 'I'll unscrew it, sir,' saiJ&#13;
the boy, and over the side 1&gt;* went,,&#13;
threw his arms around the torpedo,,&#13;
headed vt away from us, and then began&#13;
feeling for its business end. Well,,&#13;
the aircock opened, and the torpedo&#13;
dived from the ensign's arms to the&#13;
bottom.' Gillis was a Naval academy&#13;
cadet three years ago.&#13;
A Fretter. M&#13;
A little girl who was a fretter ha&lt;H&#13;
been visiting me. . She fretted when&#13;
it rained, and she fretted when the*&#13;
sun shone; she fretted when Uttfe girla&#13;
came to see her, and she fretted when&#13;
they did not. It is dreadful to.be a*&#13;
fretter. I have lately come across f.&#13;
short rule for fretters: Never fret&#13;
about what you cannot help, because&#13;
it will not do you any good; never fret&#13;
about what you can help, because ifyou&#13;
can help it, do itr-Our Little&#13;
Ones.&#13;
Bound to Have It.&#13;
A year-old Margaret wanted more&#13;
cake, but she was told that it would&#13;
make her ill.&#13;
"Well," said she desperately, "give&#13;
me anuzser piece and vend for the doctor."&#13;
^&#13;
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A' •' ^:v mmx TN m » ; &gt; * i 1 'Vjrf %'&amp;:.'%':&#13;
^ • • • • ' i&#13;
•••.•"Si&#13;
&lt;••;.&gt;;•&gt;&#13;
&gt;vfcji£*fKe vk•y ..;&gt;*£• «.' :^.&#13;
. • * . » • „ &gt; ;&#13;
1.,:&#13;
V , . &lt;,.-.-'&#13;
w ^M^^W^U^'^ y^'\ht-I&amp;'Vv'V%-tf. &amp;*'^&#13;
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f. U ANDREWS !*-•' •* H EDfTOR.&#13;
HORTICULTURAL, GRAPHIC ARTS, FORESTRY AND MINES BUILDINGS AT $UF,FA10.&#13;
THURSDAY, JULY 19, 1900.&#13;
During a thunder shower about&#13;
four o'clock Saturday afternoon,&#13;
J u l y 7, lightning killed seven fine&#13;
'Oowa-and-ji-i^Utor bull owned by&#13;
Scott Waltlo. The cattle were on&#13;
his farm in Wheat field and in an&#13;
open field.— Williaraston Enterprise.&#13;
EXCURSIONS&#13;
VIA THE&#13;
PEBj MARQUETTE&#13;
Sunday. July 22 Island Lake; Grand&#13;
Ledge &amp; Grand Rapids.&#13;
Train will leave Sonth Lyou at&#13;
8:45 a. m. Leave Grand Rapids&#13;
6:30 p . m., Grand Ledge 8:00 p.&#13;
m. Hourift trip to Grand- Rapids&#13;
$1.60, Grand Ledge $0.75. t-29&#13;
Toledo &amp; Monroe Sunday, July 29.&#13;
Special train will leave South&#13;
Lyon at 9:30 a. m. Leave Toledo&#13;
at 10:30 p. m. Rate $0.75. Good&#13;
place for a Sunday outing. t-30&#13;
Niagara Falls Alexandria Bay Montreal,&#13;
Tronoto Thursday,&#13;
August 2nd.&#13;
Tickets will be sold On above&#13;
date via Detroit and M. 0. R. R.&#13;
to Niagara, Falls and Alexandiia&#13;
Bay and via Canadian Pacific Ry.&#13;
to Toronto and Montreal; all good&#13;
to return until August 13 inclusive.&#13;
tRates will be very low, ,&#13;
same as last year. Ask agents for&#13;
full particulars. t-30&#13;
Col. Wm. F. Cody, familiary&#13;
known as "Buffalo Bill" prophesies&#13;
we shall have a horse famine&#13;
in this country next year. H e&#13;
advises farmers and ranchmen to&#13;
go into the business of raising&#13;
goofl horses, as the demand for&#13;
them will be greater and the&#13;
prices better than for many years.&#13;
T h e B e s t R e m e d y f a r s t o m a c h nu&lt;l&#13;
B o w e l T r o u b l e s .&#13;
"I have been in the drug business&#13;
for twenty years and have sold most&#13;
all of the proprietary medicines of any&#13;
note. Among the entire list I have&#13;
Copyright, 1900, by the Pan-American Exposition Co.&#13;
At the Pan-American Exposition, which is to be held in Buffalo from May 1 to NOT. 1, 1U01, the Horticultural&#13;
building, 220 feet square, is flanked on the south by the Forestry and Mines and on the north by the Graphic Arts&#13;
buildings, each 160 feet square. The whole group is connected by arcades, forming a semicircular court, in which&#13;
will stand the "Fountain of the Seasons." The Horticultural building will be about 240 feet high. The Qrapblc&#13;
Arts and Forestry and Mines buildings are companion structures of the same size and style, having four corner towers.&#13;
Two colored compositions above the eastern entrance of the Horticultural building will represent, Ceres, goddess&#13;
of the harvest, in a chariot drawn by three lions, led by Fk&gt;r* "~ " ' mavera. V&#13;
&gt;\&#13;
•&#13;
I" I&#13;
• K&#13;
iievur l'uund auylhing lu equal Chamberlain's&#13;
Colic, Cholara and Diarrhoea&#13;
Ramedy for all stomach and bowel&#13;
troubles," says O. W, Wakefield, of&#13;
Columbus Ga. "This remedy cured&#13;
two severe cases of cholera morbus in&#13;
my family and I have recommended&#13;
and sold hundreds of bottles of it to&#13;
my customers to their entire satisfaction,&#13;
It affords a quick and sure cure&#13;
in a pleasant form." For sale by F.&#13;
A, Sigler Pinckney.&#13;
There is every reason to believe&#13;
that the Thirty-Fourth National&#13;
Encampment of the Grand Army&#13;
of the Republic, which occurs in&#13;
Chicago from August 26 to September&#13;
1, will be the most largely&#13;
attended affair of the kind ever&#13;
held in the United States; and&#13;
Chicago is making provisions and&#13;
arrangements with this thou^nt in&#13;
mind. I t has raised nearly $100,&#13;
000 to defray the general expenses&#13;
of the encampment. A court&#13;
of honor with magnificent triumphal&#13;
arches will be erected on&#13;
Michigan avenue at a cost of 125,&#13;
000. There will be reunions,&#13;
camp-fires and parades—the big&#13;
parade of the Grand Army occu r&#13;
ing on Tuesday, August 28.&#13;
FARM CROPS.&#13;
We clip the following from the&#13;
crop report of last week:&#13;
The hay crop has been shortened&#13;
somewhat by the dry weather&#13;
which prevailed during: the month&#13;
yet in most instances the yield exceeds&#13;
that of one year ago. I t is&#13;
a matter worthy of notice that&#13;
clover is yielding better this year&#13;
than timothy and tbat the yield&#13;
per acre in the northern counties,&#13;
which is generally as much, if it&#13;
does not exceed the yield in the&#13;
southern part of the state, has&#13;
been affected most by dry weather&#13;
this year.&#13;
The prospect for apples this&#13;
year is on the whble better than&#13;
one- year ego. There are some&#13;
complaints of apples falling badly,&#13;
yet generally the same correspondent&#13;
will report a small per cent of&#13;
orchards cultivated. There is no&#13;
question but what the crop can be&#13;
controlled, in a measiuce, by cultivating,&#13;
spraying and thinning,&#13;
and also no doubt but what the&#13;
crop pays when such measures&#13;
are adopted. There aie a few&#13;
complaints of canker worm and&#13;
ANNUAL 15 DAY EXCURSION TO&#13;
FRANKFORT, CRYSTAL LAKE&#13;
AND TRAVERSE CITY.&#13;
Thursday, July 26, the Ann Arbor&#13;
R. R. will sell excursion tickets to the&#13;
above resorts, good for return until&#13;
August 9 inclusive. Watch next&#13;
week's papers for time of special train&#13;
and low rates. t-30&#13;
some of twig blight. Some report&#13;
that the Baldwin and Spy,&#13;
old standard varieties, are not doing&#13;
well this year.&#13;
PEACHES.&#13;
The peach crop this year promises&#13;
to be a large one in many sections&#13;
of the state. The light crop&#13;
last year togather with a favorable&#13;
growing season, enabled the&#13;
trees not killed by the cold winter&#13;
of 1899, to recuperate and set&#13;
plenty of fruit buds. Where the&#13;
orchards receive proper care all&#13;
through the season, there will be&#13;
a good crop, especially \\\ the&#13;
fruit belt and also in favorable&#13;
locations outside of that belt. The&#13;
profit derived from this crop depends&#13;
materially upon the location&#13;
of the orchard, the varieties&#13;
withjBJwch it is planted and the&#13;
care which it "receives. There is&#13;
no complaint of curl leaf or other&#13;
diseases.&#13;
&lt; A C a r d .&#13;
I, the undersigned, do hereby&#13;
agree to refund the money on a 50-&#13;
cent bottle of Green's Warrented&#13;
Syrup of Ta» if it fails to cure your&#13;
cough or cold. 1 also guarantee a&#13;
25-cent bottle to prove satisfactory or&#13;
money refunded. t-30&#13;
WiU B. Darrow.&#13;
- • •&#13;
COMING EYHSTS.&#13;
Cheap Rates Yia Grand Trunk Railway&#13;
System to Detroit, Niagara Falls,&#13;
Toronto, Alexandria Bay and&#13;
Montreal^&#13;
Half Rate to Detroit and return&#13;
from all over Michigan account of&#13;
Democratic State Convention. Tickets&#13;
sold for all trains of July 24 and 25&#13;
and good to return up to and including&#13;
July 27.&#13;
Niagara Falls, Toronto, Alexandria&#13;
Bay and Montreal Excursions.—The&#13;
first eicursion of the season will be&#13;
OBITUARY.&#13;
given on Saturday, July 28, from all&#13;
Grand Trunk stations in Michigan&#13;
and connecting lines. Special trains&#13;
and coach service will be arranged to&#13;
take the excursions over the line by&#13;
daylight. Tickets will be vaiid to return&#13;
leaving destination up to and including&#13;
August 8,1900 and rates will&#13;
be astonishing low. Get yourself&#13;
ready for the cheap and grand excursions.&#13;
Niagara Falls, one of the wonders&#13;
ot the world, and the beautiful&#13;
Canadian cities of Canada. Ask any&#13;
agent of the Grand Trunk Railway or&#13;
connecting lines for information, rates&#13;
train time, etc., etc.&#13;
e»&#13;
*&#13;
flIt&#13;
During last May an infant child of&#13;
our neighbor was suffering from cholera&#13;
infantum. The doctors had given&#13;
up all hopes of recovery. 1 took a bottle&#13;
of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera&#13;
and Diarrhoea Remedy to the house&#13;
telling them I felt sure it would do&#13;
good if used according to directions.&#13;
In two days time the child Sad fully&#13;
recovered. The child is now vigorous&#13;
and healthy. I'have recommended&#13;
this remedy frequently and have&#13;
never Jtnown it to fail.—Mrs. Curtis&#13;
BakeY,*3ook waiter, Ohio, Sold byF.&#13;
A, Sigtof J^nckney.&#13;
: • . &lt; &lt;&#13;
H e a r t b u r n .&#13;
When the quanity of food taken is&#13;
too large or the quality to rich heartburn&#13;
is likely to follow, and especially&#13;
so if the digestion has been weakened&#13;
by constipation. Eat slowly and not&#13;
too freely of easily digested food.&#13;
Masticate the food thoroughly. Let&#13;
six hours elapse Dei ween meals and&#13;
when you feel a fullness and weight&#13;
in the region of the stomach after eating,&#13;
indicating that yon have eaten&#13;
too much, take one ot Chamberlain's&#13;
StorugjcB and Liver Tablets and the&#13;
heartburn nay be avoided. For sale&#13;
by F. Aiftigler, Pinckney.&#13;
Subscribe for Dispatch.&#13;
A G o o d C o u g - h M e d i c i n e .&#13;
Many thousands have been restored&#13;
to health and happiness by the use of&#13;
Chamberlain,s Cough Remedy. If&#13;
afflicted with any throat or lung&#13;
trouble, give it a trial for it is certain&#13;
to prove beneficial. Coughs that have&#13;
resisted all other treatment for years&#13;
have yeilded to this remedy and perfect&#13;
health been restored. Cases that&#13;
seemed hopeless, that the climate of&#13;
famous health resorts failed to benefit&#13;
have been permently cured by its use&#13;
For sale by E. A. Sigler, Pinckney.&#13;
.Annual Excursion to Frankfort, Benlah&#13;
&amp; Traverse City,&#13;
Thursday, J u l y 26, the A n n&#13;
Arbor B . B . will sell excusion&#13;
Tickets to Frankfort, Beulah and&#13;
Traverse City at $4.00 for t h e&#13;
round trip. They will be good&#13;
going on regular train, leaving&#13;
Lakeland ( H a m b u r g J u o t ) a t 9:34&#13;
and for retnrn on any regular&#13;
train until Thursday August 9th&#13;
inclusive. t-30&#13;
When you want a modern, up-todate&#13;
physio try Chamberlain's Stomach&#13;
and Liver tablets. They are easy to&#13;
take and ptaugMit i s effect. P r ice. 25&#13;
SaifcpietrreeatF.A. Sigler's&#13;
:«jkpri, - ..-:,%?. '•'•&#13;
• •'-...wW&gt;r&#13;
V..,. r '.*'vV' '-.&#13;
$ • :&#13;
DAN JACKSON.&#13;
Dan" Jackson died at the home of&#13;
his sou just south of this Village on&#13;
Sunday, July 8,1900, aged 81.&#13;
Dan Jackson, son of Dr. Cyrus&#13;
Jackson of Lyons, Wayne County, N.&#13;
Y., was born July 2, 1819. He&#13;
was one of a family of ten children&#13;
consisting of six sons and four&#13;
daughters, five of them emigrating&#13;
to Michigan in the early days. Mr.&#13;
Jackson came to this State in May&#13;
1843 and on Jan. 1,1844 he was united&#13;
in.marriage to Miss Juliza Backus.&#13;
They moved on a farm of four&#13;
eighties in the Townsh'p of Stockbridge&#13;
the land then being wild.&#13;
This he cleared up and erected a large&#13;
brick bouse, among the first in that&#13;
countv. He afterward sold the farm&#13;
and removed to New York State for a&#13;
couple of years. Returning he purchased&#13;
a farm ia Hamburg and lived&#13;
there for eleven years.&#13;
April 27, 1865 he moved to Pinckney&#13;
and in '66 bought the John Sigler&#13;
farm, now owned by his son, O. B.&#13;
Jackson. Mrs. Jackson died April 16,&#13;
1873 and five years latter Mr. Jackson&#13;
married Mrs. Janette Wood who died&#13;
June 29, 1893, and for the last seven&#13;
years he has made his home with his&#13;
son Ola.&#13;
Mr. Jackson was the father of three&#13;
sons-Albert, Orla and Allen Jackson,&#13;
fhelatter deceased April 25, 1871.&#13;
The former two, together with two&#13;
brothers, Dr. F. Jackson of Rochester&#13;
and Cyrus E. Jackson of Lyons N. Y.&#13;
survive him and with his grandson F.&#13;
G, Jackson and their families mourn&#13;
the loss of a loving father and faithful&#13;
Christian Counselor and Advisor&#13;
in all tbat pertained to right. He had&#13;
on July 2 passed his 81st birthday and&#13;
was often heard to jay that' but few&#13;
were spared (as he had been to witness&#13;
the Advent of his great grandson&#13;
Harry G. Jackson).&#13;
For years Mr. Jackson had been a&#13;
member of the M. E. church at this&#13;
place and until his health tailed he&#13;
was among the most faithful, bis pew&#13;
seldom being vacant. He was a patient&#13;
sufferer and although urged to do&#13;
so he would not give up and take to&#13;
tbe bed, but was up and down every&#13;
day. He had often expressed tha wish&#13;
that the messenger might come suddenly&#13;
and tbe morning of his death said&#13;
that be was ready and willing to go&#13;
at the master's call. On Sunday, July&#13;
8,1900, the call came and his wish&#13;
was fulfilled as he was able to walk about&#13;
the room, the messenger came,&#13;
and he sank to the floor and died instantly.&#13;
A sheaf has been gathered&#13;
home fully ripened ready for the harvest&#13;
The funeral was held Tuesday afternoon,&#13;
July 10,1900, Rev. W. G. Stephens&#13;
of Plymouth officiating, assisted&#13;
by Rev. Chas. Simpson.&#13;
Notice.&#13;
Sealed bids will be received from&#13;
now until Aug. 1, for the famishing,&#13;
of 25 tonb of furnace coal for School&#13;
District No. 2, to be delivered in the&#13;
basement of the school house on or&#13;
before 8apt, 1,1900.&#13;
IX W. Murta^Soc.&#13;
• ; &amp;&#13;
fpp? MIUS RED PIUS&#13;
JFWorlm W, VAisNoPrP eOe«P LVBit a"liPtya,l em anadin W olde apko.'o1Bpleott looro*k yB&amp;lootndi ,a o(Md l Nyeoruvneg i laondd loatcat ey. oung. The great&#13;
HULL'S WHITE LIVER FILLS&#13;
oAvrea tothre angdr eaBt oLwiveel rR laegvuiolaotroart.o rY. Soyasotaemn wRoernk- while they work, never grip* or make you&#13;
MILL'S BLUE KIDNEY PILLS&#13;
aFno0 rUbarionkaaryoh treoeu'lbwlee*o.r aOonrely, 2a5nc da ablolx Koird nfievye ab*o xaedsv 1e1r. tiseGdu oarr amntoeneedy b yr eyfuonurd eddr.u ggUt to do&#13;
^&#13;
SOME FACTS! r r THEJff!&#13;
» « »&#13;
EUREKA SURE STOP TOOTHACHE POWQERS&#13;
Gives quick and sure relief.&#13;
EUREKA COMPLEXION OINTMENT&#13;
Removes Black-heads and Pimples.&#13;
EUREKA CORN CURE&#13;
Cures ail Corns, Bunions, and Callow&#13;
.» places.&#13;
EUREKA 0. K. WART REMOVER&#13;
Is certain in its results.&#13;
Bach 10c, Coin or Stamps&#13;
By Return Mall.&#13;
Agents wanted—write today.&#13;
Address, EUBBKA SUPPLY HOUSE,&#13;
Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
Jig^&amp;E)&#13;
P.XO STLAMSHIP LINES*&#13;
: Popular route for Ann Arbor, Toledo&#13;
and points East, South, and for&#13;
Howell, Owosso, Alma, Mfc Pleasant&#13;
Cadillac, Manistee, Traverse City and&#13;
points in Northwestern Michigan.&#13;
W. H. BENNETT,&#13;
G. P . A. Toledo&#13;
PEREMARQUETTE&#13;
I f c a l l r o e u a , 2&gt;&amp;my 1 3 , 1 9 0 0 .&#13;
Ev"&#13;
Ar&#13;
LT&#13;
Ar&#13;
GOINO X,&#13;
Grand Rs &gt;Id8.&#13;
Ionia ,&#13;
Lansing . . . .&#13;
Hewell&#13;
South Lyon.&#13;
Salera&#13;
Plymouth...&#13;
Detroit......&#13;
£81&#13;
GOING WEST&#13;
Detroit&#13;
Plymouth..&#13;
Salem&#13;
South Lyou.&#13;
Howell&#13;
LanBing....&#13;
Ionia&#13;
(irand Rapids.&#13;
a m&#13;
1 10&#13;
7 40&#13;
»04&#13;
10 05&#13;
10 86&#13;
10 46&#13;
11 00&#13;
11 40&#13;
a m&#13;
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9 23&#13;
9 38&#13;
9 4b&#13;
10 28&#13;
11 22&#13;
18 50&#13;
1 80&#13;
p m&#13;
U 06&#13;
12 20&#13;
t 4fi&#13;
% 36&#13;
8 04&#13;
325&#13;
4 05&#13;
P m&#13;
1 10&#13;
1 48&#13;
208&#13;
2 85&#13;
3 30&#13;
4 45&#13;
ft 10&#13;
Tie&#13;
600&#13;
7 87&#13;
9 2ti&#13;
858&#13;
9 08&#13;
920&#13;
10 05&#13;
p m&#13;
5 15&#13;
5 58&#13;
6 10&#13;
640&#13;
6 58&#13;
755&#13;
990&#13;
10 00&#13;
FBANK B J Y ,&#13;
Agent, South Lyon.&#13;
H. F. MOELLEk,&#13;
Acting 0. P. A.,&#13;
Grand Rapid*.&#13;
YEARS&#13;
EXPERIENCE&#13;
TRADE MARKS&#13;
DESIGNS&#13;
COPYRIGHTS A C&#13;
Anyone sending a sketch and description ma* Slickly ascertain oar opinion free whether aft&#13;
•entlon t» probnblr patentable. Communion*&#13;
tlons strictly confidential. Handbook on Patents&#13;
- sent free. Oldest agency for securing patents.&#13;
Patents taken through Mnnn A Co. receive&#13;
tpeeial notice, without charge, in the Scientific JUmrkaiu A handsomely illustrated weekly. Largest ttteolation&#13;
of any scientific journal. Terms, 18 a&#13;
year • four months, $L Sold by all newsdeaMn,&#13;
WUNN*C0&gt;' " ..7&#13;
Branch Office, 625 F 8t~ Waahburton, D,&#13;
A $4.00 BOOK FOR T5CXS.&#13;
The Fanners'Encyclopedia. »&#13;
t^a Biavlcjirxytto&amp; tini«r Yatff-- hteetmnoife htko*l df aarmsui sbtroacckes r aalratltaefie. i Eomn- hthoe neh orhsaeb, Jthtae . cdoislt*, eaaea of the none,&#13;
trait eoltxa^Hxk ¾poulolator, oyak,b ee7be7ep e.^hawe, aitnlhtehe,, dliofge,, attoe*U eett,a s oOcinael pof letthee Smnoeaty ocolno&gt;* pAeladiiwas) bino oeJxEist,8exn6c&gt;e., xp *i1e%¾ ifneclhl?e s,il l6n8a5- gnraeteend , elboothun bdl atdn- iontgh era nbdoo kesq ucoaslt itnog o1n4V.0 0.p rIifcyeo, u10 d.7e5si,r een dth iasx baoooekx tteinaldb ro ap oosatra gsep eacnidal wewiUfonrardlhebooktoyon. If it knot i&#13;
fatofyretamltandwewfflenhauraltoffietund&#13;
roar money. Sendteovapaeialilraatnuedpata-&#13;
Jpgoe. qooung the lowest psoas on books, FUaV&#13;
We can saTO yon money. Address all cedes to&#13;
THE WERNER COMPANY, •&#13;
eiHawaii—i. Akron, Ohl*&#13;
|Tht WMMT Ceapsnjr it rkiiuasM* rsBabt^V-Bdhar&#13;
JO.^t-S HE PAYS THEVfreifcHT&#13;
»t&#13;
WACOH SCALES Cntted States Standard* rAlL&amp;JFcW AJl.Kln&lt;u&#13;
Kotswde DT a trust or controlled by a com&#13;
' -oeu For freoBockaowlPrtoeLlit,addxt»*&#13;
;-*** As; -!&#13;
'''V^'V;:77;v&#13;
Railroad Guide.&#13;
'&lt;V.XJA',1P&#13;
n&#13;
i&#13;
. ^ ,&#13;
w&#13;
.'- ..-_:„„ t,\; ,&#13;
?TO&#13;
.••V:&#13;
*r&#13;
BY JUSTIN L ABBOTT OF BOMBAY.&#13;
fJQKTEEN YEARS RE8IDENT IN INDIA.&#13;
A fami*e the moat widespread and severe of this century now darkens&#13;
tfee whole of western and central India, an area equal to New England, New&#13;
York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Michigan and Wisconsin.&#13;
SUty million people are involved, of whom probably 10,000,000 will&#13;
perish unless aided. The living skeleton is the Indisputable evidence that&#13;
the resources of the people are exhausted. Along the highways, in lonely&#13;
A.&#13;
J&#13;
i&#13;
SKELETONIZED BY FAMINE,&#13;
passes, by stream beds that give no hope of water, weak and emaciated human,&#13;
beings are falling and dying by hundreds daily. Great numbers who&#13;
reaph relief camps are past help, and the very food they ravenously eat killa&#13;
then). Children, orphaned or deserted, are picked up by scores as they wander.&#13;
Terrible tales are told by eyewitnesses of these helpless little ones being&#13;
devoured by dogs and jackals.&#13;
The cause of the famine is the failure of the monsoon rains from June to&#13;
October last year. The farmers, who&#13;
number 80 per cent of the population,&#13;
were already impoverished by the famine&#13;
of 1897. Expenditure of every kind&#13;
was stopped; hence the laboring class&#13;
and artisans have had no work. The&#13;
British government is relieving the situation&#13;
by gratuitously feeding the infirm,&#13;
the aged, the emaciated and the&#13;
children. The ablebodied are employed&#13;
on cash wages in building reservoirs&#13;
and irrigation works, railway embankments,&#13;
roads, etc., which will&#13;
greatly mitigate future famines. About&#13;
0,000,000 are now in daily receipt of official&#13;
relief. Connected with the camps&#13;
are hospitals where those in the extremes&#13;
of emaciation are nursed back&#13;
to strength. The death rate is by far&#13;
the greatest in the native states where&#13;
government control is least. Here,&#13;
however, the government is assisting&#13;
by loans of money and of the services&#13;
of experienced officers. Already the&#13;
authorities have spent $47,000,000.&#13;
With the failure of crops in the famine&#13;
area there began a flow of grain&#13;
from other parts of India and other&#13;
countries. From Burma alone there&#13;
was imported in ten months 427,000&#13;
tons of rice, worth $70,000,000. Merchants&#13;
have carried grain everywhere,&#13;
and the price has remained, fairly un^_&#13;
form at a cost only twice that of ordinary&#13;
years. There are millions of people,&#13;
however, who have no money and&#13;
no work. It is these moneyless mil-&#13;
"WHAT WILL YOU DO WITH Ml?" U o n g f o r w n o m h e l p o r d e a t n I g t J i e&#13;
[Famine firl not too far gone to save,] o n j y alternative.&#13;
In spite of all that can be done by the government there is a vast field for&#13;
the private charity now being so splendidly supplied by America, Britain and&#13;
her colonies and various European countries. Doubtless the most efficient&#13;
agency for distribution of this private benevolence is the body of several hundred&#13;
American and European missionaries located in the famine districts,&#13;
whose experienced services are freely given to this work of humanity.&#13;
Missionaries supplement official efforts by assisting as many as possible to&#13;
reach relief camps. Those too weak for the journey, unprotected young women,&#13;
mothers with children and deserted orphans, are given refuge and tender&#13;
£fm^w\&#13;
m§r&#13;
' / ^ W ^&#13;
f pjBw syjP* \&#13;
1 E^^*"' \. ' w « v\\&#13;
1 IS»»- N^fx'^&#13;
w • • ) •&#13;
ssw\ ^ ¾ ¾ ^ ^ j'ffir'&#13;
BBBBBn^MMflBr&#13;
1 f jr**%\ " Wit+^r ^^ « . y&#13;
relief committee, under ttt» j^truiauship&#13;
of United Stages Consnl - William&#13;
EL Fee, at BombflyT with the veteran&#13;
missionary^ Robert A. Hume, as executive&#13;
secretary. * This committee aids&#13;
and co-operates with our heroic fellow&#13;
citizens of all denominations in the&#13;
famine districts.&#13;
* The New York committee of one&#13;
hundred on Indian famine relief cooperates&#13;
with committees of the same&#13;
name in Boston, New Haven, Baltimore,&#13;
Washington, Indianapolis and other&#13;
cities, each of which has charge of the&#13;
work In its own section. The committee&#13;
annonneefir that, thanks to—tfae^&#13;
hearty assistance of .the press of the&#13;
United States and the express companies,&#13;
which forward gifts without&#13;
charge, it has received contributions&#13;
amounting to $100,000. On receipt of&#13;
a postal addressed "CommHtee of One&#13;
Hundred, 73 Bible House. Xew York,**&#13;
supplies of illustrated literature are&#13;
sent without charge and expivssase&#13;
free. The help of indiyiduihsr clubs.&#13;
lodges,*4«ibor unions, employers, proprietors&#13;
of hotels, churches, Sunday&#13;
Kchools, young people's societies. King's' ^ ^ « . „ « - •&#13;
Daughters, etc.. is sought In distrilmt- ™K " ^ M0THEK B C T 0 B E m F A *X S *&#13;
hig this literature and organizing relietiuovements. Two cents a day wiH save&#13;
iife,';and $2^111 provide work for a fautlKued person until the next harvest.&#13;
'••• To lleiuove I- gg Stains. -.*&#13;
Egg staifis can easily be removed&#13;
from silver spoons by rubliifig' them&#13;
with a little salt after they have been&#13;
washed with soap and water, bnt there&#13;
are other stains on which salt makes&#13;
no impression. These will ganerally&#13;
disappear when rubbed with whiting&#13;
mixed with ammonia: but a "still xnoro&#13;
effective remedy is to be found in&#13;
whiting mixed to a paste with sweet&#13;
Ml, After the stains have disappeared,&#13;
wash In hot soapsuds and polish with&#13;
a soft cloth.&#13;
K &amp; K K ^ K K &amp; K K ^&#13;
JiB&amp;lti&amp;lli&#13;
i Til liatiig SptdallsU if Aitrici'&#13;
20 Yttrt Ii Ditritt.&#13;
250,000 Cirri.&#13;
WECURESTRICTURE|&#13;
Thousands of young and middle-aged&#13;
men e**&amp;tbuh|ed with this disease--many&#13;
anoonscioutly. They may hare a smarting&#13;
sensation, small, twisting1 stream, [&#13;
t sharp totting; pains at times, slight dit-&#13;
I charge, difficulty in commending, weak&#13;
| organs; emissions, and all the symptoms&#13;
»f newous debiliUr—they have STRICrUKE.&#13;
Don't let doctors experiment on&#13;
you, by catting, stretching, or tearing&#13;
you. This will notoure yoo, asit will return.&#13;
Our NEW METHOD TREAT-&#13;
'MENT absorb* the stricture tissue;&#13;
hence removes the stricture permanently. |&#13;
' It can never return. No pain, no sailer*&#13;
[ ing, no detention from business by our&#13;
method. The sexual organs are strengthened.&#13;
The nerves are invigorated* and&#13;
the bliss of manhood returns.&#13;
WECURE GLEET Thousands of young andf middle-aged&#13;
| » e n are having their sexual vigor and&#13;
vitaUtycontinually sapped by this disease.&#13;
They are frequently unconsoioao&#13;
of! the cause of these symptoms. General&#13;
Weakness, Unnatural Discharges, Fatting&#13;
Manhood, Nervousness, Poor Memory,&#13;
Irritability, at times Smarting Sensahon.&#13;
Sunken Eyes, with dark circles.&#13;
Weak Back, General Depression, Lack&#13;
of Ambition. Varicocele^^Shrunken&#13;
Parts, e t c GLEET and STRICTURE&#13;
may be the cause. Don't consult family&#13;
doctors, as they have no experience in&#13;
these special diseases don't allow&#13;
Quacks to experiment on you. Consult&#13;
Specialists, who hate made a life study of&#13;
Diseases of Men and Women. Our-NEW&#13;
METHOD TREATMENT will positively&#13;
cure yon. One thousand dollars&#13;
for a case we accept for treatment and&#13;
cannot cure. Terms moderate for a cure.&#13;
CURES GUARANTEED&#13;
We treat and cure: EMISSIONS.&#13;
VARICOCELE. SYPHILIS, GLEET.&#13;
STRICTURE. tofPOTENCY, SECRET&#13;
DRAINS. UNNATURAL DISCHARGES,&#13;
KIDNEY and BliADDEfrDlseaMS.&#13;
-CONSULTATION FREB.&gt;*»S»6K8&#13;
FREE. If unable to call, write for&#13;
QUESTION BLANK for H0MB&#13;
TREATMENT.&#13;
iKENNEJJYFktRGAN&#13;
Cor. Ulchigii An. aid Skillf St.&#13;
DETROIT, M I &amp; H .&#13;
ftsV^a*##'^B&gt;# c. * &gt; • • * l*&#13;
I Edited by the W. C. T V, of Pisekney&#13;
er a reward a* 50-oenflr^riny parson&#13;
wtfo iwrohasss o! oi; two 25e boxss&#13;
of Btat«c'%.J«£an&lt;lralte BitUrs-TabUta,&#13;
if it {ails to care conStfpstioiit bilioainess,&#13;
iiok-headachftj^mBdioe, loss of&#13;
appetite, soar 8toqgeher dya^epsis&#13;
liver complaint, or any of the diseases&#13;
for which it ia recommended. Price&#13;
25 ceaift for either tablets or liquid.&#13;
We will also rej^j^the money on one&#13;
package of either if it fails to give&#13;
satisfaction; * .*&#13;
P. \. Sigler,&#13;
W. B. Darrow,&#13;
WM ginclmes f ispatth.&#13;
rcBuaHSD xvmrmmavjn«os«nra IT&#13;
FRANK, b ANDREWS&#13;
Sditor and ProjrUtor.&#13;
Subscription Price $1 ftrAdranea.&#13;
Satered at the Poetofflce at Plnckney, Michifan,&#13;
a* second-class matter.&#13;
Adrertlsing rate* made known on application.&#13;
Boslneea Cards, $4.00 per year.&#13;
Death and marriage notices published free.&#13;
Announcement* of entertainments may be paid&#13;
for, if desired, by presenting the office with ticSf&#13;
ete of admission. In ease tickets are not brought&#13;
to tne office, regular rate* will be charged.&#13;
Hartreach&#13;
All matter in local notice column wlUb* ct&#13;
insertion. Where no time ia specioed, all notice*&#13;
ed at 5 cents per line or fraction thereof, for&#13;
The saloonkeepers of South&#13;
Bethlehem," Pa&gt;, are very much excited&#13;
over/the*fact that the whole&#13;
police force haresigned the pledge&#13;
of total*aBstaine'rice;•'* This is the&#13;
result of a series of temperance&#13;
meetings held by Col. W. H.&#13;
Heidley, of the Water Street mission,&#13;
New York, and Col. Jones,&#13;
histassociate.&#13;
Last November, the town of&#13;
Fulton, N. T. , carried the day for&#13;
nolicense, but owing to a techanical&#13;
error in* printing the ballots,&#13;
the opposition moved for anotuer&#13;
election, and the judge allowed it.&#13;
This second election'has just been;&#13;
held. It was a glorious victory.&#13;
Made a clean sweep of the four&#13;
propositions,, drug stores and all;&#13;
majority in all, 320.&#13;
• v • . • " •&#13;
" Gen. Otis has divided the ,city&#13;
of Manila into two license districts.&#13;
Saloons if located within the first&#13;
district will be rquired to pay a&#13;
tax of $600, Mexican currency,&#13;
and $250, Mexican currency, if&#13;
1 oca'ted within the second district&#13;
For "shops where light wines* and&#13;
r3eer only are sold, the license is&#13;
reduced to $100, Mexican currency,&#13;
j n the first, and $50, Mexican currency,&#13;
in the second district.&#13;
As-^overnor of Cuba, General&#13;
Wocd is becoming distinguished&#13;
in the victories of peace. Almost&#13;
his first act in the earlier governorship&#13;
of Santiago was to refuse&#13;
admission to cargoes of American&#13;
beer. The next news was that he&#13;
had forbidden dueling, bull fights,&#13;
lotteries, and Sunday Saloons.&#13;
l $ e people would like to know&#13;
whether his original plan to shut&#13;
out American intoxicants was&#13;
overruled, and, if so, by whom.—&#13;
Union Signal.&#13;
wiii be inserted until ordered discontinued, and&#13;
will be charged for accordinglr. \m nil i l i m p s&#13;
of advertisement* MCJdT zeacn thiiToface a* early&#13;
as TCSADAT morning to insure an insertion the&#13;
same week. , , —&#13;
JOB 3&gt;&amp;IJV2IJr&amp; f&#13;
In all its branches, a specialty. We have all kind*&#13;
and the latest style* of Type, etc., which enable*&#13;
us to execute all kind* of work, such as-Books,&#13;
PampleU, Posters, Programme*, Bill Hsaas, Not*&#13;
Heads, Statement*, .Card*. Auction Bill*, etc, in&#13;
superior styles, upon the shortest notice. Price* a*&#13;
o*v as good work can bo ttone.&#13;
-LL BILLS PAT4BLV FIRST 09 BVSBY KOMTS.&#13;
THE VILLAGE DIRECTORY.&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICERS.&#13;
PassiDKNT.. ^^.....^^.../. .\ Alex. Mclntyre&#13;
TjtosTH* E. L. Thompson, Alfred Monks.&#13;
Daniel Richards, ueo. Bowman, Samuel&#13;
Bykee, P. U. Johnson.&#13;
uiii&amp;K ••*taN&gt;»i««* •.••tiMM *t,&lt;.Ai rx. feepie&#13;
T&amp;KABC&amp;aB-&gt;....MM. M*t.....MM.. W . £ . M u r p h y .&#13;
ASSKSSOH..^....•*..•...•. ^^ W&lt; A. Car?&#13;
STBMTComussioHnn^ ..J. Monk*.&#13;
MAHHAHL.... ••..A. S, Brown.&#13;
HEALTH U r n c i a Or. H. P. Sigler&#13;
ATTORNSY.....^ ~^...Zm*...~~- W. A. Carr&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
CONURKQAriONAL CHURCH.&#13;
Bev. C. W. Rice pastor. Service every&#13;
Sunday morning at 10:30 and every Sunday&#13;
evening at 7:0C o'clock. Prayer^meeting Thar*&#13;
day evening*. 8uatoy Bchwlnrt-jclo**Minora—&#13;
in-service. ~ •- ~ -J •- ••••&#13;
hout Sec.&#13;
GOVBBKMENT RELIEF WORK-MAKING A RESERV6lRv&#13;
care. Weavers and other petty artisans are supplied with work whfth prevents&#13;
the breaking op of their homes. Industrial schools are maintained&#13;
which in a few months give boys a training that makes them self supporting.&#13;
It Is the duty and privitege of every one to have some share in this sacred&#13;
w^rk of humanity: Money may be sent to Brown Bros. &amp; Co.. 59 Wall street,"&#13;
N#w York, treasurers of the committee of one hundred. William E. Dodgs, f&#13;
chairman, and Pr. Leander^Ohamberlain, executive director, by whom it .&#13;
will be cabled promptly to the responsible and representative Amerieo-Indtan"&#13;
\\*e carry A&#13;
stock oi goods&#13;
s. '^—1 valued at&#13;
&lt; \ ^ ^ &gt;i^OO.00U0O&#13;
A&#13;
W'c rec&amp;ve&#13;
lrom" lCOOu to&#13;
•Zb.OOO letters&#13;
every day&#13;
Jwi&#13;
MBTMOUIBT EPISCOPAL CHURCH.&#13;
Rev. CQas.S&#13;
feunday morning at&#13;
evening at 7:00 o'clock,&#13;
day evenings. Sunday i&#13;
ing service. LKAI. SIGUR^ Sapt&#13;
Cnas. Simpson, pastor. Services every&#13;
10:Suf and every Sunday&#13;
Prayer meeting Thors-&#13;
Sonday school at close of morn-&#13;
~B. H. Teeple, Sapt,, Manel Swart-&#13;
S&gt;'JT . MARY'S CATHOLIC CHURCH.&#13;
Rev. M. J. Comnxerford, Pastor. Service*&#13;
every Sunday. Low mass at T:3uo'clock&#13;
high mas* with sermon at 9:30 a. m. Catechism&#13;
at a :00 p. m., veeper* ana benediction at 7:3o p.m.&#13;
SOClETfES;&#13;
The A. O. H. Society of this place, meets every&#13;
third Snnrtay in toe Vt. Matthew Hail.&#13;
John Tuomey and M. X. Kelly, County Delegate*&#13;
EPWORTH LEAGUE. Meet* every Sanda?&#13;
evening at 6:00 odock in the M. B. Cburch. A&#13;
cordial invitation is extended to *"»ry""o, «»p*-&#13;
cially young people. Mrs. Stella Graham Pre*.&#13;
CHRISTIAN ESDEAV0R SOCIETY:-Meet.&#13;
Sunday evening at 6:30. President,&#13;
HRISTIAN&#13;
lags every Si&#13;
Miss Etta Carpenter; Secretary, Mrs. C. W. Ricei&#13;
TELE W. C. T. U. meets the first Friday of each&#13;
month at 2:90 p. m. at the home of Dr. H. F.&#13;
sigler. Everyone interested in temperance is&#13;
coadially invited. Mrs. Leal Sigler, Pres; Mrs.&#13;
Ktta Dnrfee, Secretary.&#13;
meet&#13;
Mat-&#13;
KNIGHTS OF MACCABEES.&#13;
Meet every Friday evening on or before fall&#13;
of the moon at their hall in the Swarthout bldg.&#13;
Visiting brothers are cordially invited.&#13;
C&amp;ts. OanPBkLL, Sir Knight Command*!&#13;
Livingston Lodge, No. 7¾. F A. A, M. Regular&#13;
Communication Tuesday evening, on or before&#13;
the foil of the moon. H. F. Sigler, W. M.&#13;
ORDER OF EASTERN STAR meet* each month *&#13;
the Friday evening following the regular F.&#13;
AA.M. meeting, Mas. MABT RBAD, W. M.&#13;
RDER OF MODERNl WOODMEN Meet the&#13;
first Tnursday evening of each Month in the&#13;
Maccabee nail. C. L. Grimes V. C.&#13;
LADIES OF THE MACCABEES. Meet every 1st&#13;
and 3rd Saturday of eachmonth at 2:30 p m. at&#13;
K. i). T. M. halL Visiting aisters cordially invited.&#13;
LTLA Coxiwar Lady Com.&#13;
\i&#13;
KNIGHTS OP TUB LOTAL GUARD&#13;
, meet every second Wednesday&#13;
evening of every month in the K. O.&#13;
T. M. Hall at 7:30 o'clock. All vbiting&#13;
Guards welcome.&#13;
C L. Grime*, Capt. Gen.&#13;
BUSINESS C A R D S .&#13;
-««;« Hr F. SIQLER M. D- C, L, SlOt^R M, D&#13;
PK DRS. SIGLER &amp; SIGLER.&#13;
Phyaiclaas and dur^.ju*. All call* promptl&#13;
attended today o&gt; uigbt. Ottce on Maiustr&#13;
Plnckney, Mich.&#13;
T J L f - *&#13;
'-*iL*rv:&#13;
4'&#13;
PATENTS; 'M il i s a i occnp* the tail—t B « e n t i l t IpiWBnf Injnm world. We have&#13;
Bbnean hnrwred cieflB i&#13;
Ont fee returned if v.c&#13;
sketch and description o: nn&#13;
A :»y one sending&#13;
•.' invention wiu&#13;
promptly receive our opiniou : ve concerning&#13;
the patentability of same. "How to Obtain a&#13;
Patent" sent upon request, r.iients-iwpcured&#13;
through u» advertised t&gt;r sale nt o»r e\pen&gt;c.&#13;
Patents taken out through u* recei\-e tpeeieU&#13;
nttice, without charge, in THE PATENT RKCORQ,&#13;
an illustrateu and wldelv circulated journal,&#13;
OcewuHed by Manufacturers and Investors.&#13;
mfrlccopy FltCI« Address,&#13;
VICTOR J . KVANt 4 CO,&#13;
(ffeteot Attorneys,)&#13;
WA9HINQT0II, ft. •&gt;&#13;
DU)og2eat-&lt;&gt;f-tdaVn ordeA. am constantly&#13;
DR. A. B. GREEN.&#13;
DENTIST—Every Fridaj; and oo Thursday&#13;
w^ien having appointments. Office over&#13;
Sigler'* Drug Store. /'&#13;
•OR G E N E R A L C A T A L O G U E ia the book oftfhe people-it quote*&#13;
Wholeaal* Place*) to Kverybedy, haa over x^aeo pngea, «BOO iUnstrationa, and&#13;
en,ocb^4eacriptloaa of articlea w*|h pricea. It ceeta ft cftta to print ancT'mall&#13;
oacitfi«y. We want you to have one. SBHD FIFTEf N CBNT.8 to ahow&#13;
your food faith, and we'll send yoo a copy F R E E , with/all chare— prepaid. •pniimfiiY y^\m^,sgagrm*&#13;
ir&#13;
VsaWeERINARY 9 U R Q E O N .&#13;
Gradaat* of Ontario Veterinary College, also of&#13;
. —«the Veterinary DenUatry College&#13;
. ^ Toronto Canada,&#13;
W^£3tmp^l^ndto&gt;U *-*tmm ol *•* do- .animal at a reasonable prioa.&#13;
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*&#13;
P I S C ^ Y , , . * . MI$HIGAjr,&#13;
ii, HIM T fi T i i H i I =caosi&#13;
As an evidence of blind credulity the&#13;
action of the South Chicago workmen&#13;
who have accepted the story -that in&#13;
this age and generation men are locked&#13;
In a miiLand forced to labor against&#13;
their will % assuredly unsurpassed.&#13;
Th*y woulft believe anything, even the&#13;
weird talesxjfwltche* and hobgoblins.&#13;
"*•* : \ ' ( I&#13;
* Youth and age seem to be on even&#13;
terms in.politics. Mr. Morgan of Alabama&#13;
and Mr. Gear of Iowa have just&#13;
been re-elected to the Senate, although&#13;
both of them have passed their threescore&#13;
£ears and ten by half a decade.&#13;
Mr. Beveridge of Indiana, on the other&#13;
hand, is hardly more than half the&#13;
age of either of then*, and yet he is&#13;
not the youngest man in the upper&#13;
house.&#13;
Mrs. Mary Bryan Cobb, W. J. Bryan's&#13;
great-grandmother, is alive, and&#13;
has Just celebrated her ninety-seventh&#13;
i birthday. She is the eldest of the&#13;
surviving daughters of. the revolution,&#13;
her father having been Major Daniel&#13;
Gano, a colonial artillery commanuer,&#13;
and her grandfather was the famous&#13;
"fighting chaplain," the Rev. John&#13;
Gano, who was brigade chaplain of the&#13;
revolutionary struggle. Her husband&#13;
was a hero of the war of 1812.&#13;
The iron-handed suppression of the&#13;
bread riots in Milan, just two years&#13;
ago, together with the severe punishment'meted&#13;
out to the deputies and&#13;
othejs convicted of participation in&#13;
them, has borne its inevitable fruit in&#13;
the increased return of Socialists to&#13;
the Italian chamber at the recent elections.&#13;
The Socialist party Has" increased&#13;
from seventy to ninety, and&#13;
in a chamber of 508 members ninety&#13;
Is a very formidable proportions.&#13;
What is the duration of a wink*&#13;
The time occupied by the several&#13;
phases of the movement has been&#13;
Measured, and it is found that the&#13;
mean duration of the descent of the lid&#13;
is from seventy-five to ninety-one&#13;
.thousandths of a second. The interval&#13;
while the eye is shut was in one case&#13;
only fifteen-hundredths of a second.&#13;
The rising of the lid occupied seventeen-&#13;
hundredths of a second. A specially&#13;
arranged photographic apparatus&#13;
was used. The colloquial phrase&#13;
•that something is done "quicker than&#13;
a wink" is therefore expressive to a&#13;
-degree that may be stated in fractions&#13;
of a second.&#13;
China is an absolute monarchy, but&#13;
the emperor spends his life inside the&#13;
sealed walls of the Forbidden City, and&#13;
sat one Chinaman In a hundred thousand&#13;
ever looks upon the imperial face.&#13;
Again, In apite of the absolute character&#13;
of the monarchy, there is, according&#13;
to the Chinese law, a body&#13;
called the Tu-ch-a-yuen, or board of&#13;
public censors, which Is independent&#13;
of the supreme government and, theoretically&#13;
at least, higher in authority.&#13;
Theoretically, again, the supreme direction&#13;
of the affairs of the empire is&#13;
vested in the Chun Chi Ch'u, otherwise&#13;
known as the privy or grand&#13;
council. The practical administration&#13;
of the laws is under the charge&#13;
of the Nei-ko, or cabinet, a body which&#13;
consists of four members, two Chinamen&#13;
and two Tartars, with the assistance&#13;
of two members of the Great College&#13;
of Confucius, whose duty it is to&#13;
see that nothing is done by the cabinet&#13;
which is not in striit accordance&#13;
with the sacred books. Under the&#13;
cabinet, again, are seven boards of&#13;
administrators, each of which is presided&#13;
over by a Chinaman and a Tartar&#13;
jointly. These boards have the work&#13;
of government divided among them as&#13;
follows: 1. The board of civil appointments,&#13;
which has charge of all&#13;
the civil officers in the empire. 2. The&#13;
board of revenues, which has charge of&#13;
all financial matters. 3. The board of&#13;
wives and children the practice opens&#13;
opportunity for an endless amount of&#13;
intrigue and chicanery. The manner&#13;
in which the present emperor,&#13;
Tsalt'ien, came to the throne is an example&#13;
in point.&#13;
The whole Chinese empire is divided&#13;
into eighteen provinces, each ruled by&#13;
a governor-general, who is responsible&#13;
directly to the emperor for the entire&#13;
administration, political, judicial, military,&#13;
and financial. Each governor&#13;
, general is assisted by a council and by&#13;
a number of minor officials, sueh as the&#13;
treasurer, the subcommissioner, and&#13;
the Uterary chancellor. Each province&#13;
Ls divided into departments, ruled by&#13;
prefects, and each department into districts,&#13;
with a district ruler over each.&#13;
Each town and village has also its&#13;
separate government, with a complete&#13;
set of officials, so that the offlceholding&#13;
class in China Is large and extremely&#13;
influential.&#13;
The gradations of rank among&#13;
Chinese officials are clearly defined,&#13;
and each man is directly responsible&#13;
only to his immediate superior. Thus&#13;
the village governor reports to the .district&#13;
ruler, and he in turn to the governor&#13;
of the department. The departmental&#13;
governor reports to the&#13;
governor general of the province, who&#13;
may remove hira at will, or even cut&#13;
of his head. The whole administration,&#13;
therefore, hinges on the eighteen&#13;
is the most corrupt and unscrupulous&#13;
in the world.&#13;
Trine* Cbing.&#13;
Prince Ching, leader of the counter&#13;
revolution in North China, and political&#13;
rival of the monstrous Prince Tuan,&#13;
is now looked upon as .the hope of&#13;
the foreigners in Peking, or of such of&#13;
them as have survived the atrocities of&#13;
the Boxers. He is a. great and pow-&#13;
While laughing at a joke, George&#13;
McCabe was seized with a coughing fit&#13;
and choked to death in New York.&#13;
McCabe went into a restaurant at No.&#13;
114 Park Row one evening last week&#13;
and ordered a beef stew. He found a&#13;
collar button in the dish and showed&#13;
it to theJcashier. "Well, do you want&#13;
a shirt; with cbHaY and cuffs" attached,&#13;
with a ten-cent stew?" was the cashier's&#13;
rejoinder. McCabe began to laugh,&#13;
then suddenly coughed, choked and&#13;
fell to the floor unconscious. He wac&#13;
dead in a few minutes. Dr. Smith, of&#13;
the Hudson street hospital, said Mc-&#13;
Cabe probably died of heart-disease.&#13;
PRINCE CHING.&#13;
eit'ul prince, and seems to be a friend&#13;
of the whites. He is now in Peking at&#13;
the head of the Manchu garrison in&#13;
that city. These forces number about&#13;
10,000, and numerous Chinese are flocking&#13;
to the standard of the new leader.&#13;
Ching is the uncle of the late emperor,&#13;
Tsai-Tlen, who was the poisoned&#13;
the other day by the order of Tuan.&#13;
He is the greatuncle of the heir apparent,&#13;
who was chosen last winter by&#13;
the empress dowager. He was president&#13;
of the tsung-11-yamen before the&#13;
government waSaSiindered by the revolt&#13;
of Tuan arJLhiamillowcra.&#13;
_ - — , ^ .&#13;
ffailthfa Camp ctign Lies.&#13;
Nailing lies constitutes an important&#13;
feature of the business of ^ndtdates*&#13;
and campaign managers in every porampaign.&#13;
The ^c&#13;
If the ideas of A. N. Arckae,a Syrian,&#13;
should be adopted, the picturesque&#13;
cowboy of the western prairie3 would&#13;
give way to the still more picturesque-&#13;
Syrian horseman. Mr. Arckae ha?&#13;
evolved the plan in his journey across '&#13;
the country. The other day he was at&#13;
the Union station at Denver, waiting&#13;
for an east-bound train to take hin.&#13;
back to New York, after a visit in the&#13;
interest of business to San Francisco&#13;
pation for my people who are coming&#13;
to the United States has been long s&#13;
serious one to me." said Mr. Arckae&#13;
"and it struck me when I saw the&#13;
-great cattle ranges over which thf&#13;
-herds roamed, that the Syrian, who is&#13;
toy nature a horseman, is exactly suited&#13;
to the work done by the cowboys.'&#13;
rites and ceremonies, which has charge&#13;
of enforcing the laws and customs of&#13;
the empire. 4. The military board. 5.&#13;
The board of public works. 6. The&#13;
board of criminal jurisdiction. 7. The&#13;
admiralty board, which makes its headquarters&#13;
at Tien Tsin. Equal in authority&#13;
with these is the board ^ . f o r -&#13;
eign affairs, or Tsung-li-Yamen, which.&#13;
has as members all the members of the&#13;
grand or privy council.&#13;
As for the mysterious emperor* he&#13;
spends his life in the Forbidden City,&#13;
into the central portion of which no&#13;
man may enter. There he lives, surrounded&#13;
by the members of his harem&#13;
and by the enormous number of from&#13;
8,000 to 10,000 slaves. Massive walls&#13;
and the even more formidable barriers&#13;
of Oriental etiquette shut him off entirely&#13;
from the rest of the world. When&#13;
on rare occasions he goes out to Wor-&#13;
A Scotsman from the Balmoral estate&#13;
j^centiy carae to this country with&#13;
his: wife, where he found a situation&#13;
which necp.8Bltated~his becoming anaturalized&#13;
American. In company&#13;
with his wife, he attendje£:£he court&#13;
to go through the necessary* formality.&#13;
"You must renounce allegiance to al)&#13;
foreign princ^s^.'potentates and sovereigns,&#13;
and especially Queen Victoria,"&#13;
said the official. Sandiete'jaV dropped,&#13;
for he was loyal to, and an extenant&#13;
of the queen. "Dinna dae it.&#13;
Sandle!" cried his wife. . "Remember&#13;
the black silk dress her majesty gave&#13;
me!" Sandie scratched his head in&#13;
-perplexity. "An* the braw kilt ye had&#13;
frae her Sandle!" screamed his wife.&#13;
Sandie thought of the situation. Fifty&#13;
shillings a week! "Your ain cousin,&#13;
only six times removed, was piper tae&#13;
her, Sandie!" shrieked Elepsth. Sandie&#13;
eyed the Bible on the official's&#13;
desk. "An* she pinned the Victoria&#13;
cross on youg-aia falther's - breast,&#13;
Sandie," wailed the wife. "No!" roar-&#13;
+^ fli^l* hie, mind mart ft ftp; "T'il nt\&#13;
forswear the auld leddy; I maun flno&#13;
•nothtr job!"&#13;
Cheap Excursions to Colorado,&#13;
Salt Lake City, and Ogdcn, Utah, will&#13;
leave Chicago, June 20; July 9 and&#13;
17, and August 1st, via GREAT ROCK&#13;
ISLAND ROUTE. Rate of one regular&#13;
fare, plus $2, for round trip. Return&#13;
limit October 31st, 1900. Special trains&#13;
one night to Denver, Colorado Springs&#13;
and Pueblo, will leave Chicago at 4:45&#13;
p. m. Tickets will also be good on&#13;
regular trains. For full information&#13;
and free book, "COLORADO THE&#13;
MAGNIFICENT," address John Se4&#13;
bastlan, G. Pi A.. Chicago.&#13;
Pale biue ls bound to be the coW of&#13;
the year in every material, from broadcloth&#13;
to gauze.&#13;
—Life is worth living so long as thers&#13;
is anybody worth loving.&#13;
T 8 B FOREIGN CONCESSION IN TTBXTSIN.&#13;
INTBJUOiUeP' THE FORBIDDEN CITY. KIOSK ON IMPERIAL LAKE, PEKING.&#13;
ship at one of the temples/or to visit&#13;
one of-the palaces in the vicinity the.&#13;
streets along Which he and his retinue&#13;
will pass are cleared and fre3hly paved,&#13;
while tha houses aafr-other buildings&#13;
along the line are^bertftaded and the&#13;
fronts covered wi$£ hnjsje mats, so that&#13;
no Vulgar eye may took \ipoh the great&#13;
lord of the sun as he is carried along&#13;
in a magnificent sedan chair. Only&#13;
once in a number of years, when the&#13;
emperor goes out into; the country,&#13;
where it is practically impossible to&#13;
barricade all the roads, does the average&#13;
Chinaman have an opportunity to&#13;
get even a glimpse of his imperial&#13;
master.&#13;
There Is no law of hereditary succession&#13;
to the Chinese throne, it being&#13;
left to each emperor to appoint his own&#13;
iaccessor from among the younger&#13;
generation of the imperial family. A»&#13;
tht emperor commonly has a number of&#13;
provincial governor generals, or viceroys,&#13;
and those positions. Arf; in the&#13;
greatest demand...--'^&amp;\?ir\ti§gp' official&#13;
who wishes to Weep b^s place finds it a&#13;
good plan to make large gifts to the&#13;
district ruler, and therefore levies large&#13;
taxes on the-people. The district ruler&#13;
finds it good policy to hand over&#13;
roost of what he gets in this way to the&#13;
departmental chief, and the latter passes&#13;
it on to the governor general of the&#13;
province. To be appointed governor&#13;
general of a Chinese province is therefore&#13;
equivalent to a gift of a large&#13;
fortune, the amount depending only on&#13;
the avarice of the viceroy in power. A&#13;
wise Chinaman greatly prefers to serve&#13;
his country as a provincial governor&#13;
general or viceroy than as member of&#13;
the grand or privy council, the "perquisites"&#13;
of which positions are small.&#13;
_ This form of administration makes it&#13;
«fcrar why the body of Chinese officials&#13;
Morgan-until-after-etectlon" method of&#13;
influencing voters is hoary with age,&#13;
but never a campaign is waged without&#13;
the employment of this ancient device.&#13;
Mark Hanna for the Republicans&#13;
and Senator Jones for the Democrats&#13;
will deny some of the campaign lies,&#13;
but they can't find time to deny ajl of&#13;
them. The safe rule for the average&#13;
newspaper reader is to believe no&#13;
campaign yarn that is improbable.&#13;
Control of Schools.&#13;
Mr. Aaron Gore, superintendent of&#13;
schools at. Denver, leaves all political&#13;
parties far behind in his views on centralization.&#13;
Not only would he have&#13;
the schools in our now possessions directed&#13;
by the War Department but he&#13;
maintains that federal control should&#13;
be substituted for state control over&#13;
tht schools of this continent&#13;
fettt*U*sl SiftlM .©a .*** J*Mrt*l T»U"7'&#13;
Commencing July 0th trains Nos. 83»&#13;
SV&amp; •** ty/tetyeen A « | e # afti'To.&#13;
^ , , w e r ^ , n ^ o ^ o t o(ur new;«auip»&#13;
want, descrtptioftias fallows: Engine of&#13;
JJrpoks build of m o d m dflwg0! with 1»&#13;
by 26 cylinder*, eight'^wheels, 73 inch&#13;
driven* capable of attaining 00 miles&#13;
per hour with 12 coaches, baggage car&#13;
and two coaches and parlor oar of Pullman&#13;
build. The coaches aro half Empire&#13;
construction, wide .vestibule, steel&#13;
platform* steel tired wheels,, double&#13;
windows and seating capacity &lt;?f 63.&#13;
people. Each .coach is lighted with&#13;
P*ni#&amp; g*p fta,4 jDfP*&amp;fti fctth smoking&#13;
compartment with seating capacity for&#13;
0 people, and ladies' and gentlemen's&#13;
toilet rooms and lavatories. Therinterior&#13;
finish is mahogany and cars are supplied&#13;
with high back seats ele|jpantly&#13;
upholstered in plush of different colors.&#13;
These coaches are admitted by the&#13;
Pullman company to be superior in&#13;
every way, and entirely different from&#13;
anything ever turned out by theii&#13;
company, in fact they are marvels oi&#13;
beauty. . The parlor cars are also o\&#13;
Pullman construction, wide vestibuled&#13;
and other up to date features combined&#13;
in the coaches. These cars have a&#13;
seating capacity of 36, with smoking&#13;
compartments, toilet rooms and lavatories,&#13;
interior finish, mahogany chairs&#13;
upholstered in blue plush. The extrior&#13;
finish of trains is uniform throughout,&#13;
being Pullman standard, and present a&#13;
handsome appearance.&#13;
For the present the parlor cars will&#13;
be attached to trains Nos. 30, 33, 35&#13;
and 36, both coaches in all trains will&#13;
be first-class and the use o f tobacco&#13;
will be confined to the smoldng rooms.&#13;
The Shoulder Drapery.&#13;
The drapery effect around the shoulders&#13;
obtains in many things, especially&#13;
where yokes are worn. Below&#13;
the yoke of the opera cape soft material&#13;
or lace Is draped entirely around&#13;
the shoulders, and in the gowns the&#13;
same effect is used with good results.&#13;
Ladle* Can Wear Shoes.&#13;
One size smaller after using Allen's Foot*&#13;
Ease, a powder. It makes tig-ht or new&#13;
shoes easy: Cures swollen, hoMweftting',&#13;
aching feet, ingrowing nails, corns and&#13;
bunions. All druggists and shce .stores,&#13;
25c. Trial package FREE by mail. Address&#13;
Allen S. Olmsted, LeRoy, N.Y.&#13;
Pretention isn't natural; nature never&#13;
pretends.&#13;
Only the godly can do good with&#13;
money.&#13;
• The fancy penman's business is flour*&#13;
ishing. •&#13;
The&#13;
Plnkham&#13;
Record&#13;
§3 a proud and peerless&#13;
record, it is a record of&#13;
our ef of constant conquest&#13;
over obstinate His&#13;
of women? ills that deal&#13;
out despairj suffering&#13;
that many women think&#13;
is woman's natural fieri*&#13;
tagef disorders and displacements&#13;
that drive out&#13;
hopom&#13;
Lydla E. Plakham's Vegetabii Compound&#13;
oures these iroubl&amp;s of&#13;
women, and robs men*&#13;
struatlomof ttstsrrors*&#13;
No woman need be without&#13;
the safest and surest&#13;
advloe, for Mrs. Plnkham&#13;
counsels woman free of&#13;
charge. Her address Is&#13;
Lynn, Mass.&#13;
Can any woman afford&#13;
to ignore the medioineand&#13;
the advice that has cured&#13;
a million women?&#13;
[)-AI r o f i&#13;
t%&amp;5&amp;r&#13;
A&gt;&#13;
. ,£,&#13;
w&#13;
torn *mm*&#13;
v^..&amp;£•.•• i•;;•'•'.. .*,:&#13;
v r . • * i&#13;
• *&#13;
. ; « * ; •&#13;
..1. •* •&#13;
• &amp; •&#13;
, ' ,71 V'&#13;
i ' &lt; ^ ! &gt; v . / ! ^ -':'.,'5'V','J.v^ , ' ' ' V&#13;
' . • \&#13;
* sa=s * * ¢ 5 *&#13;
»»*•«•• 53BT&#13;
T R A N S V A A L WAR JTBatS.&#13;
A report from Platkop aay» that the&#13;
BritUh engaged tbe Boer* i l l day long&#13;
o n the 14ttL B i ^ n ^ a W mouat6&lt;l-lirfantar&#13;
moving north looate&lt;i the Ifoer*&#13;
lr00o strong, occupying the ridffe from&#13;
TThicl t i e y WweTdrHredth6&lt;laybefcre.&#13;
Thorneyoroltfa men held the*ridge laci&#13;
n g them* Members of the Stratheona&#13;
horse were driven in temporarily by a&#13;
heavy muak;etry Are. After a stub*&#13;
"bprn rcsl&amp;tknoe t h e Boers forced the&#13;
Brit|sh to bring the howitzers into action.&#13;
The Boers opened fire in all directions,&#13;
shelling with the guns parted&#13;
o n t h e British r i g h t A gun posted on&#13;
a n intrenched kopje four miles to t i e&#13;
«ait, forced the Boers from a number&#13;
of ridges, detached parties retiring, on&#13;
the center, whlleHa~gurr on thr~r1gtat-t station at 12:03 o'clock at a lively gait&#13;
was withdrawn through a ravine toward&#13;
a p Intrenched hill.&#13;
Gen. llundlo's rapid advance has, it&#13;
is said, forced t)&gt;e Boers into an obviously&#13;
bad corner. President Steyn&#13;
is reported to have given up all hope&#13;
after the loss of Bethlehern, and would&#13;
have Surrendered, but Uen. DeWet&#13;
threatened to shoot him. and it is be*&#13;
lieved Steyn was imprisoned in his own&#13;
laager. Capt. Driscoll of "D" scouts,&#13;
who went alone to Zorlngkrantz to&#13;
view the Boer postion, w a s surprised&#13;
at breakfast on the 14th by four Boer&#13;
scouts. Jle picked up his rifle and&#13;
commanded thctn to surrender or he&#13;
would shoot.'" TKc four at once surrendered,&#13;
although Driscoll w a s 10&#13;
miles away from the main body of&#13;
scouts ulid close to a large Boer force.&#13;
H ia understood that Johannesburg&#13;
will be the temporary capital of the&#13;
Orange, River and Transvaal colonies.&#13;
It will also be made the high commissioners'&#13;
headquarters. When the settlement&#13;
is finally completed, it is believed&#13;
t h a t Bloemfontein will become&#13;
the capital of South Africa and the&#13;
residence of the governor-general. The&#13;
governors of the colonies will reside at&#13;
Cape Town, Pietermaritzburg and Johannesburg.&#13;
N E W S Y BRVEITIES.&#13;
John D. Mcrshon, of Saginaw, has&#13;
been commissioned assistant paymaster&#13;
of the Michigan naval brigade.&#13;
The steamer City of Topeka arrived&#13;
at Seattle, Wash., on the 14th from&#13;
Lyn canal, having on board between&#13;
8750,000 and $1,000,000 in gold dust.&#13;
While attempting to change seats i n&#13;
a row boat t w o young women and a&#13;
young man were drowned in the lagoon&#13;
at Washington park, Chicago, on the&#13;
11th.&#13;
The forest fire that is destroying the&#13;
range in the country north and east of&#13;
Hillings, Mont., is assuming alarming&#13;
proportions. Uaueh buildings have&#13;
been burned and some stock has perished;&#13;
'••• •'•"•••'•"• ' •• ••• •&#13;
&lt;iov, Johnson of the Chickasaw naion,&#13;
in Texas, has ruled that tribal&#13;
taxes must be paid. It is reported at&#13;
1'ort Worth that there may be wholesale&#13;
ejectments if the taxes are not&#13;
paid, Clov. Johnson says the federal&#13;
authorities will approve the course of&#13;
the Indian oHicers.&#13;
The supreme court of Minnesota has&#13;
decided that the baking powder law,&#13;
requiring manufacturers and dealers&#13;
to affix a label bearing the names and&#13;
amounts of the ingredients on each can&#13;
is constitutional. The court holds that&#13;
the law is a proper exercise of the police&#13;
power of the state, its object being&#13;
to protect the public health.&#13;
B A S E BALL.&#13;
TBtRlDLEttiDf&#13;
M*4e by Two Boys Tfaroogh a&#13;
o s o Oar Woof. •&#13;
New York Cor. Chicago Inter Ocean:&#13;
Having expended all the money in&#13;
their pcWs«io«f in a week spavt la&#13;
sight-seeing in New York, Qeprge&#13;
Huxon, ajfed eighteen, and John Cor:&#13;
key, aged seventeen, both reudents off&#13;
iEaat Cambridge, Mass., determined&#13;
Friday night to steal a ride home on a&#13;
New Haven train. The boys loitered&#13;
about tin foot bridge at Forty-eighth&#13;
'street thai span* the Grand Central&#13;
train yard*, 'and" #*^d**; ; auggetted&#13;
Itself to j h e # $o d!^''tb thi'todf of a&#13;
car or the Bpejo^mjdnight exgress a»&#13;
It was passing under them. As the&#13;
Montreal' express Steamed but of the&#13;
women'* remedy ol the day (the only genuine).&#13;
TxitetllverPWsTtnegTesvtWverlavlgttem&#13;
Renov»tor and Btowel Regulator.&#13;
Below wo submit the official standing of the&#13;
clubsof the National aa4 American leagues up&#13;
toaad including Saturday, July 14th;&#13;
Woo. Lost. Per ct&#13;
Brooklyn&#13;
Chicago&#13;
Philadelphia&#13;
Pittsburtr ....&#13;
Cincinnati&#13;
St. Louis&#13;
Boston&#13;
New York.,..&#13;
AMKUICA.N D U G UK.&#13;
. : * Won. Lost Per ot&#13;
Chtctffo&#13;
Milwaukee&#13;
Indianapolis&#13;
Cleveland&#13;
Detroit , '&#13;
Minneapolis ^&#13;
Kansas cay&#13;
Buffalo&#13;
43&#13;
if?&#13;
37&#13;
88&#13;
35&#13;
31&#13;
24&#13;
32&#13;
3i&#13;
33&#13;
36&#13;
3d&#13;
87&#13;
'42&#13;
.642&#13;
.536&#13;
.536&#13;
.585&#13;
•&lt;V)3&#13;
.463&#13;
.439&#13;
.344&#13;
44&#13;
43&#13;
40&#13;
37&#13;
34&#13;
34&#13;
35&#13;
»1&#13;
30&#13;
33&#13;
3¾&#13;
35&#13;
40&#13;
42&#13;
44&#13;
«?&#13;
.595&#13;
.573&#13;
JK6&#13;
.514&#13;
.45»&#13;
.447&#13;
.44«&#13;
.413&#13;
T H E M A R K E T S .&#13;
LIVE STOCK.&#13;
New York— Cattle Sheep&#13;
Beat crudes. ,»4 &amp;0&amp;6 tit) 15 w)&#13;
.Lower grades 3 UU44 25&#13;
Chicago*— Bent grade*....*&#13;
Lower grade*.,. 4&#13;
Detroit—&#13;
Best grades.... 3 7»&#13;
Lower givdc:}. 3 '"&#13;
70&#13;
W&#13;
75&#13;
.a&#13;
.4 6 4 70&#13;
Buffalo—&#13;
Best grades..&#13;
Lower grade*&#13;
Cincinnati—&#13;
Beat grades....* 10®S 35&#13;
Lower grades. 4 75&lt;#5 OJ&#13;
PittebaiTj—&#13;
Beat KradeH....5 25®."» 81&#13;
Lower grades. 160tt4 lb&#13;
4 10&#13;
3 10&#13;
4 IS&#13;
a 5j&#13;
4 61&#13;
4 U0&#13;
4 00&#13;
3 63&#13;
4 40&#13;
4 OJ&#13;
Lambs&#13;
f7u&gt;&#13;
5 00&#13;
6 »&#13;
5 0 £&#13;
tf 50&#13;
b 5U&#13;
0 75&#13;
4 50&#13;
M 5&#13;
5M)&#13;
5 W)&#13;
4 W&#13;
Hogs&#13;
»6 60&#13;
5 0 0&#13;
5 45&#13;
5 2 0&#13;
5 45&#13;
4 50&#13;
5 6 5&#13;
4 &amp;&gt;&#13;
533&#13;
5 10&#13;
ft 5*&#13;
600&#13;
the youths mistook it for the Boston&#13;
train. They vaulted over the ratlins&#13;
of the bridge and dropped to the roof oi&#13;
a mail car. They had just seated themselves&#13;
when the train swung out in&#13;
the side track and headed fbr the single&#13;
track tunnel. Once inside the tunnel&#13;
the train began to increase in speed&#13;
until it wes traveling at a high rate.&#13;
The predicament of the boys was&#13;
frightful. Smoke, hot cinders, a terrible&#13;
draught, darkness and a loud&#13;
roar made them fear for their Uvea.&#13;
Corkey, it is said, Buffered from colliding&#13;
with the roof of the tunnel. When&#13;
the boys finally emerged from the tunnel&#13;
Corkey was badly cut and bruised.&#13;
When the train came to a stop at&#13;
Spuyten Duyyil they made their presence&#13;
known; They were helped from&#13;
.the roof of the car. Corkey, it is said,&#13;
;was almost nude, the clothing having&#13;
•been torn from hiB body in the tunnel.&#13;
Huxon was, covered with dust and&#13;
'bleeding from the mouth and nose. The&#13;
!boys were taken to Ypnkers and turned&#13;
lover to Policeman £ames Nolan. Corkey&#13;
was conveyed" to S t John's hospital.&#13;
The boys were arraigned in court&#13;
iand remanded.&#13;
B I G E N G I N E I S S P E E D Y .&#13;
C,ccL.l Train o f Colorado Excursionists&#13;
Tests N e w L o c o m o t i v e .&#13;
Railway men of all classes are watch-&#13;
}ng with much interest the tests of the&#13;
"1200 series" of engines of the Rock&#13;
Island road, the largest running out of&#13;
Chicago in passenger service. Engine&#13;
No. 1201 was given its first severe&#13;
test for power and speed last week.&#13;
The patrons of the Rock Island's first&#13;
excursion to Colorado occupied fourteen&#13;
of the largest and heaviest coaches.&#13;
This was enough for two traina&#13;
to be pulled by ordinary passenger engines&#13;
of the day, considering the speed&#13;
required. The big engine did all&#13;
that was expected of it and more. Between&#13;
Chicago and Rock Island it&#13;
pulled, that train ,of fourteen coaches&#13;
with ease on schedule time, and when&#13;
called on for a little extra effort developed&#13;
a speed of over 72 miles an&#13;
hour.&#13;
Engines of that class will haul all&#13;
the special trains which will be used&#13;
by the Rock Island in Jts series of Colorado&#13;
excursions, at the rate of one&#13;
fare plus $2.00 for the round trip.&#13;
Three more excursionsTwlTl be given,&#13;
leaving here July 9, July 17 and August&#13;
1. The departing time of the&#13;
special trains will be 4:46 p. m., but onthe&#13;
dates n a $ e d excursion tickets will&#13;
also be honored on all regular trains.&#13;
The special trains to be used-are high&#13;
class throngnottt. Through dining&#13;
car service is provided and the run&#13;
from Chicago to Colorado is made&#13;
witli only one night oh the road. Excursion&#13;
rates will be made to Colorado&#13;
and Utah from all points on the line&#13;
of the Rock Island between the Missouri&#13;
river and Chicago.—Chicago Inter-&#13;
Ocean.&#13;
W A X T f t P 6 0 »&#13;
Men, Women sad Children to try the beat&#13;
and ofeeapest preparations ever offered the&#13;
public. Ton don't take any chance* in txjiaa&#13;
them, as your druggist guarantee* Knlil'a Bed&#13;
Pills for Wan PeopTeT "Pale and Weak/' the&#13;
« R A 4 K , KTO.&#13;
tWVork&#13;
4jyu«tt«*&#13;
' D e t r o i t&#13;
T n l c d *&#13;
Cluoinimtl -&#13;
P l t U b n r g&#13;
Buffalo&#13;
Wtoeat,,&#13;
No. ?red&#13;
1*45&#13;
8t((jj86 .&#13;
Corn,&#13;
No. 2^mi*&#13;
4«fc4»&#13;
* 48Q49*&#13;
4-&lt;3W&#13;
4«2H H&#13;
4d5ai«&#13;
NO.&#13;
OaU,&#13;
a white&#13;
SlQ»4&#13;
$ &amp; ' * *&#13;
31681&#13;
Automobiles l o r D o pot Service.&#13;
The Baltimore &amp; Ohio Railway company&#13;
has established an automobile&#13;
service at Washington," D. C„ in connection&#13;
with its trains. This is believed&#13;
to be the first railroad to introduce&#13;
this means of transportation regularly&#13;
to and from a railroad station.&#13;
An electrical system is used. Two&#13;
small trunks can be carried on supports&#13;
on each vehicle and additional&#13;
baggage can be placed upon the top.&#13;
As the streets in Washington are in&#13;
very fine condition, there is every&#13;
prospect of the service being successful.&#13;
Indian Crow* Railroading.&#13;
The Chicago, Burlington &amp; Qulncy&#13;
Railroad is building a line in Montana&#13;
down into the Big Horn Basin toward&#13;
Yellowstone Park, and as.the Crow Indian&#13;
reservation is near at hand, a eontract&#13;
has been made with the red men&#13;
for grading a section of roadbed. The&#13;
managers of competitive lines threaten&#13;
to enter a complaint to the Western&#13;
Passenger Association, making the&#13;
charge that the Burlington has made&#13;
-a. deal with the "Scalpers."&#13;
rotutocA, &lt;a»j per bvi Live PouiW'y, sprlfj*&#13;
chKUcns; 8Jio pftc lb: fowls. 8u: turkeys, luj;&#13;
fiuc-Us. tttto. figxs. airicMyfttffrU. V-Jc per do-too.&#13;
liuiter, best Qairy, h»c perTo. ereamur^JUj.&#13;
*v&#13;
***• MX *&gt;.&#13;
*w*r^&#13;
. The way to obtain&#13;
needing it.&#13;
The average cyclist&#13;
ooth feet.&#13;
credit is by not&#13;
gets there with&#13;
U*s White&#13;
26 dotMW, *6c. 'Yon can work while they work.&#13;
Never gripe or make you alok. KnlU'u Blv&#13;
tMW PlUa an HWnef IiW&#13;
^ i i r « DyKpepatt Tablete cure:&#13;
U» cur* aU Kidney I&#13;
* Dyspepsia Tablet* cu&#13;
rest all Stomach Trouelea, destroy&#13;
pure sweetstoinacigB and b&#13;
M advertiMed ormeoey refnndi&#13;
nteed] Pills or Tab&#13;
mak*sweet atoinecbj bnatea&gt;^!Pe do.&#13;
aavertixed refunded.. Via* onif&#13;
guaranteed preparation* on the market Knlll'a&#13;
)Tetn coat 86c. UaU price of others.&#13;
To marry for money and miss It is less painful&#13;
than to marry for lore and sSiaa it.&#13;
Sin tot a foothold In tale world by making&#13;
itseltioofe harndeaa and little.&#13;
_ — - T • ^ . • s&#13;
A M Ton t'ultf AlUtn'a Foot-Baaaf&#13;
It is the only cure for Swollen,&#13;
Smarting, Burning, Sweating rFeet,&#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 FREB. Address&#13;
Allen S. Olmsted. LeRoy, N, Y.&#13;
The secret of feminine diplomacy is to know&#13;
hOK_and when to_tell a secret.&#13;
Wise is the man who doesn't Bocriftoe hia&#13;
health in search for wisdom.&#13;
Hall's Catarrh Care&#13;
Is a constitutional cure. Price. 75a&#13;
It is said that the spare rib is cot popular&#13;
with the Mormon epicure.&#13;
It is always safer to be ahead of time or a&#13;
male than behind either.&#13;
Are You Troubled with Dandrnff?&#13;
If so, get a bottle of Coka Dandruff Cure.&#13;
All druggists and barbow. $1.0X&#13;
Great victories are not always won on fields&#13;
where great armies fight.&#13;
~~~ Mrs. Winslow'e Sootbiag syrap.&#13;
For children teething, softens the gam*, reduces I T&#13;
flamm*tJ.on, allay flDain.cure*wtad colic. &lt;tte a bottle.&#13;
The shootincr stars may yet discover that the&#13;
earth is a good revolver.&#13;
Care,worry and anxiety whiten the hair too early.&#13;
Benew it with PAB&amp;KR'S HAIB BALSAM.&#13;
HIKOKSCOBXS, the bent cure for coma. IScts.&#13;
Some people wear glasses because they can't&#13;
believe their own eyes.&#13;
Piso's Cure for Consumption is an infallible&#13;
-medicine forxo ughs and colds, —N. W. SAMTJBL,&#13;
Ocean Grove, N: J., Feb. 17, 1900.&#13;
When a man doubles his fist she naturally becomes&#13;
four-handed.&#13;
Some articles must be described. White's&#13;
Yucatan needs no description; its the real&#13;
thing.&#13;
Be sure you are righther&#13;
own way. -then let your wife have&#13;
Brown's Teething Cordlut cures all diseases&#13;
peculiar to babies when teething.&#13;
When a man is in trouble his friends console&#13;
themselves with thinking it will be a lesson for&#13;
him.&#13;
'fooDiiovs'&#13;
AV^cb^Prtpa«li«iforA»'&#13;
\ \ \ W i S ( l i H I I K i . N&#13;
F o r I s f a n t s t a d CQkllrlMav&#13;
Th8 Kind You Ram&#13;
Bosght&#13;
Promotes DrSeationJCheerfurness&#13;
andRest-Contains neither&#13;
Opnjm&gt;lorplune norMiperaL&#13;
WOT TiAXLC O T I C .&#13;
JbLfmuiA*&#13;
vSmJ.-&#13;
Aperfed Remedy forConsiipa-&#13;
Tlon, Sour Stomach.Diarrhoea&#13;
Worms .Convulsions .Fcvwishness&#13;
and L o s s OF SLEEP.&#13;
Facsimile Signature of&#13;
N E W YORK.&#13;
M . N o l d&#13;
] ] 0 ( I M V j ^ C I M S&#13;
EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER.&#13;
For Over&#13;
Thirty Years&#13;
CUSTOM raun e « m w , m w vo«m orrv.&#13;
USE THE GENUINE&#13;
^ATE*?&#13;
T H E S T A N D A R D&#13;
SEWIN6 MACHIME&#13;
COMMHY&#13;
F O R **B33TW 5»»&#13;
T H E HANDKERCHIEF&#13;
TOILET &amp; BATH&#13;
R E F U S E S U B S T I T U T E D&#13;
make twenty-live different&#13;
at? lea, including theblKb«atpriced&#13;
best; and beat lowpriced&#13;
machine*.&#13;
Send fur catalogue&#13;
priuea. '&#13;
J. B. ALORiCH, State&#13;
2SB Woodward A v e . ,&#13;
D S T B O I T , MXOH.&#13;
If affile;ed with&#13;
aor« evu*. u»» ITbtnptM's Eft Watir&#13;
W . N . U — - D E T R O I T — N O . 2 9 — 1 9 0 0&#13;
Khea ftoswsriog advertlseneats&#13;
Heatiofl This faseiv&#13;
DEAD&#13;
He thinks he lives, but he's a dead&#13;
one* No person is really alive whose&#13;
liver is dead. During the winter&#13;
most people spend nearly all their time&#13;
in warm/ stuffy houses or offices or&#13;
workshops. Many don't get as much&#13;
exercise as they ought, and everybody&#13;
knows thkt people gain weignt in&#13;
winter. As a rule it is not sound&#13;
weight, but means a lot of flabby fat&#13;
and useless, rotting matter staying in&#13;
the body when it ought to have been&#13;
driven out. But the liver was overburdened,&#13;
deadened—stopped work* There&#13;
you are, with a dead liver, and spring is the&#13;
time for resurrection. Wake up the dead!&#13;
Get all the filth out of your system, and get&#13;
ready for the summer's trials with clean, clear blood, body, brain free from bile. Force&#13;
is dangerous and destructive unless used in a gentle persuasive way, and the right plan&#13;
is to give new strength to the muscular walls of the bowels, and stir up the liver to new&#13;
life and work with CASCARETS, the great spring cleaner, disinfectant and bowel tonic&#13;
Get a box to-day and see how quickly you will be&#13;
25c. 50c — ' • • • • • • • • • DRUGGISTS&#13;
To any needy mortal ttt&amp;riaf from bowel trouble* aa£ too poor to boy CASCAxzY^ we wiS send a box free. Addrm&#13;
Stcrtiag Remedy Company* Chicago or N«w York, mentioning advertbement and paper. «84&#13;
IRON BEDS AT 44 CEimBS'^^rlZ&amp;Sfigft , b a t (Ms *J «to«t oar 8 2 . 8 0 Iron Bed wooMeost par IK if on Coffee. We b»u?ht t h u before tho odvaooe. several carlo*&#13;
10 lbs. 97 CENTS.&#13;
IN nava fm big « • » • •&#13;
viae oar ouieoawn the benefl '&#13;
ocertM . Iba. 9 7 0 . w n naa&#13;
P*yA WtOp.WQT81Ul»In&gt;nBodsbythel»xbo* tMalj^rljirt o«r » a . 5 0 IroaBed w&lt;m&gt;doo«tp«rl carload* of It and are gi&#13;
•old that way. wo offer Ga vaTuo tn all kfoda of famitnre. Send for oar mammoth new Furniture Catalogue of H. Bead for our SPCOIAL 32-1» A O l P R i Q I LIST 8trta* prlcoa on grownea and thousands of other&#13;
STffi fetewimir wBaiM^'flte'?' ^jSe^^'^mr^^.of &amp; safe £isai$^^ i'oi«uroy, Sa.OO.- Ttaomandsol tbesoCoocbosaaToCeennold b , uaaadererr one * tisTuctory. We haro a handled bv REOI8T8RBO PHAKMAOtSTS. All kind* of Patent Medkrtnea.at vnoleeMe Btteea eoeeev&#13;
C O M P U r f a , L I N K of Kxc^Moa Tablet, Bool; Casoj. Librae ^iblea. Chiffonier*, Cupboard*. Sideboards, ramm We wmaendyou fl\te catalogue free !&gt;&gt;r l i e tu^lnff. andtt wm»ar«you MQRK MONEY than any&#13;
Wtmlroben.rMnlntf itooia^Furniture. In fact ApJY ARTIOLE tieeded to fnrniah your home. Send for froa inre^tmeal TOO oanrcj^*,oii nocooda areaotd ntthe profltthatdnin are. So?&gt;MllNY W i l l MAILS..&#13;
Furf&gt;ituK&gt;(^tato7u«.riM))&gt;MxW&gt;'', containing iiSopaflraa. IVo can aaT» you at least 8&amp; per cent ou your purchaaoa. § 9 . » 7 . T H I 8 . I S A SPEOlAL 8ASOAIM 0ON81OK81MQ P R E 8 E N T MARKET V A L u l !&#13;
Ft&gt;rotherprfoeaa**w-pe«*Irec prloellet. woh»*e anoTwrstock ofaboroctees. * « - - ' - a ~ M i K - »&#13;
. . ! _ . . T. « • ftOBSftta* 8UPPWY MOU8K* Ml&#13;
1n« noom Furniture. In fact A N Y AftTJLOLE reeded" t o fnrniab your home,&#13;
lo^ue, ciso ty&lt;,xu^, containing iuo pagaa. w e can aava you at least 85 per cent on y&#13;
T. li. ROBERir BUPPleY HOUSE* • BINNCAPOLIS. •INU. i ^ Z U&#13;
• A .&#13;
• T l .&#13;
W/^:^^M^^^Ssi^P': -"•&amp;**M&#13;
&lt;%',.'::&#13;
v&amp;m* r *&#13;
!&lt;&amp;$&amp;&#13;
-.-v.&#13;
ft«%"&#13;
^&#13;
^ ' : - .':, '«t- • • » uy * tfi-'i&#13;
•v. ' . # •&#13;
' * &lt; * * ^ • • 5 ;&#13;
',?"' •X* !*•• ;"Ai:.'~ ••. • ; * tt.'.V&#13;
r KNOWS&#13;
that tea loses strength and flavor when exposed to&#13;
the air. It collects dust, dirt and impurities, and&#13;
the tender leaves are crushed in handling. The&#13;
sealed package is cheaper, because it protects the&#13;
tea and preserves its strength and flavor.&#13;
UAHDI TEA is sold in sealed packages only.&#13;
Pure and fragrant.&#13;
"rr COSTS MO MORE—TRY IT»&#13;
iaJ/iil"—L2_^l 1 ^&#13;
&lt;1. f'i&#13;
f:^^.v •&#13;
*.7.,. i:&#13;
•mmm&#13;
r(:&#13;
"71&#13;
COWNOTfBT ss&#13;
&lt;J?&#13;
.'«V&#13;
1SMV PARSHALLVILLE.&#13;
v**v,*&#13;
v**!-&#13;
^&#13;
I&#13;
&gt; « #&#13;
Ef^v*&#13;
rf»^:&#13;
^¾&#13;
t Anua Sohorder of Owosso made'&#13;
i : s i 4 c t V i s i t at A. C. Wakemau's&#13;
the-past week. '&#13;
Bina Chambers of Chicago is&#13;
making a short stay at his old&#13;
home in Hartland.&#13;
Little Robie Rowly of Detroit&#13;
is having a good time with his&#13;
grandpa, Robert Griswold. —&#13;
Mrs Maggie A r t h u r of Byron&#13;
has been visiting her sister Mrs.&#13;
A. C. Wakeman the past week.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. K r e s s Townley&#13;
commenced housekeeping this&#13;
week in the old Townley home.&#13;
Mrs Durand and daughter of'|&#13;
Ann Arbor are visiting Mrs.' Dr.&#13;
Parker daughter of Mrs. Durand.&#13;
Jack Rosenberger has a brother&#13;
visiting him from Idaho that he&#13;
has not seen for a number of&#13;
years.&#13;
Laurence Smith has bought the&#13;
stock in the Gla'spie and Bravender&#13;
store and will settle the accounts.&#13;
George Austin the twelve year&#13;
old son of H e i b e r t Austin had his&#13;
foot cut entirely off with a mowing&#13;
machine last Wednesday.&#13;
The ladies aid will hold a lawn&#13;
social on Friday evening the 20&#13;
at the homo of Dr. Parker—ice&#13;
cream and cake will be served.&#13;
C. D. Bennet and wife of H o w :&#13;
ell visited at Mr. and Mrs. J a m e s&#13;
Marble's Sunday.&#13;
Several of the young people&#13;
from this place attended services&#13;
at the Brown church Marion Sunday&#13;
eveniug. ^&#13;
PETTYSVILLE.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Drullard of Ann&#13;
Arbor are guests at "Will Mercer's.&#13;
S. G. Teeple, C. Weller and&#13;
Jessie Henry were in Ann Arbor&#13;
UNADILLA.&#13;
H e r m a n Reed visited friends in&#13;
Brighton last week.&#13;
J o h n Harris was home from&#13;
Waterloo over Sunday.&#13;
Dick BartonVnd Frank Barnum&#13;
were in Ann Arbor Monday.&#13;
P e r r y Mills has purchased Geo.&#13;
Richmond's Threshing Engine.&#13;
E m m e t Hadley made a flying&#13;
trip to Stockbridge last Sunday.&#13;
' Mrs. Edson May and children&#13;
are visiting her. parents in Leslie.&#13;
H e r b e r t Lane of Marion, spent&#13;
Sunday under the parental roof.&#13;
A. C^ Watson w a s - i a Lansing&#13;
on business Tuesday and Wednesday.&#13;
Wirt Ives of Chelsea spent Saturday&#13;
and Sunday with friends&#13;
here.&#13;
Seymour May and Alex Pyper&#13;
called on Anderson friends last&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
Miss Christina Denton is attending&#13;
the summer Normal in&#13;
Ypsilanti.&#13;
Mrs. Lon Clark of Siockbridge&#13;
is spending a few days with her&#13;
parents liere.&#13;
Wm. Singleton and N o w Durkee&#13;
of Anderson, visited at Nancy&#13;
May's Monday.&#13;
Rev. Palmer and son Archie,&#13;
visited friends in Adrian and L e -&#13;
onia last week.&#13;
F. E. Ives and wife from near&#13;
Take the horn* off the cows.&#13;
Much milk requires much feed.&#13;
Millet is good to increase the flow of&#13;
milk.&#13;
Do not breed from a cow iha; has&#13;
aborted twice.&#13;
Do no use beef cows if you want to&#13;
succeed in dairying.&#13;
Cows will not do their'best unless&#13;
well housed aud feed.&#13;
Are squashed food for milch cows?&#13;
afiK.8 a subscriber. Yes.&#13;
MITE should be.a.rated, strained&#13;
and cooled as .soon as drawn.&#13;
Don't; expec: for sk!m milk cheese&#13;
the price that Edam brings&#13;
No successful dairyman allows his&#13;
cows to be chased by a worthless Cur.&#13;
It is not always meanness that&#13;
Mrs: J . W. Placeway and daugh- j Stockbridge visited at Ryal Barter&#13;
visited relatives in W h i t e Oak j p u m s l a s t ^ 0 ^ -&#13;
last. week. ^ r s - Horace Palmer started for&#13;
Mrs. (Jeo. Blades is entertaining | BW v i e w Wednesday for a visit&#13;
three i p e r grand children from ; t o h e r S 1 8 t e r ' M r s ' Thatcher.&#13;
A n n Arbor; I Misses Fannie Laverock a^d&#13;
P. W. Coniway and wife and J . ! K a t e C o l l i n s a r e visiting friends&#13;
W. Placeway and wife visited] m E a t o n R a P l d s f o r a f«w days.&#13;
friends in Jackson last week.&#13;
ANDERSON.&#13;
Mike Roche called on Gregory&#13;
friends the first of the week.&#13;
Mrs. James Hoff is spending a&#13;
few day,s with, relatives in Muskegon.&#13;
Mr. Geo. Barnes of Howell was&#13;
in this place one day last week oh&#13;
business.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Bullis&#13;
are spending the w e e k / w i t h Detroit&#13;
friends. /&#13;
Geo. Wright and Floyd Randall&#13;
of Marion visited friendj in this&#13;
place Sunday;&#13;
Rev. Simpson and wife of Pinckney&#13;
called^on, friends here one&#13;
day last week.&#13;
Frank Eaman returned to his&#13;
h o m e i u Detroit Saturday after a&#13;
^free weeks visit.&#13;
Julia Benedict of Howell spent&#13;
a few days of last week with&#13;
friends in this vicinity.&#13;
. Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Smith entertained&#13;
Mrs. S's parenfe Mr.&#13;
and Mrs. Geo. Phelps from Stockbridge&#13;
dver Sunday;&#13;
A. MDOTO a n d fits. P a r -&#13;
kins of Marion visited a t Mr.&#13;
J o h n Birnie's Tuesday ota their&#13;
r e t u r n from a visitinStbckb^kige.&#13;
&amp;%&#13;
Mrs. Jas. McClaren from near&#13;
Chelsea accompanied by Mrs. Geo.&#13;
| Lane of Dakota, visited friends in&#13;
I this place last week.&#13;
| Mrs. Robert Bond and children&#13;
| tipped over in their buggy coming&#13;
from Gregory last Saturday but&#13;
were not seriously hurt.&#13;
The following is the program&#13;
for the Unadilla Farmers Club&#13;
which will meet at Otto Arnold's&#13;
Saturday afternoon, J u l y 21:&#13;
Music, Prayer,&#13;
The World Reformer and his Wife&#13;
"T" . Henry Arnold.&#13;
Song, F. L. Andrews.&#13;
Paper, Miss Kate Barnum.&#13;
Comical Mule, Unadilla Quartette.&#13;
Rec. " A Dolls Quarrel," Ruth Pyper.&#13;
Coon Song, Mrs. A. C. Watson.&#13;
makes a cow breachy; it is irequently&#13;
hunger.&#13;
If churning is done at too high a&#13;
temperature, me butter will not be perfect.&#13;
Milk should be aerated and cooled if&#13;
it is expected to keep and please the&#13;
customer.&#13;
Gentleness in the treatment of the&#13;
cow at all times, punctuality as to the&#13;
time of milking, drawing the milk rapidly&#13;
slid clean are essential to keeping&#13;
the milk cow up to her full potential&#13;
yield.&#13;
Select a few of the best of voun&#13;
heifer calves, considering them individually&#13;
and also the dairy quality of&#13;
their dams, to keep up your herd oO&#13;
milk cows, and give them the feed and,&#13;
the handling that will develop their&#13;
dairy qualities. Bu such selection and&#13;
management a good dairy stock can&#13;
be improved and even a poor one may&#13;
be made fairly good.&#13;
A good dairyman has a good deal to&#13;
do with making a good dairy cow, but&#13;
it is the good dairyman who is most&#13;
anxious to secure the best blood in his&#13;
herd. Yet there are men who, with the&#13;
best blood, will hardly achieve-as good&#13;
results as a judicious feeder who takes&#13;
the right sort of care of his milk cows,&#13;
feeds and milks them properly, even&#13;
though they be of common stock.&#13;
A considerable number of dairymen&#13;
feed skim milk back to the cows, and&#13;
eight pounds of it is said to be equivalent&#13;
to two "pounds of bran. The cows&#13;
have to learn to like the milk, and th&lt;\"&#13;
are usually taught by putting a little&#13;
in the bottom of the pail and covering&#13;
it pretty thickly with bran. The cows&#13;
eat the bran, to which they are accustomed,&#13;
and in doing so get the milk,&#13;
which they presently find to be pretty&#13;
palatable feed stuff, and they learn to&#13;
like it.&#13;
/ MOEE LOCAL.&#13;
Some of our correspondents must be&#13;
camping this week.&#13;
H. 0. BriKKS and wife spent the&#13;
first of the week "i Brighton.&#13;
Several from I .ere went to Detroit&#13;
to the SI. &amp; Vt. races this week.&#13;
Miss Grace Gardner and Carrie&#13;
Erwin were in Howell last Wednesday.&#13;
R. H. Teeple is improving the looks&#13;
of his home on Main street by removing&#13;
the fence.&#13;
Miss Genivieve Baker is spending&#13;
the week with her sister^, Mrs. Geo.&#13;
White at Hambursr.&#13;
Eugene Campbell erected a windmill&#13;
at his home corner of Unadilla&#13;
and Mill streets this week.&#13;
Miss Mame Sigier, who has ,been&#13;
visiting her sister in Chesaning, returned&#13;
home Friday of last week.&#13;
Most of the'wheat in this vicinity&#13;
has been cut, Much of it was mowed&#13;
and raked up, it not standing well&#13;
enough for the binder.&#13;
Those who contributed to the India&#13;
Relief Fund can see something of the&#13;
work their money is, or will be doing&#13;
in a short time-by reading the article&#13;
on page 5.&#13;
F. S. Neal of the florthville Record&#13;
received the nomination as representative&#13;
to the legislature from the third&#13;
district of Wayne Co. Bro. Neal is an&#13;
exceWent fellow and we wish we could&#13;
vote for him ourselves.&#13;
On Thursday next there will be a&#13;
day orsporfs at."Brighton. One of&#13;
the best events of the day will be a&#13;
game of ball between Brighton and&#13;
the Columbian Giants. Game called&#13;
at 3:30.&#13;
Brighton Tillage it having a&#13;
amount of oement iraXka put down&#13;
and flit citizens are agitating the&#13;
question of making it a misdemeanor&#13;
to spit upon the walk.&#13;
Howell now Jbas a new industry,&#13;
The oompany is composed of A. J.&#13;
Pnndle, E. A. Bowman and Frank B.&#13;
Schater. They manufacture and put&#13;
up the new gasoline light plants, and&#13;
expect to do a big business. The&#13;
members of the company are hustling&#13;
business men.&#13;
Mrs. Mary L. Armstrong, of Unadilla,&#13;
has commenced a big damage&#13;
suit for $10,000 against Albert tfeason,&#13;
of Pinckney, and his bondsmen, Floyd&#13;
and Frank- Season,- for- *h* alleged -&#13;
furnshing of liquor to Martin Armstrong,&#13;
who died from cold and exposure&#13;
February 24, 1900,- while returning&#13;
from Pinckney. Shields and&#13;
Shields appear for Mrs. Armstrong,&#13;
L. E. Howlett for the defendant. Such&#13;
suits are good for the lawyers whoelse&#13;
suffers or is'benefited.—Republican.&#13;
CAUCUS.&#13;
J&#13;
Card of Thanks.&#13;
Poultry Iteiiiii.&#13;
Pullets rarely get too fat to lay.&#13;
A meal of dry oats can be fed profitably&#13;
once a week.^&#13;
The best article to use for tb« dust&#13;
bath is road dust.&#13;
Liberal feeding means liberal profit;&#13;
neglect means a loss.&#13;
In nearly all cases the early hatcned&#13;
make the best breeders.&#13;
Food rich/fn nitrogen is always, required&#13;
by the laying hens.&#13;
Clean off the&#13;
Having sold the Hause farm, Fred&#13;
Hause will close up farming here and&#13;
will sell\ the personal property at&#13;
auction on\tbe farm 3 miles north of&#13;
Pinckney on\Monday, August 6. See&#13;
bills.&#13;
rnpi-r Ooli* for «' hiMrer&#13;
Little girls are fond of making paper&#13;
dolls. Here is.a brand new way to&#13;
manufacture them.&#13;
Take a sheet of cardboard and trace&#13;
) on it several figures from one model&#13;
from sonif fashion magizine.&#13;
On the figure that fa to be the doll&#13;
paste a head cut from the magazine,&#13;
leaving the #eclc free. :^&#13;
Draw «PO» the figure underclothing,&#13;
shoes audjltockings. painting thnm&#13;
with wftUff cojor. Hair, cheeks an 1&#13;
eyes sfrfWldUaJiO be tinted.&#13;
yard as well-as lue nouses.&#13;
Scaly legs may be cured by wetting&#13;
the legs with diluted kerosene.&#13;
Water for poultry-can bes^be kept&#13;
pure If put up in earthen crocks.&#13;
Px&gt;r mating, the pullets should be at&#13;
least a year younger than the cock.&#13;
A cockerel will always be true to&#13;
color as compared with an old cock.&#13;
A fowl that shows a gross defect&#13;
should never 'be used as a breeder.&#13;
To matte the best success in breed-1&#13;
ing we must know what we are breeding&#13;
for.&#13;
Ducks are voracious eaters and if&#13;
kept closely confined there is danger&#13;
of over-eating.&#13;
Breeding with a knowledge of what&#13;
you desire means to undertake the&#13;
work systematically.&#13;
Sell off the surplus cockerels and the&#13;
late hatched pullets as soon as they&#13;
are sufficiently matured.&#13;
An egg from a good layer will be&#13;
more likely to produce a good layer&#13;
than one from a poor layer.&#13;
When fowls are confined they need&#13;
meat occasionally; when they run at&#13;
large they get bugs and worms.&#13;
Now is a good time to hatch out&#13;
bantams; if hatched out parly they are&#13;
apt to grow too large. They are rather&#13;
more for ornament than use.&#13;
One reason why the hen that steals&#13;
her nest always hatches well is that&#13;
she is rarely too fat and her eggs contain&#13;
good vitality.&#13;
We desire through your columns to&#13;
thank all who so kindly assisted us in&#13;
our late bereavement in the loss of&#13;
our father, _ - . - -&#13;
Albert Jackson and family&#13;
Orla Jackson and family.&#13;
The Democratic electors of the&#13;
Township of Putnam will meet at&#13;
the Town Hall Saturday, July 21, at&#13;
8 o'clock p. m. for the purpose of electing&#13;
seven delegates to attend the&#13;
county cony_enlion held at Howell&#13;
July 23 and „ to transact any other&#13;
business that may come before the&#13;
caucus. By order of Commitee.&#13;
Business Locals.&#13;
NOTICE:.&#13;
Notice i s hereby given that sealed&#13;
bids will be received for che performance&#13;
of Marshall service by the month&#13;
for the remainder of the year endinar&#13;
on second monday in April 1900. All&#13;
bids to be in the hands of the clerk on&#13;
or before next regular meeeting. The&#13;
council reserves the right to reject&#13;
any or all bids.&#13;
Dated Aug. 2, 1900.&#13;
R. H. Teeple, clerk.&#13;
Important Notice.&#13;
Commencing Friday, July 20, we shall close our store each Friday&#13;
afternoon at 12:30 o'clock during the balance of July and for the entire month of&#13;
August. This we do to give ouFcIerkl a half holiday each v?e.ek during the hot&#13;
weather. . y.&#13;
L.. H. P I B K H .&#13;
We Shall Close&#13;
Friday Afternoon,&#13;
As announced at top of this advertisement, but we shall give&#13;
you such grand good trades for Friday Morning as to make yon think we're&#13;
worth knowing. Remember to do all your trading in the morning. If you&#13;
have any packages to leave you can: leave them with us in the morning and&#13;
call for them in the afternoon at Mrs. Ida Mook-Webster's store (between our&#13;
main store and our cloak store).&#13;
Savinjj Seed Corn.&#13;
Why not use pedigreed corn a*s well&#13;
as pedigreed stock? As soon as husks&#13;
turn white, the farmer should select&#13;
the largest ears from the largest stalks,&#13;
and those ears that are closest to the'&#13;
ground, and leave a small amount of&#13;
husk on eath ear; then take it to the&#13;
barn or some place of safety from rats,&#13;
mice or other vermin, and tie the&#13;
husks of two ears together, and hang&#13;
thpm across a wire high enough to be&#13;
our of thp way. By the time cold&#13;
weather arrives the corn will be sufficiently&#13;
dried to stand any freeze *e&#13;
ever have in this country. No cars&#13;
should be selected except those that&#13;
have small cobs and long grains. whlcn&gt;&#13;
extend out over the ends of the (Ob:&#13;
All ears of corn should taper gradually,&#13;
with straight rows. I don't like to&#13;
see swelled butts and small end ea^snrr&#13;
cOTn.—A. R. Peters. --&#13;
Subieribe 'or the DISPATCH&#13;
Men's Overall&#13;
Special.&#13;
Here is a trade on Men's Overalls that will interest&#13;
every man who wears them. J&#13;
Men's Good Quality Blue Denim Overalls wi'h bibs, good quality of&#13;
•cloth, not'heavy aod bungling, but strong, well made, good fitters; any size&#13;
you want, large and smalt waists, long or short l e j ? s , O Q ^ PAIR&#13;
This is a Real Bargain.&#13;
FRIDAY MORNING, JULY 20&#13;
Allover $1.00 and $1.25 Wbi|;e and&#13;
Colored Shirt Waists, 79c&#13;
Stors Closes 12:30 Friday. .&#13;
FRIDAY MORNING, JULY 20&#13;
Allover $1.00 and $1.25 Udiee'&#13;
Wrappers, 89c '&#13;
Store Closes 12:30 Friday.&#13;
FRIDAY MORNING, JULY 20&#13;
Allover $1.00, $1.25 and $1.35&#13;
Skirts tor&#13;
Wash&#13;
Store Closes 12:30 Friday.&#13;
FRIDAY MORNING, JULY 20&#13;
5,000 Valenciennes Lace&#13;
for&#13;
Store Closes 12:30 Friday.&#13;
L. J I F I E L D .&#13;
•WM*&#13;
'V'.i'vi'&#13;
rlr',&#13;
JaokeoD, Mioh.&#13;
v.&#13;
•-j* •&#13;
•* % v t ^</text>
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              <text>Use the Windows Snipping Tool to capture the area of the document you want to save. If you want multiple pages printed please see staff to print the pages you want. &lt;a href="https://howelllibrary.org/technology/#print" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View the library's printing information.&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch July 19, 1900</text>
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                <text>July 19, 1900 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</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. syin. PINOZNEY, LIVINGSTON CO., MICH., THURSDAY, JULY 26,1900. No. 3 0&#13;
Prices are right at&#13;
The&#13;
Surprise&#13;
Special Sale&#13;
Saturday, July 28.&#13;
Good Map of Michigan, worth $1, 50c&#13;
Pair Ladies'8c Hose 5c&#13;
Pair Men's 8c Hose 5c&#13;
Men's Cottonade pants worth 75c, 45c&#13;
L O C A L N E W S .&#13;
Good 15c Suspenders&#13;
Good 35c Suspenders&#13;
Brownie Overalls&#13;
Clothes Baskets from&#13;
Bushel Basket&#13;
Good Wash Boards&#13;
Small sized Fry Pan&#13;
2 Cockeyes&#13;
10c&#13;
25c&#13;
25c&#13;
25c to 50c&#13;
15c&#13;
15c and 25c&#13;
5c&#13;
5c&#13;
Bggs Taken&#13;
S a m e a s Cash,&#13;
H. W. B U U S , Prop.&#13;
E. C. Ort was in Storkbridge the&#13;
last of last week.&#13;
Archie Palmer of Unadilla called at&#13;
this office Tuesday.&#13;
Casimer Lyman of Jackson is visiting&#13;
relatives in this place.&#13;
Geo. Green and wife are visiting&#13;
relatives in BUlsdale county.&#13;
Miss Ethel Graham spent Sunday&#13;
with her uncle in Stock bridge.&#13;
Mrs. H. D. Grieve visited relatives&#13;
in Plainfield on Friday of last week.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Cbas. Simpson were&#13;
in Mt. Clemens the first oi the week.&#13;
The steam thresher is now going&#13;
the rounds trying to find something&#13;
to thresh.&#13;
Herman Reed of Unadilla, started&#13;
from here for Seattle Wash, on Saturday&#13;
last.&#13;
Cbas. Spencer is laid up with a&#13;
sprained ankle received from jumping&#13;
off a fence.&#13;
The adjourned term of circuit court&#13;
will commence Monday, July 30, with&#13;
judge Smith in the chair.&#13;
Miss Anna Dolan returned to Jackson&#13;
Saturday last after spending several&#13;
weeks with ber parents here.&#13;
Mrs. Etta Hopkins of near Grsgory&#13;
was thrown from a rake one day last&#13;
week and received quite severe bruises.&#13;
Miss Vera McGilvery of Jackson,&#13;
who has been visiting her uncle Root.&#13;
Erwin and family, returned home&#13;
Saturday last.&#13;
Mrs. A. C. Maxwell and Mrs. A. T.&#13;
Mann of Bay City and Mrs. L. D.&#13;
Brokaw are visiting with their sister&#13;
Mrs. C, V. Van Winkle this week.&#13;
Miss Fannie Clinton of Crystal, who&#13;
has been visiting her parents here for&#13;
several weeks, started for home Monday,&#13;
She will spend a couple of weeks&#13;
in Jackson.&#13;
TEEPLE &amp; CAP WELL&#13;
General Hardware,&#13;
Have as complete an assortment of heavy and shelf hardware&#13;
as can be found in the county, and 1900 finds us&#13;
more thoroughly equipped than ever before.&#13;
Builders Hardware a Specialty.&#13;
Doors and Common Sash always in stockv&#13;
Complete line of Buggies, Wagons and&#13;
Heating Stoves, K anges^ Wood Stoves&#13;
Wood and Coal.&#13;
Specials:&#13;
All Dress Ginghams, Dimities, Organdies, Piques and Lawns&#13;
This Week at Cost.&#13;
10c Garments, 2 for 15c&#13;
15c Garments, 2 for 21c&#13;
25c Garments, at 21c each&#13;
nW&#13;
21c each Garment&#13;
Men$s and Boys' Straw Hats:&#13;
25c Hat 20c, 50c Hat 39c, 75c Hat 59c, $1.00 Hat 82c&#13;
Robt. Erwin is on the sick list this&#13;
week.&#13;
Harry Goean was in Ann Arbor&#13;
over Sunday.&#13;
Those who burn coal are busy filling&#13;
up their bins this week.&#13;
E. M. Field of Whitmore Lake was&#13;
in town the first of the week.&#13;
Mi88 Mabel and Harold Brown of&#13;
New York are visiting relatives here.&#13;
Miss Louise Eastman of Holyoke,&#13;
Mass., is visiting Mr. andvMrs. V. G.&#13;
Dinkle.&#13;
Mrs. 0 . Taylor of Sonth Lyon spent&#13;
Sunday with her mother Mrs. Alice&#13;
Greer of this place.&#13;
Mrs. A. B. Green and daughter Jessie&#13;
spent Saturday and Sunday with&#13;
her daughter in Blissfield.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Ellis of Oak Grove&#13;
were visiting their son, H. W. Ellis&#13;
of the Surprise store, the first of the&#13;
week.&#13;
William Ferguson of Howell, has&#13;
purchased the meat market business&#13;
of Seymour &amp; Allbright at this place,&#13;
and took possesion la3t week, and will&#13;
continue the business at the present&#13;
location. He will move his family to&#13;
this village in the near future.—Fowlerville&#13;
Review.&#13;
100F excursion to Detroit under&#13;
the auspices of the Unadilla Lodge&#13;
No. 40 and 100F of Stockbridge,&#13;
Thursday Aug. 2. ,Fare for round&#13;
trip from Pinckney $1. Arrives in&#13;
Detroit at 10:30a. m. and leaves at&#13;
7:00 p.m.&#13;
The state teachers institute for Livingston&#13;
county will be held at Howell&#13;
August 6 to 15 inclusive. The work&#13;
is outlined in a 50 page pamphlet&#13;
which has been sent to all teachers.&#13;
Every teacher in the county should attend&#13;
this institute as it is one of the&#13;
best means of keeping up with the&#13;
times.&#13;
The DISPATCH acknowledges with&#13;
many thanks the receipt of a pamphlet&#13;
put out by the Southern Railroad&#13;
Company, aptly illustrated, showing&#13;
many points of interest in the south&#13;
half of the United States. It is an exquisite&#13;
work of the typbor'iaTfworlgy&#13;
S. Darfee and family spent Sunday&#13;
with relatives near Fowlerviile.&#13;
R. 0 . Carlson of Oak Grove was in&#13;
town Wednesday the gue$t of H. W.&#13;
Ellis.&#13;
This vicinity was visited Tuesday&#13;
and Tuesday night by a very heavy&#13;
rain, the ground being thoroughly&#13;
soaked. —&#13;
E. L. Thompson who has been in&#13;
Fowlerviile a few weeks assisting in&#13;
shipping the Royal Freezer, was home&#13;
this week.&#13;
There will be a box social at Mr. T.&#13;
Birkett's Tuesday evening July 31.&#13;
Each lady is requested to bring lunch&#13;
for two. All are very cordially invited.&#13;
We were shown this week a sample&#13;
of the genuine carpet bug and are&#13;
informed that tbsy are very numerous&#13;
in thi3 vicinity. The housewife wants&#13;
to be watching out for it takes but&#13;
little time to destroy a good carpet.&#13;
We will deliver Flour&#13;
direct to the peo-&#13;
. pleat&#13;
50 cents for a 25-pound sack ;&#13;
V..V . **&amp;&#13;
95 cents for a 5Qrpound sack&#13;
$3.80 for a barrel.&#13;
10 pounds Graham. 15 cents.&#13;
10 lbs. granulated meal lOcts&#13;
Seed Buckwheat.&#13;
•t, • V I&#13;
m&#13;
T e r m s , Cash.&#13;
R. H. BR WIN.&#13;
Specials For This Week:&#13;
15 per cent discount on all Men's S h o e s&#13;
15 per cent discount on all L a d i e s ' S h o e s&#13;
15 per cent discount on all B o y s ' S h o e s&#13;
10 per cent discount on all S u m m e r Underwear&#13;
10 per cent discount on all C o r s e t s .&#13;
•"V.#S;&#13;
Groceries:&#13;
Try our Ideal Mocha and Java Coffee*&#13;
1 lb. Package, t h e Best 25c Coffee i n t h e county&#13;
every p o u n d warranted t o please if n o t your&#13;
money back^&#13;
•f&#13;
oi preservation. Anyone comtemplating&#13;
a trip to the Sunny South would&#13;
do well to secure one of the pamphlets.&#13;
It is claimed that some farmers who&#13;
have been houbled with grasshoppers&#13;
eating their beans have been able to&#13;
check the work of the pest by spraying&#13;
a few rows along? the outside of the&#13;
rield with paris green and water. The&#13;
poison should be made somewhat&#13;
weaker than for potatoes. In attacking&#13;
a new field the hoppers usually&#13;
commence next a fence or grass field&#13;
and gradually work toward the enter.&#13;
The above method is said to work well&#13;
in stopping the damage to beans although&#13;
no dead hoppers are discovered.&#13;
Salmon&#13;
Peas&#13;
Corn&#13;
Beans&#13;
8c&#13;
8c&#13;
8c&#13;
8c&#13;
x&gt;.&#13;
M M t » Q » M t » » t M * l i * . . . . . i&#13;
OUR LADDER TO SUCCESS f&#13;
A PINCKNEY HUSTLER.&#13;
Saturday July 28,&#13;
9 Bars Silk Soap&#13;
2 lbs Rioe&#13;
12 Boxes Matches&#13;
Good Bed Salmon&#13;
1 lb 20o Baking Powder&#13;
Canned Corn&#13;
25c&#13;
7c&#13;
lie&#13;
10o&#13;
I n&#13;
7c&#13;
•T*,&#13;
'I&#13;
Special Prices on Shoes, July 38.&#13;
- ^ - F. G. 3ACKSON.&#13;
We clip the following from the&#13;
Marquette Daily Journal which shows&#13;
that there is hustle in a former Pinckney&#13;
boy:&#13;
**P. G. Teeple of the insurance firm&#13;
of Peter White &amp; Co., is back from&#13;
Milwaukee, where he attended the&#13;
annual meeting of agents of the&#13;
Northwestern Life Insurance company,&#13;
held Tuesday and Wednesday&#13;
which was an exceedingly enjoyable&#13;
affair Mr. Teeple took second rank&#13;
as &lt;t writer of insurance in the territory&#13;
covered by the jurisdiction of D.&#13;
E. Murphy, on total policies written&#13;
by him individaaTryttajrthg'' the yearV&#13;
the solicitor who took first having a&#13;
record of policies written by him amounting&#13;
to oyer $1,200,000 to his&#13;
credit As there are about sixty so*&#13;
licitors employed by the company in&#13;
Mr. Murphy's territory, the showing&#13;
indicates that Mr. Teeple hasn't let&#13;
much grafts grow under his feet durj&#13;
ing the past year.&#13;
•&#13;
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Progressiva Methods&#13;
Courtesy&#13;
Cle*ftfnft&gt;3s&#13;
Complefe Stock&#13;
Accurate Compound'g&#13;
Pure Drugs&#13;
Facilities&#13;
Experience&#13;
Knowledge&#13;
Skill&#13;
Study&#13;
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Your Patronage, when la need or Drugs,&#13;
Patent Medicines, etc., I* toileted.&#13;
Give your&#13;
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P o w d e r a ,&#13;
We have&#13;
Secured the&#13;
Agencyr ~&#13;
For them.&#13;
Prescriptions&#13;
Carefully&#13;
Compounded.&#13;
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H A V E A T O T A L ttMROLLMBNT&#13;
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. • • • • • — ^ — ^&#13;
The Weekly Crop Bulletin Saye Bain*&#13;
Interfered Considerably WItU Haylof—&#13;
Grand Jury Cases WUl go Over&#13;
to the September Term of Court&#13;
Our Public Schools.&#13;
The superintendent of public instruction&#13;
has prepared a summary of statistics&#13;
from the reports for the last school&#13;
year, which includes interesting und&#13;
important data, relative to the extent,&#13;
cost of maintenance, etc., of the public&#13;
schools of Michigan, as well as to the&#13;
number and wages of teachers, etc.&#13;
T h e more important of the statistics&#13;
urc as follows: Number of^o'vvhshTpsund&#13;
cities reporting, 1 «.'$(); number of&#13;
graded schoo,! districts,-Uy:j; number of&#13;
ungraded school districts, 0,46'.); number&#13;
of township unit districts, 115;&#13;
*chool census of graded districts, 410,-&#13;
109; school census of ungraded districts,&#13;
297,521; total number of pupils in census,&#13;
71.'»,090; enrollment in graded districts,&#13;
29:..052; v u roll men t in ungraded&#13;
districts, 204,7 23; total enrollment,&#13;
498,005; average duration of school in&#13;
months, H. 17; estim;ited number of pupils&#13;
altending seleet schools, 45.56S;&#13;
total number of teachers necessary to&#13;
supply all schools, 12,999; total number&#13;
of men teachers employed. 3.471; total&#13;
number of women teachers employed,&#13;
12,09;i; total number of teachers employed&#13;
in all schools, 15,501. The total&#13;
wages of all the teachers for the year&#13;
were $4,310,030.11»&#13;
• Crushed Under u Street Can •&#13;
f Mlaa Clara a Cttft,jrt^trolfrfrhifc&#13;
returning home m m dhoppiag- W thn&#13;
evening of t h e 21st, misjudged the&#13;
speed of ,*n eleptrtp car Arnd w a s run&#13;
i &gt; w n andla^tichtly killed Her chum,&#13;
l ^ ^ ^ ^ a / t f y s j a ^ . ^ r a g ^ i t h , .her&#13;
at the time of the accident. Both rode&#13;
wheels. Miss Kaufmann's explanation&#13;
of the terrible accident was that Miss&#13;
Craft was leading the way across the&#13;
car tracks, h u t becoming alarmed a t&#13;
the rapid approach of the car she (Miss&#13;
Kaufmano) turned around. The next&#13;
instant the ear fender struck her companion&#13;
and w h e n the ear was stopped&#13;
it was found that she was a frightfully&#13;
mangled corpse. Deceased w a s 35&#13;
years of age and had been a resident&#13;
of Detroit for the past 23-¾ years.&#13;
• — - - - — • - — • - - • • • &gt; ' " • — • • - • ' • • '&#13;
M I C H I G A N NEWS I T E M S .&#13;
Gram) Jnry Cun«e co Over.&#13;
Nothing more will be heiirtl of any&#13;
of the grand jury cases until the •September&#13;
term of eouit, .Judge Wiest having&#13;
on the 18th adjourned court until&#13;
Sept. 1. r.etween that time and the&#13;
fourth Monday of the month, when the&#13;
regular term will commence, the court&#13;
will look after matters left.over from&#13;
the present term. It has not yet been&#13;
decided which of the state cases will&#13;
be tried Itv.st, but there is no doubt&#13;
whatever that cither&lt;&lt; the cas«: against&#13;
Speaker Adams or that, against Land&#13;
Commissioner French will be tried at&#13;
tlic next term.&#13;
l' Rxtn« loterfercd.-&#13;
'The weekly crop bulletin, issued by&#13;
'the. Michigan weather bureau on the&#13;
17th, says that the mean daily temperature&#13;
for the past week was G. ?&gt; degrees&#13;
below normal, the average precipitation&#13;
i).\A abovi* normal, and the&#13;
sunshine an average of :vi pop cent of&#13;
the possible amount. Vrequent showers&#13;
have interfered considerably with&#13;
haying. The nights have been rool&#13;
and have somewhat retarded the growth&#13;
of corn. Otherwise Lhc weather conditions&#13;
have been very favorable to&#13;
crop growth.&#13;
•A Bail of F i r * F«ll * t 111« Rapids. &lt;&#13;
During a heavy rain and electrical&#13;
-storm at llig Haptds on the Kith a ball&#13;
of tire fell and two brothers, Hugo and&#13;
Chas. Mart/, aged 'j:i and 17 respectively,&#13;
under an umbrella JO feel, d i s - - - g r g r n , U t l N m i U U I ,,, M-ciion in the vi&#13;
tant, were felled to the sidewalk, lingo&#13;
was killed instantly; Charles was&#13;
knocked-insensible, but half an hour&#13;
later showed signs of life. lloth were&#13;
more or less bnrued. Main felt in torrents.&#13;
Stabbing Affray at Fort IVurnn.&#13;
A neighboring vow between two Port&#13;
Tluron families, Isaac Peifter and Noah&#13;
Miller, occurred on the night of the&#13;
17th. The row had raged more-or less&#13;
fiercely for the past two weeks, and&#13;
•culminated on the above date in a&#13;
stabbiug aUray. Mr. Miller is in the&#13;
hospital with a stash in his head which&#13;
may result fatally, a/id IVUVrt—w- io&#13;
jail.&#13;
' Dlfteaae in Michigan.&#13;
"Reports to the state board of health&#13;
show that rheumatism, diarrhea, tonsillitis,&#13;
neuralgia and bronchitis, in&#13;
order named caused most sickness in&#13;
Michigan, during the past week. Cere&#13;
bro-spinal meningitis was reported at&#13;
4 places, smallpox at6, whooping eongh&#13;
a t 16, diphtheria'at 2,\ typhoid lever&#13;
at 44. scarlet fever at 52, measles at i»o&#13;
and consumption at 1 OS.&#13;
rdcr May be ModHi«rl.&#13;
The recent order of the military authorities&#13;
that no member of the national&#13;
guard whose name was not orr&#13;
the rolls June M e a n draw pay from&#13;
the state while attending the state encampment&#13;
may be modi tied so as to admit&#13;
to cat»p sAkiieri* who have been attending&#13;
drills for several wctiks before&#13;
June 30.&#13;
** .mmwgP*&#13;
—Jlrlghton has laid 4,000 feet more of&#13;
cement walk.&#13;
The Norwegians at Spruce have just&#13;
dedicated a new church.&#13;
Sixty-four marriages were solemn*&#13;
ized at St. Joseph on the 22d.&#13;
•4Th« liillsdalo Screen Door Co. will&#13;
remove to Adrian. The iirra employs&#13;
50 men.&#13;
The basket, factory at Cadillac w a s&#13;
destroyed by fire on the 18th. Loss,&#13;
SI7,000; covered by insurance.&#13;
W. J. Raymond, the alleged embezzler&#13;
wanted at Port, Huron, w a s recently&#13;
arrested at Wei land, Ont.&#13;
Hudson h a s decided t o repeat i t s&#13;
street fair again this year, making the&#13;
5th annual fair, i t is to last five days.&#13;
The dog warden of Tckonsha collected&#13;
the entire dog tax without a&#13;
hitch and kept everybody good-natured.&#13;
—&#13;
Two deaths from drowning were reported&#13;
at Monroe on the 31st. In both&#13;
eases the victims were drowned while&#13;
in bathing.&#13;
During a thunder storm on the 14th,&#13;
lightning killed suvon line cows and a&#13;
registered bid I owned by Scott Waldo,&#13;
of Willianiston.&#13;
Rertha Cooper, of Kowlcr, pounded&#13;
upon a can of sulphur and potash to&#13;
get it open. It exploded and her hand,&#13;
was badly lacerated.&#13;
The thrashing season has commenced&#13;
in Tekonshaand vicinity and-wheat is&#13;
yielding from two to three bushels per&#13;
acre—poor ijuultty of wheat at that.&#13;
W. U iluiles. a prosperous merchant&#13;
of OrtonviHe, has a ttcard that measures&#13;
exactly seven feet in leugth aud&#13;
whcrf.be is standing drags on the floor.&#13;
The wheat crop around Flat llock is&#13;
almost a total failure and what little&#13;
has been cut is growing in the shock&#13;
on account of the excessive wet&#13;
weather.&#13;
Krnma, the pretty 5-year-old daughter&#13;
of Mr. and ,Mrs. Frit/. Brencck, of&#13;
Muskegon, died of hydrophobia on the&#13;
ISth. She was bitten by a small dog&#13;
last April.&#13;
The first rural mail delivery from&#13;
Alma started operations on the MiVli.&#13;
It entails a drive of 2d miles and covers&#13;
49 square miles, giving mail service to&#13;
729 people.&#13;
A severe electrical, wind and hail&#13;
*f**i~**m**#mF*m^***p&#13;
Marshall and Battle Creek youngs&#13;
t e w are persistent hunters. TBey&#13;
&lt;he*e tirmw* t8#0.02 out erf the county&#13;
treasury for sparrow heads, in spite o f&#13;
thtuiaot t h a i the appropriation, w a s&#13;
but taoa v..u.&#13;
The taxpayers of Tekonsha will pay&#13;
the largest t a x in t h e history of the&#13;
village this year, by nearly 50 per cent.&#13;
The concll has quite extensive improvements&#13;
i n mind in the line of drainage&#13;
and grading.&#13;
During a terrific electrical storm&#13;
which swept over Sheridan on the 17th&#13;
four barns were struck by lightning&#13;
and burned. A house in the village&#13;
was struck h y a bolt of lightning hut&#13;
was not badly damaged.&#13;
The Blue Ribbon races at Detroit&#13;
during the week ending July 21, drew&#13;
out the largest crowd in the history of&#13;
the association. The weather was fair,&#13;
with the exception of one day, and the&#13;
races were all on the high order.&#13;
Fire broke out at Weidman in J. S.&#13;
Weidman's lumber yard on t h e 15th&#13;
and raged for six hours, burning over&#13;
5,000,000 feet of lumber. A heavy&#13;
downfall of rain saved the mills. The&#13;
loss will reach $80,000, with insurance&#13;
for half.&#13;
The big power dam belonging to the&#13;
Kalamazoo Light &amp; Power Co., four&#13;
miles south of Allegan, is in danger of&#13;
going out, the constant rains having&#13;
slowly undermined tho structure&#13;
Workmen are strengthening it as fast&#13;
as possible.&#13;
The Masons of Athens are planning&#13;
to build a new hall for their lodge,&#13;
which they propose to make a n ornament&#13;
to the village. It is to front 46&#13;
feet on Main street aud have a depth&#13;
of SO feet, and will be built of common&#13;
field stone.&#13;
Forty-three of the 112 district&#13;
schools in Newaygo county have school&#13;
libraries, costing from 83.25 to $20,&#13;
and representing a total of 8500. These&#13;
additions to the equipment of t h e&#13;
school have been made during the&#13;
school j'ear just closed.&#13;
Additional rural free delivery service&#13;
will be established at Caro, Tuscola&#13;
county,-ott- A+tg^—t,—The length of&#13;
the rout** will b* 20miles; area covered,&#13;
45 square miles; population served,&#13;
810; oumber of bouses on the route.&#13;
180; carrier, .las. Pattison.&#13;
Chas. Ititliughnrst has 10 acres of&#13;
muskmel»&gt;ns growing on his farm near&#13;
Albion. If frost does not come too&#13;
early he expects to market between&#13;
1,000 and 3,000 bushels. How he .pioposes&#13;
to keep the small hoys away&#13;
from them he has not disclosed.&#13;
Colojna was visited by a three-hours'&#13;
rainfall on the l?th which left tho&#13;
highways and hillside throughout a&#13;
wide extent of country in a bad condition;&#13;
ravines and gullies to the depth&#13;
of five feet being cut out. Much damage&#13;
was done to crops and orchards.&#13;
At a special election held a t Pinckney&#13;
on the UHh, the question of bonding&#13;
the town for lire protection&#13;
was lost by a large vote The business&#13;
men will probably form a company and&#13;
establish a water works system, as the&#13;
town is entirely without lire protection.&#13;
.los. Mitchell, a yotmg cigar maker&#13;
from Kingston'. Ont., was shot aud in-&#13;
£fBE4HWBKL.LABr 4&#13;
i 'ICL&#13;
. Severe Electrical Storm at Hatlle Creek*&#13;
•iBattle Creek was visited by a severe&#13;
thunder storm on the 20th, when two,&#13;
-storms, one from t h e west aud one&#13;
from the east, came together. The&#13;
. streets were .covered with water from&#13;
• curb t o , curb. Telegraph, telephone&#13;
and trees were, leveled tp the ground&#13;
and considerable other damage was&#13;
• done. ' _ y' . .&#13;
Er^aujfrfri'alfr*. df Mt. Clemens, who&#13;
-c^Mpgflflttttftinonth ago in a fit of&#13;
•&gt; WeYSHeTa ^ ^ , 1 ' J T ™ " * * 1&#13;
•'...*The jrtpttlihean convention for t h e&#13;
12th sill jsjin tonal district has been&#13;
&lt;caW#4*to-ileet4U; Calumet on July 20.&#13;
cinity of Katon Uapids on the 20th. doing&#13;
considerable damage tt? coin and&#13;
other crops.&#13;
Tho Michigan Telephone company&#13;
has begun the construction of its longdistance&#13;
liue.s between Saginaw and&#13;
Ludington, following the IVre Marquette&#13;
right of way.&#13;
At Powagiae, right in the heart of a&#13;
beautiful fanning country, dealers iu&#13;
oleomargarine paid 8144 for licenses to&#13;
do business this monl h. The six months'&#13;
bill amounts to 8715.&#13;
A Detroit, man has secured optious&#13;
through Flat UocU for the right, of way&#13;
for the new Toledo &amp; Detroit, electric&#13;
road. The route will probably be&#13;
along the old plank road.&#13;
Detroit has established means whereby&#13;
poor sick children anil their mothers&#13;
can enjoy free rules on the water,&#13;
where such a recreation is deemed advisable&#13;
by the attending physician.&#13;
Lightning struck the house of F. W.&#13;
Bradley at Mancelona on the 18th,&#13;
tearing the shoes from the feet of Mrs.&#13;
Dradley and burning one of her feet&#13;
badly, but not injuring her otherwise.&#13;
Special census agents ltfCve begun&#13;
woih in Lansing. Charlotte and Luton&#13;
Hapids, securing iigures in regard to&#13;
manufacturing. The special agents in&#13;
PonUac ami Flint have completed their&#13;
work.&#13;
Arthur Taylor, a colored pugilist of&#13;
Marshall, on the 20th shot his sweetheat&#13;
t..Mrs. Lillie Green, nnd then put&#13;
two bullets An hJM»\vn brain.. She will&#13;
recover but it~~is feared his wounds will&#13;
prove fataL "&#13;
The Beaufort iron mine in Baraga&#13;
county will be reopened on a large&#13;
scale by Oglebayr Norton &amp; Co., of&#13;
Cleveland. I t is. the most wealthy&#13;
mine in Marquette county und has&#13;
been idle 10 years.1&#13;
Gov. r'mgree has pardoned John Caslin.&#13;
sent from Lake City, June 11, 1900.&#13;
to.the.Detroit house of conection for&#13;
60 days-for being di'Unk and disorderly.&#13;
His father is dying&#13;
~*~SnCak thieves entered the home of&#13;
ex-Supervisors Cod L. Tuomcy, a short&#13;
distance east o f Ann Arbor o n the 17th,&#13;
and secured about $500 worth of&#13;
plunder—mostly diamonds.&#13;
stAiii.ly killed on the 21st by Policeman&#13;
Christopher Eck. Mitchell was intoxicated&#13;
and resisted arrest. LYU claims&#13;
that in discharging his revolver to call&#13;
assistance, Mitchell got within range&#13;
aud was accidentally killed.&#13;
The speed and force of a bird when&#13;
flying were forcibly shown on a Muskegon&#13;
county farm recently, when the&#13;
farmer observed a quail flying through&#13;
the air strike i* wire fence ami fall to&#13;
the ground. He weut over to the spot&#13;
and found that the bird's head had&#13;
been severed by its sudden collision&#13;
with the wires as smoothly as if done&#13;
with a sharp knife.&#13;
Port Huron has a bicycle ordinance&#13;
which imposes a license fee of 81 on&#13;
riders, upon payment of which permission&#13;
is granted to ride under certain&#13;
restrictions on nearly all the sidewalks&#13;
in thecity along uupaved streets.&#13;
The council has now ordered that all&#13;
moneys received from^bicycle licenses&#13;
shall be placed in a special fund, to be&#13;
used exclusively for the construction&#13;
of side paths along such streets as the&#13;
council may determine.&#13;
BRIEF NEWS PARAGRAPHS.&#13;
The gold Democrats will decide upon&#13;
placing a third ticket in the licld at&#13;
Indianapolis, July 25.&#13;
According to recent dispatches from&#13;
the famine districts of India a more&#13;
cheerful outlook is in sight.&#13;
For the fiscal year ending June 30&#13;
last, there were 26,540 patents granted,&#13;
including re-issues aud designs.&#13;
Methodists have 142 American mis&#13;
siouarles in China, Presbyterians, 309,&#13;
and the American board of commissioners'for&#13;
foreign missions, 110.&#13;
The strike at Kotterdam i s extending&#13;
and oyer 12,000 men are now involved.&#13;
There arc 170 vessels iu t h e&#13;
Mass river awaiting discharge.&#13;
Gen. Shafter on the 18th notified&#13;
Copt. Humphreys of battery D, 3d artillery&#13;
that his battery has been selected&#13;
for immediate service in Chiua&#13;
or tlie Philippines. -••- •&#13;
. Tho excessive heat caused the death&#13;
of six persons in Philadelphia and t w o&#13;
in Camdpn, N. J., pu t h e 18th. Over&#13;
40 leases, of prostration were treated af&#13;
the hospitals on the above date.&#13;
B£ WHiftvlSSUB I N&#13;
T U C K * T H I S F A L U&#13;
« i j&#13;
[cial Militairjt, W'oohen-&#13;
•/Iffeed Authentic&#13;
number of allied&#13;
now in criina is 43,000. Of these,&#13;
.. tw'ever, 20,000 *nSf1**s are located in&#13;
froeeediut* Have, »een Commenced to ffciftO Tup J p«itfn»ttfe&lt;jSJpd Kwanff Tung&#13;
Revoke the Charter of the Street. 1 p r b v i n c e W 1 ,&lt;W&gt; tfermaus with Id&#13;
. Hallway ComnapfaJa St. Louie—&#13;
% y Other Uventi of the Week.&#13;
/ m . -&#13;
^&#13;
Chicago, Viewed*'hr V w i a * Store*&#13;
HaU, heat and hurricane struck various&#13;
portions of Chicago on July&#13;
15th, and gave the city one of t h e&#13;
most fantastic days from a meteorological&#13;
point of view that t h e k»al&gt;&#13;
weather bureau has ever en^otarterecUThere&#13;
were many heat prostrations&#13;
during the day. hut a t midnight only&#13;
one death had been reported—'Paul&#13;
Suckan. Of those prostrated, five are&#13;
in a serious condition. In t h e evening&#13;
the h o t wind which had been blowing&#13;
from tho west all day increased in violence.&#13;
It tore down signs, destroyed&#13;
shrubbery and shade trees, made sport&#13;
with porch furnishings and played&#13;
havoc with buildings under course of&#13;
erection. In Lincoln park many of the&#13;
small boats were driven ashore before&#13;
the blast and their occupants compelled&#13;
to wade to the land. None of t h e boats&#13;
capsized, although there were many&#13;
narrow escapes.&#13;
Tien Tain Caioallty Report Confirmed.&#13;
The nayy department on the 16th received&#13;
official confirmation from Admiral&#13;
Remey-of the reverse of the allied&#13;
forces at Tien Tsin on the morning&#13;
of the 13th. The dispatch w a s&#13;
dated Che Foo, July 16, and says: Reportedthat&#13;
allied forces attacked native&#13;
city morning 13th; Russians right&#13;
with 9th infantry and marines on the&#13;
left. Losses allied forces large—Russians,&#13;
100, including artillery colonel;&#13;
Americans, over 30; British over 40;&#13;
Japan, 58; including a colonel; French.&#13;
25. Col. Liscum, 9th infantry, killed;&#13;
also Capt. Davis, Marine Corps. Capt.&#13;
Lcinly, Liouts. liutler and Leonard&#13;
field guns, 12 heavy guns and o maclrtne&#13;
tfuua, a t 1 t r « € h o n . 'Now"-on the&#13;
JTAX.ttm UMPWW. sFvWSft *Wi England&#13;
there are ttypifc, lA\°9Q nBen* A r "&#13;
rangements have been made for t h e&#13;
departure of 57,000 with 144 guna, a n d&#13;
altogether there will be, from present&#13;
arrangements, In China by September&#13;
16,000 Oermans, 13,000 English, 66,00^&#13;
French, 50,000 Russian*, 31,000 Japanese,&#13;
7,000 Americans, 2,000 Italians and&#13;
TWlfustrJahs, together wiin -all" guns&#13;
and 36 machine guns, Geif. Von Hoguslawsky,&#13;
a high military authority,&#13;
said it w a s quite possible that thisforce&#13;
of 115,000 men would prove insuf"&#13;
ftcient to brjng China down.&#13;
A Chinese merchant who-has just arrived&#13;
from Pekln, gives horrible details&#13;
of the massacre. He says he saw&#13;
European women hauled into the&#13;
streets by shrieking Tioxers, who stripped&#13;
them and hacked them to pieces.&#13;
Their dissevered limbs were tossed to&#13;
the crowd and carried off, with howls&#13;
of triumph. Some were already dead,&#13;
having been shot by foreign civilians.&#13;
He says he saw Chinese soldiers carrying&#13;
the bodies of white children aloft&#13;
on their spears, while their companions&#13;
shot at the bodies He gives other details&#13;
too horrible to be particularized.&#13;
It seems that the Boxers leaders had&#13;
organized a plan including the offering&#13;
of rewards and rich loot for the annihilation&#13;
of Europeans throughout&#13;
China asd that Prince Tuan's generalshave&#13;
been emphasizing the opportunity&#13;
the soldiers have of seizing the bodiesof&#13;
whito women.&#13;
President Mclvinley h a s received&#13;
what purports to be a direct appeal&#13;
from the Chinese imperial government&#13;
to use his good ofiices to extricate that&#13;
government from the difficult and&#13;
dangerous position in which it h a s&#13;
wounded. At 7 in the evening allied hecn placed as a result of the Boxer&#13;
attack on native c i t y w a s repulsed with uprising and the ensuing hostile attig&#13;
re at, loss. Returns y e t incomplete;, tude of the great powers. Although&#13;
details not yet confirmed. the exact text of the appeal made by&#13;
the emperor of China to France, as outlined&#13;
iu the cable dispatches of the&#13;
21st, has- not been made known at&#13;
Washing-ton, it is believed that the&#13;
address to the President is similar in&#13;
terms Uv that communication. In&#13;
our case the communication was made&#13;
through. Minister Wu to the state department.&#13;
'1'hus far a final answer&#13;
has not been returned.&#13;
"If the ne-ws of a t'hinese invasion of&#13;
Siberia proves true it will, of course,&#13;
immensely complicate, the situation&#13;
from the international point of view.&#13;
As stated' in the Associated Press St. .&#13;
Petors-burg dispatch of July in. the&#13;
Chinese bad already peremptorily ordered&#13;
all Uussians to quit Manchuria,&#13;
but uo one imagined they would be&#13;
audacious enough to break out of their&#13;
Own country ami attack Russian territory.&#13;
Such an attack, if it has been&#13;
made, of course, constitutes in itself a&#13;
declaration of war, rgnoWing formal&#13;
notification needless.&#13;
ToaUi &gt;m occasionc(l_bj&#13;
the extremely serious import of news&#13;
showing the daily developing strength&#13;
of the anti-foreign movement iu the&#13;
south of China comes a report from&#13;
Shanghai on the 2oth that 0O missionaries-&#13;
and 100 native converts have been&#13;
massacred by "Boxers" at Tai Yuan.&#13;
Tai Yuan, is a fortified and populous&#13;
city in'tlie province of Shan See on the&#13;
Fuen Ho, an affluent of the Hoaug [io,&#13;
y &lt;ioehet Law ttie IMOC,&#13;
John W. Yerkes, of Danville, w a s&#13;
nominated for governor by the Republican&#13;
convention held in Louisville on&#13;
the 17th. A platform was adopted&#13;
declaring the issue of the election&#13;
to be the Goebel election |uw.&#13;
The speakers very unsparingly&#13;
denounced the pic-cut Democratic&#13;
state administration, aud the Democratic&#13;
legislature, thus indicating a&#13;
purpose to welcome into the Republican&#13;
party all Democrats who are opposed&#13;
to the (Joe be I election law.&#13;
There was no nomination to be made&#13;
by this convention except for governor&#13;
to fill a vacancy*&#13;
The St. I.onlg .Street Car Situation.&#13;
Atty.-Cen. Crow on the 17th filed in&#13;
the supreme court quo warranto proceedings&#13;
against the St. l/ouis Transit&#13;
Co.. the United Railways Co. and the&#13;
National Railway Co.. asking that&#13;
their charters be revohcoL—on the&#13;
ground that tiiey have not conformed&#13;
to their charters and that a street railway&#13;
monopoly in St. Louis has been&#13;
created, The petition alleges further&#13;
that the companies have violated the&#13;
state law iu capitalizing for more than&#13;
is allowed under the state law. The&#13;
suit is against all the companies embraced&#13;
iu the St. Louis Transit Co.'s&#13;
system.&#13;
Cholerw nod f a m i n e I D India.&#13;
The governor of Bombay telegraphs&#13;
to the secretary of state for India that&#13;
there were 9,928 cases of cholera in the&#13;
famine districts during the week ending&#13;
July 7, of which 6,4,74 were fatal,&#13;
and that in the native states there&#13;
were 9,520 cases, of which 5,802 were&#13;
fatal. The total number of deaths on&#13;
the relief works was 5,780, which was&#13;
3.9 per 1,000. There ha* been a good&#13;
rainfall in Snrat, Khandcish aud the&#13;
western part of the Dccoan. and rain&#13;
has begun on parts of northern (lujerat,&#13;
where the number, demanding&#13;
relief continue to increase.&#13;
:S&gt; "•&#13;
Americana Mobbed&lt; In .lupan.&#13;
Oriental advices by the steamer Empress&#13;
of India say that the American*&#13;
mission at Nagaoya ha.s been attacked&#13;
by a Japanese mob and the missionaries&#13;
so severely beaten that they were&#13;
left for dead, although they subsequently&#13;
recovered. The prime cause&#13;
of the trouble was the interference of&#13;
the missionaries in the trafficking in&#13;
young girls, who it is said, have Wen&#13;
openly &gt;old. A mob surrounded the&#13;
mission station and would have destroyed&#13;
all the buildings but for the&#13;
somewhat tardy arrival of t h e uattvc&#13;
police.&#13;
™ - • I I ^ H &gt; « M i l — P&#13;
Friends rear for Their 8*&lt;et*.&#13;
A special from Austin, Test., dated&#13;
July 18, says: Three li und rod families&#13;
from Austin, Sail Antonio, Fort Worth,&#13;
Houston and other towns of the stale&#13;
w-vo camping along tile UppVr courses&#13;
of the Llano, Guadaloupe, Nueces and&#13;
Colorado rivers, when tho series of&#13;
water spout* ocenrrew i« that region&#13;
t w o day*«ag&lt;x iktt f e w of•» these- 4&gt;ttf-»&#13;
tog parties have been heard from since&#13;
the ternUle rioodfc, ami friends o ( the&#13;
misving, oue» arc aiairued foe tUvlv&#13;
safety,&#13;
l&#13;
t&#13;
250 miles-southwest of IVkin.&#13;
(J'apt. Zalinski, iu charge of the quartermaster's&#13;
storesatChickainauga park,&#13;
Tcnu., has received urgent orders from&#13;
the war depart mo lit to prepare for&#13;
shipment, presumably to China, a large&#13;
quantity of quartermaster1* stoics anil&#13;
ambuLtnccs, which have been stored at&#13;
Chickaiieiauga since the war with Spain.&#13;
Tv«o train loads will leaver. under rush&#13;
orders-for the Pacific coast.&#13;
It is semi-olVicially announced that&#13;
Raron, von Bnelow, the imperial mini-&#13;
slev of foreign affairs, has notified the&#13;
Chiuese legation at Berlin that until&#13;
further notice it cannot be allowed to&#13;
send telegrams in cipher or secret language,&#13;
am| that telegrams in plain language&#13;
must, be submitted for the approval&#13;
of tin? secretary of state before&#13;
they can be despatched.&#13;
An official telegram from Shanghai,&#13;
.lated July IS, Alates that, according to&#13;
the governor of Shan-Tung, the foreign&#13;
ministers aud their families at Pekiiu&#13;
are safe nnd sound\ but. that the dagger&#13;
is still very great. The viceroy,&#13;
according to this^despatch, informed?&#13;
the Consular corps that he bad telegraphed&#13;
to Pekin ucginVthc protection&#13;
of the foreign, legatirtnsA i- ?&#13;
The quartermaster's. d\partmcut at&#13;
Washington has nuuie a requisition for&#13;
something over SU«©W fot\ap para pis.&#13;
to&gt;upply ,the troops, of .the Chinese expedition&#13;
pure drinking w a t c r A ' f h e department&#13;
already has placed orders for&#13;
sterilisers and ^is^Hing plants \vhieU&#13;
""will farniahifr aggregate of 32,500.gal*&#13;
lohs Af pure water a day.&#13;
Li Hung Chang and his suite arri&#13;
kht Hon£ K c ^ btf'thY 17th and landeN&#13;
the following . morniixg. Li Hung'&#13;
Chang slated flint h e had received dell&#13;
nite news that the ministers and for*&#13;
eigne** at JrVUifl. with t h e exception&#13;
of Baron von Kettleler? Ihe'Uercnau&#13;
minister, were safe July a,&#13;
vHl&#13;
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Romance&#13;
Alan Adair*»» »0&#13;
"Do you mind, my dearest?"&#13;
"Yes; X wish I bad been the first,&#13;
&lt;Alaa.*» &lt;&#13;
The two people who were speaking&#13;
. wore sitting together on a boulder by&#13;
Use seashore of one of our prettiest&#13;
watering places. It. was early October,&#13;
•and although it had been a late season,&#13;
&lt;yet there was already a touch of cold- j&#13;
Jness in the air, notwithstanding the&#13;
'brilliant sunshine. The sea was as blue i&#13;
«8 the sky, tossing and little die-&#13;
Curbed by the wind, yet only enough&#13;
to give it color and motion. The little&#13;
town looked white and'clean, smiling&#13;
in the autumn sunshine. A thoroughly&#13;
conventional English scene,&#13;
just as the girl herself was a thoroughly&#13;
conventional English girl. Her dark&#13;
blue eyes were brown and of a&gt; soft&#13;
texture; her face a perfect oval, with a&#13;
little square chin, into which ?there&#13;
had been pressed, as by some loving&#13;
finger, the prettiest dimple -in the 1^-,^-,.1,,,,,,..&#13;
world! A tall, slight figure, that g*veHf!^°*?h f u U y .&#13;
promose of a fuller, ampler womanhood;&#13;
a clear white Bklti, flushed rosy;&#13;
and lashes and eyebrow* many shades&#13;
darker than her hair completed a&#13;
whole that was very captivating. She&#13;
was dressedT too, conventionally, although&#13;
the blue serge £rees and Jacket&#13;
fitted her as only a tailor-made gown&#13;
can fit. A little sailor ftat was perched&#13;
upon her head in Just'the:most effective&#13;
manner possible.&#13;
But at this minute 'the dark blue&#13;
eyes looked troubled, the pretty hands&#13;
were clasped round "her knees, and she&#13;
was looking seawards arid away from&#13;
the man by hersdoe. He, too, looked&#13;
troubled, "it hart cost Alan Mackenzie&#13;
a good deal t6 record the events of hi3&#13;
life, and to speak of the young wife he&#13;
had lost faux years ago. He had wanted&#13;
the past to be past; and although&#13;
- Veronica's memory was dear and sweet&#13;
to him, and the girl herself had been&#13;
loving and tender, :yet it seemed to&#13;
him hard to bring up the dead past.&#13;
There was such ;a chasm between that&#13;
life and this, such a difference between&#13;
the dark-eyed, half-Spanish girl&#13;
he had wooed under the brilliant South&#13;
American skies and this girl whom he&#13;
was wooing beside the tumbling English&#13;
sea, that rt often seemed to Alan&#13;
Mackenzie that he must be an entirely&#13;
different person.&#13;
He leaned forward and looked at&#13;
her. She had her face turned towards&#13;
the sea, so that he could Just see the&#13;
delicate profile outlined against the&#13;
blue sky, aould juGt fsee the pink ear&#13;
nestling against the colls of her hair.&#13;
It was not for her beauty alone that he&#13;
loved Joyce Grenville. He felt that&#13;
she was his equal in most, bis superior&#13;
in some, things. Beaand she together,&#13;
he thought, could live-the perfectYnar-&#13;
Tlett—ttfe ^ nri iyrrw -tiwrfr—wffB~~fTT^&#13;
shadow of poor Veronica to come and&#13;
throw a gloom over their wooing. Veronica,&#13;
whom he had never loved like&#13;
this girl; Veronica, Ecr whom.he had&#13;
had the tendeneat protective pity, but&#13;
that was a i l&#13;
And now he looked at JJoyce, and&#13;
felt to the full that iff he lost her&#13;
he lost everything IShat .made life&#13;
worth ^ving; that life without Joyce&#13;
would be incomplete, ;and ;that all&#13;
his success in life—and he was&#13;
by no means disposed :to undervalue&#13;
that—would mean .nothing to him&#13;
without Joyce. She was so ^desirable,&#13;
was Joyce, with her highrbred, British&#13;
air, and with all the qualities.that&#13;
he knew her to possess, .an;d with that&#13;
fact staring him full iv- the .face that&#13;
he loved her, and her Sllone.&#13;
His voice trembled as he said: "Do&#13;
you mind so much, Joyce, :that [it-will&#13;
be an insuperable bar? Do you mean&#13;
that you cannot say 'Yes' to me?"&#13;
She turned round and faced him, and&#13;
he could flee the trouble ±h '.her ceyes&#13;
r' „ and the twitching of her lips. "No,"&#13;
&gt; ^ she said, in a low voice, "J don't mean&#13;
that; I cannot give you up„ Alan. You&#13;
have made me love you; I cannot&#13;
change my love in a day. Hut it ihas&#13;
cast a shadow over me. I cannot rejoice&#13;
over my love for you as I did&#13;
now I know this: That life cannot&#13;
give the unalloyed happines that 1&#13;
thought possible half an hour ago."&#13;
"Because you are not the first,&#13;
Joyce? In one sense you are tfcesVst&#13;
I have told it you all Quite truthfully&#13;
—how first I felt nothing, but pity for&#13;
her, and then gradually I wanted to&#13;
chield her from the hardships of life,&#13;
and there was no other way. I mar*&#13;
Tkd her/' *~&#13;
"And she—did she not love you?"&#13;
Alan did not hesitate, nor did he&#13;
prevaricate. A lees truthful man than&#13;
be might have made light of Veronica's&#13;
devotion, but he could n o t The&#13;
dead girl's passionate eyes, fixed upon&#13;
him with an,r expsesion of undying&#13;
love in them,' rose up , before him.&#13;
"She,"he said, in a low voice^'ahe&#13;
loved me more than her life."&#13;
Joyce, gave a little exclamation, It&#13;
was toot altogether pafn, but as if she&#13;
had said that she; had known it well.&#13;
Of course she had loved him! What&#13;
woman would not have loved Alan&#13;
Mackenzie?&#13;
He said nothing, but she could see&#13;
his lips quivering. That troubled her.&#13;
She felt that be would say no more,&#13;
hut that the first words must come&#13;
from her. He had stated his case; he ]&#13;
had pleaded with her. It was for her&#13;
to say MYes" or "No." Only ho had&#13;
told her .the whole^ truth. Some men&#13;
would have said less; but then she&#13;
loved him for that very truthfulness,&#13;
which would hide nothing from her.&#13;
"I wish you had not told me," she&#13;
said. For a moment she thought that&#13;
this really was so, and that she would&#13;
rather not have knpwn; it was only&#13;
momentary, however.&#13;
"Would you rather not h a W&#13;
known?" he said, and looked at her&#13;
"Joyce, I hate having&#13;
to give you this pain; but I have always&#13;
thought that the very essence of&#13;
married happiness lay in, the fact that&#13;
husband and wife had no secrets.from&#13;
each other."&#13;
"Did you tell her "everything?"&#13;
asked Joyce, woman-like.&#13;
"No, dearest God forbid that I&#13;
should wish to deprecate the girl who&#13;
loved me so well; but she was not&#13;
your equal. She was simply a pure,&#13;
sweet, loving woman; but .she would&#13;
not ha/ve understood. She had pretty&#13;
ways of making a house homelike and&#13;
charming; but she had but very little&#13;
education. I eould not have told her&#13;
everything. Joyce, you know all about&#13;
our brief married life .now. I don't&#13;
[ believe that you—I don't believe that&#13;
you would be jealous of the dead woman.'&#13;
Now tell me .straight out if you&#13;
will make me happy. I don't think&#13;
you know or can guess what you are&#13;
to me. How my whole life and 3011I&#13;
are bound up in you, how empty my&#13;
life would be without you. I think it'&#13;
you understood that you would forget&#13;
all about the story I have told you,&#13;
and give yourself to me, to hold and&#13;
to keep as the dearest thing in the&#13;
world."&#13;
The tears were standing in his eyes,&#13;
he was so much in earnest. It seemed&#13;
to him as if the making ;or the marring&#13;
of his life was in this slender&#13;
girl's hands; and she was moved, too.&#13;
"Of course I mind, dearest," she said.&#13;
"If I did not miad so .much I should&#13;
not lo-v^e you so much. Just think&#13;
how would you like it if some other&#13;
man had had my .first kiss, my first&#13;
words of love!"&#13;
"I should not like it .at all; I should&#13;
hate it, Joyce," 2u» said, frankly. "I-!&#13;
knewL^Qu would. I shQiild-have-aakert&#13;
father as ha had told i t to Joyos, and&#13;
alter that he faH he had dote all that&#13;
would ha asked of him. H » revelled&#13;
in the thought of Joyce'n l o m and&#13;
poor Veronica might never have -agisted&#13;
for him at all. There was noshing&#13;
but talk of preparations for tha&#13;
wedding and settlements, nothing but&#13;
congratulation* and envyings of his&#13;
luck, nothing in all this to remind fate&#13;
of the simple preparation!. tor the&#13;
civil marriage that had bean the only&#13;
one possible in Rio. Joyce had begged&#13;
for a six months' engagement, Alan&#13;
had insisted on threerand as there&#13;
wan really nothing to wait for he had&#13;
his way.&#13;
He had known Joyce for more than&#13;
three years, and had met her at the&#13;
house of a mutual friend, had been&#13;
attracted to her from the first; so that&#13;
it seemed as if they had actually been&#13;
engaged much longer than was the&#13;
case. He was still in the firm of&#13;
Dempster; only now he was a partner&#13;
instead of an employe. He had been&#13;
called to the bar, but did not practice&#13;
regularly, seeing that he did not have&#13;
much time. The three months passed&#13;
'very quickly; there was so much to&#13;
do, so much to settle. It was a very&#13;
happy time, but one evening Alan gat&#13;
rather a nasty shock. He had been&#13;
seeing Joyce, and they had spent the&#13;
usual happy time together. He was&#13;
immersed in thoughU and dreams of&#13;
her, and was not looking very much&#13;
where he was going. Turning a corner&#13;
sharply he ran up against a man&#13;
who seemed a little unsteady in his&#13;
gait.&#13;
"I beg your pardon!" Alan said.&#13;
The man uttered an imprecation. At&#13;
the first sound of his voice Alan&#13;
thought that it was familiar to him.&#13;
He gave a start. "Hutchinson!" he&#13;
cried. The man looked up. A gleam&#13;
of recognition lit up his drink-sodden&#13;
eye3, and with the recognition there&#13;
came, too, a gleam of hatred.&#13;
"It's you!" he cried, and he swore&#13;
again.&#13;
"Yes," said Alan, "and I am sorry&#13;
to see you like this. Can I do anything&#13;
for you, Hutchinson?"&#13;
"Do anything for me? You? I'll&#13;
trip you yet!" cried the ,.man, his&#13;
hatred flashing like a knife. "Do you&#13;
think I have, forgotten how you got&#13;
me turned out, how you ruined me?&#13;
No! And I will be even with you yet&#13;
if I hang for it! And there's that girl&#13;
of mine, too! I always thought that&#13;
you had a hand in her disappearance!&#13;
I will be even with you yet, my fine&#13;
young man!"&#13;
"Well," said Alan, coolly, "I would&#13;
have helped you if you would have let&#13;
me; not that I regard your threats. It&#13;
was your own dishonesty and nothing&#13;
else that was your ruin. And as for&#13;
the girl, you are right there. I married&#13;
her, and she was drowned; but&#13;
she v*ras no daughter of yours, and&#13;
you kuew it."&#13;
Hutchinson's surprise got the better&#13;
of his caution. "I brought her up,"&#13;
he said, "even if she was not my own.&#13;
In a way she was mine. And so you&#13;
married her, did you? And now you&#13;
say she is dead."&#13;
"She is dead, poor soui!" said Alan.&#13;
"Died in tlre-Tmn'k uf ik* 'Valparaiso'"&#13;
T¥1&#13;
four years ago; and I'm to be married&#13;
again. I wish you would let me help&#13;
you, Hutchinson!"&#13;
An evil sneer crossed Hutchinson's&#13;
face. "Married again, are you? Soon?&#13;
Well, I will wish you joy, you and&#13;
your bride. You may have an unexpected&#13;
guest at yoar wedding, although&#13;
I am not quite sure. We will&#13;
see what way things will go. Goodby,&#13;
my fine gentleman!**&#13;
He left Alan with a curious sense&#13;
that something untoward had happened,&#13;
although the young man could&#13;
not say what it had been.&#13;
(To be Continued.)&#13;
you to marry me a year ago if I had&#13;
not had this past behind me. I have&#13;
loved" you well enough .all the time.&#13;
It is only now that I .have been presumptuous&#13;
enough to think that you&#13;
love me a little that J have spoken;&#13;
and if you do truly Jove me, Joyce,&#13;
you will only be sorry for all that 1&#13;
have suffered in the past."&#13;
Joyce was not an ungenerous girl,&#13;
and though there was a certain sting&#13;
in the fact that Alan .had suffered&#13;
through another woman, yet she could&#13;
feel it in her heart to ,pity the girl&#13;
.who had only been Alan's wife for&#13;
four months, and who had died in so&#13;
tragic a manner. She rose. "Shall we&#13;
go in to the others, Alan?" she said/&#13;
softly.&#13;
But he caught her haavd. "Not before&#13;
I have had my answer, Joyce.&#13;
Oh, no! not before I have .had my answer!&#13;
Don't be cruel, darling! Put&#13;
me out of pain!" ~&#13;
"Dearest,1' she said. 'Jyou know&#13;
your answer. You know that I love&#13;
you, and that I would never deny my&#13;
love. This unhappy story ..of yours&#13;
ji has been a surprise to me* and a little&#13;
shock; but it does not really nuke any&#13;
difference, does it, when two people&#13;
love each other?"&#13;
"Joyce," he cried—there was - the&#13;
purest joy in his tone—"Joyce, you&#13;
have made me so happy that J have&#13;
no words to express my happiness.&#13;
And you will not think of this again?&#13;
It will not be a bar between us? It&#13;
only comes to me now and again,&#13;
when I have thought that you would&#13;
ast like i t And now, Joyce, you are&#13;
cheating me of my kiss of betrothal&#13;
Come behind this rock."&#13;
And as Joyce was just a sweet loving&#13;
girl, who had promised herself to&#13;
the man she loved, she made no detanr.&#13;
hwt gjsve him his kiss; and they&#13;
both walked up to the house, trying&#13;
t$ forge* the thing; that had been discussed&#13;
between them* And; as a matter&#13;
of fact they did torgat i t They&#13;
were so happy in each other, and «6&#13;
happy in the prospect of the new life&#13;
before them, that they actually did twenty-throe summonses ware&#13;
forget Alan told his story to Joyce's, in one day m a single arrondlsaemsnt.&#13;
Ingredients of Toilet Soap.&#13;
The basis of the better qualities of&#13;
toilet soap is generally curd or yellow&#13;
.soap, in the making of which special&#13;
precautions are taken to insure abaenee&#13;
of free alkali. This is most important,&#13;
as otherwise the soap would&#13;
he altogether unsuitable for toilet purposes,&#13;
the free alkali being injurious&#13;
is&gt; the .skin. This is the reason why ao&#13;
many &lt;Ql the cheaper laundry &lt;*oaps&#13;
produce chapped hands and similar&#13;
reautts when used for toilet purposes.&#13;
If, mx the other hand, there is an excess&#13;
of fat, the soap is greasy and does&#13;
not possess the cleansing properties TT&#13;
good soap should. A laundry soap may&#13;
be made without much difficulty by&#13;
an amateur, guit it is better to buy&#13;
whatever toilet soap is required, for&#13;
the reasons stated, and also because&#13;
special apparatus is required to make&#13;
a soap of first class quality.&#13;
^austnittmiytaMMMMmtiaiMiaiMi&#13;
The Truth ..&#13;
4^otfTafe&#13;
"I kissed a y sister, for she is kind&#13;
And loves me, but as we reached tha&#13;
gate&#13;
I turned and told her I had a mind,&#13;
Nevertheless, to try my fate!"&#13;
. i&lt; —Anonymous.&#13;
It took Hanora qurte a time to find&#13;
out the truth about Tobias. Not that&#13;
Tobias could ordinarily be considered&#13;
a mysterious individual Indeed,. he&#13;
was precisely the reverse. From the&#13;
cool dawn hour In which he arose to go&#13;
forth and drive the team for Twist &amp;&#13;
Taffeta, of which firm he was trusted&#13;
collector, until his return at 6:30 to&#13;
the modest fiat where his sister—and&#13;
supper—awaited him, bis life was a&#13;
clean and commonplace, page, spread'&#13;
wide for every casual or interested&#13;
glance. His nights, if less exposed to&#13;
the arc lights of public scrutiny, might&#13;
as well have been so. For, after eating&#13;
heartily of the food Hanora had prepared&#13;
and referring to the same in&#13;
admiring terms, he was wont to remove&#13;
his shoes as unnecessary impedimenta,&#13;
place his feet in their welldarned&#13;
hose upon the chair "beyant."&#13;
light his pipe, drink the solitary bottle&#13;
of beer which Hanora permitted him,&#13;
and read the mighty accumulation of&#13;
both morning and evening papers until&#13;
the autocratic spinster who ruled his&#13;
abode suggested "a decade," and&#13;
turned the lamp low by way of a gentle&#13;
but quite sufficient hint.&#13;
Tobias was 40—plus five.. He had a&#13;
brickdust skin, pale brows, a pugnacious&#13;
nose, and a smile of such sudden,&#13;
suffusing, apologetic radiance it explained&#13;
his love for his fellowmen in&#13;
general and for Hanora in particular.&#13;
Indeed, his was the only love that had&#13;
ever come Hanora's way. She had&#13;
never been guilty of that form of highway&#13;
robbery known as coquetry. Not&#13;
that she was unsophisticated. She&#13;
knew that a woman quick of perception&#13;
and adroit of finger may appropriate&#13;
the purse of one who walks her&#13;
way and suffer incarceration. And she&#13;
knew also that one who possesses herself&#13;
of an unappropriated masculine&#13;
Fine M U M an B o w&#13;
There is no shadow of a possible&#13;
shadow of doubt that the day of the&#13;
motor car and automobile fiend is at&#13;
an end in Paris and the same may be&#13;
said of the scorching cyclist The&#13;
roar, the hissing sound and the cloud&#13;
of dust are no mora. Thoir desperate&#13;
recklessness has led the police to&#13;
cut down to eight kilometers, which&#13;
4s only n shade over fire miles an&#13;
hour, their authorised speed, and&#13;
heart not only goes free in the sight&#13;
of the law, but glories if she will in&#13;
her guile and in the magnitude of her&#13;
deed. Whether the bonds of inopportunity&#13;
had shackled Hanora Ryan or&#13;
whether she had preferred maiden triumph&#13;
to the exultation of matronhood&#13;
deponent sayeth not. Anyhow,&#13;
to get back to the truth about Tobias.&#13;
On one memorable midsummer eve he&#13;
devoured lemon pie without protest.&#13;
Hanora knew he loathed lemon pie.&#13;
On the following morning he meekly&#13;
ate the French -toast ehe set before&#13;
him, instead of his regulation potato&#13;
and rasher. This was her second test&#13;
For Tobias had frankly declared only&#13;
two weeks ago that he would eat no&#13;
more French, or Flemish, or—no, begorrah—&#13;
Boer toast, that was made of&#13;
stale bread dipped in egg and fried!&#13;
So there! She began to feel suspicious.&#13;
He was a good brother, but alarmingly&#13;
docile when presented with viands for&#13;
which he possessed an aversion.&#13;
She was like the parrot which its&#13;
owner declared "said little but done a&#13;
devil of a heap of .thlnkln'!" She&#13;
thought a good deal In those days.&#13;
When Tobias suggested bringing a&#13;
friend home with him to dinner she&#13;
thought more than ever, albeit she&#13;
possibly said less.&#13;
"To be bringin' j i man^ here^ for a&#13;
male!" quoth^sheT "What" kind of a&#13;
man might he be now, Tobias?"&#13;
"Sthraight as they make 'em!"&#13;
promptly responded Tobias. "He&#13;
drives the 'rush' bus. He's a good wan.&#13;
He'd relish one of your raspberry rolls&#13;
—that he would, Hanora?" Whereat&#13;
Hanora blushed In,, a wintry sunset&#13;
sort of way and said he might bring&#13;
his friend.&#13;
He did bring his friend. And—to tell&#13;
the truth—Hanora looked exceedingly&#13;
well. She had given her old . black&#13;
xkirt a "dip," whatever that mysterious&#13;
phraseology may mean. And she&#13;
wore with this a shirt waist of softest&#13;
lawn, whieh she had bought at quite&#13;
an absurd figure because It was one of&#13;
the smaller alsea. This she had duly&#13;
and delicately laundered. Not that&#13;
"Tha household art was the only dower&#13;
fib* would bring for a gift to him aha&#13;
But the household art saona up i s&#13;
resj&gt;iesMlepce «n that party^iar night*&#13;
Never, thought treaaharous Ynhfta*.&#13;
with a glow at his heart had nay man*&#13;
such a sister; end ifl it w e * not Cor tha&#13;
—here he hsjoke oft l a j y i ajpmy oft&#13;
deception which made him temporarily&#13;
oblivious of the merits of tha raspberry:&#13;
r o l l . ••»* •••«•'• - v * . •&#13;
"You ain't eat a bite!" asowedV&#13;
Hanora. y&#13;
Tobias made a sweeping geatii: -&#13;
across his Adam's apple. "Clear j&#13;
here!" he declared with delicious mendacity.&#13;
After supper they went into the parlor.&#13;
Hanora played on the o r g a n -&#13;
yes, and sang, too, in a Sweet thin littie&#13;
voice. She sang "The Meeting of&#13;
the Waters" and "The Kerry Dancing"&#13;
and the "Wearing of the Green." No&#13;
rag-time for Hanora.&#13;
"She's a jewel!" commented DennIK&#13;
Maguire, addressing Tobias Ryan,&#13;
when they parted on the sidewalk.&#13;
"Ain't—ain't"—timidly, "there anywan&#13;
a-coortin'!"&#13;
"Niver a wan!" returned Tobias.&#13;
He felt so guilty upon his return hecould&#13;
hardly make the proper responses&#13;
to the "decade" which Hanora&#13;
was "giving out." He did not come&#13;
home until 10 o'clock the folio wins&#13;
night—nor yet the next. He explained&#13;
his absences by mysterious allusions&#13;
to "caucuses" and "primaries," thereby&#13;
soothing Hanora and stultifying his&#13;
conscience. It was not until Hanora&#13;
found a rose in the buttonholle of his&#13;
coat one morning and a little lace&#13;
trimmed handkerchief in his pocketf&#13;
that her diresf doubts were aroused.&#13;
But even these Tobias explained away.&#13;
"Sure the flower cost notnm', Hanora.&#13;
'Twas from a bush I was passin*.&#13;
And the handkerchief was on the sidewalk.&#13;
I thought belike you could&#13;
make use of it."&#13;
He was rapidly becoming a beautiful&#13;
liar,&#13;
A week later he refused to go out&#13;
with Hanora and Dennis on account of&#13;
the night being damp. He had rheumatism,&#13;
he said. So his sister and his&#13;
friend went to the theater and Tobias&#13;
settled himself to the composition of a&#13;
long and fervent letter, the accomplishment&#13;
of which necessitated frequent&#13;
reference to the pocket dictionary hehad&#13;
bought for this purpose. To make&#13;
a long story short—and it was not&#13;
such a long story when all was said —&#13;
Hanora married Dennis Maguire. Tobias&#13;
was desolate—disconsolate. Ht&gt;&#13;
might go to live with them. Dennishad&#13;
won a treasure. Yes, he might go&#13;
to live with them after awhile. For&#13;
the present he would take his meals&#13;
at, a restaurant until sure what could&#13;
be done with the furniture—and so on.&#13;
All through her wedding journey,&#13;
which lasted full three weeks, it troubled&#13;
Mrs. Maguire to determine what&#13;
was the matter with Tobias. She tol&lt;f&#13;
her new made lord all about his evening&#13;
absences, his mild -acceptance o?&#13;
distasteful viands, his abrupt and eager&#13;
hospitality toward Dennis—even about&#13;
the rose and handkerchief. It was not&#13;
uutil she had returned to Chicago and&#13;
went out to the flat vhere had been&#13;
passed her years of mature maidenhood&#13;
that she really discovered the.&#13;
t r u t h a b p n t Tnht.ng,— _ ^ L&#13;
For the flat into which she let herself&#13;
with her tatch key was altered,&#13;
decorated, illumined. There were curtains&#13;
of rosy swissollne at the windows.&#13;
There were a lot of flowers on&#13;
the table. A canary sang in a gilded&#13;
cage, and—what was that? A parasol&#13;
in the corner—a hat on the sewing machine!&#13;
Such a frivolouus hat—all chiffon&#13;
and daisies! Hanora turned quite&#13;
faint. Could Tobias—-&#13;
"0," cried a radiant little creature&#13;
fluttering out of one of the Pullman&#13;
car apartments which serve as bed^—&#13;
rooms in the modern flat, "I did-not&#13;
know any one was here. Take this&#13;
chair. You are Mrs. Larch, I know.&#13;
Tobias said the wife of his friend in&#13;
the shipping department would call.&#13;
We are not really fully settled yet.&#13;
Our wedding was quite a suurprise to&#13;
our friends, but really We had been&#13;
considering it for some time. I was in&#13;
the ribbons, you know, and became acquainted&#13;
with Mr. Ryan while at the.&#13;
store. But it seems he had an old&#13;
maid sister living with him. and having&#13;
a girl's natural distaste for relations-&#13;
in-law—though doubtless someof&#13;
them are kind enough, I suggeste T-—&#13;
to Tobias that it would be better t &gt;&#13;
marry her off if possible before—why&#13;
—what "&#13;
For Mrs. Dennis Maguire _had_r|sai&#13;
in aghast and stately discomposure.&#13;
"I am his sister," she said.&#13;
"Dear, O. dear! I'm so sorry! Y&gt;&#13;
didn't know—nor - suspect—I wish \&#13;
had kept still! Take off your things'*&#13;
Stay to supper! There—there! You'rr&#13;
sweet as you can be—and I'll love yon&#13;
If you let me—indeed, I will."—Chicago&#13;
Tribune.&#13;
FtopoMd 100 Apostkt.&#13;
The report that Charles Frohmaa.&#13;
may attempt to produce the Passion&#13;
Play in this country recalls * good:&#13;
Story that Eugene FieW used to ten,&#13;
says the Indianapolis News. An enterprising&#13;
American manager once saw •&#13;
the Passion Play and was so impressed:'&#13;
by it that ha determined to duplicate;&#13;
It in America. However, J * proposed!&#13;
to improve upon i t Instead of con^&#13;
tenting himself with twelve apostles^&#13;
ha was going t o hava a aiusdagj'&#13;
..'."'.VJ .*;v . •;&gt; ?T.t&#13;
' -&gt;'&lt;'/&gt;••,'.:• • • • / • " i f f&#13;
' : ' • ^ • ^&#13;
::,.•,•"•/;• ^ t ^ S&#13;
VMKfl&#13;
'it&#13;
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• §&#13;
"I&#13;
• • v&#13;
*l&#13;
'' &gt;*£%'•&#13;
• -¾^&#13;
j t a f c ^ m i ^ j ^ , ^ -Hiti/jin' ftiM&#13;
V ;•&gt;(-, ",;V c i '&#13;
^ ^ ' ' ' ' • v f i t - ' ' - ^ ' ^ - ' : / ' ' - ' ' : V . , ' ' ' ' : ' ' ' ' " , y •" " ' " V "' : : " ^ . - / ' " •••* " ' **' •"••*' •" •' ' ' * / " : ' ' ' ' ' ' . ''.'""'&gt;'„•&#13;
"A,\&#13;
' . i V r . ; - ' , . .--'&gt;r'*: -1 V&#13;
t-"V&#13;
;v'v&#13;
' » « •&#13;
!£&lt; * , ' • • • "••'&#13;
" V f '.I •'.. •;•&#13;
• *Hi&#13;
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1. * ^ -&#13;
I- is '&#13;
* « *&#13;
ftfc* fitwfetmj f tojratd*;&#13;
F. L. ANDREWS EDITOR.&#13;
COLOSSAL STADIUM AT THE PAN-AMERICAr EXPOSITION.&#13;
THURSDAY, JULY 26, 1900.&#13;
The work of visiting counties&#13;
for the purpose of investigating&#13;
complaints of excessive o r inadequate&#13;
assessments is now goin on.&#13;
All the commissioners will • take&#13;
part in this work, and all counties&#13;
will be visited.&#13;
• , I , , M 1 . . • • — * -&#13;
T l i e Beat B e m e d y f«r s t o m a c h a n d&#13;
B o w e l T r o u b l e s .&#13;
"I have been in the drug business&#13;
for twenty years and have sold most&#13;
all of the proprietary medicines ot any&#13;
note. Among the entire list I have&#13;
never found anything to equal Chamberlain's&#13;
Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea&#13;
R9toedy for all stomach and bowel&#13;
gtroubles," says 0. W. Wakefield, of&#13;
Columbus Ga. "This remedy cured&#13;
two severe cases of cholera morbus in&#13;
my family and I have recommended&#13;
and sold hundreds of bottles of it to&#13;
my customers to tbeir entire satisfaction,&#13;
It affords a quick and sure cure&#13;
in a pleasant form." For sale by F .&#13;
A, Sigler Pinckney.&#13;
A company has been organized&#13;
at Grass Lake for the manufacture&#13;
of cement. t The lake near the village&#13;
has an inexhaustible supply&#13;
of raw material. T h e "Zenith"&#13;
organization will be capitalized at&#13;
$700,000. I t is proposed to manufacture&#13;
1,000 barrels per day.&#13;
During last May an infant child of&#13;
our neighbor was suffering from cliol*&#13;
era infantum. The doctors had given&#13;
up all hopes of recovery.-— 1 took a bottle&#13;
of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera&#13;
and Diarrhoea Remedy to the house&#13;
telling them I felt sure it would do&#13;
good if used according to direct&#13;
In two days time the child hadyfully&#13;
recovered. The child is noyr vigorous&#13;
ancTbealthy. I have recommended&#13;
this remedy frequently and have&#13;
never known it to tin 1.—Mrs. Curtis&#13;
Baker, Book waited Ohio. Sold by F.&#13;
A. Sigler Pinckney.&#13;
An exchange tells of thejollowing&#13;
scHeme that is being worked&#13;
o n ^ l d soldier's: Three persons&#13;
jtre engaged in t h e work. They&#13;
approach their intended victim and&#13;
offer to sell him a book containing&#13;
hjfl war recotd and to be ac-&#13;
Copyright, 1900, by the Pan-American Exposition Co.&#13;
The completed Stadium for the Pan-American Exposition, to be held In Buffalo from May 1 to Nov. 1,1901, will offer&#13;
to the lovers of sports the most spacious and splendid arena ever erected In America. The athletic carnival to be&#13;
held during the great Exposition will be the most notable in the history of American sport. The co-operation of&#13;
many of the best promoters of athletic games has been secured. Visitors to the Exposition may therefore expect to&#13;
witness the meeting of the most famous athletes of the world in competition for prizes worthy of their best feats.&#13;
It is said that the great Colosseum at Rome could accommodate 87,000 spectators. The Pan-American Stadium will&#13;
be 129 feet longer and but 10 feet narrower than the historic amphitheater of Rome. The Stadium, however, will&#13;
have a larger arena, and the seating capacity is estlmajted for 25,000 people.&#13;
The result of t h e U.&#13;
may not be known&#13;
S. census&#13;
for some&#13;
monthsyet. The work of 35,000&#13;
enumerators must b e examined&#13;
and verified, and no less than 400 j&#13;
tons of bl&amp;nks must be sorted&#13;
arranged. The cities will be&#13;
en up first and the populati&#13;
nounced for t h e benefit of&#13;
press. A count will b ^ m a d e , during&#13;
verification, by the eletric tabulating&#13;
m a c h i n e / a n d this work&#13;
will require fiy*K)r six months.&#13;
C0MING EVENTS.&#13;
Cheap Rates Via Grand Trunk Railway&#13;
System to Detroit, Niagara Falls,&#13;
oronto, Alexandria Bay and&#13;
Montreal.&#13;
anthe&#13;
Annual Excursion to Frankfort, Beulali&#13;
&amp; Traverse City.&#13;
Thursday, July 26, t h e A n n&#13;
Arbor R. R. will sell excusion&#13;
t i c k e t s to Frankfort, Beulah and&#13;
Traverse City a t $4.00 "lor t h e '&#13;
round trip. They will be good&#13;
going on regular train, leaving&#13;
Lakeland ( H a m b u r g J u c t ) at 9:34&#13;
and for retnrn on any regular&#13;
train until Thursday August 9th&#13;
inclusive. t-30&#13;
compained by a certificate, when&#13;
properly filled out, which will enable&#13;
his widow or children to receive&#13;
his pension without t h e&#13;
usual tedious process. T h e old&#13;
soldier has simply to pay a dollar&#13;
down and two more on t h e delivery&#13;
of the book.&#13;
H e a r t b u r n .&#13;
When the xpanity of food taken is&#13;
When you want a modern, up-todate&#13;
physic try Cbanrbertain's Stomach,&#13;
and Liver Tablets. They are easy to&#13;
take and pleasant in effect. Price. 25&#13;
cents. Samples* free at F. A. Sigler's&#13;
drug store.&#13;
A neighboring exchange—k&amp;stco&#13;
large or the quality to rich heartburn&#13;
is likely to follow, and especially&#13;
so if the digestion has been weakened&#13;
by constipation. Ea.t slowly and not&#13;
too freely of easily digested food.&#13;
Alastreate the food thoroughly. Let&#13;
six hours elapse^between meals and&#13;
when you feel a Soilness and weight&#13;
in the region of the stomach after eating,&#13;
indicating that you have eaten&#13;
too mucb„take one of G amberlain's&#13;
Stomach and Liver Tablets and the&#13;
heartburn rr.ay be avoided. For s a l ^ c n a m b e r ] a i l M Cough Remedy. If&#13;
b&#13;
fe"&#13;
It '&#13;
Iby&#13;
F. A. Sigler, Pinckney,&#13;
A farmer over in Oakland&#13;
eomity says the Hessian fly can&#13;
be easily done away with by t h e&#13;
use of salt. The salt is scattered&#13;
over the ground at the rate of one&#13;
bushel to the acre. Whether t h e&#13;
remedy will do as he says remains&#13;
to be seen. I t is t o be hoped&#13;
that t h e experiment will prove&#13;
valuable, as the IJessian fly is a&#13;
great source of trouble to farmers&#13;
every year.&#13;
ANNUAL 15 DAY EXCURSION TO&#13;
FRANKFORT, CRYSTAL LAKE&#13;
AND TRAVERSE CITY.&#13;
Thursdayi July 26, the Ann Arbor&#13;
R. R.&gt;iU eeil excursion ticketa to the&#13;
abov«kresort8, (rood for retnrn until&#13;
Watch&#13;
and low rates. trSO&#13;
\&#13;
the gossipers a hard rap when it&#13;
says: "It is unfortunate b u t true&#13;
that public opinion is"too~Trequently&#13;
moulded by loafers. A&#13;
woman w h o attends every tea&#13;
party or convention and allows&#13;
her furniture to be covered by&#13;
dust and cobwebs' frequently&#13;
starts an idle gossip amoung other&#13;
idlers which does a great injustice&#13;
to some modest woman who is&#13;
to busy with her housework to be&#13;
present. A loafer on t h e street&#13;
cilculates some evil report about&#13;
a man who is to busy minding his&#13;
own business too be~standing' around&#13;
and contradicting the lies&#13;
told about him."&#13;
A Good C o u g h m e d i c i n e .&#13;
Many thousands have been restored&#13;
to health and happiness by the use of ,&#13;
Half Rate to Detroit and return&#13;
from all over Michigan account of&#13;
Democratic State Convention. Tickets&#13;
sold for all trains of July 214 and 25&#13;
and good,to return up to and including&#13;
July 27.&#13;
Niagara Falls, Toronto, Alexandria&#13;
Bay and Montreal Excursions.—The&#13;
first excursion of the season will be&#13;
given on Saturday, July 28, from all&#13;
Grand Trunk stations in Michigan&#13;
and connecting lines. Special trains&#13;
and coach service will be arranged to&#13;
take the excursions over toe line by&#13;
daylight. Tickets will be valid to return&#13;
leaving destination up to and including&#13;
August 8, 1900 and rates will&#13;
be astonishing low. Get yourself&#13;
ready for the cheap and grand excursions.&#13;
Niagara Falls, one of the wonders&#13;
ot the world, and the beautiful&#13;
Canadian cities of Canada. Af§k any&#13;
agent ot the Grand Trunk Railway or&#13;
ronnecting lines for information, rates&#13;
train time, etc., etc.&#13;
Council Procedings.&#13;
For The Village of Pinckney.&#13;
Regular. July 2, 1900,&#13;
Council convened and called t o&#13;
order by president Mclntyre.&#13;
Present:—Richards, Bowman,&#13;
Erwin, Love, Reason.&#13;
Absent —Monks.&#13;
Street Com'r report read a n d&#13;
approved.&#13;
The following Highway bills&#13;
were presented and accepted:&#13;
S. Grimes, labor, $0.63&#13;
Diul Grieves, tlraying, .25&#13;
T. Turner, 1.75&#13;
Teeple and Cad well, nails, .20&#13;
T. Read lumder etc., . 7.37&#13;
Total, $10.20.&#13;
The foHowing bills were presented&#13;
and accepted:&#13;
Teeple and Cadwell oil $2.54&#13;
J . Wraith Marshall services 4.17 —&#13;
(i. R-owmunB'd Review 2-davs 4-00&#13;
C. Henry watching Colby lire 2.00&#13;
W. Thompson Reason and Colby 2.75&#13;
G. Green Assesor, K'd Review 19.00&#13;
A C a r d .&#13;
I, the undersigned, do hereby&#13;
agree to refund the money on a 50-&#13;
cent bottle of Green's Warrented&#13;
Syrup of Tai if it fails to cure your&#13;
cough or cold.—1 alao guarantee j ^&#13;
25-cent bottle to prove satisfactory or&#13;
money refunded. t-30&#13;
Will B. Darrow.&#13;
afflicted with any throat or lung&#13;
troub'e, give it a trial for it is certain&#13;
to prove beneficial. Coughs that have&#13;
resisted all other treatment for years&#13;
have yeilded to this remedy and perfect&#13;
health been restored. Cases that&#13;
seemed hopeless, that the climate of&#13;
famous health resorts failed to benefit&#13;
have been permently cured by its use&#13;
For sale by E. A. Sigler, Pinckney.&#13;
After all that has been said about&#13;
special delivery stamps t h e&#13;
ordinary individual knows very&#13;
little about them, or if he does, he&#13;
forgets the great convenience offered&#13;
by these 10-cent stamps.&#13;
There was a time when cities made&#13;
their brags that they had dispatch&#13;
companies in their midst. H e r e&#13;
is something that requires no&#13;
membership fee, and which is just&#13;
as good backed by t h e government.&#13;
All that is necessary_js a&#13;
special delivery stamp on a letter,&#13;
and it will be delivered by special&#13;
messenger immediately upon its&#13;
arrival in the postoffice. If a local&#13;
drsp letter, with o n e of these&#13;
special delivery stamps affixed is&#13;
put into a box or a postoffice, it is&#13;
Total, 834.46&#13;
Moved a n d carried that t h e&#13;
lighting of t h e street lamps b e&#13;
continued.&#13;
An ordinance forbiding Minors&#13;
under the age of 15 years from&#13;
being on the streets or alleys after&#13;
certain hours in the evening,&#13;
was read and approved.&#13;
The resignation of Marshal, Jas.&#13;
Smith was read and .accepted.&#13;
Moved that the clerk advertise&#13;
for bids for t h e performance of&#13;
Marshall services for the balance&#13;
of .the year ending 2nd M o n d a y&#13;
in March, read and approved.&#13;
K, H. Crane and F . H. Smith&#13;
made a few remarks relative to&#13;
procuring some fire protection.&#13;
After some discussion council&#13;
decided to submit t h e matter to&#13;
the people b y vote in the d i s b u r s -&#13;
ment of funds necessary t o carry&#13;
out the undertaking and Resolutions&#13;
for special election was presented&#13;
and accepted.&#13;
For a special election, the President&#13;
made the following appointments:&#13;
sent out at once. Thus for 12 Inspectors of election Reason&#13;
cents, t h e 2-cent regular stamp |a n &lt; ^ Bowman; gate keepers K.&#13;
and 10-cent special delivery stamp i H . Crane and F . H. Smith; Board&#13;
The analysis of the water from&#13;
the capus well pumped since t h e&#13;
well was plugged, is t h e same as&#13;
before. Prof. Campbell, will make&#13;
a further analysis for valuable&#13;
mineral properties, which he suspects&#13;
the water may contain. I t is&#13;
to be regreted~if this ~ mineral&#13;
water should be lost to humanity.&#13;
» x a -^ • W7.*.u ««.• ^ i * water is there, and at a deph&#13;
August 9 ineionve. Watch next - , v&#13;
week's par^r^Wfiiheor spe&lt;aartrair tpheants ipvue.m—pAinngn i tA crabnonro Ct obuer vieerr.y exa&#13;
messenger is sent out with t h e&#13;
letter, and upon t h e delivery of&#13;
the letter a receipt is given. If&#13;
people want to know to a certainty&#13;
that their letters are received they&#13;
should use a special delivery&#13;
stamp. If this explanation is not&#13;
full enough, ask for further particulars&#13;
at your postoffice. If t h e&#13;
system was thoroughly understood&#13;
there would be many more used&#13;
than at present.&#13;
We would like a good load of-straw&#13;
or a few hundred pounds of hay * on&#13;
subscription. If yon are owing us a&#13;
dollars or two this wi)l be an easy way&#13;
to get even and pay a year or two* in&#13;
advance. — — - —&#13;
of Registration Reason and B o w&#13;
man. Accepted.&#13;
Upon motion council adjourned,&#13;
R. H . T E E P L E , Clerk.&#13;
* GEMS PP.. THOUGHT&#13;
The mind's the standard of the man.&#13;
—Watti. tUl*&#13;
The path ot duty leads to happiness.&#13;
—Southey. .&lt;&#13;
The proud lore no spectator to theiT&#13;
emotions.—Bulwer Lytton.&#13;
Joy is the best of wine.—George&#13;
B l i o t ' •' W i * :..i '•' t&#13;
Judge not according to the appearance—&#13;
Bible,&#13;
The unspoken word never does&#13;
harm.—Kossuth. - *&#13;
Language is the dress of thought.—&#13;
Dr. Johnson.&#13;
^mm WILL CUBE&#13;
YOU MILL'S RED PILLS&#13;
For WAN PEOPLE "Pftle «nd W w A " B ^ t w e&#13;
Vim, Vigor and Vit&amp;Uty, make eld people look&#13;
Suung, fee) young and act young. Tbe great&#13;
lood and Nerve Medicine.&#13;
MILL'S WHITE LIVER PILLS&#13;
Are tbe great Liver Invigorator, Syatem Renovator&#13;
and Bowel Regulator. You can work&#13;
while they work, never gripe or make yon&#13;
8 i °k MILL'S BLUE KIDAEY PILLS&#13;
For backaches' 1 vine or sore, and all Kidney&#13;
and Urinary troubles. Only 25o a bor or Ave&#13;
boxes II. Guaranteed by your druggist to do&#13;
as advertised or money refunded.&#13;
Werner's Dictionary of Synonyms &amp; Antonyms,&#13;
Mythology and Familiar Phrases.&#13;
w l H N ' US •&#13;
Dl(l:i)]Ui\&#13;
elgn&#13;
A book {hat should be in the vest&#13;
pocket of every jwraon, because It&#13;
tells you the right wordMto use.&#13;
No Two Word8 In the English&#13;
Language Have Exactly the&#13;
Same Significance. To express&#13;
the precise meaning that one intends&#13;
to convey a dictionary of&#13;
Synonyms is needed to avoid repetition.&#13;
The strongest figure of&#13;
speech is antithesis. In this dictionary&#13;
the appended AntonvmB&#13;
will, therefore, be found extremely&#13;
valuable.—Contains many other&#13;
features such as Mythology.&#13;
Familiar Allusions- and For-&#13;
Fhrases, Prof. Loisette's Memory&#13;
Syitem, 'The Art of Never Forgetting,'' etc.',&#13;
etc. This wonderful little book bound In a neat&#13;
Cloth binding and sent postpaid for $0.25. Full&#13;
Leather, gilt edge, $0.40, postpaid. Order at&#13;
once. Send for our large book catalogue, free.&#13;
Address all orders to&#13;
T H E W E R N E R C O M P A N Y ,&#13;
Vlbttibtra and MaMfectortrt, AXKOIf, OHIO.&#13;
SOME FACTS! BEAD THEM!&#13;
•»• • -&#13;
EUREKA SURE STOP TOOTHACHE POWDERS&#13;
Gives quick and sure relief.&#13;
EUREKA COMPLEXION OINTMENT&#13;
Removes Black-heads and Pimples.&#13;
EUREKA CORN CURE&#13;
Cures all Come, Bunions, and Callous&#13;
places.&#13;
EUREKA 0. K. WART REMOVER —&#13;
Is certain in its results.&#13;
Bach 10c, Coin OP S t a m p s&#13;
By R e t u r n Mali.&#13;
Agents wanted—write today.&#13;
Address, E U R E K A S U P P L Y H O U S E ,&#13;
Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
Railroad Guide.&#13;
AND STEAMSHIP UNES*&#13;
Popular route for Ann Arbor* Toledo&#13;
and points East, South, and for&#13;
Howell, Owosso, Alma, Mi Pleasant&#13;
Cadillac, Manistee, Traverse City and&#13;
points in Northwestern Michigan.&#13;
W. H. BENNETT,&#13;
G. P.A.Toledo&#13;
PERE MARQUETTE&#13;
SaallxosuA, M a s r 1 3 , 1 9 0 0 .&#13;
Lv&#13;
Ar&#13;
Lv&#13;
1 Inn Skin l)fse»«e.&#13;
This is a dry and rough condition of&#13;
the skin of the shank. There is an nbsf&#13;
nee of the oily c-onstitutent causing&#13;
the scalps to be brittle and'crack, allowing&#13;
dust and filth to get between&#13;
and under the scales and give an unpleasant&#13;
appearance. Fish skin disease&#13;
is not-caused by an insect, as iff&#13;
scaly legs, but does seem to be found*&#13;
in certain lots of birds, giving the Impression&#13;
tnat it may be largely' a&#13;
trouble of hereditary taint. Softly rub&#13;
the dry spots of shank and toes witn&#13;
some petroleum jelly, as vaseline or&#13;
cosmoline, or an oinfment of vaseline,&#13;
two pans; oleate.of zinc, one part.&#13;
This will soften the skin and restore&#13;
the natural condition.&#13;
Ar&#13;
GOING BAST&#13;
Grand R&amp;^Jds.&#13;
Ionia&#13;
Laosiog&#13;
Howell&#13;
South Lyon...&#13;
Salem&#13;
Plymouth&#13;
Detroit&#13;
OOtNO WEST&#13;
Detroit&#13;
Plymouth....&#13;
Salem ,&#13;
South Lyon....&#13;
Howell&#13;
Lansing&#13;
Ionia&#13;
Grand Rapids,&#13;
&gt; * • • • * « «&#13;
a nr&#13;
t 10&#13;
7 40&#13;
9 04&#13;
10 05&#13;
10 36&#13;
10 46&#13;
11 00&#13;
11 40&#13;
a to&#13;
T52&#13;
9 2ft&#13;
9 88&#13;
9 4»&#13;
10 88&#13;
11 88&#13;
13 50&#13;
1 80&#13;
T&gt;"~fif&#13;
12 06&#13;
12 20&#13;
1 46&#13;
2 8ft&#13;
804&#13;
385&#13;
4 OB&#13;
P m&#13;
1 10&#13;
1 48&#13;
9 06&#13;
8 88&#13;
8 30&#13;
445&#13;
ft 10&#13;
p m&#13;
5 30&#13;
600&#13;
7 87&#13;
92»&#13;
868&#13;
9 08&#13;
980&#13;
10 06&#13;
p m&#13;
5 16&#13;
668&#13;
«1Q_&#13;
680&#13;
688&#13;
766&#13;
9 80&#13;
10 00&#13;
FRANK BAY,&#13;
Agent, South Lyoiv.&#13;
H. F. MOELLEK,&#13;
Actin* O. P. A.,&#13;
Grand Rapid*.&#13;
YEARS'&#13;
BXPERIENC1&#13;
TRADE MARKS&#13;
DcaioNs&#13;
COPYRIGHT* AC&#13;
AnyotM tending a sketch and d—cription mam&#13;
onfekfr ascertain onr opinion free whether A&#13;
InTentkra in probably patentabfa. Comtamrtea&gt;&#13;
tkmaftrlotljr confidential. Handbook on Patents&#13;
aent free. Oldest agency for •eonrtnopatents.&#13;
Patents taken throneh Ifnnn A Co. raeafPt&#13;
facial notice, withont charfe, in the Stitnfflic Jfoericatu A handsomely Utai&#13;
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year -• four months,&#13;
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[The Winner Coppuvy is thoroughly tellable.]—Editor&#13;
^fa*»»J*j*j|**gf|*4*J*»y#*j**M**W&gt;BMBWWMW*MMiWMWMM^WWi^i^iWBWMl&#13;
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Not made by ft trust or controlled by a com&#13;
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A Book for Young and Old-&#13;
W. C- 7. U-&#13;
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Edited by the W, O. T V, of PtoekaeJy&#13;
OUR&#13;
RECORD&#13;
Est* 1878&#13;
250,000&#13;
DISEASED&#13;
MEN&#13;
CURED&#13;
D-R. 5&#13;
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BLOOD&#13;
SKIN &amp;&#13;
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DISEASES&#13;
V C V ^ V ^&#13;
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YOUNG MAN "Saur SsS&#13;
wwhereen c iogmnomraitntitn ogf. tDheid t eyrorui bolne lcyr cimones yidoeur&#13;
the fascinating allurcnn&lt;uts or this evil&#13;
habit? Whon too late to avoid the terrible&#13;
results, were your eyes opened to&#13;
your peril? l)id you Inter on in man-&#13;
LooO-contrrict any PRIVATE or BLOOD&#13;
disease? Wore you cured? l)oyouuo,w&#13;
and then see some alarming symptoms?&#13;
Daro you marry in your present condition?&#13;
You Know. " LIKE FATHER,&#13;
LllvK SON.". It" married, are you constantly&#13;
livinp in dread? I.s marriape a&#13;
failure with you on account of any weakness&#13;
caused i»y early abuse or later excesses?&#13;
Have you been drugged with&#13;
mercury? This booklet will point out to&#13;
you the results of these crimes and i&gt;oint&#13;
out how our NEW METHOD TREATMENT&#13;
will positively cur© you. It&#13;
shows how thousands have been save 1 by&#13;
our NEW TREATMENT.• It proves&#13;
how we can GUARANTEE TO CURE&#13;
ANY CURABLE CASE OR NO PAY.&#13;
Wo treat and cure— EMISSIONS. .&#13;
VARICOCELE, SYPHILIS. .GLEET,&#13;
STRICTURE. I M P O T E N C Y , S l £&#13;
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enclosing lie stamp. CONSULTATION&#13;
V U 1 •: E. If unable to call, write for&#13;
Q U E S T I O N B L A N K for HOME&#13;
TREATMENT.&#13;
KENNEDYFKERGAN&#13;
Cor. Mrchigan Ave. and Shelby St.&#13;
DETROIT. M I C H .&#13;
K ' f c K ' K &amp; K K &amp; K K &amp;&#13;
It ,10 stated that Russia has taken&#13;
in hand the combat against alcohol&#13;
The state has granted 2S0T&#13;
000 roubles to the committees at&#13;
Petersburg, Mosco and Warsaw&#13;
alone in earring out reforms as to&#13;
the reduction of the number of&#13;
drink shops, the suppression of&#13;
profit, the sale of healthy drinks,&#13;
and the providing of reading rooms&#13;
and popular fetes.&#13;
Dr. Buckley, editor of the Christian&#13;
Advocate, well says: "No&#13;
more transparent sophism than&#13;
that of the attorney-general, on&#13;
which the war department gleefully&#13;
acted, was ever employed to&#13;
deprive the people of what congress&#13;
meant to give them, than&#13;
that by means of which the law&#13;
ordering the expulsion of the canteen&#13;
from the military Btations of&#13;
the United States was interpertjedsoasto&#13;
perpetuate what it is&#13;
j intended to destory."&#13;
Rum is getting in its work in&#13;
| the navy aswell as in the army.&#13;
1 This is seen by the startling state-&#13;
| ment made by the Chicago Tribune&#13;
in regard io the wrecking,&#13;
of the American warship, Charleston,&#13;
off the Philippine islands,&#13;
recently. The Tribune says: "The&#13;
letter to Secretary of the Navy&#13;
Long, charging that the Charleston&#13;
was wrecked because many of&#13;
the offiicers in charge of the cruiser&#13;
were drunk is not the only&#13;
communication of the' same kind&#13;
in the country. Several letters&#13;
have been recieved in Chicago.&#13;
One is from a man in Manila, who&#13;
is vouched for by his friends as&#13;
thoroughy trustworthily, and who&#13;
is in a position to know absolutely&#13;
all the details attending the&#13;
i wreck. This letter charges, in so&#13;
fmany words, that the Charleston&#13;
j was run on the reef because the&#13;
men in command at the time were&#13;
so under the influence of liquor&#13;
that they did not know where the&#13;
ship was. This statement, the&#13;
letter said, was freely made by&#13;
the crew of the Charleston, and&#13;
U5ADILLA FARMER* CtCB.&#13;
had been repeated many times&#13;
amoving their comrades and to the&#13;
soldiers at Maniva." The Charleston&#13;
was a splendid cruiser, cost&#13;
the government $2,000,000, and is&#13;
a total wreck.&#13;
The club met at the&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Gtto AttRJRT on&#13;
Saturday last and considering the&#13;
busy time of the year a large number&#13;
were present. The question of&#13;
the August picnic was. taken up&#13;
and discussed and it was decided&#13;
to accept the invitation of the&#13;
North Lake Grange to meet them&#13;
in a picnic at Stephenson's grove,&#13;
North Lake, August 7.&#13;
Henry Arnold gave a recitation&#13;
which was well received. A dolls&#13;
quarrel was~then rendered by&#13;
Janette Pyper, and a song by F.&#13;
L. Andrews. This was followed&#13;
by a few rambling remarks by&#13;
Rev.S. G. Palmer as to how to&#13;
make the club more successful.&#13;
He thought everyone should be&#13;
ready to take part every time&#13;
there is a meeting. Song by&#13;
Messrs. Gates and Otto Arnold&#13;
and wives and an instrumental&#13;
piece by little Vancie Arnold and&#13;
song by Miss Mabel Hartsuff.&#13;
These were followed by the question&#13;
box which was found very interesting.&#13;
*&#13;
What is the object of the Far-;&#13;
mers Club? Mr. Gates—to meet&#13;
together to exchange thoughts and!&#13;
get new ideas.&#13;
What is the reason people do&#13;
not visit as much as they used to?&#13;
Otto Arnold—aire living in a faster&#13;
age and do not have time.&#13;
Mr. Glenn—In an early day there&#13;
were not so many social gatherings&#13;
and that was the only way of visiting.&#13;
The dicussion was very interesting&#13;
and was entered into by&#13;
nearly all present.&#13;
What kind of soil is best adapted&#13;
to beans to raise the largest&#13;
crop? Mr. Hartsuff—this year&#13;
the sandy soil is the better—ordinary&#13;
years I think the low heavy&#13;
ground just as good.&#13;
Which is the most profitable&#13;
sheep to breed? Z. Hartsufi—It&#13;
depends on circumstances. For&#13;
me I want a merino for another&#13;
perhaps a mutton sheep. Today&#13;
wool is low and many people are&#13;
eating mutton so that that class of&#13;
sheep are the better to raise unless&#13;
we can raise a sheep that will&#13;
produce both; Mr. Glenn thought&#13;
EXCURSIONS&#13;
UETTB&#13;
Niagara Fall* Alexandria Bay Montreal,&#13;
Tronoto Thnrftdar,&#13;
August 2nd*&#13;
Tickets will be sold on above&#13;
date via Detroit and M. C. R. R,&#13;
to NiagararFalls and Alexandria&#13;
Bay and via Canadian Pacific Ry.&#13;
to Toronto and Montreal; all good&#13;
to return until August 13 inclusive.&#13;
Rates will be very low,&#13;
same as last year. Ask agents for&#13;
fall particulars. t-30&#13;
• Toledo &amp; Monroe Sunday, July 29.&#13;
Special train will leave South&#13;
Lyon at 9:30 a. m. Leave Toledo&#13;
at 10:30 p. m. Rate $0.75. Good&#13;
place for a Sunday outing. t-30&#13;
Sunday, August 5, Island Lake, Grand&#13;
Ledge, and Grand Rapids.&#13;
Train will leave South Lyon at&#13;
8:45 a. m. Returning leave Grand&#13;
Rapids 0:30 p. m., Grand Ledge&#13;
8:00, Island Lake 10:15 p. m.&#13;
Rates low as usual. Turner's&#13;
Society at Grand Rapids will dedicate&#13;
new ball with good time incident&#13;
to German celebrations.&#13;
t-31&#13;
•*•»»&#13;
MY HORSE LINES.&#13;
Subscribe f6T^E)ispatch.&#13;
PATENTS GUARANTEED&#13;
Our fee returned if-we tail, Any one sending&#13;
sketch and description of any invention wil!&#13;
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the patentability of same. " H o w to Obtain a&#13;
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Patents taken out through us receive special&#13;
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consulted by Manufacturers and Investors.&#13;
Send for sample copy FREE. Address,&#13;
VICTOR «1. EVANS A CO.&#13;
(Patent Attorneys,)&#13;
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w&#13;
XXTA^TKiySKYHajLL BRIGHT&#13;
™ AND HONB9T M O T N to&#13;
as as Managers in thk and akwe by coua*&#13;
lies. Salary 990* a yaw and expenoea*&#13;
Strait, bono-flda, an anar*, a* lata. Fori.&#13;
Hon pttmaaant. Otar faftnraoocs, amy&#13;
Wak in any tovav II k aainfy o f t *&#13;
W k ooadootad at * * • » . Mataonoa. Em&#13;
Doamvxm Ooi . S» Ganci.Go.w&#13;
/£}:•:&#13;
&amp;&#13;
FV&#13;
0u=&gt;"&#13;
*aP *fe&#13;
&amp;&#13;
£&#13;
i«a&#13;
mi&#13;
1—Ri* ?ea.aaii llaaaaa.ii&#13;
U-::&#13;
v. -&#13;
/ &gt; $n&#13;
fjJB^r&#13;
•BBSEg&#13;
! " ! B l !&#13;
CI&#13;
! • » mm an* eaaany the taQaat raercantiU building in « • world. W« have&#13;
. • * • * a,aocsooo costamtrs. Sixteen hundred clerks are const- tly&#13;
engaged filling out-oMown orders.&#13;
OOK OBMERAL CATALOGUE is the book of tUe~&gt;ople-it quotes&#13;
Wholesale Prises to Everybody, has over x.ooo pages, 16,000 illustrations, and&#13;
fe^ooo descriptions of articles, wfllh prises. It costs 7s cents to print and mail&#13;
each cepy. We waat you to have ooe. SEND PIPTEBN CENTS to show&#13;
ye«ar good-Isith, and we'll sen* you a copy FREE, with all charges prepaid.&#13;
;liKHire(HKBY WARS &amp; G0."'•h*'¾¾¾!Sr•,,*,&#13;
that the Ramboulett would be a&#13;
sheep for general purpose. Mr.&#13;
Field thought the Shropshire the&#13;
best breed to use. Sold his lambs&#13;
last week for $3 each and wool&#13;
brought over $1.60 per head from&#13;
the mothers.&#13;
Is it good policy to cultivate&#13;
beans in the blossom? Mr. Howlett—&#13;
Yes, I think the ground&#13;
should be stirred, especially if&#13;
the season is dry.&#13;
Has the farmers life a bright&#13;
side? Mrs. Gates—yes. Mrs.&#13;
Crossman—it would be bette*r if&#13;
we could have better help in the&#13;
house. Mr. Hewlett—The larger&#13;
side is bright. The farmer is the&#13;
most independent man on earth.&#13;
Which should do the work in&#13;
the garden, the. man or woman?&#13;
Mrs. Otto Arnold would enjoy the&#13;
work if she had time. j&#13;
Are farmers wives as a rule as i&#13;
saving as the farmer? a chorus of I&#13;
ayes carae from the women an- j&#13;
swvring this.&#13;
What shall we do that we may j&#13;
!n\e berries at our home? Mrs.&#13;
lladley—plant 'em. A good berry&#13;
patch means less_doctor, meat and&#13;
store bills and the expense* is very&#13;
small. " - i&#13;
The club adjourned to meet at j&#13;
the home of Mr. and Mrs. J. M.&#13;
Crossman third Saturday in Sept-'&#13;
ember. !&#13;
, _ _ /&#13;
A Story for Wee Folk.&#13;
OSE thought ^he would s'pris?&#13;
me that morning and find int&#13;
asleep when she came creeping&#13;
in to put her presents untrer my&#13;
pillow, but I was up and trying&#13;
.on the rubber boots and bath&#13;
robe, and counting the six gold dollars&#13;
In the nice i^d pocketbook. "'Oh, hem&#13;
rich you are!" she said, making bis,&#13;
round eyes.&#13;
There was something in the toe ol&#13;
my boot, and I sat on the bed, and&#13;
Rose pulled and pulled, and when tin&#13;
boot came off she fell back and bumped&#13;
her head. But she jumped right&#13;
up, and we looked in the boot and&#13;
found something worsted that jingled.&#13;
It was yards and yards, and Rose said,&#13;
"It is a mile long," but I kjew better.&#13;
Horse lines never are miles long.&#13;
They were all lovely colors, and&#13;
grandma made them; she knits things&#13;
I harnessed Rose, and we raced dowr&#13;
to the kitchen, where Mr. Handy was&#13;
putting up shelves, and he measured&#13;
them with his rule and told us they&#13;
were just twelve feet long. Aft r&#13;
breakfast mamma asked if I would&#13;
like to go to the Park to play horse,&#13;
told her now I was six I was too grown&#13;
up to have a nurse take me.&#13;
Mamma said, "Well, Katie can tak'&#13;
Rose, and you can be their escort.'&#13;
I'm going to ask papa what that&#13;
means.&#13;
-We ft* un(fc»r8ig*#d, do hereby&#13;
agree to refund the money on a 60&#13;
cent bottle of Down's Eli fir if it doet&#13;
not cure any cough, cold, whooping&#13;
cough, or throat trouble. We also&#13;
guarantee Down's Elixir to cure consumption,&#13;
when used according to directions,&#13;
or money hack. A full dose&#13;
on going to bed and small doses during&#13;
the day will cure the most severe&#13;
cold, and stop the most distressing&#13;
cough.&#13;
P. A.Srgier,&#13;
W. B. Darrow,&#13;
Itte ^indmcy J&gt;i*patch,&#13;
PDBUSHBD SVSBY V H C U D A Y tfOBVIVe BY&#13;
FRANK. L . V N D R E W * 3&#13;
Editor ami ProprMor. &lt;&#13;
Subscription Price $1 In Advance.&#13;
Watered at tbe Postofflce at Plackney, Michljraa.&#13;
as second&gt;class matter.&#13;
Advertising rates made known on application.&#13;
Baslness Cards, $4.00 per year.&#13;
reath and marriage notices published tree.&#13;
Announcements of entertainment* may be paid&#13;
for, it desired, by presenting tbe office with tickets&#13;
of admiBsion. l a case tickets are not brought&#13;
to the office, regular rates will be charged.&#13;
All matter in local notice column wiU be charged&#13;
at 5 cents per line or fraction thereof, for each&#13;
insertion, where no time is specified, all notices&#13;
will be Inserted until ordered discontinued, and&#13;
will be charged for accordingly. &amp;V*AU changes&#13;
of sdvertisemeots MUST reach this office ae early&#13;
ae TUESDAY morning to insure an insertion the&#13;
same week.&#13;
JO'S PBIXWYG /&#13;
in all its branches, a specialty. We have all kinds&#13;
and the latest styles of Type, etc., which enables&#13;
us 10 execute all kinds of work, such as Books,&#13;
Pamplets, Posters, Programmes, Bill Heads, Note&#13;
Heads, Statements, Cards, Auction Bills, etc., in&#13;
superior styles, upon the shortest notice. Prices as&#13;
Q-V as good work can be aone.&#13;
•*»Ll, BILLS PATABL7 FIBiT OF SVBBY ttOSIH.&#13;
THE VILLAGE DIRECTORY.&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICERS.&#13;
PRESIDENT.. ««. ~~. Alex. Mclntyre&#13;
TRUSTEES E. L. Thompson, Alfred MOQKS,&#13;
Daniel Richards, vi eo. Bowman, Samuel&#13;
Sykes, f\ i). Johnson.&#13;
CLERK ;...„...^- „ «~ ,..R. H. Teeple&#13;
TRBASCRBB...'....« W, E. Murphy&#13;
ASSESSOR ~ ~ ~*&gt; W. A. Can&#13;
STREET COMMISSIONER , J. Monks.&#13;
.UARBAHL ~..A. E. Browa.&#13;
HKALTUu?&gt;ic£R Dr.H. r\ rsigler&#13;
ATTORNEY... W. A. Carr&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
M'E THOD1ST EPISCOPAL CHURCH.&#13;
Rev. Cbas. Simpson, pastor. Services every&#13;
Sundsy morning ac 10:30, and every Sunday&#13;
evening at 7:0) o'clock, Prayer meeting Thursday&#13;
evenings. Sunday school at close of morning&#13;
service. LEAL SIOLER, Supt.&#13;
CONUREGATIOMAL CUUKCH.&#13;
Rev. C. W. Rice pastor. Service every&#13;
Sunday morning at 10:30 and every Sunday&#13;
evening at 7 :oc o'clock. Prayer meeting Thurs&#13;
day evenings. Sunday school at .close of morninu&#13;
service. R. H. Teeple, Supt,, Maoel Swarthout&#13;
Sec.&#13;
ST. MARY'S CATHOL.IC CHURCH.&#13;
Rev. M. J. Gouimertoru, Pascor. Services&#13;
every Sunday. Low mass at 7:3U o'clock&#13;
high mass with sermon at 9;3Ga m. Catechism&#13;
at3:Qu p. in., vespers ana benediction at 7:30 p. m.&#13;
SOCIETIES;&#13;
' r « * &gt; of *antiac«&gt;.&#13;
In Santiago, in tbe better e n s * 1\&#13;
of bouses, the bedsteads are sur-/"&#13;
• rounded with a close kind of nft»T&#13;
• ting, beglnlng at the floor a n d j&#13;
gathered at the top. This is I n - f&#13;
tended as u protection against tar-#&#13;
antulas. the bites of which are4&#13;
poisonous. $&#13;
I drove Rose all the way to the Park,&#13;
and she drove me around the fountain.&#13;
Then Rose was so tired she went and&#13;
sat by Katie, who was tafking to another&#13;
girl about hats and things, and&#13;
I had no one to play with. Far off I&#13;
saw the Reed boys, and I ran to show&#13;
them my lines. Rob harnessed Phil,&#13;
and. snapping the whip, hollered "Gee&#13;
up, Buster!" and started to run off.&#13;
He called to me to go stand in the stable&#13;
and be the horse asleep.&#13;
While I was standing there, feelinglonesome,&#13;
the old gentleman in the&#13;
wheel chair called me over to him. I&#13;
know hini.. reaL-welL... He has to be&#13;
pushed about and is all wrapped up&#13;
He likes children and talks to them&#13;
and gives them peppermints.&#13;
I told him all about ray birthday.&#13;
but kept looking around for the boys\&#13;
when he asked me who I was looking&#13;
for. I told him about Phil and Rob&#13;
leaving me in the stable. Just then&#13;
they came racing along, and the old&#13;
gentleman called "Whoa!" and they&#13;
stopped. "You're a first rate driver.&#13;
Rob; here's a peppermint for you, and&#13;
you're a good fast trotter. Phil; here's&#13;
a peppermint for you; but the little&#13;
colt here must be hungry, standing sc&#13;
Ions in the stable, so hero are six peppermints&#13;
for him.'' The boys laughed&#13;
a funny little laugh, and we all thanked&#13;
him. We took turns after that, but r.o&#13;
one stood in the stable.&#13;
A lot of children came up to mv&#13;
house in the afternoon, and I had a&#13;
party and more presents, but I like&#13;
the horse lines best of all. I sle-&gt;t&#13;
with them under my pillow that night&#13;
and I dreamed I fell out of an apple&#13;
tree and bumped my head. When T&#13;
woke up I was lying on the big, round&#13;
silver bells—Mary B. Florence.&#13;
Tbe A/O. H. Society of thl3 place, meets every&#13;
third Sunrlav intaa ^r. Uittbew Hall.&#13;
John Tuoiney and M. X. Kelly, County Delegates&#13;
EPWORTH LEAGUE. Meets every Sunday&#13;
evening at 6:00 oclock In the M. E. Cnurch, A&#13;
cordial invitation Is extended to everyone, especially&#13;
young people. Mrs. Stella (iraham Pres,&#13;
CHRISTIAN ENDEAVOR SOCIETY:-Meet.&#13;
ini»a every Sunday evening at t&gt;:30. President,&#13;
Miss Etta Carpenter; - Secretary, Mrs. C. W, Rice.&#13;
m H E W. C. T. U.-meets the first Pridav of each&#13;
L month at 2:30 p. m, at the home of Dr. H. P.&#13;
sigler. Everyone interested in temperance i s&#13;
coartially invited. Mrs. '-.eal Sigler, Pres; Mrs.&#13;
Etta Durfee, Secretary.&#13;
The C. T. A. and B. society of this place, meet&#13;
every third Saturaay eve'ning in the Fr. Matthew&#13;
Halt. John Donohue, tresident.&#13;
KNIGHTS OF MACCABEES.&#13;
Meet ever v* Friday evening on or before fall&#13;
"o( the moon at their hall in the~Swurtb;out bldg.&#13;
Visiting brothers are cordiallvinvited. ,&#13;
CHAS. OAHPBELL, Sir knight Commander&#13;
Livingston Lodge, No.7*:, F &amp; A. M. Ke»tt!»T&#13;
Communication Tuesday evening, on or before&#13;
the full of the moon. H. F. Sigler, W. M.&#13;
ORDER OF EASTERN Sl'AR meets each month&#13;
the Friday evening following the regular F.&#13;
iA.M. meeting, Mas. MARY READ, W. M.&#13;
ORDER OF MUDEUN 'WOODMEN West the&#13;
nrst Tnursdiiy evenius; of each Mouth in the&#13;
Maccabee nail. C. L. Grimes V". C.&#13;
LADIES OF THE MACCABEES. Meet every 1st&#13;
and^Jrd Saturday of eacbmonth at 3::10 p m. at&#13;
K. O. T. M. hall. Visiting sisters cordially invited,&#13;
LILA CoxiWAY Lady Com.&#13;
Si KNIGHTS OF THE LOYAL GOARO&#13;
meet every second Wednesday&#13;
evening of every month in the K. O.&#13;
T. M. Hall at 7;30o'clock. All visiting&#13;
Guards welcome.&#13;
C. L, Grimes. Capt. Gen.&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
H. f . SIGLER M. D- C, L, SIGLER M, D&#13;
DRS. SIGLER &amp; SIGLER,&#13;
Physicians and Sur&gt;;e,ins. All calls prompt)&#13;
attended to day or uight. Office on Mainstr&#13;
Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
" DR. A. B. GREEN.&#13;
DENTIST—Every Fridaj; and on Thursday&#13;
Mhen having appointmcuts. Office over&#13;
Siller's l&gt;nic Store.&#13;
Treatment of roil with lime has&#13;
been sueested to the Paris Academy&#13;
of Science as a possible remedy&#13;
for malaria, as it has been noticed&#13;
that countries having a surface rich in lime are tree fxom'thii xnaK&#13;
*dx.&#13;
J. # e MlLMBi&#13;
V E T E R I N A R Y S U R Q E O N .&#13;
Graduate of Ontario Veterinary College, also o f&#13;
the Veterinary Dentistry College&#13;
Toronto Canada.&#13;
WiU promptly attend to all diseases of the domesticated&#13;
animal at a reasonable price.&#13;
Horses teeth examined Fsssr&#13;
o r r i C C a t f t i L L . PINCKNEY.&#13;
- — I r , . • • ' « — i ' ) • 1'i^.t&gt;'&lt;»i ^ " ^ . f , , ; ' 1 ' . ' ' ••••&#13;
• * • » . ,&#13;
1 V1 .&#13;
••'v:.v;'.;:-. v'i';&#13;
if'-- ,:-.-&#13;
•P-.*"T''. c&#13;
K*-^-&gt; '• ^ ' • • ' " , ' ,&#13;
$*&gt;•''',;&#13;
M » - ••••&gt;&#13;
JRV&gt;:&#13;
m •&#13;
m M i * * *&#13;
.V&#13;
— i MM'1' ».nV&#13;
• a p g g r p c mu ,riWU,i q p e a p p o e a g M t&#13;
It i t quite evWftnt t a a t i b e g o o e&#13;
B o x e r very clbaeiy resemble* the g o a d&#13;
Indian.&#13;
Of eourM, tboae flnthugiastlcally patrfotfc&#13;
$ l t i « e j » f w h o are mobbing Chin&#13;
e s e laundrymen would hail w i t h der&#13;
l i g h t . ( ^ opportunity to go to ChinA.&#13;
Reqitn^ stwddip of the ocegu bottom&#13;
n e a r t h e cdasPTine cr: continehts fcave&#13;
Bhown t h a t rivers ^of considerable s i t e&#13;
s o m e t i m e s enter the s e a beneath t h e&#13;
surface.&#13;
Mummies manufactured in Prance&#13;
e r e now being shipped all over the&#13;
world. Prudent antiquarians, purchasi&#13;
n g wisely, e x a m i n e the m u m m y with&#13;
t h e X-rays, for thus t h e spurious article&#13;
is readily detected.&#13;
T h e e m p l o y m e n t of w o m e n in t h e&#13;
postal service i s not an American id.^a.&#13;
It was by no m e a n s u n c o m m o n in the&#13;
old days, when postmasters kept post&#13;
h o u s e s and were persons of some consequence.&#13;
"In 1548, Leonard, of Taxis,&#13;
appointed a w o m a n postmaster at&#13;
Braine-le-Comte, an important point in&#13;
France." ~&#13;
The Delaware &amp; Raritan Canal Comp&#13;
a n y t s - s a i d to be mustering its mules&#13;
out of service, and h a r n e s s i n g up the&#13;
a u t o m o b i l e to do their work on the&#13;
tow-path. If this sort of t h i n g is all&#13;
o w e d to g o o n till t h e beasts of burd&#13;
e n and of draft are let off from their&#13;
present tasks, the Society for the Prev&#13;
e n t i o n of Cruelty to A n i m a l s will be&#13;
tempted to relax its vigilance.&#13;
Consul-General J o h n Goodnow, the&#13;
. U n i t e d States representative at Shanghai,&#13;
w h o s e dispatches to the governm&#13;
e n t concerning the situation at Peki&#13;
n g h a v e been printed in the n e w s -&#13;
papers of the country, is a Minneapolis&#13;
man. He used to o w n the Minneapolis&#13;
Baseball club, and at the time of his&#13;
appointment to his present post by&#13;
President M c k i n l e y he w a s engaged&#13;
in t h e coal business in Minneapolis.&#13;
Besides being'the seat of the Transvaal&#13;
government. Pretoria Is t h T moat&#13;
beautiful town in South Africa. It&#13;
n e s t l e s In a valley. N o w h e r e else in&#13;
&amp;&gt;ujh Africa is there such a "blending&#13;
o f new. a,nd old or are there so many&#13;
contrasts in the way of architecture.&#13;
There are Quaint, low Dutch roofs,&#13;
s t u r d y English architecture and the&#13;
his government buildings completed&#13;
t e n years ago at a cost of $1,003,000.&#13;
T h e r e are important distinctions bet&#13;
w e e n India rubber and gutta percha&#13;
a n d in the majority of purposes for&#13;
w h i c h they are empIoyecT; one can not&#13;
replace the other. W h i l e t h e trees&#13;
y i e l d i n g India rubber are well distributed&#13;
over the tropical parts of the&#13;
w o r l d and may be c u l t i v a t e d w l t h more&#13;
or less facility, the tree which furn&#13;
i s h e s gutta percha is to be found only&#13;
In Borneo, Sumatra and the Malay arc&#13;
h i p e l a g o generally.&#13;
A fat citizen of the seacoast town&#13;
of Lubec, Me., went down a ladder at&#13;
.Jhe side of a schooner t o get a hammer&#13;
t h a t be had dropped overboard. H e&#13;
inserted h i s body between the rungs&#13;
of the ladder, that he m i g h t reach&#13;
d o w n and get the h a m m e r from the&#13;
s h o a l water, and became stuck there.&#13;
T h e t|de was rising and he w a s rescued&#13;
t h r e e h o u r s afterward, just in time to&#13;
s a v e him from drowning, the water&#13;
h a v i n g reached within t w o inches of&#13;
his mouth.&#13;
t$&#13;
In A b y s s i n i a w o m e n are rulers and&#13;
m e n are evidently the w e a k e r vessels.&#13;
T h e house and all its c o n t e n t s belong&#13;
to t h e woman, w h o may, if s h e choose,&#13;
turn her husband out of doors on t h e&#13;
slenderest pretext. If, upon repentance,&#13;
s h e c o n s e n t s to receive him again, he&#13;
m u s t brings as a peace-offering a cow&#13;
or half the market prieu of-^a camel.&#13;
T h e right of divorce belongs E x c l u s i v e -&#13;
l y to the wife, and, t h o u g h h e r huavband&#13;
m u s t n o t leave her w i t h o u t her&#13;
consent, he is obliged to g o if she d e -&#13;
sires to be rid of h i m . In fact, a&#13;
state of affairs exists i n Abyssinia&#13;
w h i c h m i g h t well J u s t i f y a revolt of&#13;
man. ,-.'* •.• *&#13;
• ' •' ' ' V • '' ' ,&#13;
Th«vin«ttM^0frA»uiuas i n t h e matter&#13;
o i self •preservation is curioasly&#13;
illustrated by the, f a c t that- several&#13;
d o z e n cats found refuge d a r i n g t h e&#13;
O t t a w a fire in a wooden house w h i c h&#13;
a l t h o u g h t h e buildings o n each side&#13;
w e r e burned down, refused t o catch'&#13;
fire, a n d remained intact. Cats have a&#13;
p e c u l i a r gift in this direction; since,&#13;
i n addition to'their reputed nine l i v e x&#13;
t h e r e i s a popular superstition that&#13;
t h e y w i n o n l y eat w h a t i s good for&#13;
t h e m , t h i s B W ^ J W j i q t to a faW&#13;
l a c y ; b u t the, instinct # «elf-pr%«ervation,&#13;
w h i c h , i s c o m m o n to alj animals,&#13;
e i c e &gt; &gt; t r ^ f t * 8 « c : nfcrscs ( w h o , being&#13;
v e r y . b i ^ &amp; a e r v e a , will during a fire&#13;
btfaat* * l # a t f f e f t d * l o b g t t w n t y ) , has&#13;
" ^ ' ^ ' V * f t d - s * s * a :&#13;
A ^&#13;
TALMAGE'S J1RJION.&#13;
TTt» ,-. (fr ~.i&#13;
T A L K O N O N E O f T N I M I S S I O N S&#13;
r .Wort*** Wottads AWitr BtontftXm—Xto&#13;
^ntlauit* K«l»Uoae ^f Sorcery&#13;
Thmolmgy, [n:&#13;
(Copyright, 1900, by Louis Klopsch.)&#13;
i n &gt;this disoeurae Br^ T a l m a g e ( w h o&#13;
is n o w t r a v e l i n g i n Europe) puts i n a n&#13;
unusual light t h e ^ v f r a i o n o f Christ&#13;
a n d s h o w s h o w d i v i n e p o w e r will y e t&#13;
m a k e t h e i l l n e s s e s of t h e world fall&#13;
back; text, M a t t h e w xl, 5, "The Mind&#13;
receive their sight, and t h e l a m e walk,&#13;
t h e lepers are cleansed and the deaf&#13;
h e a r . " "&#13;
"Doctor/'. I said .to a d i s t i n g u i s h e d&#13;
Burgeon, "do y o u not g e t w o r n o u t&#13;
with c o n s t a n t l y s e e i n g s o m a n y&#13;
wounds and broken bones and distortions&#13;
of the h u m a n body?" "Oh; n o , *&#13;
he answered, "all that is overcome by&#13;
m y j o y in curing them. A s u b l i m e r&#13;
and more merciful art never c a m e&#13;
d o w n from h e a v e n than that of s u r -&#13;
gery. Catastrophe and disease entered&#13;
t h e earth so early that one of t h e first&#13;
w a n t s of the world was a doctor: Our&#13;
crippled and agonized human race called&#13;
for surgeon and family p h y s i c i a n&#13;
for m a n y years before they came. T h e&#13;
first s u r g e o n s w h o answered t h i s call&#13;
were m i n i s t e r s of religion—namely,&#13;
t h e Egyptian priests. And w h a t a&#13;
grand thing if all- clergymen were a l s o&#13;
doctors, all D. D.'s were M. D.'s, for&#13;
there are so m a n y cases where body&#13;
and scul need treatment at the s a m e&#13;
time, consolation and medicine, t h e -&#13;
o l o g y and therapeutics. A s the first&#13;
surgeons of the world were also m i n i s -&#13;
ters of religion, m a y these t w o professions&#13;
a l w a y s be in full s y m p a t h y ! B u t&#13;
under what disadvantages the early&#13;
surgeons worked, from the fact t h a t&#13;
the dissection of the h u m a n body w a s&#13;
forbidden, first by the pagans, and&#13;
_theii_J^the_early-XJhristiansi Apes,&#13;
being the brutes m o s t like the h u m a n&#13;
race, were dissected, but n o h u m a n&#13;
body aright be unfolded for physiological&#13;
and anatomical exploration,&#13;
and the surgeons had to guess what&#13;
was inside the temple by looking at&#13;
the outside of it. If t h e y failed in&#13;
any surgical operation, they were persecuted&#13;
and driven out of tne city, as&#13;
was •Archagathus because of hi3«bold&#13;
but unsuccessful attempt to savft-a, pa^_&#13;
tient. • ' j ^ .&#13;
y h e Surjcoa In History.&#13;
But the world from the very beginning,&#13;
kept calling for surgeons, and&#13;
their first skill is s p o k e n of in Genesi3.&#13;
where t h e y employed their art for the&#13;
incisions of a sacred rite, God m a k i n g&#13;
surgery the predecessor of baptism,&#13;
and we see it again in II Kings, where&#13;
Ahaziah, the monarch, stepped on&#13;
come cracked latticework in the palace,&#13;
and it brcke,TriTd he, fell from the&#13;
upper to the lower floor, and he was&#13;
so hurt that, he sent to the village of&#13;
Ekron for aid. and Aesculapius, w h o&#13;
wrought such w o n d e r s of surgery, that&#13;
he w a s deified and temples were built&#13;
for his worship at Fergaraos; and Epidaurus&#13;
and Podelirius introduced for&#13;
the relief of the world phlebotomy,&#13;
and Damocedes cu;redo&gt;the dislocated&#13;
ankle of K i n g Darius and the cancer&#13;
of his queen, and Hippocrates put successful&#13;
hand on fractures and introduced&#13;
amputation, and P r a x a g o r a s removed&#13;
obstructions, and Herophllus&#13;
began dissection and Erasisiratus&#13;
removed tumors, and Celsus, the R o -&#13;
man surgeon, removed cataract from&#13;
the eye and used the Spanish fly; and&#13;
Heliodorus arrested disease of t h e&#13;
throat, and Alexander bf Tralles treated&#13;
t h e eye, and R h a z a s cauterized for&#13;
t h e prevention of hydrophobia, and&#13;
Percival" P o t t came to combat diseases&#13;
of the spine, and in our century w e&#13;
have had, a m o n g others, a Roux, and&#13;
a Larray in France, an A s t l e y Cooper&#13;
and a n Abernethy in Great Britain and&#13;
a V a l e n t i n e Mott and Willard Parkar&#13;
and Samuel D. Gross in America and&#13;
a g a l a x y of living s u r g e o n s as brilliant&#13;
as their predecessors. W h a t m i g h t y&#13;
progress in the baffling of d i s e a s e a i n c e&#13;
t h e crippled and sick- of ancient cfties&#13;
were laid along t h e streets, that people&#13;
w h o had ever been hurt or disordered&#13;
in the s a m e w a y m i g h t s u g g e s t&#13;
w h a t had better be d o a e for the "patients,&#13;
and the priests of olden time,&#13;
w h o were c o n s t a n t l y suffering from&#13;
colds, received in w a l k i n g barefoot&#13;
o v e r t h e temple M x e w e a t * - had to prescribe&#13;
for,- themselves,, a « d fractures&#13;
were considered s o far:be»ond all h u -&#13;
m a n cure t h a t instead of calling in t h e&#13;
surgeon t h e people o n l y i a v o k e d t h e&#13;
g o d s ! "•• ' - ^ . ; J ; , . ' ; , - - • . . ,&#13;
B u t nbtwiths^andinki^U: the surgl- have tried everything,&#13;
cal and medical-'Sfcflr 'in the world,&#13;
w i t h w h a t tenaoity t t o old- d i s e a s e s&#13;
h a n g o n t o the h u m a n race, a n d - m o s t&#13;
of t h e m are thousands o | y e a r s old,&#13;
and to our B i b l f » ^ r j e l d cQ - t h e m —&#13;
the carbuncles of Job and H e s e k l a h ,&#13;
the palpitation of tfce'hefcrt spoken of&#13;
in Deuteronomy, t h e s u n s t r o k e of a&#13;
child carried from t h e fields' o f S h u -&#13;
nem, crying, "My head, m y h e a d ! "&#13;
K i n g Asa's disease of t h e feet, w h i c h&#13;
was n o t h i n g but g o u t ; defection of&#13;
teeth, t h a t called for dental s a r g t r f t&#13;
the akil of which, a l m o s t equal to a n y -&#13;
thing modern, is still s e e n in the filled&#13;
molars of t h e unrolled E g y p t i a n m u m -&#13;
m i e s ; the- o p h t h a l m i a e* owed, by, the&#13;
juice of t h e n e w l y ripe fig, l e a v i n g t h e&#13;
people Mind b y t h e roadside; epilepsy,&#13;
as in the case of tJbe young man eiten&#13;
falUng in^tttft^^aiWl Pit into the&#13;
water; hyfpochondr^ as of NebuohadnestajA&#13;
whp imagined himself aa ox&#13;
and gjojag out to the fields to pasture;&#13;
thefathered toad, which, in Bible&#13;
times, as now, ci&gt;me from the destruction&#13;
of the main artery or from paralysis&#13;
of the chief nerve; the wounds of&#13;
the man, whom the thieves left for&#13;
dead on the road to Jericho and whom&#13;
the good Samaritan nursed, pouring in&#13;
oil and wine—wine to cleanse the&#13;
wound and oil to soothe it Thank God&#13;
for what surgery has done for the alleviation&#13;
and cure of human suffering!&#13;
&amp;nrg«rjr Without Pain*&#13;
B u t t h e world w a n t e d a s u r g e r y&#13;
w i t h o u t pain. Drs. Parre and H i c k -&#13;
m a n and S i m p s o n and W a r n e r a n d&#13;
Jackson, with their a m a z i n g g e n i u s ,&#13;
c a m e forward, and w i t h their a n a e s -&#13;
thetics benumbed t h e patient w i t h&#13;
narcotics and ethers a s t h e a n c i e n t s&#13;
did w i t h h a s h e e s h and m a n d r a k e and&#13;
quieted him for a while, but at t h e return&#13;
of consciousness distress returned.&#13;
The world h a s never seen but o n e&#13;
surgeon w h o could straighten the&#13;
crooked limb, cure the blind e y e or&#13;
reconstruct the drum of a soundless&#13;
ear or reduce a dropsy w i t h o u t a n y&#13;
pain at the t i m e or a n y pain after, a n d&#13;
t h a t surgeon w a s J e s u s Christ, the&#13;
mightiest, grandest, gentlest and most&#13;
sympathetic surgeon the world ever&#13;
s a w or ever will see, and he deserves&#13;
t h e confidence and love and w o r s h i p&#13;
and h o s a n n a of all the earth and halleluiahs&#13;
of all heaven. "The blind receive&#13;
their sight and the lame walk;&#13;
the lepers are cleansed, and the deaf&#13;
hear." &lt;&#13;
I notice this s u r g e o n had a fondnes3&#13;
for chronic cases. Many a surgeon,&#13;
w h e n h e has had a patient brought to&#13;
him, h a s said: ' " W h y w a s not this&#13;
attended to five years ago? You bring&#13;
him to me after all power of recuperation&#13;
is gone. You have waited until&#13;
there is a complete contraction of the&#13;
museies, and false H t a t u r e s are form*&#13;
ed, and ossification h a s taken place. It&#13;
o u g h t to have been attended to l o n g&#13;
ago," But Christ the Surgeon seemed&#13;
to prefer inveterate cases. One w a s a&#13;
hemorrhage of t w e l v e years, and he&#13;
stopped it. Another was a curvature&#13;
of eighteen years, and he straightened&#13;
it. Another was a cripple of thirtyeight&#13;
years and he walked out well.&#13;
The eighteen-year patient was a w o -&#13;
_man, bent almost double. If you could&#13;
call a convention cf all the surgeons of&#13;
all the centuries, their combined, skill&#13;
could not cure t h a t body so drawn out&#13;
of. shape. Perhaps they m i g h t stop it&#13;
from getting worse, perhaps they&#13;
might contrive, braces by w h i c h she&#13;
might be made more comfortable, but&#13;
it is, humbly speaking; incurable. Yet&#13;
this divine surgeon put both his hands&#13;
on her, and from that doubled u p posture&#13;
she,.began to rise and the e m -&#13;
purpled lace began to take on a healthier&#13;
hue. and the muscles began to&#13;
"elax from their rigidity, and the spinal&#13;
column began to adjust itself, and&#13;
the cords, of the neck began to be the&#13;
more supple, r,nd the eyes that could&#13;
see only the ground before, n o w looked&#13;
into the face of Christ with gratitude&#13;
and up toward heaven in transport.&#13;
Straight! After eighteen weary&#13;
3nd exhausting years, straight! The&#13;
poise and gracefulness, the beauty of&#13;
healthy w o m a n h o o d reinstated. The&#13;
thirty-eight years' case was a man w h o&#13;
lay on a mattress near the mineral&#13;
baths at Jerusalem. There were five&#13;
apartments where l a m e people were&#13;
brought, so that they could get the&#13;
advantage of these mineral baths. The&#13;
&amp;tone basin of the bath Is still visible,&#13;
although the waters h a v e disappeared,&#13;
probably through s o m e convulsion of&#13;
nature. The bath, 120 feet long, forty&#13;
feet wide and e i g h t feet deep. A h ,&#13;
joov man, if you have been lame and&#13;
helpless thirty-eight years, that m i n -&#13;
eral bath cannot restore you. W h y ,&#13;
thirty-eight years i s more than the avarage&#13;
h u m a n life. N o t h i n g but t h e&#13;
grave will cure you. B u t Christ the&#13;
Surgeon, w a l k s a l o n g these baths and&#13;
I have no doubt passes by s o m e patients&#13;
who h a v e been o n l y s i x m o n t h s&#13;
disordered or a year or five years, and&#13;
comes to the mattress of the man w h o&#13;
had been nearly four decades, helpless&#13;
and to this thirty-eight year's invalid&#13;
srid, "Wilt thou be made w h o l e ?&#13;
Chridt the Chief Surgeon.&#13;
The question asked not because the&#13;
surgeon did not understand t h e pro-,&#13;
tractedness, the- desperateness of t h e&#13;
case, but to evoke the man's pathetic&#13;
narrative. "Wilt t h o u be made w h o l e ? "&#13;
"Would you like to g e t w e l l ? " "Oh,&#13;
yes," s a y s t h e m a n . "That is w h a t I&#13;
came to these mineral baths for. r&#13;
All the surg&#13;
e o n s have failed, and all t h e prescriptions&#13;
h a v e proved valueless, a n d 1&#13;
g o t w o r s e and worse, and I can n e i t h e r&#13;
m o v e hand nor foot n o r head. Oh, if&#13;
I c o u l d o n l y be free from t h i s pain of&#13;
thirty-eight y e a r s ! " Christ t h e S u r -&#13;
g e o n could not stand t h a t B e n d i n g&#13;
o v e r t h e m a n o n t h e mattress, a n d I n a&#13;
voice tender wtth all s y i a p s t h y , mtt&#13;
s t r o n g w i t h all o m n i p o t e n c e , h e s i y s ,&#13;
" R i s e ! " a n d t h e invalid i n s t a n t l y&#13;
s c r a m b l e s to his k n e e s a n d t h e n puts&#13;
out. h i s . r i g h t foot, t h e n h i s left foot,&#13;
"Shoulder t h i s m a t t r e s s . ;for y o u are&#13;
n«* o n ^ w e l l ^ e s p u g A ^ J t o i . b u t w e l l&#13;
e n o u g h t o work, a n d s t a r t . o u t from&#13;
t h e s e m i n e r * } tothf. T a t o u p t h y &gt; d&#13;
, w a | | r Qh, jsjjhat a surgeon. Jfor&#13;
nic « a s e e M t h e * a n d t o r c h « » J c&#13;
cases n o w i . &lt; &lt;&gt;.i* ,;&#13;
T h i s is n o t applicable s o m u c h t o&#13;
t h o s e w h o a r e o n l y a little h u r t of sin&#13;
a n d o n l y for a shbrt time, b u t to'tfease&#13;
prostrated of s i n tweh-e y e a r s , e i g h t -&#13;
e e n year*, tbirtff«tjgl»t *«*£** Heir* U&#13;
a surgeon able to g f y e t o | i p r t a l M h e a ^ h .&#13;
"Oh." y o u say, 'h^i^W-im^my&#13;
o v e r t h r o w n V l l l l l j p f tfiilTTIft Mill&#13;
t h a t I c a n n o t r i s j g ^ &amp; r e y o u flatter&#13;
d o w n t h a n t h i s p a t i e n t at the mineral&#13;
b a t h s ? N o . T h e n r i s e . &amp; t h e nainc&#13;
of J e s u s of Nazareth, t h e s u r g e o n ;«jho&#13;
offers y o u b i s r i g h t h a n d of h e l p , I bid&#13;
t h e e rise. N o t c a s e s of a c u t e §&gt;n, but&#13;
of chronic s i n — t h o s e w h o k m n o t&#13;
prayed7 for thirty-eight years*, t h o s e&#13;
w h o h a v e n o t been s o church foj&amp; thirt&#13;
y - e i g h t y e a r s , t b i s e w h o h a r e . b e e n&#13;
gamblers, or libertines, or t h i e v e a , ) o r&#13;
o u t l a w s , or blosmtowexs, oiCitofiiels,&#13;
or aethelsts, or a l l th.^9 togtjtfter, (for&#13;
thirty-eight year's. A Christ" for e x i -&#13;
g e n c i e s ! A Christ f o r a: • d e a 8 fift! A&#13;
surgeon w h o never l o s e * a ease?&#13;
I n s p e a k i n g of Christ as a s u r g e o n I&#13;
m u s t consider h i m as a n oculist or e y e&#13;
doctor, a n d a n aurist or ear doctor.&#13;
W a s there e v e r s u c h another o c u l i s t ?&#13;
That he w a s particularly sorry for the&#13;
blind folks I take from the fact t h a t&#13;
the m o s t of h i s w o r k s were w i t h t h e&#13;
diseased optic nerves. I h a v e not t i m e&#13;
to c o u n t up the n u m b e r of blind p e o -&#13;
ple m e n t i o n e d w h o got his cure. T w o&#13;
blind m e n in o n e h o u s e ; also o n e w h o&#13;
w a s born blind; s o that it w a s not removal&#13;
of a visual obstruction, but the&#13;
creation of t h e cornea and ciliary m u s -&#13;
cle and c r y s t a l l i n e lens and retina and&#13;
optic n e r v e a n d tear g l a n d ; a l s o t h e&#13;
blind m e n of Betfisaida, cured by t h e&#13;
saliva w h i c h the Surgeon took from&#13;
the tip of his own tongue and put u p o i&#13;
the eyelids; a l s o t w o blind m e n w h o&#13;
sat by the wayside.&#13;
Unloosing1 the Barred Tongue.&#13;
litiK'fegl'&#13;
had? pever beea prostrated. WhTlihe&#13;
Our s u r g e o n , h a v i n g unbarred h.s&#13;
ear, will n o w unloose the shackle of&#13;
his tongue. T h e s u r g e o n will use tha&#13;
s a m e l i n i m e n t or s a l v e that h e used&#13;
on t w o occasions for the cure of blind&#13;
people—namely, the moisture of his&#13;
own mouth. The application is j n a d e ,&#13;
and lo, the rigidity of the d u m b t o n -&#13;
gue is relaxed, and between the t o n g u e&#13;
and teeth w a s born a w h o l e v o c a b u -&#13;
lary and words flew into expression.&#13;
He not o n l y h e a r d / b u t he talked. One&#13;
gate of his body s w u n g in to let sound&#13;
enter, and another gate s w u n g out to&#13;
let sound depart. W h y is iTthat, whil?&#13;
other s u r g e o n s used k n i v e s and forceps&#13;
and probes and stethoscopes, t h i s&#13;
surgeon used o n l y the o i n t m e n t of his&#13;
own lips? T o s h o w that all the curative&#13;
power w e ever feel comes s t r a i g h t&#13;
from Christ. And If he touches us not&#13;
we shall be deaf as a rock an:i d u m b as&#13;
a tomb. Oh, t h o u greatest of all artists,&#13;
compel us to hear and help us to&#13;
speak!&#13;
But what were the surgeon's fees for&#13;
all these cures of e y e s and ears and&#13;
tongues and withered hands and&#13;
crooked backs? The skill and the&#13;
painlessness of the operations were&#13;
worth hundreds and thousands of&#13;
dollars. Do not think that the cases&#13;
he took were all m o n e y l e s s . Did he&#13;
not treat the nobleman's s o n ? Did h e&#13;
not doctor t h e ruler's daughter? Did&#13;
he not affect a cure in the house of a&#13;
centurian of great wealth w h o had out&#13;
of his own "pocket built a s y n a g o g u e ?&#13;
They would h a v e paid him large fees,&#13;
and there w e r e hundreds of w e a l t h y&#13;
people in Jerusalem and a m o n g the&#13;
merchant castles a l o n g L a k e Tiberias&#13;
who would have g i v e n this surgeon&#13;
houses and lands and all t h e y had for&#13;
such cures as he could effect. F o r&#13;
critical cases i n our time great surg&#13;
e o n s h a v e received $1,000, ¢5,000 a n d&#13;
in o n e case I k n o w of $50,000, but t h e&#13;
surgeon of w h o m I speak received n o t&#13;
a shekel, not a penny, not a farthing.&#13;
In his^whole earthly life w e k n o w of&#13;
his h a v i n g had but 62½ cents. W h e n&#13;
his taxes were due, by his o m n i s c i e n c e&#13;
he k n e w of a fish in t h e sea w h i c h h a d&#13;
s w a l l o w e d a piece of silver m o n e y , a s&#13;
fish are apt to s w a l l o w a n y t h i n g&#13;
bright, and h e s e n t Peter w i t h a h o o k&#13;
which brought up that fish, and from&#13;
its mouth w a s extracted a R o m a n s t a -&#13;
ter, or 62¼ cents, the only m o n e y he&#13;
ever had, and t h a t he paid out for&#13;
taxes. This greatest s u r g e o n of all t h e&#13;
centuries g a v e all his services then a n d&#13;
offers all h i s s e r v i c e s n o w free of all&#13;
charge. " W i t h o u t m o n e y and w i t h o u t&#13;
price" you m a y spiritually h a v e y o u r&#13;
blind e y e s opened, and your deaf e a r s&#13;
unbarred, ..and your d u m b t o n g u e s&#13;
loosened, and y o u r w o u n d s healed a n d&#13;
your soul saved. If Christian p e o p l e&#13;
g e t hurt of body, m i n d or soul, l e t&#13;
them remember t h a t surgery i s a p t&#13;
t o hurt, but it cures, and y o u can afford&#13;
present pain for .future glory. B e -&#13;
sides that, there a r e powerful a n a e s -&#13;
t h e t i c s in t h e d i t o l j p r o m i s e s ( h a t&#13;
s o o t h * and° a i l e v i a ^ . ^ 3 ^ ^ f i K ^ o r&#13;
c h l o r o f o r m - * * eocafatf e v e r m w r ^ h e&#13;
s o sut»erlef*t^ d i s t r e s s - « s * a t e w * tfttsps&#13;
of i t h a t m a g a i f i c e h t ' . ^ t t i ^ e i . / ' A n&#13;
t h i n g s work t o g e t h e r for good to-those&#13;
w h o l o v e OOd.'*f-**WeeplBg n t a r e n d n w&#13;
for a n i g h t , but Joy c o m e t h i n t h e&#13;
m o r n i n g . "&#13;
Only he w h o l i v e s a life of 4 i s o w n&#13;
can h e l p t h e l i v e s o f other m e n . —&#13;
Phillips Brooks.&#13;
T R A N S V A A L W A R I T E M f .&#13;
On t h e 16th t h e Boers m a d e a d e t e r -&#13;
m i n e d a t t J i f e k ' b n t h e ^ l o f t o f P o l e -&#13;
Carew's fpsteloflNMd a h m * t h e l e f t&#13;
4*n)i, c o m m a n d e d b y B u t t o n . T h e&#13;
pjMjta heisV b y A b * * I r i » b ' f u s i l i e r s and&#13;
(teaadian motw.teoVu i n f a n t r y u n d e r&#13;
L i e u t . Col. Aidereoa w e r e mo«t g a l *&#13;
l a s t l y defended. T h e , B o e r s m a d e r e *&#13;
p e a t e d a t t e m p t s to a s s a u l t t h e posi&#13;
t i o a a , c o m i n g in. close r o u g e a n d c a l l -&#13;
i n g t o t h e Fusilier* t o surrender. T h e&#13;
Bflers suft^ej^wfOTftlJf. i . T h e y h a d 1»&#13;
k i l l e d a n d SO wo«n«iod, a n d foar w e r e&#13;
t a k e n prisoners. Th^j IJritisU casualt&#13;
i e s w e r e w^yen killed^ i n c l u d i n g th«&gt;&#13;
Canadian l i e u t e n a n t s . Bordpa a n d&#13;
Birch, 30 wonudod and 2 i m,i&amp;sing..&#13;
T h e Boers m a d e a d e t e r m i n e d ) attack&#13;
o n tbp 2i_st tp d e s t r o y , J J ; . J N S ^ a ^ t h o&#13;
Rail Head, 1¾ m i l e s c a s t o f jlcidejpcrer,&#13;
w h i c h t h e y attacked, wit^i" t h r e e . g u n s&#13;
and a pompom a n d surrounded. T h e y&#13;
weris, h o w e v e r , b e a t e n off after a a h a r p&#13;
e n g a g e m e n t , before r e i n f o r c e m e n t s&#13;
s u m m o n e d from H e i d e l b e r g h a d arrived-&#13;
— » — — M l I I I • • • ( • I W I W M ' • 1 ^ - » « ^ ^ »&#13;
More t h a n "0 p c i s o n s s u c c u m b e d and&#13;
m a n y m o r e werw fatally prostrated by&#13;
h e a t in N o w York city o n t h e 18th.&#13;
A b o u t half of t h e f a t a l i t i e s occurred&#13;
a m o n g b a b i e s a n d little cjUildren.&#13;
I n d i a n s hunting1 on t h e e a a t coast of&#13;
Hudson bay recently found t h r e e bodies&#13;
and a vast q u a n t i t y o f w r e c k a g e .&#13;
It is believed by officials t h a t it w a s&#13;
t h e r e m a i n s of And reft and party, w h o&#13;
w e r e t r y i n g to reach the n o r t h p o l e byballoon.&#13;
In t h e p r e l i m i n a r y e x a m i n a t i o n of&#13;
J e s s i e Morrison, a t Eldorado, K a n s a s ,&#13;
on t h e IHth. charged w i t h t h e murder&#13;
of Mra. Olio C*-stle, i n t e r e s t centered&#13;
in the testimony of Glin Castle,&#13;
w h o s e y o u n g w i f e w a s s l a i n a w e e k&#13;
after her w e d d i n g .&#13;
Capt. M c r e e i v Indian a g e n t a t Solw&#13;
a y . M i u n . . s a y s that t h e U l a n k e t Ind&#13;
i a n s have w i t h d r a w n t h e i r opposition&#13;
to t h e building of a s c h o o l house on&#13;
their reservation, and ever)'thing" is&#13;
n o w a111 ica l&gt;ly sc111 &lt;;&lt; 1. _&#13;
~^A cuhictfram w a s ivccivorl from V. S '&#13;
Minister Conner from I'ckin on t h e&#13;
'.'Utij stating, llt.'il t w o d a y s previous to&#13;
t h a t t\nU-, ho was alivo ami that t h e&#13;
foreigners wore fiyhting" for their&#13;
.&gt;afoly.&#13;
Tin*, jjovn.roniont. depot at- JcfTersonvillc.&#13;
J ml., has nci.'ived orders from&#13;
W a s h i n g t o n to hog in making1 150,000&#13;
flannel blouses and 300,OOD pairs of&#13;
drawers. This is in a o t i e i p a t i o n of&#13;
military o p e r a t i o n s ill China and to&#13;
i lolhe the soldiers in the P h i l i p p i n e s&#13;
lor the ehanjjiiiK" seasons.&#13;
The c a s u a l t i e s - o f I tie a l l i e s in t h e&#13;
llsree days' liVht.inj*' before? 1 he native&#13;
oily ot TiOn Tsiuexuecd**! 1.000. It is&#13;
now certain thai, there w e r e several&#13;
IJiissians and I'lVnehn'oii fighting" on&#13;
the Chinese side. The Chinese killed&#13;
their o w n w o m e n w h o l e s a l e to prevent&#13;
ihem falling into the iiumls'oi t h e Russians.&#13;
On the t?th the w h o l e native&#13;
city was in Haines', ami the s t e n c h of&#13;
1 he hurtling t housapds of corpses was&#13;
unspeaUahly horrible. ,. .&#13;
.Secretary of War RpoL o n tho -0th&#13;
made the s t a t e m e n t that the i'. JS. had&#13;
not ordered a n y m o r e troops to, China,&#13;
ami added" T h e chief effort of our&#13;
•Hivornment. just n o w ' m u s t b e directed&#13;
lo aiding the friendly Chinese ollieials.&#13;
It i* e v i d e n t from the d i s p a t c h t h a t&#13;
the imperial g o v e r n m e n t lias been netiny&#13;
ui yood faith, and on J u l y IS w a s&#13;
still u.sin&lt;»- its best oiVorts t o protect&#13;
the leyntions. We must do,everything1&#13;
we can to &gt;ceond their efforts. •&#13;
B A S E B A L L .&#13;
Reiow wc •sotunit the orflcial Ktancltn^ of th»&#13;
I'lniisof tin' National ;ir*l AmcrR'iin tua^uci up&#13;
Uiaml including Sunday, July J.M:&#13;
Won. r«o*t. Per cfc.&#13;
lirooMvn&#13;
IMnlihlclptu.i&#13;
I'llXslmrj,' ,&#13;
-*,"(t»ciiy&lt;» '•&#13;
('iiii')irhiUl&#13;
Hu&gt;l.oii&#13;
S I I.IMJIS&#13;
N«w York •..&#13;
4?&#13;
4,)&#13;
id&#13;
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AMICKICA.V LY.ACVKChtmiro...&#13;
In.h.ui.ipolis .,&#13;
MilwiiuKoe —&#13;
UlpvoUnd . . . .&#13;
Detroit&#13;
Uufl.ilo..&#13;
Kansas (My ..&#13;
Minneapolis ..&#13;
&lt;:&gt;&#13;
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T H E M A R K E T S .&#13;
I.IVK STOCK.&#13;
Sew York-- Cattle Sheep Lambs&#13;
H o i "ruth's f I WytS-i tfi ft M» *&gt; 7»&#13;
Lower grades U fttttfS W ;&lt; W 5 00&#13;
nilt'»H«»—&#13;
I'esi. yrinJes... 5 0.1^5 (V&gt;&#13;
Lower ytailOH i&lt; v&gt;5^5 W&#13;
»*trt&gt;lt—&#13;
Mem. «rmU'«....« 7.VJH *.Ti&#13;
Lower grades .i JO^I 7 J&#13;
1U»8t n ratios .. 4 -fOSlft 2h&#13;
LowiT grade* 4 0JU^4 40&#13;
r i n c t a n n t l —&#13;
L o « v r .gnuio»..4 3u^i&gt;.(U&#13;
l*ltt«barg—&#13;
Brxt jpriidrHt,.. ft SMU 81&#13;
Lower »;ru«»e«..3 «W»4 7J&#13;
4 M&#13;
J 8."»&#13;
4 ."*)&#13;
3 5J&#13;
4 7.%&#13;
4 M&#13;
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5 *tt&#13;
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tUm^Work&#13;
*Detrou&#13;
CtttVlODMll&#13;
Fltubnrk&#13;
UuW»lu&#13;
Wheat.&#13;
No. .' red&#13;
OOtL'lfr"&#13;
rJOfrrV&#13;
?^7t&lt;^&#13;
CJorn,&#13;
No. 2 mix&#13;
«IQ4IH&#13;
• • t • • • J W , - " *&#13;
4:404 i&#13;
4Q«3'/&lt; WW&#13;
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So t." wbita&#13;
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•iMwrr-^inif. No&lt; Mv&lt;iiftt^^«r») per &lt;*&gt;a&#13;
Pototoe*. Wo per bu. Live Poulirr, *prioif&#13;
Chkkenii. »Hc per 10; fowlN, to; turkeys, loo;&#13;
itutkm J&gt;Hc &lt;«K*gis&gt; *u*m» »&lt;•»: tfl»«wr 4*&gt;lka.&#13;
i •&#13;
4&gt;&#13;
gutter. L^»&lt;,&lt;&#13;
J*a m - J ^ ^ ^ J ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ U I ^ I ^ ^ ^ ^ ^&#13;
v i .&#13;
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t!&#13;
« N 9 l . t 8 H ^ ^ A d g f - -&#13;
fUvld** Into Ds^t*TJaarfpiee«, Jfari*&#13;
"I am alwaya, &gt;•&gt;§&lt;• a lot of tue*&gt;&#13;
tlona about: the i»eeTege," M U ^ A i t i&#13;
Jamieeon, of Load©*, art the W&amp;14off»&#13;
Astoria, to awNe* York Tribune man,&#13;
"whenever I am in America. One&#13;
thing that eeema especially to bother&#13;
you people la that while a house of&#13;
lords exists nevertheless lords, earls&#13;
and even marquises are t o be found&#13;
among members of the house of commons.&#13;
This conjee about from the socalled&#13;
courtesy titles borne by eldest&#13;
sons and heirs. For example, take the&#13;
case of, thef,Mar&lt;lu1« of Lome, now&#13;
—ninth Puke of Argyll, who married the&#13;
Princess Louise. He bore the title of&#13;
marquis during his father's life by&#13;
courtesy. The peerage is divided into&#13;
dukes, marquises, earls, viscounts&#13;
and barons, and the'Spiritual peerage&#13;
into archbishops and bishops. The title&#13;
duke is very old. Hannibal was called&#13;
Duke of Carthage. The Doge of Vealce&#13;
was a duke. A duke is addressed&#13;
as 'His Grace and Most Noble,' and by&#13;
the crown as 'our right trusty and&#13;
right entirely beloved cousin.' Marquises&#13;
were formerly military leaders,&#13;
who guarded the limits or marches of&#13;
the kingdom.. Hence; they were called&#13;
Lords of the Marches, or _Marquises.&#13;
They are addressed as 'Most Honorable,'&#13;
and by the crown a6 'our ripht&#13;
trusty and entirely beloved cousin.'&#13;
Viscounts, or vice countesses, were&#13;
sheriff*, in earlier days. They are addressed&#13;
as 'Right Honorable,' and by&#13;
the Crown as 'our righty trusty and&#13;
•well beloved cousin.' JBarons, originally&#13;
by tenure, then by writ and now&#13;
by letters patent, are bearers or supporters—&#13;
from the etymology of the&#13;
word—and- are styled 'Right Honorable,'&#13;
and addressed by the Crown as&#13;
'our righty trusty and well beloved.'&#13;
The royal addresses sound like a&#13;
game where you go on losing a word,&#13;
.don't they? The only title by tenure, i&#13;
—think, now existent among us is the&#13;
•Earldom of Arundel, which the Duko&#13;
of Norfolk holds by his tenre of Arundel&#13;
Castle, but this was confirmed by&#13;
a special act of Parliament. Baronets&#13;
and knights are both addressed as&#13;
'Sir,' but while the former is a title&#13;
that holds with and descends in the&#13;
family, the latter exists only during&#13;
the life of the holder. Sir William Van&#13;
Home, who built the Canadian Pacific,&#13;
is a knight."&#13;
" " " i " WOKI. *r&#13;
»•».*««* «.&#13;
CALIFORNIA P R U N E S .&#13;
Variety Said to Be Superior to the&#13;
French Article.&#13;
According to a statement made by&#13;
United States Consul Joseph I. Brittaiu,&#13;
stationed at Nantes, France, the&#13;
quality of the California prunes is superior&#13;
to the French, and the duty is&#13;
not excessive, being but 10 francs jscr&#13;
kilograms, or less than one cent per&#13;
pound. If the prunes are carefully selected&#13;
and tastefully packed in sub*&#13;
stantial boxes, and are always as represented&#13;
by the samples, there will&#13;
soon be a much larger demand from&#13;
this part of France. I was recently&#13;
shown samples of California apricots&#13;
packed,in five-pound boxes. The first&#13;
layer was composed of large yellow&#13;
fruit, while underneath the fruit was&#13;
not only small and inferior, but it was&#13;
very irregular in color. The effect oi&#13;
such methods can be imagined. The&#13;
French people are not easily deceived,&#13;
and the California fruit dealers who&#13;
anticipate orders after sending such&#13;
samples are making serious mistakes.&#13;
One of the Nantes importers recently&#13;
received a consignment of California&#13;
prunes from New York City. He told&#13;
me he could buy them cheaper in California,&#13;
but he wished to have them&#13;
guaranteed by some one with whom&#13;
he was acquainted; hence the order&#13;
was given through the New York&#13;
house. These prunes were nicely&#13;
packed, but the dealer says he lost&#13;
about 20 cases in consequeuce-of_Jthe&#13;
boxes having been made from very&#13;
thin lumber. I measured one of the&#13;
covers, and found the lumber to be less&#13;
than one-fourth of an Inch in thickness.'*&#13;
Mary J. Kennedy, manage* P*&#13;
toour A Ca's B i f i b i r a t flK ^TraL&#13;
Mississippi-Exposifttota at Omaha, K^L.,&#13;
writes t h e following of Perns*, a* q.&#13;
cure for that&#13;
common 'pha**&#13;
of, summer oatsrrh,&#13;
known&#13;
as indigestion.&#13;
Miss Kennedy&#13;
says:&#13;
"I found the&#13;
c o n t i B U S 1&#13;
change of diet&#13;
incidental t o&#13;
e i g h t y e a r s '&#13;
traveling com-,&#13;
pletely u p s e t&#13;
m y dl^restive&#13;
system. Irteonsulting&#13;
several&#13;
physicians they&#13;
decided I suffered&#13;
with catarrh&#13;
o f t h e&#13;
stomach.&#13;
"Their prescriptions&#13;
&lt;*did&#13;
not s e e m t o&#13;
help me any,&#13;
so, reading of&#13;
the remarkable&#13;
cures effected&#13;
by the use of&#13;
Peruna I decided&#13;
totry it and&#13;
soon found myself&#13;
well repaid.&#13;
"I have now,used Peruna for about&#13;
three months and feel completely rejuvenated.&#13;
I believe I am permanently&#13;
cured, and dp not hesitate to give&#13;
iinstinted praiso to your great remedy,&#13;
Peruna."&#13;
The causes of summer catarrh are&#13;
first, chronic catarrh; second, derangements&#13;
of the stomach and liver; third,&#13;
impure blood.&#13;
buch being the case anyone w h o&#13;
knows anything whatever about the&#13;
operations of Peruna can understand&#13;
why this remedy is a permanent cure&#13;
for summer catarrh. I t eradicates&#13;
chronic catarrh from the system, invigorates&#13;
the stomach and liver, cleanses&#13;
the blood of all impurities, and therefore&#13;
permanently cures by removing the&#13;
cause—a host of maladies peculiar to&#13;
hot weather, The cause being removed&#13;
the symptoms disappear of themselves.&#13;
"Summer Catarrh" sent free to any&#13;
address by The Peruna Medicine Co.,&#13;
Columbus, Ohio.&#13;
T h e N e w Railroad t o S a n Francisco.&#13;
The Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe&#13;
Railway Co. has completed an extension&#13;
of their route to San Francisco,&#13;
and opened it up recently for&#13;
passenger business, opening for&#13;
freight business having been made&#13;
several weeks ago. Heretofore,&#13;
San Francisco and the other cities&#13;
of central California have been_ connected&#13;
with the east by only one transcontinental&#13;
line, and the entry of the&#13;
Santa Fc route to compete for public&#13;
patronage may be expected to result&#13;
in much better freight and passenger&#13;
transportation for those cities. ,The&#13;
Santa Fe road is now the only railroad&#13;
under one ownership and management&#13;
all the way from Chicago to San Francisco.&#13;
SB *&#13;
HleVT BRKAK9 T ^ f t M a M K T K f c .&#13;
l J T h » cottonwoo«s bare shed t n « r&#13;
caterpillars, there has been i thuMdtrns&#13;
ff&#13;
storm, mesquite wood has fiDen fn&#13;
price, Indians are selling bows and&#13;
arrows, the rose and the oleander&#13;
have long been out. oranges art In&#13;
b l o o m / the umbrella tree is putting&#13;
out its leaves, last summer's suit has&#13;
been cleaned and pressed, the&#13;
small hoy has gone swimming in the&#13;
canal, the wise man stays up nights&#13;
and stealft irrigation water from h i s&#13;
neighbors, alfalfa is almost readjr t o |&#13;
cut, strawberries have been #hipped&gt;&#13;
mulberries are nearly ripe, summer&#13;
will soon he here and the Phoenix&#13;
summer bedroom will soon be necessary.&#13;
Phoenix sleeps out of doors&#13;
in the summer and the bedroom is&#13;
born out of that necessity. . It is on&#13;
stilts, b built of wire screen of fine&#13;
mesh, for the Phoenix mosquito is&#13;
microscopic in size. It is furnished&#13;
according to the taste of the occupant,&#13;
with interior curtains" to keep&#13;
out the morning sun, the gaze of the&#13;
curious and the sand storm. The bed&#13;
is a cot of canvas or wov,en wire, covered,&#13;
perhaps, with a sheet, but even&#13;
a sheet feels like a featherbed on a&#13;
Phoenix summer night. The bed covering&#13;
is the roof of the bedroom, and&#13;
careless folks who consult their comfort&#13;
only don't wear nightshirts.&#13;
Phoenix is proud of Its climate during&#13;
eight months of the year, but it&#13;
doesn't talk much in public about its&#13;
midsummer. It is a right warm day&#13;
when the government weather bureau&#13;
doesn't know what the sun temperature&#13;
is and is unable to determine it,&#13;
and that 13 how hot it gets in Phoenix.&#13;
I called on Observer Burns one&#13;
day last July and asked him what the&#13;
"official" temperature was in the sun.&#13;
He said he did not know and that the&#13;
government couldn't afford to experiment&#13;
to that end. He said he had attempted&#13;
to catch the sun temperature&#13;
'during" the summer of 1898 and had&#13;
broken a $3 thermometer in the attempt.&#13;
To please my curiosity he&#13;
hung a thermometer in the sun,&#13;
watched 4t-until it registered 136 degrees,&#13;
and then took it in, fearing it&#13;
would break. The dryness of the atmosphere&#13;
relieves this great heat of&#13;
any terrors to all living things except&#13;
women and cats.—Phoenix Graphic.&#13;
The'^rn&amp;rf lmpoxtent change made&#13;
at the recent provincial chapter of the&#13;
ComjrsspUionief tho- Holy Cross at* the&#13;
University of « # o t « - Pame, Indiana,&#13;
was the transfer of Rev. James A.&#13;
Burns from the head of the community&#13;
a d a s e * ^ thVprssiAtfeV of H « 7&#13;
Cross college,- which is situated in&#13;
Washington in affiliation with the&#13;
Catholic University of America.&#13;
Father Burns, who has been professor&#13;
of chemistry at Notre Pame after brilliant&#13;
work at Harvard and Johns Hopkins,&#13;
Is one of the ablest as well a s&#13;
one of the youacea* of the Catholic&#13;
sdncators of America, and as head of&#13;
the post graduate institution in Wash*&#13;
ington he has a great field for further&#13;
progress. •&#13;
Deer Avenged Harder &lt;kt fawn.&#13;
In the park of Lord Orantley, at&#13;
Wonersh, near Quildford, a fawn,&#13;
drinking, suddenly was pounced upon&#13;
by one of the swans, whldi pulled the&#13;
animal into the water and held it under&#13;
until drowned. This was observed&#13;
by the other deer in the park. Shortly&#13;
after this swan, which had hitherto&#13;
never been molested by the deer, was&#13;
singled out when on land, and furiously&#13;
attacked b j &amp; herd, which surrounded&#13;
and killed it.r-Wcekly Telegraph.&#13;
m* trnvfrimw. i i •&#13;
B e s t f o r t h e B o w e l s .&#13;
No matter what ails you, headache&#13;
to a cancer, you will never get well&#13;
until your bowels are put right.&#13;
CASCARBTS help nature, cure you&#13;
without a gripe or pain, produce easy&#13;
natural movements, cost you just 10&#13;
cents to start getting your health back.&#13;
CASCARETS Candy Cathartic, the&#13;
genuine, put up in metal boxes, every&#13;
tablet has C. C. C. stamped on it. Beware&#13;
of imitations.&#13;
Marquette, o o L a k e Superior,&#13;
is one of the mest charming summer&#13;
resorts reached via Chicago, Milwaukee&#13;
&amp; St. Paul Railway.&#13;
Its healthful location, beautiful&#13;
scenery, good hotels and complete immunity&#13;
from hay fever, make a summer&#13;
outing at Marquette, Mich., very&#13;
attractive from the standpoint of&#13;
health, rest and comfort.&#13;
For a copy of "The Lake Superior&#13;
Country," containing a description of&#13;
Marquette and the copper country, address,&#13;
with four (4) cents in stamps to&#13;
pay postage, Geo. H. Heafford, General&#13;
Passenger Agent, Chicago, 111.&#13;
As long as we let Christ lead, wc&#13;
shall have victory. i&#13;
The chronic kicker usually kicks&#13;
himself out of joint. )&#13;
— : (-&#13;
Supremo Court Sustains the Foot-Ease&#13;
Trade-Mark.&#13;
Justice Laughlln, in Supreme Court,&#13;
Buffalo, has ordered a permanent injunction,&#13;
with costs, and a full accounting of&#13;
pales, to issue against Paul B. Hudson,&#13;
the manufacturer of the foot powder&#13;
culled "Dr. Cftirk's Foot Powder," and&#13;
also against a retail dealer of Brooklyn,&#13;
restraining them from making or selling&#13;
the Dr. Clark's Foot Powder, which" is&#13;
dodged, in the decision of the Court, an&#13;
imitation and infringement of "Foot-&#13;
Ease." the powder to shake Lo£o your&#13;
shoes for tired&gt; aching foet, now BO largely&#13;
advertised and sold all over the country.&#13;
Allen S. Olmsted, of Le Roy, N. Y.,&#13;
is the owner.of the trade-mark "Foot-&#13;
Kase,'* and he iR the, first Individual who&#13;
ever advertised a fotrt -ptowder efctenatVety&#13;
over the country. He win —ad* »-sample&#13;
Free to any one who writ**.him for&#13;
it. The decision in this case upholds&#13;
hi? trade-mark and renders all parties&#13;
liable who fraudulently attempt to prof-&#13;
It by the^extenslve "Foot-Ease" adveH&#13;
Using, In placing upon the market a&#13;
spurious and similar appearing preparation.&#13;
l«,b*letf*nh6 put * .'tip* lw&gt; «rrYe**pes&#13;
and boxes like Foot-Base.- Similar suit*&#13;
will be brought against others who. are&#13;
now infringing on the Foot-Ease trade*&#13;
mark and cottrawn law rights. ' ' • ;&#13;
Many a woman h a a f t c u r e d a lifelong&#13;
Job ty *ma*iwtaf a man t o reform&#13;
h i m . • •* '&#13;
The man w W » a * t » fojgeta that he&#13;
is a gentfeuaan alao remember* thai&#13;
there art otkan,—CbJoafo Newa.&#13;
Illiteracy in N o r t h Carolina.&#13;
Illiteracy in North Carolina is Increasing,&#13;
particularly among the&#13;
whites. By the census of 1870 there&#13;
were 38,111 illiterate white voters in&#13;
North Carolina; in 1880, 44,420; in&#13;
1890, 49,570—an average Increase of&#13;
S00 illiterate voters a year, and a total&#13;
of 21 per cent of the entire white voting&#13;
population.&#13;
Hall's Catarrh Card&#13;
Is taken internally. Price, 75c.&#13;
Most of the good jokes are old on'es&#13;
if you only knew i t&#13;
To Car* Dandruff Quickly&#13;
use Coke Dandruff Cure. Money refunded&#13;
if it fails, so why not try it?&#13;
WANTU) 50©&#13;
Men, Women' and Children to try the best&#13;
and cheapest preparations ever offered the&#13;
public. You don't take any chance* m tryia*&#13;
them, as your druggist guarantees Knill's Bed&#13;
Pills for Wan People. -Pale and Weak," the&#13;
women's remedy of the day (the only genuine).&#13;
Knill s White LiveT Pills, the great Ldver Invtgorator,&#13;
System Renovator and Bowel Regulator.&#13;
25 doses, 23c. You can work while they work.&#13;
Never gripe or make you sick, Knili's Blue Kidney&#13;
Pills cure all Kidney Ills. Backache, etc.&#13;
Knill's Dyspepsia Tablets cure Indigestion, correct&#13;
all Stomach Troubles, destroy all foul gases,&#13;
make pure sweet stomachs and breaths. To do&#13;
as advertised or money refunded. The only&#13;
sruaranteed preparations on the market. Knill's&#13;
Pills or Tablets cost 25c. Half price of others.&#13;
Motor Car for Warfare.&#13;
A patent was issue recently for a&#13;
"motor driven car for use in wartare."&#13;
It is nothing more than a battleship&#13;
on wheels, or an armored automobile&#13;
full of guns and other terrjfying&#13;
weapons, and ateb adapted to be&#13;
so charged with electricity that rash&#13;
storming parties attempting to board&#13;
it will instantly be electrocuted,&#13;
The smarter a man is in fancy the&#13;
more he will smart in fact.&#13;
• C«awf%«a4&#13;
" D K A B Msa. £ n s * A i f : - ~ 2 write to&#13;
tatf yeet ot k,h* good Lydia &amp; Piafe-&#13;
1iiia*~MT'*"-*'***^* TMbtiliiilliJ l i t AiSSL&#13;
me. I Wall aiek in bedebout **6 weelia.&#13;
The right aide o* my abdomen p a i n o *&#13;
me and waa s o awollen and eore t h a t I&#13;
could n o t walk. The&#13;
doctor told my Unahaad&#13;
I w e a l d ha*e t o&#13;
undergo an operation,&#13;
Thia t rcfuaed t o d o ,&#13;
until I had given your&#13;
mediciuea trial. B e -&#13;
fore I had t a k e n&#13;
one bottle t h e&#13;
• w e l l i n g b e -&#13;
g a n t o disappear.&#13;
I con*&#13;
tinued t o use tS&#13;
your medicine&#13;
until the swelling&#13;
waa entirely gone.&#13;
When t h e doctor&#13;
came h e waa very&#13;
much surprised toi&#13;
aee me so 'much'&#13;
better."—Mas. M a n r SMITH, Arlington,&#13;
Iowa*&#13;
" D B A B M B S . PINKHAM:—I was sick for&#13;
t w o years with falling of the womb, and&#13;
inflammation of the ovaries and bladder.&#13;
I was bloated very badly. My left limb&#13;
would swell so X could not step o n m y&#13;
foot. I had such bearing down-pains I&#13;
could not straighten up or walk across&#13;
the room and such shooting pains would&#13;
g o through me that I thought I could&#13;
not stand it. My mother got me a bottler&#13;
of Lydia £ . Pinkham's Vegetable Compound&#13;
and told me to try it. I took six&#13;
bottles and now, thanks to your wonderful&#13;
medicine, I am a well woman.n&#13;
— M B S . ELSIE B B Y A V , Otiaville, Mich.&#13;
Counterfeiters are getting rich at&#13;
Manila circulating spurious coin.&#13;
He who can stand the little trials i s&#13;
fitted for the great trusts.&#13;
The bonds of friendship are stronger&#13;
than t h e ties^f kindred. — " ~&#13;
• U S E • T H E • G E N U I N E&#13;
MURRAY &amp; -&gt;&#13;
LAN MAN'S&#13;
ABSOLUTE&#13;
SECURITY.&#13;
Genuine&#13;
barter's&#13;
Little Liver Pills.&#13;
M u s t B e a r S i g n a t u r e o f&#13;
5e» Pac-SimlU Wrapper Below.&#13;
It Isn't fair to measure other people in youl&#13;
half bushel, but you probably do it.&#13;
FITS Permanently Cured. No (Its or nerrotistiew a«er&#13;
first day's UM« ot Dr. Kllu«'s Great Nerve K*»torw.&#13;
Send for F R E E 9 2 . 0 0 tiUl bottle and treatiM.&#13;
Da. R. H. KiAHm, LW., »31 Arch St, MUlaUelphlA, Fa.&#13;
Some people have faith in odd numbers—and&#13;
the favorite is number one.&#13;
Mrs. Witulow'a 800thing- Syrap.&#13;
For children teething, softens the jrum», reduces inflauunatlofi,&#13;
allays pain, cures wind coUc 33c a bottl*&#13;
Givo the business man plcaty of vopo and&#13;
he'll form a cordage trust.&#13;
Indian Crows Railroading.&#13;
The Chicago, Burlington &amp; Quiney&#13;
Railroad is building a line in Montana&#13;
down into the Big Horn Basin toward&#13;
Yellowstone Park, and as the Crow Indian&#13;
reservation is near at hand, a contract&#13;
has been made with the red men&#13;
for grading a section of roadbed. The&#13;
managers of competitive lines threaten&#13;
to enter a complaint to the Western&#13;
Passenger Association, making the&#13;
charge that the Burlington has made&#13;
a deal with the "Scalpers."&#13;
The true pessimist would rather be&#13;
wrong than happy.&#13;
Worry ruins more business men than&#13;
bad deals 4 o .&#13;
Did Ton Erer Bun Across&#13;
an old latter—ink aU faded out? Couldn't hare&#13;
been Carter's Ink for U doesn't txde.&#13;
to take a*&#13;
CARTERS&#13;
llTTLE IVE.R9.&#13;
F0t HEABACHL&#13;
FQft QIZflNESS.&#13;
m i I1U0USMESI.&#13;
FOR TOftHD LIYtt.&#13;
FOft COatSTIPATIOH.&#13;
FOR SALLOW KIR.&#13;
FOR THEC0MPUXI0R&#13;
SJUST MVS SlSNATUft&#13;
P E R F U M E&#13;
0 « THE HANDKERCHIEF;&#13;
TOILET &amp; BATH.&#13;
R E F U S E A L L S U B S T I T U T E S&#13;
FARM MORTGAGE&#13;
LOANS&#13;
In amounts ranging from 1800 to&#13;
910,000 on choice improved farms&#13;
in the Western part of North&#13;
DaVct*.&#13;
Write us if you have maney to Invest&#13;
and we will be pleased to &amp;ead you '&#13;
description of loanti, rates of lnterf&#13;
»•, etc Personal examination of&#13;
all loans. We bare invested nearly&#13;
On* Million Dollars in farm loans&#13;
in North Dakota since 1881 without&#13;
the loss of a dollar.&#13;
NORTH DAKOTA LAND &amp; LOAN CO., Rugby. N. C.&#13;
EDUCATIONAL.&#13;
CURE SICK HEADACHE.&#13;
T H E&#13;
An honest man always keeps his credit a little&#13;
better than his clothes.&#13;
Vsnfcsnaes indues crrsT htir. bnt P A U S E S K M *&#13;
BALS&amp;V arlass back tbs yoorhtui color.&#13;
HujosacouHs, the best cure for corn*.&#13;
Lots of men tret rich by helpiaf&#13;
make fooU of themselves.&#13;
Piso's Cure is the best medietas we evet us«d&#13;
for all affections of the throes aad laags.—WM,&#13;
O. ENDSLEY, Vanburen. la*., M , Mt 1900.&#13;
A tender feeling for taw wife of another man&#13;
isn't legal tender.&#13;
When cycling. taJa* a&#13;
You can ride fur&#13;
White's Yucatan.&#13;
r.&#13;
Ignorant mm aie a peed While la fibding out&#13;
what ails them. '&#13;
•rtr&#13;
COMPANY&#13;
S T A N D A R D THE UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME,&#13;
CCaVIMil afliPallltC NOTRE DAME, INDIANA,&#13;
OCHIRQ pUftyHHIC Cables, Letters, Econoaaics sad HLstory.&#13;
Journalism. Art, Science, Pharasecy. Law.&#13;
Civil, riechanlcaJ and Electrical EaginetriDf.&#13;
Architecture.&#13;
Thorough Preparatory and Comsaerdal&#13;
Courses. Ecclesiastical students at special rates.&#13;
ROOBU Free. Junior or Senior Year. Collegiate&#13;
Courses. Rosen* to Rent, moderate charges.&#13;
St. Edward'* Hail, for bov's under 13.&#13;
The 57th Year wi If open September 4tb,190O&#13;
C«ta!e*nes Free. Address&#13;
REV. A. MORRiSSEY. C S C . President.&#13;
mske twentj-nve different&#13;
styles. Including the highestpriced&#13;
best; and best lowpriced&#13;
machines.&#13;
Send for catalogue and&#13;
prices.&#13;
J. B. ALDRiCH, State Mgr..&#13;
828 Woodwsrd Ave.,&#13;
DKTEOIT, Mica.&#13;
BOOKLETS; FREE,&#13;
••HV.' ." (fOT-Ii L'S ;&gt;&gt; • V,&#13;
J. &amp; C.-MAGUIRE S EXTRACT BENNE PLANT&#13;
' - / ' t ' U W f S C i t ' i i - , G &gt; . . . • ; , » .VI &lt;.-&gt;.'t • v,i «. . O 1 . 1 r r h . P i ! &gt; v S c r ! f H&#13;
C o n ' i ' i . V i H - . M - . ' l " « - - . I L V -1 I n T h e r v :i r : , • • . . ! &lt; , ' • U M&#13;
i&gt;\ • T- \ 1' (t ;.&gt;v U ' . i - ' . i ' i ' . - i ' : i v . i r ; j ' , U s » ' &lt; l t i y ... ,r A - &gt;iv .» I :' I&#13;
U , \ , -&#13;
. 1 , ! O r . . ; X C M1GUIRE MEUii f^t :'() . 5&#13;
BUY* DOUBLE MftftCL B M B C a l $t« SHOT • • • fe&gt;r $9.77.&#13;
^^^S^r^SR^.&#13;
W t w a t&#13;
8CW WINOHMTKR RIFLES. » 3 . 0 7 . M W&#13;
U t t O N LOADiWQ SNOTOUIMa, .Va.47.&#13;
H«W WIN6HISTUISNOT &lt;HiNaVtia.»7.&#13;
Wtoeaesser aad U. M. C. Leadse aaaUs,«7! | 7 yer Ma&#13;
_ Ktwo Fowdsr Loaded aheUs, « | . 7 7 p e r m err SHOT, ^ts^^ss^sse^^ij^&amp;sss^i&#13;
» « y H T HOUM. 7IJ-T«I MIooWW *W&gt;I». MUMIAPOLI*. » W N . M?,&#13;
An. act 6f charity t»a«ally dl&#13;
an act ot heroism. 4 :.*c?Ar y&#13;
It nerer hurts t h e value of fejM 'to&#13;
call it filthy lucra, &gt;&#13;
The aupreae excellence laHtt 'f*4«t«&#13;
la aimpHclty. ^ . ^ . ^ , . r^&#13;
W.ir.U—DBTRCftT—N6.3C-- l©Oo' a MONIY FOR&#13;
SOLDIERS' HEIRS&#13;
' aW» o»lrji«oa iileHu wao m&#13;
MasIOMB leTwara* befoee Jane&#13;
g i s i a e w M ) . tt i t s e**rOosj&#13;
WHta CAPT. O^AJatBLL, Ppa ilia At—a&gt;&#13;
• a a t a m l a t e &lt;aawa\&#13;
.-ml&#13;
1 ^X-'tfi&#13;
m&#13;
JM&#13;
: Ik I,&#13;
••&amp;i&#13;
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i :9&#13;
• • ' * •i&#13;
%&#13;
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r*&#13;
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• -'Vj&#13;
m ' • ' • • • ' ' •&#13;
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A-:&#13;
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»&gt;&amp;V.:&#13;
L,.r«:'' •&#13;
r..&#13;
I-&#13;
' r'V&#13;
!&#13;
% • • • •&#13;
fl&amp;' £ * ! •&#13;
S&#13;
&amp;.*•«&gt;&#13;
^ V&#13;
. \)"'.•'.'••'' yfS^i.'.'^\'• 'i'^-'- •'•';'• '^,'^'':'i'.''.' 'L'S^l'' ''''''"-•-'''— litc:Lli^.i•,.*-.'^ J%-rr?&gt;'... ''.'•..'.^.'.-J.;.-.•-*'•-'-^--'..' '.??'•.;".-• '•- "- ,-,^--'• -T-,:---••«•.--1^--7--^ •".•'V'*';^ ." ' ,'r^';. ,:*£$vljfc" ' ^ ^ ' ' • " • ' " ^ ' ^ / T ' " ^ ^&#13;
*i'ijm^,ff •WV^yHr™&#13;
.'*•..: ?'' ' V, :*.&#13;
W 1 ,'S M •,-;',*,* •, , * . v ; &lt;• •• ' , ; • •• • • ; • : " * • • - . .&#13;
./&#13;
% ASK YOUR GROCER FOR UANDI T ^ SOLD BY ALL FIRST-CLASS DEALERS.&#13;
Ill SEALED PACMaES ONLY-PURE MO FRiORAHT.&#13;
" IT COSTS NO MORE-TRY IT"&#13;
WEST PUTNAM.&#13;
Miss Katherine Connoy of Detroit&#13;
is visiting at Coopers.&#13;
Wellington White visited&#13;
friends in Marion last week.&#13;
Blanch and Mary Kuen of Jackson&#13;
are visiting at Win. Murphy's.&#13;
Miss Addie Burkhart of&#13;
Cohoctah visited at Wm. Sales,&#13;
last week.&#13;
Mrs. Chas White and Mrs. D.&#13;
B. White visited in Hamburg&#13;
last week.&#13;
Wm. McQuillan and family of&#13;
Hamburg spent Sunday with P.&#13;
Kelly's folks."&#13;
Mrs. Maxwell, wife of judge&#13;
Maxwell of Bay City is visiting at&#13;
,C. V. Van Winkle's.&#13;
Blanche Graham of Pinckney&#13;
spentthefirsiTbf the week with&#13;
friends in this place.&#13;
Herman Beed left last Saturday&#13;
for Washington where he expects&#13;
to secure a position as teacher.&#13;
Success to him.&#13;
Those desiring instructions in&#13;
croquet are cordially invited to&#13;
H. B. Gardners; H. B. lays claim&#13;
to the championship.&#13;
K V. and C. V. Van Winkle&#13;
S. E . Barton, H., B. Gardener&#13;
and Wm. Sales attended a masonic&#13;
gathering at Stockbridge&#13;
last week.&#13;
H. B. Gardner aud C. V. Van&#13;
Winkle attended the Democratic&#13;
News of the newspaper kind is&#13;
quite scarce—plenty of gossip.&#13;
Mrs. Morgan of Milwaukee Wis.&#13;
and Mr*. Cox of Detroit are visiting&#13;
their sister Mrs. Clinton Spalding&#13;
of Parshallville.&#13;
Thomas Bidleman has resigned&#13;
his position with Wm. Wolverton&#13;
and Floyd Wolverton begins&#13;
work this morning in his place.&#13;
r&#13;
. £A6T l-'UTNAM.&#13;
Sirs. Alex Pearson spent the&#13;
past two weeks in Hamburg.&#13;
Mrs. Will Schiefle of Campbell&#13;
Mills visited here Sunday.&#13;
Mr~Burr Fitch of Stockbridge&#13;
spent Sunday with his sister Mrs.&#13;
Bert Hicks.&#13;
Fred Lake of Marion spent one.&#13;
day last week at the home of&#13;
R. W. Lake.&#13;
Mrs. Bert Hnuse and children&#13;
of Hamburg spent Tuesday with&#13;
Mrs. Geo. Brown.&#13;
Miss Sarah Pearson who&#13;
been in Ann Arbor for the&#13;
month is home now.&#13;
Mrs. Hattie Browra who has&#13;
been;, visiting at Holly for a fortnight&#13;
returned home this week.&#13;
Rev. N. W. Pierce of Chubbs&#13;
Corners will lead the~C. E^-service&#13;
at this place next Sunday after&#13;
noon at 3 o'clock topic—Cumberers&#13;
of the grouni.&#13;
has&#13;
past&#13;
HAMBURG.&#13;
J. L. Kisby was in Brighton on&#13;
business one day last week.&#13;
Miss Etta Jones of Dimondale&#13;
convention at Howell on Monday. I visited Miss Cora Olsaver last&#13;
C. V. 'was elected a delegate to the week&#13;
State convention.&#13;
Mrs. F. A. Sigler and Miss Villa&#13;
Mrs. Frank Dunlavey spent&#13;
part of last week with relatives in&#13;
Martin of Pinckney called on Mrs. I Dexter.&#13;
S. E. Barton the first ofjilie week.&#13;
Mrs. Barton is seriously sick but&#13;
at this Writing is reported slightly&#13;
improved.&#13;
PETTYSVILLE.&#13;
Miss Maude Culy is visiting in&#13;
H amburg this week.&#13;
Ruel Coniway visited in Howell&#13;
Saturday and Sunday.&#13;
Miss Nella Cady -. called on&#13;
Thressa Melvin Sunday."&#13;
Miss Ella Mercer visited relatives&#13;
in Howell the past week.&#13;
Mrs. Wm. Hooker was in Dexter&#13;
Monday to see her daughter&#13;
who is sick,&#13;
Miss Lucy Schneider of Howell&#13;
spent Sunday with her sister Mrs.&#13;
A. Rohrgass.&#13;
Erma and Lura King of White&#13;
Oak are visiting at their aunts,&#13;
Mrs. J . W. Placway.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. A. Schoenhalls of&#13;
Hamburg visited at P. Coniway's&#13;
the first of the week,&#13;
Mrs. Lee who has been visiting&#13;
her sister Mrs. Art. Flintoff, t h e&#13;
past few weeks, left Saturday for&#13;
Detroit.&#13;
PARSHALLVILLE.&#13;
Our new store of Wolverton&#13;
Brothers is doing a lively business.&#13;
_&#13;
Mrs. Gub has moved to Oak&#13;
Grove where she lived before&#13;
coming here.&#13;
Despite the threatening weather&#13;
there was a. good company at&#13;
the ice cream social a t Dr. Park&#13;
ex's Pri4ay evening, reeiepte $6.50.&#13;
Mrs. J. Newberry of Detroit is&#13;
visiting with-lier parents in Cunninghams.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs.. Wm. Featherly&#13;
are entertaining relatives from&#13;
Toledo this week.&#13;
Quite a number-from this place&#13;
will attend Gala Day at South&#13;
Lyons next Friday.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Geo Wimbles of&#13;
Howell visited at the home of&#13;
Jas. Hayner the first of the week.&#13;
Miss France Streeter of Fowlerville&#13;
spent part of last week at(&#13;
the home of her aunt Mrs. Chas.&#13;
Burnett.&#13;
The Free Mail delivery route&#13;
will open July 30. I t extends&#13;
north from this village to Pleasant&#13;
Lake and south to Dexter.&#13;
Miss Laura Becker accompanied&#13;
by her aunt and uncle, Mrs.&#13;
Sam Jones and Jas. Jones started&#13;
last Wednesday for a visit with&#13;
relatives in New York.&#13;
At the M. E. parsonage at&#13;
Whitmore Lake* on Tuesday, July&#13;
17 occured the marriage of Miss&#13;
Lena Olsaver to Mr. Wm. Leice,&#13;
both well known young people of&#13;
this place. The happy couple are&#13;
now visiting at Harbor Springs.&#13;
ANDERSON.&#13;
Jas. Birnie Sundayed at home.&#13;
Threashing has begun in this local*&#13;
itv.&#13;
Floyd -Durkee of Iosoo Sundayed&#13;
with his mother.&#13;
Harry Keusah visited his parents in&#13;
Chelsea Sunday. He was accompan.&#13;
ied bv Charley Poole making the trip&#13;
on wheels. v —"• ~~~ —&#13;
Mm Dora Buillis is visiting friend?&#13;
and relatives lp Lansing.&#13;
Mrs. Eugene Smith made a flying&#13;
trip to White Oak Toes Jay.&#13;
Geo. Walton and friend of HoweU&#13;
visaed Burr Smith Saturday.&#13;
Jas. Roc be of Pinckney called on&#13;
friends in this place Saturday. .&#13;
Thany and Nora Durkee visited at&#13;
Jas. Roches in Pinckney Friday.&#13;
Nancy May of Unadilla spent Friday&#13;
niffht with Mrs. E. J. l&gt;urKee.&#13;
Dave Smith and wife eutertained&#13;
friends from Mecosta County Sunday.&#13;
jars. Chas. Hoff and daughter Kittie&#13;
were in Stockbridge one day last&#13;
week.&#13;
A couple of our energetic young&#13;
men were out among them Sunday&#13;
night.&#13;
Nelson Bullis and Samuel Placeway&#13;
attended the convention in Howell&#13;
Monday.&#13;
A few. of the young people from&#13;
this place spent Saturday fishing near&#13;
Unadilla.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs." John Birnie visited&#13;
their daughter Mrs. Harry Moore in&#13;
Howell Saturday.&#13;
Lester Williams and wife of Williamston&#13;
called on friends here the&#13;
first of the week.&#13;
The Ladies Aid that met at Mrs.&#13;
Nelson Bullis's Wednesd*y, July 18&#13;
netted the Society $3.00.&#13;
Little Susie and Maudie Smith are&#13;
spending a week visitin at the home&#13;
of Mrs. D. Walters in Howell.&#13;
Wirt Barnum and wife and Ales&#13;
Piper and wife visited Thos. Bud.il at&#13;
Stock bridge Saturday last.&#13;
Howard Sweet and wife. John Budd&#13;
and Vema Lyon * from Sjtockbridge&#13;
spent the last &lt;• last week on the&#13;
shores of Brnin Lake.&#13;
Eev. Swift from the Temples home&#13;
Chicago will talk in the- Presbyterian&#13;
Church Sunday evening in' behalf of&#13;
the homeless boys of that city.&#13;
A. C. Watson and wife accompanied&#13;
by J. D. Coulton and wife and John&#13;
Watson and wife from Chelsea spent&#13;
the iast of last and the first of this&#13;
week with&#13;
Sturgers.&#13;
MORE LOCAL.&#13;
UNADILLA.&#13;
Gertrude Webb Sundayed under&#13;
the parental roof.&#13;
Chandler was home from North&#13;
Lake over Sunday.&#13;
Unadilla goes to Iosco to play ball&#13;
next Saturday after noun.&#13;
Seymour May returned to his home&#13;
in Grand Kapids last week.&#13;
Jennie Harris from Chelsea Sundayed&#13;
under the parental roof.&#13;
J. D. Coulton from Chelsea visited&#13;
at A. C. Watson's last week.&#13;
Will Singleton from Anderson called&#13;
at Edd. Cranna's Tuesday.&#13;
Miss Addie Burkhart of Cohoctah&#13;
visited at Will Sales last week.&#13;
A number from this way took in&#13;
the show at Jackson last Friday.&#13;
A. E. Palmer is spending part of the&#13;
week with friends at Portage Lake.&#13;
Lon Clark from Stockbridge spent&#13;
Saturday and Sunday at L. K. Hadley1s.&#13;
Don Harris has hired out to work&#13;
tor John Bradley near Parkers Corners.&#13;
Clarence Hartsuff from Waterloo&#13;
spent last week with his grandparents&#13;
here.&#13;
D. M. Gvieves and wife from Pinckney&#13;
visited at Wm. Pyper's last Safc"&#13;
urday.&#13;
Mrs. Ales Pyper and Gertrude Mills&#13;
visited with friends near Munith&#13;
Tuesdav,&#13;
Silas Hemingway and wife from&#13;
Gregory visited friends in this place&#13;
Tuesday.&#13;
Gerturde Mills was home from her&#13;
work in Chelsea last week and the&#13;
first of this.&#13;
Wm, Liverraore and wife spent last&#13;
Sunday with their, their daughter in&#13;
Stockbridge.&#13;
The Sunday Schools in this vicinity&#13;
will hold a Basket Picnic at North&#13;
Lake August 2.&#13;
Mrs. Chas. Hill and son Cecil and&#13;
Lloyd are spending a few days with&#13;
her parents here.&#13;
Bert Hartsun' and family from&#13;
North Waterloo visited his parents&#13;
here over Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. Eugene Smith returned to her&#13;
borne in Ionia last week after a three&#13;
weeks visit at Ryal Barnum 1s.&#13;
Geo. Hoyland and wife from&#13;
Howell spent the last of last week and&#13;
the first of this at Wm. Pypers. -- t-&#13;
E. Everett Howe author of&#13;
Cronicles of The Break of Day&#13;
on friends in this place Sunday. .&#13;
The Unadilla Farmers Club will&#13;
join- with the North Lake Orange hi&#13;
a Basket Pi cmc at Stevensons Grove&#13;
August 7, a number of good speakers&#13;
bave, been engaged and the Stockbridge&#13;
Band will furnish" music for&#13;
them. Everybody invited to come.&#13;
Wm. Ferguson of Fowlerville, was&#13;
in town Tuesday.&#13;
H. Harrington of Detroit, is spenda&#13;
week in this vicinity.&#13;
Mrs. Andrew Wilhelm spent the&#13;
last of last week with relatives in&#13;
Stockbridge.&#13;
Chas. Grimes is spending a few&#13;
weeks in Ohio. Ind. and 111., making&#13;
the trip on his wheel.&#13;
W. W. Barnard and wife spent&#13;
Wednesday at Whitmore Lake with&#13;
a sister of Mr. Barnard.&#13;
J. W. Placeway has our thanks for&#13;
a dozen ear-1 of early sweet corn from&#13;
his garden. We think this is about&#13;
the first of the season. —&#13;
Subject at Cong'l Church Sunday&#13;
Morning—"Manaen the foster brother&#13;
of Herod the Tetrarch" or Diverse&#13;
destinies in life.&#13;
While camping at Portage lake the&#13;
past week a horse belonging to Dick&#13;
Reason was badly marked up by&#13;
marsh flies(!)or else kicked the paint&#13;
bucket. He was m arked "polka dot"&#13;
all righ t.&#13;
Master Luke Cole of Owosso, who is&#13;
visiting his uncle, F. L. Andrews at&#13;
this place, has improved the time by&#13;
commencing to lea,rn to set type in&#13;
the DISPATCH office, having set nearly&#13;
a column for this issue.&#13;
1 • » i . ~ « ~ — . I I . I I 11 i ~ - t » - » - » ~ y » - - y " » ' i •• 1 1.•&#13;
There were W&gt; on; the morning&#13;
train bound for Zukey Lake for a picmo.&#13;
Taey were from Stockbridge.&#13;
I. J." Abbott and daughter Oreasa of&#13;
West Marion, and Lyie Abbott of&#13;
Fowlerville are in Bowling Green, 0.,&#13;
attending a family reunion.&#13;
GRANGE PICNIC, NORTH LAKE,&#13;
the. Qrange picnic at North Lake&#13;
Augu1sstt 77,, Itnnee rfotlliloowwiinngg speaketr s will&#13;
he present: Geo. B. Harlow, master&#13;
of State Grange; Hon. H. C Smith,&#13;
and Chas. Rilley, D. D., Adrian; Thos.&#13;
E. Bark worth, Jackson; Rev. 0. S.&#13;
ftiends—and~-relativesTn|,lones, Chelsea; and others.&#13;
Hay furnished on the grounds, also*&#13;
refreshments. Plenty of boats for&#13;
hire, also a gasoline launch. A good&#13;
band will furnish music and there will&#13;
be vocal music.&#13;
Business Locals.&#13;
Fo&lt; Service.&#13;
One thorough-bred Jersey bull.&#13;
Inquire of J. W. Placeway.&#13;
For Sale.&#13;
Extra good road horse and carriage;&#13;
W. H. Sayles, Gregory, ;&#13;
NOTICE.&#13;
Notice is hereby given that sealed&#13;
bids will be received tor che performance&#13;
of Marshall service by the month&#13;
for the remainder of the year ending&#13;
on second monday in April 1900. All&#13;
bids to be in the bands of the clerk on&#13;
or before next regular meeeting. The&#13;
council reserve8 the right to rejecit&#13;
any or all bids.&#13;
Dated Aug. 2,1900.&#13;
R. fl. Teeple, clerk.&#13;
Notice.&#13;
Sealed bids will be received from&#13;
now until Aug. 1, for the furnishing&#13;
of 25 tonb of furnace coal for School&#13;
District No. 2, to b(e delivered in the&#13;
basement of the school -house on or&#13;
before Sept. 1, 1900.'&#13;
D. W. Murta,Sec.&#13;
Hi 1 " MM J&#13;
This store closes Friday afternoons at 13:30 until&#13;
Sept. 7th. I*. H. FIELD.&#13;
The Red Mark Sale&#13;
Has Only Another W e e k .&#13;
TO RUN:—This sale has been from its very start full of satisfaction to our&#13;
customers. We have given such big dollar's worth for every dollar that the&#13;
reputation of this store for fair, square, honest dealing has been incieased.&#13;
Make the best of your Red Mark chances this las*, week.&#13;
Best bight Percales, 9 l-2c.&#13;
We have an ovor-stook of 12|c Light Percales. They are the very&#13;
best of cloths and the choicest of the new patterns. We must clean tlem up&#13;
however, and to do this we mark the prices from 12.1c tc 9Jc per yard.&#13;
Closing Prices on Wash Goods.&#13;
One lot of best 12Jc Ginghams*, 6¾. _^__._&#13;
One lot of 18c and 20c Dress, Ginghams, 12£c&#13;
Lot of 25c, 30c, 35c and 40c Madras and Ginghams, 15c.&#13;
All our best Dimities in fancy colors up to 20c per yard are now on sale&#13;
at 10c.&#13;
Gutting&#13;
O v e r B&#13;
Price on all&#13;
roideries.&#13;
WeV^going to clean up the entire stock of Allovers this week, and&#13;
here's how we take to do it. We take one piece at $2.00, 15piece .at $1.75;&#13;
several pieces at $1.65 and $1.48 and a few pieces at $1.25 and make a uniform&#13;
price on the whole lot&#13;
8 9 c .&#13;
Closing Out S a l e of Hammocks*&#13;
All bur Hammocks previously up to $1.75, now in a lot of 98c.&#13;
All our Hammocks previously up to $3.50, now in a lot of $1.98.&#13;
The way W e Gut t h e Price on Belts&#13;
Is really reckless. All our Fanoy Pulley Belts, our Beaded Elastio Belts, ou r&#13;
Fine Leather Belts are cut to close.&#13;
Half price on Jetted Elastic Be UP.&#13;
Half price on Fancy Pulley Belts.&#13;
25c for 50c and 75c Fine Leather Belts.&#13;
48c for 98c and $1.25 Fine Leather Belts.&#13;
v L/H. FIELD.&#13;
JaokaoB, iiiok&#13;
•4 &gt;• :' •&#13;
V -V&gt;'^&#13;
,: h&#13;
.,¾ I&#13;
*&amp;&#13;
i' t * . • • 4 « ' ,.&lt;&#13;
• i ) '&#13;
V&#13;
-a'lBMt.. Ufrtafc JUtt» ^ - i * Mi II lull. I&lt;H» * " .LlilWl&#13;
'^^TT^T ^.,..- «i&gt;'C*XM*Ji**iir&amp;i£\lSJ!-^A '. fflr^B&#13;
^ . . ^ , ,.^^^^.,^-^U. -|^,i&gt;,T .^,;.h-.n WWy.ili.MUi. „/•',' / , , , , 1 , . . , , ^</text>
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              <text>Use the Windows Snipping Tool to capture the area of the document you want to save. If you want multiple pages printed please see staff to print the pages you want. &lt;a href="https://howelllibrary.org/technology/#print" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View the library's printing information.&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch July 26, 1900</text>
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                <text>July 26, 1900 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>1900-07-26</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>XVIII. HNCENEY, LIVINGSTON GO., MICH., AUGUST 2,1900, Nd. 31&#13;
Prices are right at&#13;
Surprise&#13;
*i»iw&#13;
Dress Stay8 per set 5c and 7c&#13;
Lenox Soap 2 bars 5c&#13;
Good Map of Michigan, worth $1, 50c&#13;
Pair Ladies' 8c Hose 5c&#13;
Pair Men's 8c Hose 5c&#13;
Men's Cottouade pants worth 75c, 45c&#13;
LOCAL NEWS.&#13;
Good 15c Suspender*&#13;
Good 35c Suspenders&#13;
Brownie Overalls&#13;
Clothes Baskets from&#13;
Bushel Basket&#13;
Good Wash Boards&#13;
Small sized Pry Pan&#13;
2 Cockeyes&#13;
10c&#13;
25c&#13;
25c&#13;
25c to 50c&#13;
15c&#13;
15c and 25c&#13;
5o&#13;
5c&#13;
Eggs T a k e n&#13;
S a m e as C a s h ,&#13;
H. W. E L L I S , P r o p .&#13;
Wm. Moran was in Howell on Friday&#13;
last.&#13;
T. Read is building an addition to&#13;
bis e|e«ator.&#13;
Mrs. H.W. Ellis was in Howell the&#13;
last of last week. '&#13;
Norman Reason of Detroit was&#13;
home the past week.&#13;
Miss Mae Toomey of Detroit is the&#13;
guest of her father at this place.&#13;
A Hazel and Morley Vaughn are&#13;
visiting their uncle in DansviIIe.&#13;
Geo. Reason and wife took in the&#13;
excursion to Niagara Falls Saturday&#13;
last.&#13;
Mrs. G. W. Teeple and daughter&#13;
Mae were guests of her father in&#13;
Leslie the past week.&#13;
Mrs. M. Nash returned from Detroit&#13;
Thursday last, where she bad been&#13;
visiting her daughter.&#13;
P. L. Andrews and family and&#13;
Master Lake Cole, visited the U. of M.&#13;
museum on Thursday last.&#13;
Miss Hazel-Bnrff of Cohoctab is&#13;
visiting her grandparents Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
H. W. Smith of West Marion.&#13;
Earl Foster, Faye Palmer, Ed. Kensen&#13;
and Phil Steger spent Thursday&#13;
in town having walked over from&#13;
North Lake where they were camp*&#13;
ing.&#13;
The Ann Arbor trainB were loaded&#13;
down on Thursday last with people&#13;
who were making their way to the&#13;
northern summer resorts. Besides the&#13;
regular trains a large special train&#13;
was run on that day.&#13;
The contract has baen let and new&#13;
material is being drawn for a new 40-&#13;
loot iron bridge to span the river between&#13;
big and little. portage lakes.&#13;
Fred Wyman has the contract for&#13;
building the abutments.—Dexter&#13;
Leader. Fred built both culverts in&#13;
this village and we know his part of&#13;
the contract will be 0. K.&#13;
I F. D. Johnson visited in Jackson&#13;
a couple of days this week.&#13;
S. T. Grimes and Mr. Sweet of&#13;
Howell spent Sunday here.&#13;
The woodwork of the Mann block&#13;
is receiving a coat of paint.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Finch spent Sunday&#13;
with friends in Waterloo.&#13;
Dennis B. Hayes of Detroit will be&#13;
one of the speakers Aug. 16.&#13;
G. A. Sigler and C. P. 8ykes wetej*&#13;
in Stockbridge Tuesday on business.&#13;
Base ball game between Brighton&#13;
and Oceola on the day of Picnic, August&#13;
16.&#13;
TEEPLE &amp; CADWELL&#13;
General Hardware,&#13;
t Have as complete an assortment of heavy and shelf hardware&#13;
as can be found in the county, and 1900 finds us&#13;
more thoroughly equipped than ever before.&#13;
Builders Hardware a Specialty.&#13;
Doors and Common Sash always in stock.&#13;
Miss Jennie Haze spent last week&#13;
witL the VanFleet families of East&#13;
Putnam.&#13;
Hon T. E. Barkworth of Jackson&#13;
will make an address on Aug 16,&#13;
1900 at the picnic.&#13;
We understand that Mrs. Colby will&#13;
soon erect a house on the site of the&#13;
one recently bnrned.&#13;
The Dunlavey horse, driven by Matt&#13;
Brady won first money at the races in&#13;
Fowtervill eFndayiast;&#13;
Wm. Shehan and family of Dansville&#13;
spent Saturday and Sunday with&#13;
their parents in this vicinity.&#13;
W. S. May and family of Stockbridge&#13;
are guests of Mr. and Mrs. J.&#13;
A. Cad well, at Happy Thought cottage.&#13;
Lyle Martin, of Camp Verd, Arizona&#13;
is spending a few weeks with his&#13;
mother here. Lyle looks as if the&#13;
climate in that State agreed with him.&#13;
Quite extensive repairs are being&#13;
made on the School building, It is&#13;
being painted inside and oat and a&#13;
fire escape being placed to the upper&#13;
rooms.&#13;
The annual picnic of St Mary's&#13;
church will be held in Jacksons grove&#13;
Remainder of Program for August&#13;
16 will be given next week.&#13;
Joseph Briggs and. wife of Oceola&#13;
spent Sunday with H. G. Briggs and&#13;
wife of this place.&#13;
. Brighton has not been defeated,&#13;
Qceola has not been defeated and a&#13;
good game promised Aug. 16.&#13;
c, The Anderson. Farmers Club will&#13;
their picnic at C. V. Van Winkle's&#13;
pre Saturday, Angnst 11, 1900.&#13;
ken and music have been secured.&#13;
Everybody invited.&#13;
Dr. and Mrs. H. F. Sigler will leave&#13;
the last of the week tor Chicago where&#13;
the doctor will spend a short time in&#13;
the hospital wort when they will go&#13;
by boat to Indian Store, Manistee, Esoanaha&#13;
and home by way of boat to&#13;
Detroit: They expect to be away&#13;
about two week and hope to call on&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. P. J. Teeple at Marquette&#13;
as well as many other friends&#13;
along the line.&#13;
on Thursday August 16, There will&#13;
be the usual big time and big dinner.&#13;
Everyone come.&#13;
The Abbott family reunion at Bowling&#13;
Green Ohio, is one ot the big days&#13;
in that town. This family hold&#13;
annual meetings at the fair grounds&#13;
in that city and on -Inly 26Voyer 100&#13;
we^e present to enjoy the reunion of&#13;
old friends and make ihe acquaintance&#13;
of new additions to the family. We&#13;
see by the Toledo times that Irwin J.&#13;
Abbot of this plare responded to the&#13;
address of welcome. When the company&#13;
adjourned it was to meet next&#13;
year the second Thursday in August&#13;
at the same place.&#13;
WEDDING BELLS RING.&#13;
Complete line of Buggies; Wagons and&#13;
Heating Stoves, Ranges, Wood Stoves&#13;
Wood and Coal.&#13;
Dry Goods Specials:&#13;
All 10c Thin Qoods&#13;
All 15c Dimities and Organdies,&#13;
All 10c Madras Clothe, .&#13;
Dress Ginghams, at&#13;
15«! Coverts,&#13;
7c&#13;
l i e&#13;
8c&#13;
8c and 14c&#13;
12ic&#13;
All Broken Lines Men's Boys' Misses'&#13;
and Children's Shoes to Close at Cost&#13;
Saturday&#13;
On Wednesday, August 1, at about&#13;
46;clock p. m., a quiet wedding occurred&#13;
at the Cong'l parsonage here,&#13;
when Miss Olive Orr and Mr. Clyde&#13;
H or ton, both of Cleveland, were united&#13;
in holy wedlock by Rev. C. W. Rice.&#13;
Miss Orr is a sister of Mrs. C. W. Rise&#13;
and Mr. Horton a young business man&#13;
of Cleveland, Ohio^&#13;
The young couple jrill visit a few&#13;
days here after which they will return&#13;
to Cleveland. The DISPATCH extends&#13;
congratulations.&#13;
A Caique Wedding*&#13;
Full Cream Cheese,&#13;
Best Bed Salmon&#13;
Yeast, 2 packages for&#13;
2 lbs Rice&#13;
Corn Starch,&#13;
2 lb Can Baking Powder&#13;
10c&#13;
lie&#13;
5o&#13;
He&#13;
19c&#13;
tVodue* Wanttd F. G. .3 ACKSQJi&#13;
On Wednesday afternoon, Angnst 1&#13;
secured a unique wedding at the&#13;
pleasant cottage home of Mr. and Mrs&#13;
Chas. G. Smith at Lakeland when&#13;
their only daughter, Miss Ollie and&#13;
John R. Strain of Detroit were united&#13;
in the holy bonds of matrimony. The&#13;
oereaoony was performed by Rev. C&#13;
W. Jlice of Pinokney in the presence&#13;
of relatives and personal friends of the&#13;
bride.&#13;
The bride is well known by a large&#13;
circle of friends in this vicinity and&#13;
the groom is a promising young traveling&#13;
man of Detroit They start out&#13;
with flatten OK prospects and have the&#13;
well w isbew of a host of iriendt_ , ,&#13;
We understand th*£ the young&#13;
couple will spend the snowier at&#13;
Lakeland after wJkfch tbeit hoae will&#13;
I bain Detroit \ V * '*-&#13;
• «' • • H&#13;
We will deliver Flour&#13;
direct to the people&#13;
at&#13;
tit&#13;
JP.&#13;
50 cents for a 25-pon«|rt w«ck&#13;
95 cents for a 50-pound sae|t&#13;
$3.80 for a barrel.&#13;
10 pounds Graham 15 cents.&#13;
10 lbs. granulated meal lOcts&#13;
Seed Buckwheat.&#13;
% , :&#13;
j ;&#13;
h.&#13;
'V'Sto&#13;
'•'*£&#13;
Terms, Cash.&#13;
R. H . ERW1N.&#13;
Specials For This Week:&#13;
A few odds in Mens Fancy Shirts that will go at a price&#13;
to sell them.&#13;
All Summer Underwear to be sold at Actual Cost.&#13;
All Thin Wash Goods will go at Cost This Week.&#13;
All Ladies Walking Shoes will be sold at Cost.&#13;
4 ^ - — •&lt;Mi&#13;
pecials for Saturday:&#13;
Ideal Mocha and Java Coffee 25c.&#13;
Jaxon Soap Powder and Armour Washing Powder, 4c&#13;
Per Package.&#13;
Best Vanilla Extract in Bulk He Per Oz.&#13;
Best Lemon Extract in Bulk 7c Per Oz.&#13;
Best Corn and Peas 8c Per Can.&#13;
W. W. BARNARD.&#13;
'41&#13;
r * I&#13;
:-M&#13;
m&#13;
vft&#13;
tt^iSnrprisin^&#13;
How cheaply we sell our proprietary&#13;
medicines. Any of&#13;
the standard remedies that&#13;
you may want you will find&#13;
can be bought cheaper than&#13;
of any other druggist.&#13;
Our Patent Medicines : - &lt;. • r*&#13;
. are always fresh. We never&#13;
allow stock to stand around&#13;
for years. We sell the best,&#13;
and for the least money.&#13;
F. A. SIGLER. . fA .&#13;
^f-&#13;
* &amp; •&#13;
f * *&#13;
«-«,' w M *,&#13;
•*»l/&#13;
r !••• • ••Jjite'i'v:'."&#13;
f#:!f#::&#13;
»&#13;
mm~&#13;
.'X&gt;..-.iJV&#13;
K-*'&#13;
y *&#13;
• *&#13;
# : ;&#13;
«&#13;
rV '&#13;
*&#13;
:WU44J&#13;
' * . &lt; -&#13;
&lt; ; • •&#13;
.T.&#13;
t. • ?&#13;
M * * # * * 9 P « * t * '""'MVP" •*•**«*&gt; DEMOCRATS.&#13;
TKCY HILD THEIR STATE CONVENTION&#13;
AT 8AQ1NAW.&#13;
'.J:V&#13;
Crop Itattotta •*&gt;• Aalm&#13;
iatarfsrs* ^OiwlJtatal? WW* » » r -&#13;
tag — ThV iaeu4M £e&amp;ocrnts Have&#13;
Beaotoata* f*Hr $ * a i r f t o . , , •&#13;
• Wa*kly.j&amp;rep *aUatf*,&#13;
•&lt; JThe weekly crop bulletin issued on&#13;
the 24th ease; Frequent And heayy&#13;
showers have interfered with all field&#13;
work and damaged considerable bay;&#13;
there i« also some opmplaint that wheat&#13;
U sprouting in the ehock, £Jot only&#13;
baa the work been delayed during t;be&#13;
«ajos&gt; but mock ground has . been left&#13;
tod soft for the binder and reaper. In&#13;
$fc« upper peninsular and northern&#13;
counties of lower Michigan baying has&#13;
been greatly delayed and much of the&#13;
jcut damaged. While cultivation and&#13;
other field work has been greatly retarded,&#13;
vegetation of all kinds has&#13;
been greatly benefitted by the wet&#13;
weather. There is some complaint that&#13;
the heavy rains have damaged corn&#13;
•Ad potatoes on low lands, but generally&#13;
corn, potatoes, beans, sugar beets&#13;
and garden truck have made fine progress&#13;
and are in good condition. Corn&#13;
is rather short, but looks strong and&#13;
healthy; it is generally tasseli.ng and&#13;
in thesouthera part of the state it is&#13;
setting for ears. Oat harvest is just&#13;
beginning and the present condition&#13;
of that crop indicate a large yield.&#13;
Some barley has been cut In the&#13;
southern counties plowing for fall&#13;
needing has begun.&#13;
c • 'atihtal JPtesv-0ell»eif QMtets.&#13;
Postmaster-General £mory Saaith, of&#13;
Washington, has issued an order carrying&#13;
s into effect recommendations&#13;
made by the rural free delivery superintendents&#13;
who hare beam in session&#13;
there several days. The order, which&#13;
applies to all rural free naKvcry service&#13;
In'tao eountry.iollbwft- - v&#13;
ooatag^will n^t a b p ^ withi* rural&#13;
free delivery liialts. '^bo'two oenta&#13;
par ounce rate (rill boOxeoted within&#13;
such delivery on all flrst-niaas matter&#13;
exosptpostal carda.,,.&#13;
'**. That the introduction of rural,&#13;
free delivery will not increase or otherwise&#13;
modify the present rata of postage&#13;
on second-class matter. ——^&#13;
"3. That rural free delivery carriers&#13;
will not bring to the postoffloe mail&#13;
matter collected &gt;*j **»*»» —MrHi'lUny&#13;
be delivered on-their routes before&#13;
completing their trips.&#13;
"4. That stamps on mail matter collected&#13;
by rural free delivery carriers,&#13;
including those on matter delivered en&#13;
route as named in section 3, will be&#13;
cancelled by them reported to the postmaster,&#13;
who will derive the benefit of&#13;
the cancellation if the office is fourth&#13;
class.&#13;
»'5. That until suitable rubber cancelling&#13;
stamps can be supplied by the&#13;
department rural free delivery letter&#13;
carriers will cancel stamps with the&#13;
indelible pencils furnished them for&#13;
use in registered letters."&#13;
Tbe old-veterans at Wharton huve at I tT fit&#13;
last 100900494 to organising * Grand * *•** ***&#13;
Army post t h e m £%*• work has been&#13;
slow on account of the small number&#13;
of old soldiers in too vicinity.&#13;
Grasshoppers are making great havoc&#13;
ia Ifcwuh OQaat.y. IWda.* ot cipher,&#13;
the second crop, how in blossom* are&#13;
devastated in a few hours. Oat ftslda&#13;
arc also* attacked ond the grain rtftaefc&#13;
' Two encounters are reported t o V V e&#13;
taken place between British and Cbi&amp;&#13;
esc forcas near Wei Hai Wei T h a &gt; t -&#13;
ter* it is reborted, wore repulsed after&#13;
a stubborn encounter. No dates toe&#13;
given.' ":&#13;
By the explosion of a steam tube connecting&#13;
with the boiler in the steam&#13;
«w» mmm*mm*m**&gt;*fm&#13;
H&#13;
8oclal Dtmocratlo State Convention.&#13;
The state convention of the social&#13;
Democratic party convened in the city&#13;
hall, at Saginaw, on the 24th, 32 dele-&#13;
^gates^being present. A series of resolutions&#13;
indorsing Debs and pledging&#13;
support to the United Social ticket&#13;
were passed. Henry Ramsey, of Battle&#13;
Creek, was elected permanent chairman,&#13;
and Clarence Neeley, of Saginaw,&#13;
permanent secretary;—Max &gt;&amp;—Hayea,-&#13;
of Cleveland, delivered a rousing speech,&#13;
and the following state ticket was put&#13;
in nomination:&#13;
For governor—Henry Ramsey; Battle&#13;
Creek.&#13;
Lieut., governor—Clayton J. Lamb,&#13;
Lapeer county.&#13;
Secretary of Btate—Jos. Dick, Detroit&#13;
Treasurer—Albert Eynon, Saginaw.&#13;
Auditor-general—David C. Hendricks,&#13;
Saginaw.&#13;
Commissioner of state land office—&#13;
John D. Hunt, Hillsdale county.&#13;
Attorney-general—Geo. A. Eastman,&#13;
Detroit&#13;
Superintendent of public instruction&#13;
—Miss Rose McBrearty, Detroit.&#13;
Member state board of education—&#13;
Jos. Carr, Saginaw.&#13;
State headquarters during the campaign&#13;
will be at Saginaw.&#13;
DHclilrmi* In a Healthy State.&#13;
°The weekly health bulletin issued by&#13;
fha gtftio hrtanH r&gt;f &gt;iAa.Uh shows a vary&#13;
healthy condition in the state. The&#13;
presence of diarrhea, for the first time&#13;
this year, at the head of the list of diseases&#13;
*hich caused most sickness during&#13;
the week, might be supposed to indicate&#13;
that this disease was unusually&#13;
-prevalent but this is not the fact. The&#13;
average percentage of reports which&#13;
stated the presence of diarrhea in&#13;
Michigan in July in the&#13;
years is 57, and for the&#13;
Juty 31 of this year is 51&#13;
10 preceding&#13;
week ending&#13;
per cent, or&#13;
about 6 per\cent below the average.&#13;
The diseases which usually cause most&#13;
sickness in Michigan — rheumatism,&#13;
neuralgia and bronchitis—were less&#13;
than usually prevalent, and thus&#13;
diarrhea, with less than the average&#13;
amount of sickness at this period of the&#13;
year, was forced to take first place in&#13;
the l i s t - v&#13;
&lt;}. A. K. Get Back Tl»*Ir Charter.&#13;
Eighteen months ago FaiKchild Post,&#13;
No. 288, of Grass Lake, disbanded and&#13;
surrendered their charter to\the department&#13;
G. A. R. Twp months ago&#13;
22 veterans signed a request that the&#13;
charter be restored and the Post reorganized.&#13;
. Their request was granted&#13;
and on the evening of the 24th Major,&#13;
Daniel Willson, of Jackson, with several&#13;
comrades from Edward Pomeroy&#13;
Post mustered in the post under its old&#13;
name. The ladies of the W. R. C. gave&#13;
the veterans and their wives a banquet&#13;
after the muster was completed.&#13;
•&#13;
Two More Victims.&#13;
The%third street car fatality at Detroit&#13;
in two days occurred on the&#13;
evening of the 33dT when John Fecteau,&#13;
aged 37, and Cyrus Jackson, colored,&#13;
aged 13, were killed. The former was&#13;
out in two and died instantly, and the&#13;
latter only survived a. few hours. In&#13;
both cases the accidents are attributed&#13;
to carelessness on the part of the dead,&#13;
in not using due caution while crossing&#13;
the car tracks. Fecteau was riding- a&#13;
wheel and the boy was running across&#13;
the street&#13;
Bad Mix-Up in the 1»troll Btver.&#13;
.There was a lively mix-up in the Detroit&#13;
river near Ecorse on the night of&#13;
the 27th, and for a time big freighters&#13;
and consorts were battling against one&#13;
another in the darkness. There were&#13;
16 boats off Grassy Isle at one time as&#13;
a result of the collisions and the blockade&#13;
of the channel. The captains&#13;
would not talk and it was impossible&#13;
to get a close estimate of the money&#13;
loss, but it will run into the thousands.&#13;
The boats involved were the fine steel&#13;
propeller James Watt of the Bessemer&#13;
line; the propeller Tacoma, of the Le*&#13;
high Valley Transportation Co.; the&#13;
steel propeller Maruba, of the M innesota&#13;
Steamship Co., and the consort&#13;
Manda.&#13;
BuffaloTHlTi Traffi-Wreefcatfc&#13;
One death, and 10 men injuredy some&#13;
seriously, were the results of a railroad&#13;
wreck in the Detroit, Grand Have» A&#13;
Milwaukee railroad yards at Milwaukee&#13;
Junction, Detroit, on the mor:&#13;
of the 29th. The first section of&#13;
train carrying Buffalo Bull's Wild&#13;
West show was run into by a freight&#13;
train, and the caboose on the formertrain&#13;
was crushed and pushed into and&#13;
over one of the sleeping cars containing&#13;
employes of the show. All of the&#13;
78 men in the sleeper were more or less&#13;
injured &amp;nd shaken up, but only 10&#13;
taken to the hospitals, all the&#13;
others going on with the show to Pon-\&#13;
tiac.&#13;
MICHIGAN NEWS ITEMS;&#13;
Grass Lake is to have a cement factory.&#13;
—Vrw» mail d*»jWAry will be begun at&#13;
• Brained HI* Father Wl(h a Hammer.&#13;
Orolo Van Alstine, of Grant township,&#13;
Osceola county, haH a quarrel&#13;
with his son Fred, aged 23. The sonv&#13;
hit him in the head with a* hammer,&#13;
fracturing his skull so that his brains&#13;
protruded through the opening. There&#13;
ia no hopes of his recovery. The father&#13;
i s a quarrelsome man and very cross&#13;
with his children, aod public sympathy&#13;
is with the young man.&#13;
Charlotte,. Oct 1.&#13;
There are 32 inmates in the Ingham&#13;
county poorhouse.&#13;
Something over 1,200 dogs have licenses&#13;
to live in Saginaw.&#13;
The contract has been let for a $40,-&#13;
000 opera house at Ithaca.&#13;
Lewis Tyler, of Olds, lost 25 sheep&#13;
by a stroke of lightning recently.&#13;
About $1,300 worth of cement walks&#13;
have been laid in Mayville this summer.&#13;
Tipplers who are caught on the&#13;
streets of Tekonsha will hereafter be&#13;
liable to a fine of $20.&#13;
The Genesee County Agricultural&#13;
society will hold its annual fair at&#13;
Flint, Oct 2, 3, 4 and 5.&#13;
A chapter of Daughters of the American&#13;
Revolution, with 13 members, has&#13;
been organized at Big Rapids.&#13;
' Arrangements are being made for a&#13;
good roads congress to be held at Saginaw&#13;
the latter part of August&#13;
The flour mills at Reading and&#13;
Jonesville are using Kansas' wheat,&#13;
which is received in carload lots.&#13;
The Willow Creek creamery buildings&#13;
at Charlotte are completed, and&#13;
operations will begin about Aug. 1.&#13;
The Sanitas Nut Food Co.'s buildings&#13;
at Battle Creek burned on the -ri1-&#13;
Loss\$l8,000; covered by insurance.&#13;
^Smallpox has been reported to the&#13;
state board of_health from Walker&#13;
townshipV Kent county, the disease&#13;
having been, brought from Grand Rapids.&#13;
It cost E. d^n^of~41illsdalaK_$7.M&#13;
to disregard the\prder of the live stock&#13;
commission concerning the quarantining&#13;
of a horse that had been exposed&#13;
to glanders. \&#13;
Work on the new sugar factory at&#13;
Marine City is progressing rapidly.&#13;
The machinery is arriving and it is&#13;
hoped the building will be completed&#13;
by the time the beets are rei&#13;
Hugh Kennedy, a farmer near Coldwater,&#13;
has a field of corn which ^promises&#13;
a phenomenal crop. Though so&#13;
early in the season, he exhibits -stalks&#13;
12 feet high, with ears six feet from the&#13;
ground.&#13;
Many people at Three Rivers are&#13;
against the proposed curfew ordinance&#13;
because it would advertise t o the&#13;
world that the citixens of that city&#13;
are unable to properly handle their&#13;
children.&#13;
yacht Trilby, three children lostthefr&#13;
livea, one mora was frightfully acalded&#13;
and three other persons were more or&#13;
less burned on the 24th.&#13;
Oh the third attempt at self-destruction,&#13;
Nettie Dal ton, an Inmate of a&#13;
house of questionable repute in Detroit,&#13;
succeeded in ending her Ufa on.&#13;
the 34th. She swallowed a large dose&#13;
of carbolic acid.&#13;
Sept 19 will be "Republican day"&#13;
at the Union fair, at Muskegon. On&#13;
that day Gov. Roosevelt Cot Bliss,&#13;
Congressman Bishop, Chairman Diekema&#13;
and Senators Burrows and McMillan&#13;
will be there. &gt;&#13;
• L. R Slussar, editor of the Mancelona&#13;
Herald, created a sensation there&#13;
recently by making a balloon ascent,&#13;
the occasion being the harvest jubilee.&#13;
He went up about 300 feet and then&#13;
made the parachute drop successfully.&#13;
Galesburg is already reaping the results&#13;
accruing from increased facilities&#13;
for ingress and egress. Within a week&#13;
a Battle Creek lumber firm has made&#13;
arrangements and will, establish a&#13;
thoroughly equipped branch in the village.&#13;
Little Lawrence. Lester, of Harbor&#13;
Beach, was only 15 minutes out of his&#13;
mother's sight, but wbein she found&#13;
him the neck of his dress was caught&#13;
on the nail of a chicken coop and he&#13;
had choked to death. He was 19&#13;
months ©ad.&#13;
A proposition to enact a enrfew or-„&#13;
dinance by the council of Union City&#13;
was voted down. The ordinance was&#13;
a little too strong for the city fathers.&#13;
The age limit was 14 yeas» and the&#13;
curfew hour 9 o'clock in&lt; summer and 8&#13;
o'oiock in winter.&#13;
The breaking down of a Bridge on&#13;
the Albion road "near Bomer, under&#13;
the weight of a tractiom engine and&#13;
separator, will aost the township not&#13;
only a new bridge, but also***couple of&#13;
'hundred dollars for repairs, and damages&#13;
to the engine.&#13;
The Benton Harbor Pallaeftam says&#13;
a farmer in that vicinity raised a crop&#13;
*ot early turnips* and forwarded, 25&#13;
orisfcels of the crop, duly Labeled, to a&#13;
Chicago commission house. Hr waited&#13;
long for the letter that finally eamer&#13;
and which inclosed: a check for „$1.49,&#13;
with the usual explanations.&#13;
The schooner H-W. Sage, in tow of&#13;
FRIEND* V O r p f C t S AT HfW&#13;
DISPOSAL.&#13;
Fakla to- Tie* Tilai laapirtal 1&#13;
• * * CHINA W^ l NSWS•. ( • , v _&#13;
Snrgetai'Genfral Sternberg, of t b *&#13;
U. &amp; navy, has joana every larrango.&#13;
meat for the o*re of the siek abd&#13;
wounded soldiers on Chinese solL&#13;
Provision has been, made by the quar*&#13;
BJaU a#w Jaaat Trn»J teMiaiitnti^i^ensBtanwit fm&gt;ihi»innaedfr&#13;
M M *&#13;
:tfrX*ve Keen rrotacttog tea *lalst*M&#13;
i M the Capital city.&#13;
T T Chiaa's Ap#4al * l « NfiOtaaWt*&#13;
: T » following correspondence; \between&#13;
. the President, of the, United&#13;
States end the emperor of China was&#13;
made public by the slate department&#13;
on the 84th. The following i t the&#13;
medical stores and supplies, including&#13;
upp&gt;gsv.^»%eepiUl lawta with&#13;
flooring, stovesy e t c The nature of&#13;
ipltal i t baa&#13;
preaent afforte&#13;
Ho the establishmin«pfca suetabll field&#13;
h A oeen charged* with the JMtab*&#13;
t^aaUUon&gt;.oi a jiebUftam raoeJjradJyJ Hebnm* * ^ e e * v o M a * p a e f e » e f i boa*&#13;
Mtobter Wu on July 80, 1900, from the MUX. There already i * a l a W e o v p a&#13;
tautat ui Biuuguat; a aw tfniyi &gt;,i WW- I &amp; medical dttoerl in TJflfift anil others&#13;
"Have received a telegram from Gov.&#13;
Yuan (of Shantung) doted 33d day of&#13;
this moon (July W), w h o having ree&#13;
jived -from the privy council (at Pekin)&#13;
a dispatch embodying., an imperial let-&#13;
•ter to the President of the United&#13;
States, has instructed me to transmit&#13;
it to your excellency.. The Imperial&#13;
message is respectfully, transmitted, as&#13;
follows:&#13;
TheP Eremsitaeernotr ooff tCheh iUnan itteod H Sttaa tEesx,o eOUroeneotlva, gt:a o&#13;
CoJaa has long maintained frieodljf relation*&#13;
withithe United States and is deeply conscious&#13;
that the eojea* at the United States Is International&#13;
ootnmerce. Neither oouacry entertains&#13;
the least suspicion or distrust 'toward the&#13;
other. ReattOS outbreaks of mutual antipathy"&#13;
between the pwaple and Christian missionaries&#13;
caused the tomigvt pemen to view with suspicion&#13;
the positfoa of the imperial government&#13;
as favorable to- the people and prejudicial to the&#13;
missions, with the result that the Taku forts&#13;
were attacked! and captured. Consequently&#13;
there has been oiaahing of forces with calamitous&#13;
consequence*. The situation has beoomo&#13;
more and more sedans and' critical. We have&#13;
just received a telegraphic memorial from our&#13;
envoy, Wu Ting Fang, and ft is highly gratify.&#13;
lng to us to learn-thoc the United States government,&#13;
having in view the friendly relations&#13;
between the two countries, has taken a deep interest&#13;
in the preseuisituation.&#13;
Now China, driven by the irresistible course&#13;
of events, has unfortunately Incurred well&#13;
nigh universal indignation. For settling the&#13;
present difficulty. China ntoaes special reliance&#13;
in the United States. We address this message&#13;
to your excellency in* all slneevelty and&#13;
kindliness with the hope that your exceliswey&#13;
will devise measures and take the initiative- in&#13;
bringing about a conoert oftthe powers for the&#13;
restoration of order aftd peaoa. The favor of a&#13;
kind reply is earnestly requested aaA awaited&#13;
with the greatest anxiety.&#13;
Kwangshu, 88th year, ethanaon, Sd day (Jnty&#13;
10, 1900.)&#13;
"It is. therefore, my ottrtjrta' traaaastt the&#13;
above with the request that-gooir exoeiHenoy i» I Count von&#13;
respectful obedience of Imperial wishes will deliver&#13;
the same to its high detuiaation an# favor&#13;
me with a reply. "YttLllN-YujM*,&#13;
"Taotatat ShoaajhaU.&#13;
"KwanKhsu, 20th year, 6th. moon, 23d.-day&#13;
(July 1», 1900.")&#13;
thieen of the West, collided with&#13;
the steamer Chicago off Algona&amp;on the&#13;
night of the 29th, and sunk. Ohr deck--&#13;
hand went down with her, be Lag maable&#13;
to get out of the forecastla before&#13;
she went down. Thawheelmam e* the&#13;
Chicago claims that thej. chain of the&#13;
steering gear parted..&#13;
Rew. J. J. Axtell, of Royal Oakvaeeraa&#13;
a shining mark for misfortune*. He&#13;
left the ministry and. went to work as&#13;
a barber. Now Secretary Beigar, of&#13;
the state board of examinees of barber*&#13;
&gt;, has sworn out a warrant before&#13;
a Royal Oak justice charging him with&#13;
running a barber shop without, a certificate&#13;
of registration.&#13;
The-Qdd Fellows-hall at Lmfington&#13;
is completed. The first floor*has been&#13;
converted into an ideal ball noons and&#13;
diningrhall with a kitehen,at&lt; tbo rear&#13;
and a ticket office and a dressing room&#13;
in front The second story will be&#13;
used for lodge rooms exclusi-we-ly in the&#13;
future. With the additions ju*t made,&#13;
the Odd Fellows have one-off the finest&#13;
halls-in the state.&#13;
The citizens of Tekonshm are noted&#13;
for tfteir generosity. Xo case of want,&#13;
sorrow or destitution is overlooked.&#13;
The churches are* not alwvays the first&#13;
to bestow charity. The roughest people-&#13;
m town* are-as liberal as those who&#13;
male higher professions. If a citizen&#13;
suffers from a fire, loses a horse or a&#13;
cow the citizens straightway make np&#13;
a purse for him if he is- ia poor circumstances.&#13;
A small black bug in large numbers&#13;
has made has appearance in Vernon&#13;
and is called the carpet^bug and by&#13;
others a Buffalo bug; He is demanding&#13;
as much attention) if not more than&#13;
ever did the kissing bug, as he seems&#13;
to delight in eating up carpets irrespective&#13;
of house or home. His deviltry&#13;
canaed one woaean to remark after&#13;
looking at her carpet, "well, it is&#13;
enough to make a preacher swear."&#13;
Port Huron ia to have a second daily&#13;
newspaper. E. J. Ottaway and Louia&#13;
A. Well, of Detroit, having purchased&#13;
the .Sanday Herald, X-Rays and th*&#13;
German Herald, and will merge tk*&#13;
two former papers into one, and on&#13;
Aug. 1 will commence the issue o t an&#13;
evening paper. The German japer&#13;
will be continued for the preseixV. The&#13;
proprietors of the new enterprise are&#13;
both clover newspaper men, and were&#13;
formerly connected, with vfcfc&#13;
Freo. Vrusa&#13;
The cablegram was attonne&#13;
icated to the President at Canton and&#13;
the following is his reply: ,&#13;
The President of the United Statss- to- the £m»&#13;
perorof China, Greeting: —&#13;
I have received your majesty'*»89sage at the&#13;
1Mb of July, and am glad to know that your&#13;
majesty recognizes the foot that the ganwgnt.&#13;
stent and people of the United States desire of&#13;
China nothing but what is just nod equitable.&#13;
The purpose for which we - landted&gt; tneaap* im&#13;
China was the rescue of our legation from grave&#13;
danger, and the protection of the lives and.&#13;
property of Americans who were ^miratacr in'&#13;
China in the enjoyment of rij&lt;htw guaeaatbed&#13;
thorn by treaty unrt bxlgtgrPfttioaal luw- The&#13;
same purposes are publicly declaoid by all thai-] oafital of the province o f Shan-Si.&#13;
; powers which ham landed miutucy fames- in&#13;
j your majesty's ompire.&#13;
I am to infor from your majesty's*, letter that&#13;
tbo malefactors who have disturb*!the peace of&#13;
I China, woo have murdered the minister of Geiv-&#13;
* many aud a member of the Japanese legation,.&#13;
and who now hold besieged in Pok4n those for&gt;-&#13;
eign diplomatists who still survive,, have not&#13;
only not received any favor or encouragement,&#13;
lrom your, majesty, but aro acting, in Eebellloni&#13;
against the imperial outhoritifte*. If tih* be me&#13;
ease I most solemnly urge upon jjour majesty's,&#13;
government:&#13;
1. To give public assurance ^jctiran the fan*-&#13;
eign ministers are alive, ana,.li.aa„in&gt; what con«-&#13;
dition.&#13;
t To put the diplomatic rearessntttives of&#13;
the powers in immediate and.it»e; oommunicai*-&#13;
tion with their respective ^orennnencs and! to&lt;&#13;
remove all danger to their live^andliberty.&#13;
1 To place the imperial authorities in China&#13;
In communication with the relict expedition so.&#13;
that co-operation may be seemwi bstween thonn&#13;
for the liberation of the legations,, the protection&#13;
of foreigners and the restoration of ordex.&#13;
Xftheseobjects are accooapiishatfit is th&amp;b**»&#13;
liefoftbis government that," no. obstacles will&#13;
be found to exist on the pnru of. the powers to.&#13;
an amicable settlement of, ait the questions&#13;
arising out of the recent; troubles, and the&#13;
friendly good offices of tbds* ga*«rnment willi&#13;
with the assent of the other, powers, be cheerfully&#13;
placed at your majesty's, disposltlottfor&#13;
that purpose.&#13;
WrCflSTAMI MCKINIJW.&#13;
July 23, 1900.&#13;
By the President, John HatvSearetary of Ssate..&#13;
King- HamberttAsaawaJnatod.&#13;
King Humbert, oC Italy, has aeon&#13;
assassinated. He was. shot at Ma»sa,&#13;
Italy, on the evening of the v39th*hjr a&#13;
man named Angelo Breesi de Pvato,&#13;
and died in a few miantes, Tho king&#13;
had been attending a distribution of&#13;
prizes in connection with a gysanaetic&#13;
competition. He had just entered his&#13;
carriage with hia aid-de-cam^. amid&#13;
the ojaeers of Hut crowd, wheat he was&#13;
struck by three* wvolve^slfo^raj^&#13;
quicjfe successionv One pierced the&#13;
heafft of his majesty, who fell hack and&#13;
expired in a flow minutes. The assassin&#13;
was immediately arrested, and was&#13;
with some- difficulty saved from t h e&#13;
fvry of the* populace.&#13;
will he aent to t b o asiUtance off Major&#13;
Hoff. ' He wiU Mise the «r«t available&#13;
steamer across tho-Pacific&#13;
While the latest impresaionT derived&#13;
from the array of cooticting'telegMuna&#13;
from the far east is that a nortios&gt;of&#13;
' the foreign colony at Pekinumay have&#13;
eaeaped slaughter until a recent dent,&#13;
a general consensu*^ of the 'heat^ ia*&#13;
•formed opinion of Europe seems-to continue&#13;
to favor the acceptance of the;&#13;
worst news and prompt action thereoo,&#13;
the contention^ being' that the onljr&#13;
poaaibility of /definitely ascertaining&#13;
the truth is by the allied commandera&#13;
TSqutrlngat P^in. Judging-from the?&#13;
pews fromrfien Tsin, howeverv recording&#13;
division^ among the admirals there;,&#13;
the prospects i^or a^, speedy advance&#13;
seema to he,endangered unless the govejrnznenta&#13;
speedily agree on a supremo*&#13;
leader.,&#13;
. The Chinese legation in Berlin baa*&#13;
received a message from Sheng, director&#13;
general of railways and telegraphs^,&#13;
saying that he has received a&gt; dispatch,&#13;
from Pekin ajinonhctttg "inat - Oen^—&#13;
Tung Fuh Siang tbreaterts&gt;to kill all&#13;
the members of the legations-if the international&#13;
forces advance' u^ejaPekin. &lt;&#13;
Evidently the legation is embarrassed&#13;
by the receipt of this dispatch, as tho&#13;
Chinese minister has not communicated&#13;
it to the German government.&#13;
The legation has cabled tho viceroy of&#13;
Nankin requesting him to try&gt; to get&#13;
information as to whether the widow&#13;
of Baron von Ketielerv the murdered&#13;
fierman minister, is still aliw.&#13;
Bnelow, the minoster of&#13;
foreign affaire, made reply on-the 24th&#13;
to the appeal of the emperor of China&#13;
for German: mediation between the&#13;
powers and the Chinese government.&#13;
1* substance, Cvunt von Buelow said&#13;
[ ho would not submit the telegram from,&#13;
the Pekin government so long as the&#13;
i fete of the legations and other foreigners&#13;
were not ascertained, and. as long&#13;
a* the. Chinese government had not&#13;
atoned for the murder of Baron von&#13;
Ketteler and given a guarantee that in&#13;
' tho future its conduct would be in harnseay&#13;
with international lava, and the&#13;
usages oi civilization.&#13;
A dispatch from missionary sources,&#13;
dated Shanghai. July 26, says: Riot- -&#13;
ing haa broken out at Ai-Ynon-Fu, the •&#13;
There axe no details. Rioting has also .&#13;
occurred at iinai-Luh, south of Chih-Li.&#13;
AJi the nkisaions have been*destroycd.&#13;
Qfeur friends safely escaped to the eounr&#13;
tcjv but are *tiH in dangeg. It is reported,&#13;
at Shanghai that Russia haa •&#13;
borrowed nearly 10,000,000 sterling&#13;
foosn the Imperial bank of Jiussia since&#13;
'the ceaaBaencenoent of troubles in&#13;
€hina.&#13;
An Italian priest who recently arjniivod&#13;
at lioug Kong- from lien Sien Fn,&#13;
ia aoAithern Hu An, says, the Italian&#13;
biahop and three priests* were massacred&#13;
after revolting-torture. This&#13;
took place on July 4. Six hundred converts&#13;
were ma&amp;sacrcd after the women&#13;
had been subjected to hisaeous brutalities.&#13;
Six other priests lied to the hills,&#13;
where they were probabliy killed. The&#13;
priest who escaped had a perilous&#13;
journey to Hong Kong. He hid in a&#13;
coffin on board a river boat for 17.Jays.&#13;
M. Krutiki, engineer- of the Eastern&#13;
Chinese x'ailway, telegraphing from&#13;
Algatcfoi, in the Trajts-Baikal territory,&#13;
under date of Fjaday, Julyy2.oC re- -&#13;
ports the occupation of Chailar by&#13;
Chinese troops. Th*&gt; Russiaa«», according&#13;
to this dispatch, continued to&gt;&#13;
concentrate at Charhin,&#13;
Unless some authentic as9«ronceaa&gt;&#13;
to the condition o&amp; the Amarioans in.&#13;
Pekin reaches the- state departments&#13;
within a day or two, the administration&#13;
is likely to, abandon, whatever*&#13;
faith it has manifested thu*^ far in the*&#13;
truthfulness of Chinese information^.&#13;
The supplementary estimates neces»&#13;
sUated-by the pjiolongatinn of the war&#13;
in South Africa,amount to,£11,500,000»&#13;
Sw^llawea s Us»r«.&#13;
Some thne ago Mrs. Anna M. Jonee,&#13;
of Marens. Hook, Pa., accidentally&#13;
swallovxed a lizard while drinking water.&#13;
Fijeqnently the reptile climbed&#13;
up into, heir throat, hut at all times&#13;
successfully resisted fall attempt* at&#13;
ejectment Mrs. Jones feared that in&#13;
one* of these excursions of the lizard&#13;
showould be choked to death, On the&#13;
:i*a, after complaining of a ehoking I1 sensation, she suddenly expired. It is&#13;
believeia that' her dread of violent&#13;
death had a fatal effect en. her heart.&#13;
making a totaVof £34,510,000 voted for&#13;
this purpose and bringing the total&#13;
British army* estimates up to £70,-&#13;
.869,153.&#13;
An imperial. ukase: issued on the*23d&#13;
orders that a statc: of siege be proclaimed&#13;
itu the iniatery districts of&#13;
Siberia, Tnrkestan and idemiretcbinsk,&#13;
and that, all researetste in those districts&#13;
be ealled. to ih«- colors.&#13;
According to See*! teports the Coroan&#13;
governsent has fco^ested against the&#13;
pre&amp;enoe of Russiaa, refugees at Miju,&#13;
but a|ter an audience thp Russian rep*&#13;
reseaJw.tive agteed to remove them to&#13;
Port Arthur without delay,&#13;
v*Spare '* nobody&gt;v are,! the Kaiser'a&#13;
vgerds to troops, bound fox- China. '&#13;
' 'It is estimated that U'would, bo unwise&#13;
for the .po'worg to move toward&#13;
Pekiti irithout-at looat ia»Q0Q UXQ^U&#13;
, I • • • • ;&#13;
' I I&#13;
• ^'v W -v.&#13;
v- ^&#13;
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:"A' •"• - . ^ : - - &gt; : ^ •:•::;.-^ /;'•' V-'.. : - . : ' y 7 ' \ , / &gt; ,&#13;
!-r ^(*v 7 . - ^ ^ - - - r&#13;
fgi-$'&#13;
,.u&#13;
&lt; &gt;&#13;
&lt;,&gt;&#13;
/&#13;
J&#13;
- 0 *A- . - ( 1 . ?.' •' 1 . : • • &lt;&#13;
• , • &gt;&#13;
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, ' ; - . ' • ' , . t . •&#13;
^ v . -&#13;
; ' t&#13;
: - . v ; - : ; ., ,•';• &gt;..'*'&#13;
'•••m&#13;
• : $ • *&#13;
&gt; •:. • ' ' v ? .&#13;
. . . - j . . , - ,&#13;
^•'if'v:&#13;
• ' * • . - ; &gt;&#13;
S ******* Lf . . &gt; v * - y . - * ,# ;.&lt; v.?&#13;
&lt; i i i i i « &gt; i r &gt; c ' . !&#13;
. / . . • . . • i &gt; &lt; , .&#13;
• i " l " --^-. - , s &lt;&#13;
. CHAPTER V.&#13;
A dirty, untidy lodging In' an English&#13;
slum. An unkempt man, with «11&#13;
the sign* of drink «Ail dlaeiDattoa&#13;
Upon his low face; such was the man&#13;
mad such was the surroundings of a&#13;
man whom Alan Maeke&amp;ate W&amp; &lt;to&#13;
risk In his beautiful estate of La Pax.&#13;
His had never, been an honest, attractive&#13;
face; but now there had come into&#13;
it- a look of such devilish cunning: and&#13;
dissipation had given ' him such a&#13;
bloated appearance, that it was evident&#13;
he would soon reach she lowest&#13;
depths of degradation.&#13;
Alan Mackenzie's denunciation of&#13;
him had been his ruin. He had tried&#13;
to retrieve •himseli had speculated,&#13;
and had fld&amp;idered. deeper Into the&#13;
mire. He made even Bio too hot for&#13;
him, and returned to England. Veronica's&#13;
disappearance meant .nothing to&#13;
him. He would nave got -rid -of her to&#13;
the highest matrimonial bidder, that&#13;
was all. j($iw) was oiot -his daughter,&#13;
aB he h$d told her, only Jihe orphan&#13;
child of",a m&amp;n he .had ruined, and&#13;
whom he^had brought up because her&#13;
beautiful mother had been the -one&#13;
woman he had reaUy cared, for. But&#13;
for Veronica .herself he bad not the&#13;
slightest affection. -She was too&#13;
quiet, too affectionate. -Her .mother,&#13;
who bad jilted him, -had been a coquette,&#13;
and had thus won Hutchinson's&#13;
love and .admiration.&#13;
He was just JOOW sitting at the corner&#13;
ol a very dirty bed, with a glaes&#13;
of some spirits at -his elbow. He&#13;
looked pleased with -himself. "So he&#13;
married her!" he said, and burst out&#13;
into rude laughter. "He1 married her&#13;
and she got "drowned!' Who * Would&#13;
nave thought it of th^m, both so innocent!&#13;
Now there.is-only one thing to&#13;
be considered. Shall I let him marry&#13;
the other, and bleed him afterwards,&#13;
or shall I stop it now? Which will&#13;
hurt him most, I wonder? I think he&#13;
loves this girl. Shall I separate&#13;
them?"&#13;
He thought'.a moment. A look of&#13;
cunning came over his face. "No," he&#13;
said, "they shall get married. I will&#13;
give him six weeks, and then he shall&#13;
either bribe me or be exposed!"&#13;
He rubbed his hands with glee and&#13;
then pulled himself up again. "But&#13;
he isn't going to eheat me of my revenge!"&#13;
he cried. "'That would be&#13;
nothing—a man soon forgets a woman.&#13;
After all, it will be the woman&#13;
who suffers most; but he—he has beggared&#13;
me! *He~has deprived me of&#13;
my very life! He shall suffer for it.&#13;
I shall never rest until my knife is&#13;
driven into his very heart!"&#13;
Hutchinson tcfok a draught at his&#13;
glass. ."There's nothing left me but&#13;
this," he said—"nothing! And I have&#13;
so much—carriages and horses, and&#13;
fine living and everything going well.&#13;
I should have been the richest man in&#13;
Bio, the most powerful Englishman&#13;
over there. There is no need for me&#13;
to prompt .my memory lest I forget;&#13;
the wonder is that I did not come&#13;
across him before. Let me see, he is&#13;
such a eoft, he will have told this girl&#13;
all .about .ft before. No, no! My best&#13;
plan will ,be to wait until after the&#13;
marriage—:hls second marriage!. And&#13;
Veronica?&#13;
"Well, .she does not know where to&#13;
find either him or me. I can drop her&#13;
for a week or two. She has more cunning&#13;
in Jier than I should have&#13;
thought possible, for she never mentioned&#13;
Mackenzie's name to me. I&#13;
had no idea .that he knew anything&#13;
about her. It was the merest guesswork;&#13;
but what a chance! I havenlS&#13;
had a chance for more than four&#13;
years. Perhaps the luck has turned,&#13;
and the man who ruined jne is destined&#13;
to put me on my legs again. But&#13;
-mrquarterl W4»teverhtruoe^i.snarh&#13;
still take my revenge!"&#13;
Meanwhile, the object of eJJ these&#13;
plots and plans had gone home a little&#13;
disturbed. Alan Mackenzie ccuild&#13;
not look 'unmovGd at the picture of&#13;
the.wreck-of a man's life. He knew&#13;
that he counted for something in&#13;
Hutchinson's ruin—nay, for a great&#13;
deal. Hutchinson had never been a&#13;
good man; but there had been a difference&#13;
between the man who schemed at&#13;
La Paz, surrounded by every luxury,&#13;
and the dirty, drunken scoundrel he&#13;
had met in the streets of London.&#13;
Then, too, the mention of Veronica&#13;
disturbed him. He bad never thought&#13;
to much about her aa he had lately,&#13;
perhaps because he had never understood&#13;
before what love-meant. Now,&#13;
In his love for Joyce, he began better&#13;
to understand the poor dead girl's&#13;
feelings. He did not regret that he&#13;
had not loved her better; he rather rejoiced&#13;
that his best love should go to&#13;
Joyces And ht knew that be had always&#13;
bean perfectly kind to her, at&#13;
fee y u to niost women; but at knew&#13;
sow whet' the • separation from him&#13;
must have meant to Veronica, and&#13;
how, when she was drowning even,&#13;
her one regret would be that- she&#13;
should see his face" no more!&#13;
The preparations for the wedding&#13;
went on apace. Joyce was very popular&#13;
among her friends, and quite recognised&#13;
to be a pearl among womanhood.&#13;
Old General Grenville, her father, had&#13;
a large acquaintance, who were all&#13;
disposed to make much of the beautiful,-&#13;
-bright girl. Not a "few men were&#13;
envious of Alan's luck. There was&#13;
quite a little stir in the circle of which&#13;
Joyce was the ornament. It only&#13;
wanted a fortnight to the wedding,&#13;
and Joyce and her betrothed were&#13;
driving down Regent street together.&#13;
It was the beginning of May,, and they&#13;
were to be married on the seventeenth.&#13;
Both Joyce and Alan were&#13;
willing to forego the details of the&#13;
London season. They bad taken a&#13;
charming house in the country, where&#13;
they intended to spend the summer in&#13;
honeymooning. If they liked the&#13;
neighborhood, and it suited them,&#13;
they thought of buying it, as a little&#13;
country house where they could live&#13;
when tired of London. But for this&#13;
season it was to be their home as&#13;
soon as they bad returned from&#13;
abroad. "They were on their way to&#13;
Liberty's to buy hangings for their&#13;
new abode when a block occurred in&#13;
the traffic. Joyce and Alan were&#13;
laughing at some foolish joke, - and&#13;
waiting for their hansom to be allowed&#13;
to moye on. A slight woman with a&#13;
child in her arms attracted his attention.&#13;
'"" The child was about three, and&#13;
Alan could see that his head was covered&#13;
with rich brown curls. He could&#13;
not see the woman, but the pose of&#13;
her head seemed familiar to him. In&#13;
an instant the color forsook his face,&#13;
and everything seemed to turn black&#13;
before his eyes. When he had regained&#13;
control over himself the woman&#13;
was gone. Joyce turned quickly&#13;
and saw the pallor on his face.&#13;
"Alan," she cried, in alarm, "my&#13;
darling, what is it? Are you not&#13;
well?" '_&#13;
"A passing fnintness." he said. He&#13;
could not tell her that this strange&#13;
woman carrying a child, and Whom of&#13;
course he had never seen before, reminded&#13;
him of Veronica, and it gave&#13;
him a shock.&#13;
"Are you often like this?" she&#13;
asked, anxiously. "'Oh, Alan, there is&#13;
only a fortnight more, and then I&#13;
shall be able to came and take care of&#13;
you always! I am .sure you do too&#13;
much," she added, tenderly.&#13;
He gripped her hnpd harH jf would&#13;
be exquisite to have her with him always;&#13;
but he was truthful above all&#13;
things. "I have never been faint before,"&#13;
he said.&#13;
"Then it is t h e prospect of spending&#13;
life with me that alarms you," she&#13;
said, gaily. Alan had regained his&#13;
usual color and his usual manner.&#13;
The cab stopped at the door of th-n&#13;
shop, and he sprang out to help her&#13;
down. They were both very much in&#13;
earnest over their purchase. Joyce&#13;
had exquisite taste, and Alan £ was&#13;
deeply interested in getting all that&#13;
she wanted; but he was conscious all&#13;
the time of a feeling of strain. Do&#13;
what he would he could not get the&#13;
woman's figure out of his head- It&#13;
was an utter absurdity that this&#13;
strange woman with her child should&#13;
have so upset him, and he hated himself&#13;
for the thought that he must always&#13;
keep something from Joyce.&#13;
Although she knew all about it, yet&#13;
he felt that he should not have liked&#13;
to tell her why he turned faint when&#13;
,the hansom stopped. He did so yearn&#13;
minded,me of poor dead Veronica.&#13;
Mia* yon, I &lt;tyd not see her .face, be*&#13;
aone*hinf in her walk waa Uke. i&#13;
aw 9&#13;
Joyee waa as pale aa Alan ha4 bapa*&#13;
• w a*^OW' W p ^ H ' ' e&gt; a^a^a tsjgnaa ^^^•e^^ae o&gt;^9^P&#13;
loved Her more than you thought*&#13;
"No, no!" he said, ' i t la not thai&#13;
at alt, Joyce, but the sight of that&#13;
strange woman made me'realise bow&#13;
necessary yoa are to me. l*rlin*, it I Knox a* follows: Ha$e followed com&#13;
is because I love you so that I cannot&#13;
bear to think of losing you. If I bad&#13;
to wait another two months instead of&#13;
two weeksX-think I should mo mad!"&#13;
He pushed his kair from his brew&#13;
and leant his head oa hia hand. Joyce&#13;
saw that he was overdone and naryoua,&#13;
and that she must brace him up&#13;
a little. She recognised, with a gush&#13;
of.thankfulness to God, that here was&#13;
a man who loved her aa few men love&#13;
women, and that the poor dead girl&#13;
could never have had his heart It&#13;
was only pity, as he had said. She saw&#13;
this in a flash even as she looked at&#13;
him. t&#13;
"Alan," she said softly, "put away&#13;
these fears, sweetheart. See, here I&#13;
am; look at me. I am yours till death&#13;
and after. Death itself has no terrors&#13;
of separation for people who i o v r a s&#13;
we. What do you think—that flesh&#13;
and blood could contain our love?&#13;
No; we belong to each other for always,&#13;
and Here comes our lunch,&#13;
and you will have to eat i t "&#13;
And he did eat it, cheered by t^he&#13;
sunshine of her eyes and the music&#13;
of her voice. And after lunch they&#13;
sat up in one of the balconies and&#13;
watched the boats go down the grimy&#13;
but sunlit bosom of Mother Thames,&#13;
for the hotel looked out upon the river.&#13;
And Alan smoked, and they made&#13;
plans for the future. Where they&#13;
would go, and what they would do,&#13;
and what they would see, together, together,&#13;
together always. And they&#13;
talked of the folly of married men and&#13;
women who go their separate ways,&#13;
not recognizing the divinely blessed&#13;
link between husband and wife. And&#13;
when they rose to go they knew that&#13;
they were nearer to each other than,&#13;
they had ever been before. It bad&#13;
been a golden afternoon, although now&#13;
the sun had gone from the river, and&#13;
the mist was rising a little. Still, as&#13;
Joyce said, "No mist can blot the sun&#13;
put forever." She meant it as an allegory,&#13;
and as an allegory Alan understood&#13;
i t&#13;
And then they drove home again together,&#13;
and that evening Alan Bpent&#13;
quietly, doing a little work which was&#13;
necessary, seeing that he had spent a&#13;
good many hours doing nothing but&#13;
making love to Joyce. And on the&#13;
morrow he had forgotten the strange&#13;
turn that the woman had given him..&#13;
Nothing happened during the—neri&#13;
fortnight, which went all toa slowly&#13;
for him, until his wedding day. On&#13;
the contrary, each day his heart became&#13;
lighter, and he looked-forward&#13;
each day to that which would see the&#13;
consummation of his dearest desires.&#13;
And so the wadding day came, and&#13;
•Alan forgot everything but that the&#13;
sweetest woman in the world was go-&#13;
I n y t n holnnff Yn h i m f r o m t h a t d a y&#13;
forward Jorcvermore. His responses&#13;
rang out clear and fluent, as did hers."&#13;
He forgot Hutchinson and Hutchinson's&#13;
enigmatic prophecy—that there&#13;
might be a strange wedding guestthough&#13;
"he could not have known that&#13;
Hutchinson had chansed his mind, and&#13;
that there would be no strange wedding&#13;
guest that da3'.&#13;
hv forgot everything, save that the&#13;
time was coming nearer and nearer&#13;
when the carriage door would be closed&#13;
behind him and Joyce, and he would&#13;
whisk her of!, his own dear bride. And&#13;
it is no exaggeration to say that the&#13;
sun had never shone on two happier&#13;
people than Alan and Joyce MacKen-&#13;
(To be continued.)&#13;
Horn A m o n g I h e BtOlrushe*.&#13;
There is a variety of grebe (colymbus&#13;
minor) which hatches its young on&#13;
a regular raft. Its nest is a mass of&#13;
strong stems of aquatic plants closely&#13;
fastened together. These plants contain&#13;
a considerable quantity of air in&#13;
to be entirely one, with- the girl_*ha_^¾¾^ «e»a.*nd-..set *ree gases to the&#13;
had promised herself to him, and how&#13;
could he with the shadow of the past&#13;
over him? And ell the time that he&#13;
criticized Joyce's hangings, and the&#13;
colors and tints that would do well&#13;
with her fair skin and light hair, he&#13;
felt /an undercurrent of restlessness.&#13;
"It's .only because my happiness has&#13;
made me nervous. I feel like the old&#13;
Greeks,.who made libations to their&#13;
gods when some great good fortune&#13;
happened to them. If I could only give&#13;
something—a thank-offering—for what&#13;
I have got!"&#13;
Joyce was too much ih sympathy&#13;
with him not to know that something&#13;
was worrying him. They went to&#13;
lunch at some quiet place, and when&#13;
she had got her gloves off .she put her&#13;
hand In his and said: "Now, what is&#13;
worrying you? I must know!"&#13;
Ha looked at her, and, to her surprise,&#13;
bis eyes were full of tear:?.&#13;
"Joyce," he aafo\ "I cannot quite tell&#13;
you, because It Is difficult to make you&#13;
understand. When our cab stopped in&#13;
Oxford street ft&amp;4 I turwed faint, I&#13;
a woman with a cblM who rei&#13;
Tfi liliHUlVi. f»i|i»f I rfi&gt;T.r»—j—-"I i i h i « —&#13;
TftAXgVAAl WAfMTEMr.,&#13;
Gen. ft* Wet ha* a ^ 4 .u^oeeded to&#13;
*m*Mwnm T***A Bohftzw MMnnniiicationa.&#13;
both by rattway aa4 telegraph* an4&#13;
has esptumi ,100 of 4*e Hi*hJU*d*«s.&#13;
The story ol) tbe federal commander'e&#13;
bold raid comes in the form of • telejrram&#13;
from flen. Forestler-Walker,&#13;
dated at Cape Town, Sunday*, July 28,&#13;
forwarding a dispatch from Gen.&#13;
mSmSSBi'.&#13;
process of decaying. The air and the&#13;
gases imprisoned in the plant make&#13;
the neBt lighter than water. The bird&#13;
usually sits quietly on its eggs, but if&#13;
any intruder approaches or any danger&#13;
is feared the mother plunges one&#13;
foot in the water, and, using it as a&#13;
paddle, transports her floating nest&#13;
to a distance,often dragging along with&#13;
it a sheet of water plants. A naturalist&#13;
who frequently watched this remarkable&#13;
removal says: "The&#13;
structure looks like a little floating Island&#13;
carried along by the labor of the&#13;
grebe, which moves in the center of a&#13;
mass of verdure."—Cincinnati Enquirer.&#13;
mando since July 4«. Hard..sharp&#13;
flghttof at Palatetfouteia, July 19.&#13;
Prevented from pursningr leager by&#13;
darkness. Eight, dead Boers found.&#13;
Our "caanaltles five killed and 7*&#13;
wounded. Beach Vaalkranti on the&#13;
23d. JSnemy doubled back through&#13;
Paardekraal in darkness. Send supplies&#13;
lor 3,000 men and homes, also&#13;
any sews of the enemy's movements.&#13;
I hear the commando consists of 2,000&#13;
men and four gums and i* accompanied&#13;
by President Steyn and both the De&#13;
Wets.&#13;
A new clement has entered into the&#13;
South African campaign with the receipt&#13;
of news that Gen. Carrington,&#13;
with hie Rhodesian force, has had his&#13;
first fight, attacked the Boers and carried&#13;
their position on Sclous river on&#13;
the SJUl, after a sharp engagement..&#13;
Gen, Carrfr/gton lost four killed and IQ&#13;
wounded.&#13;
Koloed by Filipino*.&#13;
At Oroquieta, in northern Mindanao,&#13;
two soldiers entered a native store for&#13;
the purpose of buying food. While&#13;
there one of them was killed by a bolo&#13;
and his head severed from his body.&#13;
The other escaped and gave the alarm.&#13;
A company of the 40th infantry, stationed&#13;
at Cagayan, repaired to Oroquieta&#13;
and killed 89 natives, 30 of them&#13;
being in. a.,single house. Subsequently&#13;
the gunboat Callao, commanded by&#13;
Lieut. Geo. B. Bradshaw, shelled Oroquieta,&#13;
burning the warehouse. One&#13;
of the crew was killed. A force of the&#13;
enemy estimated to number 500, under&#13;
the leadership of Alvarez, formerly the&#13;
insurgent president of Yarbranga, is&#13;
now persistently troubling northern&#13;
Mindanao. A marine at the outpost of&#13;
Isabela de Basilan was boloed by natives&#13;
and so badly wounded that he&#13;
died. Isabela is tranquil.&#13;
N o T h i r d T i c k e t Thin Year.&#13;
By unanimous vote of the national&#13;
committee of the National (gold standard)&#13;
Democracy on the 25tk the scheme&#13;
of fusicm with the anti-imperialistic&#13;
movement originating with the recent&#13;
mass meeting in Now York, was de- I there into the truest, noblest, and most&#13;
feated, as was alsp the plan to place a&#13;
gold standard Democratic ticketjn the&#13;
field this year. Qf the i'J members of&#13;
the national committee, there were&#13;
present 11» members. Two of the committeemen&#13;
held several proxies. When&#13;
the vote on the question of fusion and&#13;
the nomination of a third ticket was&#13;
taken up, Gordon Woodbury, of New&#13;
Hampshire, proved to be the only committeemen&#13;
present who favored a third&#13;
party ticket. He urged his views at&#13;
some length. The vote was by ballot&#13;
and stood 20 to i against the proposition.&#13;
Mr. Woodbury at once moved&#13;
that the vote be made unanimous, and&#13;
this was done.&#13;
It is-President McKinley's intention&#13;
to attend the 34th national encampment&#13;
of the G. A: K., at Chicago, August&#13;
25.&#13;
Wm. .T. Bryan has accepted an invitation&#13;
to attend the national encampment&#13;
of tlie G. A. R. at Chicago in&#13;
August.&#13;
BASE BALL.&#13;
Below we subojii the official standlnsr of the&#13;
clubsof ttte NiUioiuU uml American leagues up&#13;
to anil iacluiiiu£ Suoduy. July -'9th:&#13;
Won. Lost. P e r c t&#13;
Brooklyn&#13;
Philadelphia....&#13;
Pittsburg&#13;
Chicago&#13;
Boston...&#13;
Cincinnati&#13;
S t Louis&#13;
New York&#13;
43&#13;
43&#13;
41&#13;
30&#13;
37&#13;
36&#13;
Si&#13;
-,¾&#13;
28&#13;
34&#13;
38&#13;
38&#13;
89&#13;
i'i&#13;
41&#13;
-4n-&#13;
.633&#13;
AS8&#13;
.51«&#13;
^06&#13;
.4S7&#13;
.462&#13;
.440&#13;
.-SSi-&#13;
Cbicajro&#13;
IndianupoliH.&#13;
Milwaukee...&#13;
Buffalo&#13;
Detroit&#13;
Cleveland. ..&#13;
Kansas CHy..&#13;
Minneapolis..&#13;
AMKK1CAN LSAGUK.&#13;
Won. L o s t Per o t&#13;
49&#13;
45&#13;
47&#13;
4-»&#13;
41&#13;
ft)&#13;
4}&#13;
af&#13;
33&#13;
36&#13;
4(&#13;
45&#13;
41&#13;
i!&#13;
4»&#13;
S66&#13;
.53+&#13;
.493&#13;
.481&#13;
.481&#13;
.40«&#13;
.4iV&#13;
T H E M A R K E T S .&#13;
J W . 5 IW&#13;
Powerful Kidrnkorff Coll*&#13;
Two of the largest Ruhmkorff coils&#13;
ever made have been ordered in the&#13;
United States for a foreign govern*&#13;
ment, and will give an electric spark&#13;
forty-live inches In length expending&#13;
energy amoux&amp;njuto three or four&#13;
horse power, and having a pvttBflaJ of&#13;
half a million volte.&#13;
LIVK STOCK.&#13;
Wew Y o r k— Cattle Sheep Lamb*&#13;
Best grade* . .f4 .Vx^&gt; 75 »4 80 *6 \M&#13;
Lower grades J aU(£4 W&#13;
Chlc»fo—&#13;
Best grades..&#13;
Lower grades.&#13;
D e t r o i t - -&#13;
Best grade*...&#13;
Lower grades.&#13;
Buffalo—&#13;
Best grades...&#13;
Lewer grades.&#13;
.&amp; !*?&amp;* 85-&#13;
4 UU^4 (ft&#13;
.3 ?S®4 ?r»&#13;
.3 MXtfJ 7o&#13;
4 40&amp;V23&#13;
.4 OJttfl 41)&#13;
wWXhUoWle+-Bl e-sCt ingeriafidbea*i.t..r.5 _2_S ®- TSa Lower grades..4 •£*&amp;&amp; 5&amp;&#13;
4 40&#13;
4 00&#13;
4 50&#13;
&gt; tw&#13;
4 40&#13;
4 15&#13;
3 75&#13;
.Pittebarg—&#13;
Best grades.... ft 15AA 70 4 60&#13;
Lower grades.4 7o©t&gt; UO 4 «0&#13;
G R A I N , BTO.&#13;
Wheat. Com.&#13;
Nat'red No. 2ml*&#13;
S 00&#13;
4 40&#13;
5 80&#13;
d 50&#13;
6 0 0&#13;
560&#13;
" T S 5 ~&#13;
5 75&#13;
600&#13;
5 25&#13;
B o g s&#13;
5 40&#13;
5 3 0&#13;
6 US&#13;
ft 35&#13;
5 2»&#13;
560&#13;
4 80&#13;
5 45&#13;
5 »&#13;
Q^KACHiNQ TH9PU9H y*W,OW~&#13;
To all loveraet ooOoor M r asd ft»&#13;
thoae tagged and worm oat dyepefitks&#13;
who need n braeing «mic in*tte ***»•&#13;
of pure air and healthy exereleaf *w»&#13;
heartily recommend a trip to the Yellowatom.&#13;
There yon are carried back&#13;
to tko "food old coaching daye," eo&#13;
charmingly described by Dickene, Wfcft&#13;
the additional advantage of ma*nin*&#13;
cent scenery/unflhrpaased in any other&#13;
part of the" World! There are aeveral&#13;
so-called coach lines and camping otrtftta&#13;
in the park, but the majority of&#13;
them are a delusion and a snare. If&#13;
yon want to enjoy the trip thoroughly&#13;
go via the Northern Pacific railway to&#13;
Cinnabar and thence take the splendidly&#13;
appointed .coaches of the Yellowstone&#13;
National Park Trans. Company&#13;
for the drive through the park. These&#13;
famous Concord coaches seat from flye&#13;
to seven persons, are drawn by four&#13;
fine, well-broke horses, and are. in&#13;
charge of thoroughly experienced drivers.&#13;
They are run on schedule time,&#13;
and a late arrival on this line Is a&#13;
thing unknown. It in the largest stage&#13;
line ever organized. At the present&#13;
time they have 700 head of horsee, 75&#13;
drivers and seating capacity tor over&#13;
1,100 persons—representing an investment&#13;
of over $200,000. The business is&#13;
carried on with military precision.&#13;
There is no rush, no hurry, or confusion.&#13;
To any of our readers*contemplating&#13;
a trip to this "wonderland" we earnestly&#13;
advise them to assure themselves&#13;
when purchasing tickets that they&#13;
read via the Northern Pacific and the&#13;
Yellowstone National Park Transportation&#13;
Co.&#13;
ST. MARY'S ACADEMY.&#13;
Notre D a m e , Indiana.&#13;
SJ'! •;.' '...""if-.'&#13;
: • • ' # # &amp;&#13;
We call the attention of our readers&#13;
to the advertisement of St. Mary's&#13;
Academy which appears in another&#13;
column of this paper. The 46th year&#13;
opens September 4th, 1900. We do not&#13;
need to expatiate upon the scholastic&#13;
advantages of St. Mary's for the catalogue&#13;
of the school shows the scope of&#13;
work Included in its curriculum, which&#13;
is of the same high standard as that&#13;
vt Vassar and Bryn Mawr, and is carried&#13;
out faithfully in the d i s s rooms.&#13;
We simply emphasize the spirit of earnest&#13;
devotion which makes every&#13;
teacher at St. Mary's loyally strive to&#13;
develop each young girl attendant&#13;
intelligent womanhood. Every advantage&#13;
of equipment in the class rooms,&#13;
laboratories and study rooms, every&#13;
care in the matter of food and clothing,&#13;
and exceptional excellence of climatic&#13;
condlitons—all of these features&#13;
are found at St. Mary's, in the perfection&#13;
of development only to be obtained&#13;
by the consecration of devoted&#13;
lives to educational Christian work, in&#13;
a spot favored by the Lord.—The Fine&#13;
Arts Journal.&#13;
BEAR STORIES&#13;
Are always interesting. The bears In&#13;
Yellowstone Eark afford intense&#13;
amusement to those who visit Wonderland.&#13;
There are black bears, brown&#13;
bears and grizzly bears. There are the&#13;
big bears, the medium sized bears,&#13;
and the little wee bears of. the story&#13;
of childhood days. These bears live in&#13;
the hills and forests and venture down&#13;
to the park hotels in the evening t o&#13;
eat from the refuse heaps. The way&#13;
they carry on and the frolics they&#13;
have, are very funny to the park tourists&#13;
who go cut to photograph them&#13;
with, kodaks.&#13;
The bears never hurt any one ancT&#13;
are easily scared.&#13;
No one is allowed to throw stick*&#13;
or stones at them under penalty of&#13;
arrest by the soldiers in the park.&#13;
A book called Wonderland 1900 that&#13;
tells about these park bears will be&#13;
nant lr&gt; a n y n n a w h n -ari)\ a&lt;&gt;nrl af* c e n t s&#13;
in stamps to Mr. Chas. S. Fee, Gen.&#13;
Pas. Agent pf the Norte$tm Pacific&#13;
Railway at St. Paul, Minn. The bear&#13;
stories are found in the chapter on&#13;
Yellowstone Park.&#13;
Mow York&#13;
* D e t r o i t&#13;
T o l e d o&#13;
Cinelauatl&#13;
P l t U b o r g&#13;
Boff ale*&#13;
N_ o. Os wathsi.t e&#13;
8 0 * 0 *&#13;
79QWM&#13;
78078Vi&#13;
81081¾&#13;
8 0 0 * 0 *&#13;
4.^43&#13;
38038*&#13;
41041¼&#13;
a»03»*&#13;
4 4 0 " *&#13;
43043¾&#13;
4304**-&#13;
290a»x&#13;
SJO*£X&#13;
S80*tf&#13;
aoss*&#13;
«70*7&#13;
H a d D r U e u Molee B o tore.&#13;
Daniel C. Pomeroy, once a prominent&#13;
New York criminal lawyer, in his early&#13;
life was a-^tage oriver on the old Butterfteld&#13;
line, and gleaned his legal education&#13;
largely upon the box seat of&#13;
his coach, or while change of horses&#13;
was being made at the stations. . B.i&#13;
was associated with others in the defense&#13;
of one Mrs. McCarthr, on her&#13;
trial at Utica for the murder of a man&#13;
named Hall of Ogdensburg, who waa&#13;
killed by a bullet from her re«rolver^&#13;
which was aimed at another man.&#13;
Jijdge Doolittle presided at the trial,&#13;
and seemed to believe in the prisoner's&#13;
-^^ I guilt- -The judge was bitter—and so&gt;&#13;
was Pomeroy. The latter made an objection,&#13;
and insisted upon it rather&#13;
strenuously. "Mr. Pomeroy,*' said the&#13;
judge, "I am not a horse, and can't be&#13;
driven." "Well, your honor, I learned&#13;
in my early experience to drive mules,&#13;
and I will try to keep up my former&#13;
reputation."—Philadelphia Call. '&#13;
•Detroit-Hay, No. I Timothy, 11* 00 per ton.&#13;
Potatoes, 4i)o per bo. Live Poultry, tpriag&#13;
tuhJrena, 8Ho per lb; fevrlft, so: turkeys, lOoj&#13;
dUAttta, a**. £gfa strlett? freeh, tie per dose*&#13;
Seller* beat* Ma otr lb; ertamerf, 19«&#13;
Joe, Mitchell, a young cigar maker&#13;
from Kingston, Ont, was shot and instantly&#13;
killed on the 21st by Policeman&#13;
Christopher Eekr Mitchell yfM intoxicated&#13;
and resisted arrest* fcek claim*&#13;
that in discharging hia revolver to call&#13;
aeaisUnoe, Mitchell got within&#13;
and waa accidentally killed.&#13;
^&#13;
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Sf-'.»l'* it&#13;
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• M * * » W « » • l f » W » W " W&#13;
MM P»SP MMMPM •*•*&#13;
gfytick.'&#13;
f. U ANDREWS KOITOK.&#13;
THURSDAY, AUGUST 2, 1900.&#13;
Ill H l l Mil • • • — I 0 11» Ml I - ^ • « « » • . » . l i W W W " W W &gt; . l I " ' " • " " " * * '&#13;
The first automobile to make its&#13;
appearance in Plymouth passed;&#13;
through that place last week. It&#13;
was used by a taveling man who&#13;
claimed it was cheaper than to&#13;
travel by rail and there was no&#13;
waiting for the train.&#13;
T h e l a w s of health require that t b e&#13;
b o w e l s m o v e once each day &amp;nd o n e oi&#13;
the penalties (or v i o l a t i n g this l a w is&#13;
piles. K e e p y o u r bowels r e g u l a r by&#13;
t a k i n g a dose of Chamberlain's Stomach&#13;
and L i v e r Tablets w h e n n e c e t s -&#13;
ary a n d y o u will n e v e r have that s e -&#13;
v e r e p u n i s b m b n t inflicted upon y o u .&#13;
P r i c e , 2 5 c e n t s . F o r sale by F. A .&#13;
- S i g l e r , P i n c k n e y .&#13;
»&#13;
T h e b r i l l i a n t A u g u s t n u m b e r&#13;
o f F r a n k L e s l i e ' s P o p u l a r M o n t h -&#13;
l y , w h i c h i s t h e r e g u l a r M i d s u m -&#13;
m e r F i c t i o n N u m b e r o f t h i s p e r i -&#13;
o d i c a l , m a y f a i r l y b e c a l l e d a n&#13;
e p o c h - m a k i n g a c h i e v e m e n t i n t e n -&#13;
c e n t m a g a z i n e l i t e r a t u r e .&#13;
W h a t mosc people w a n t is somet&#13;
h i n g mild and g e n t l e , w h e n i n need&#13;
of a p h y s i c . Chamberlain's Stomach&#13;
NORTH AMP WEST SIDES OF PLAZA, PAN-AMERICAN EXPOSITION.&#13;
Copyright, 1000, by the Pan-American Exposition Co.&#13;
Standing a t t h e great Electric T o w e r a n d looking north, t h e visitor t o t b e Pan-American Exposition, to b e held&#13;
In Buffalo from May 1 to Nov. 1, 1901, w i l l h a v e before him t b e Plaza, o r square, a beautiful open s p a c e 350 b y 500&#13;
feet. On t h e opposite, or north, side o f t h e P l a z a will be t b e Propyleea, or monumental, entrances, connected b y a&#13;
c u r s e d colonnade 280 feet long. A large building at the left, 841 feet long a n d 5 2 f e e t wide, w i t h t o w e r s 164 feet&#13;
high, will be used for restaurant purposes. T h i s forms a l s o the e a s t e r n entrance t o t h e Midway, or pleasure ground,&#13;
w h e r e t h e visitor m a y find a collection o f n o v e l entertainments t h a t will a s t o n i s h t h e most cosmopolitan traveler.&#13;
Directly across the Flaza from t h e R e s t a u r a n t building is a c o m p a n i o n structure, forming t h e entrance t o t h e Stadium,&#13;
or athletic field, w h e r e 25,000 people m a y be seated t o enjoy t b e high c l a s s athletic sports.&#13;
and L i v e r Tablets fill t h e bill t o a dot.&#13;
T h e y are -easy to t a k e a n d pleasant in&#13;
effect, F o r sale by F . A. S i g l e r&#13;
P i n c k n e y .&#13;
The Christian Endeavors are to&#13;
have a resort similar to the Epworth&#13;
resort and the Bay View assembly,&#13;
and it is so to be located&#13;
at the west end of Portage Lake,&#13;
ten miles north of Manistee, where&#13;
one hundred acres have been secured&#13;
for gi ounds.&#13;
A few nights ago there was a&#13;
lady who, supposing that her husband&#13;
had gone "down town," sat&#13;
up until 12 o'clock waiting for&#13;
him. Her patience then gave out&#13;
and she went to her room angry&#13;
and tired, and there found her&#13;
husband fast asleep. Instead of&#13;
going out he had gone to bed.&#13;
The lady was sp mad she would&#13;
not speak to him for four days.—&#13;
Brighton Argus.&#13;
A Minister'* Good W o r k .&#13;
" I " b a d a severe attack of bilious&#13;
colic, g o t a bottle of Chamberlain's&#13;
Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy,&#13;
took two doses and w a s entirely cured,"&#13;
says Rev. A. A. P o w e r , of Emporia.&#13;
Kan-. "My n e i g h b o r across the&#13;
street was sick for over a week, bad&#13;
t w o or three bottles of m e d i c i n e from&#13;
the doctor. He used them for three&#13;
or four days w i t h o u t relief, then&#13;
called in another doctor w h o treated&#13;
him for some days and ^ a v e h im n o&#13;
relief, so discharged h i m . 1 w e n t&#13;
over to see him the next m o r n i n g .&#13;
H e said his bowels were, in a terrible&#13;
fix, t h a t they had been r u n n i n g off&#13;
so Jong that it. w a s almost bloody flux.&#13;
I asked him if he bad h i e d Chamberlain's&#13;
Colic, Cholera a n d D i a r r h o e a&#13;
R e m e d y a n d he said. ' N o . ' I w e n t&#13;
h o m e and b r o u g h t him my bottle and&#13;
g a v e him o n e dose; told h im t o take&#13;
a n o t h e r dose in fifteen o r t w e n t y minutes&#13;
if he did n o t find relief, but be&#13;
" T h r o u g h t h e m o n t h s of J u n e and&#13;
J n l v (..in- ha.i.y was t e e t h i n g and t^ok&#13;
a r u n n i n g off of t h e b o w e l s a n d sickness&#13;
of t b e S t o m a c h , " says O. P . M.&#13;
H o l l i d a y , of D e m i n g I n d . " H i s bowels&#13;
w o u l d move from five to e i g h t&#13;
t i m e s a day. I had a bottle of Chamberlain's&#13;
Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea&#13;
Man's highest ar. t i. s t,hua t* bv y w,hI,iIc„Kh ]i Hambur"g a_n d Pntnnm Fa rmH e r s Clnbi&#13;
he fashions for himself a v i s i o n of j T h e a b o v e c l u b h e l d t h e i r J u l y&#13;
M f ^ e ^"frna^l-eetingattH^pleasant home of&#13;
w h i c h is God. Wherefore, our v i s i o n | Mr. a n d M r s . E . G . F i s h ' o n S a t -&#13;
of the perfect is ^ ^ surcl^ that such j u r d j t w M c h W R U e j e _&#13;
a t h i n g must be.—J. W. CnactwicK. j « ^ &amp;&#13;
Consecration is n o t t h e act of our j l y a t t e n d e d . A l t h o u g h t h e p r o -&#13;
feelings, but of our will. Do not^try [gram was short it was made an&#13;
interesting meeting by the quesa&#13;
farmer trying to raise a crop by&#13;
.afetijCife* t*fr* " ^ V * # a t »&#13;
ten acrt fi#ld wishing that a nioe&#13;
crop would spring up inrjt. Ridiculous&#13;
i*n*t i t *',' Bat' not more&#13;
so than the merchant who hides a&#13;
stock of goods away in a store&#13;
^oam and then sits. on, a cbimier&#13;
noping the people will obmete and&#13;
Verner*8 Dlettonary ol Synbuyms $ Antoii|ma»&#13;
KytboiGjtf m FaiaUiaiElum&#13;
A book that aoouId be in thp yvsk&#13;
pocket of every purfeon, bec*u*y It&#13;
tells you tbe right word to use.&#13;
No Two Words in the English&#13;
Language Have Exactly the&#13;
Same Significance. To express&#13;
the precise meaning that -one intends&#13;
to convey a dictionary of&#13;
Synonyms la needed to avoid repetition.&#13;
The. strongest fte'jn. of&#13;
speech is antithesis In tni* dictionary&#13;
the appended Antonyms&#13;
will, therefore, oe found extremely&#13;
valuable. Contains many other&#13;
features such as Mythology,&#13;
Familiar Allusions and Foreign&#13;
Ffcrasss, Prof. Loisette's Memory&#13;
• y s U m , 'The Art of rjsvw Forget U n a ' ' etc.,&#13;
t i e . This wonderful little book bou^dln a neat&#13;
cloth binding and sent postpaid for $0.26. Pull&#13;
Leather, gilt edge, $0.40, postpaid. Order at&#13;
onoe. Sena for our large book catalogue, free.&#13;
Address all orders to&#13;
T H E W E R N E R C O M P A N Y ,&#13;
KbUabsrt aad Ua&amp;oateturtrs, AXIOM, OHIO.&#13;
t o feel anything. God is w o r k i n g in&#13;
you t o will, whether you feel it or not.&#13;
Jle is giving y o u power at this m o -&#13;
m e n t t o will and to d o H i s good pleasure.&#13;
Believe this, a n d act upon i t -&#13;
Meyer.&#13;
Resignation,—not t o a whirlwind of&#13;
inexorable forces, n o t to a brutal fate&#13;
or destiny, not to powers w h o cannot&#13;
tion box and the social talk which&#13;
followed.&#13;
After -singing by^the club Mrs.&#13;
Harriett Brown gave a selecrt reading,&#13;
Jimmie Culy a recitation,&#13;
R e m e d y in t h e hou^e a n d Ka ve u i r a | hold your peace y o u will pass over&#13;
f o u r drops in ft teaspoonful of water ! n i n e out of t e n of t h e provocations of&#13;
and he g o t better at onoe. gold b y | life.—Henry Ward Beecher.&#13;
F . A . S i l l e r , P i n c k n e y .&#13;
see or hear or feel, but to One who ; Miss Kate Browu a reading and a&#13;
lives forever, and w h o loves us well, i . °&#13;
and w h o has given u s all that w e have, p a p e r b y M i s s M a m e F i s h , " T h e&#13;
aye, life itself, that w e m a y at h i s W o m a n o f t h e t w e n t i e t h C e n -&#13;
bidding give it * ~ k&#13;
f ^ w » - - ^ « » \ t u r y . " T h e m a i n p a r t o f t h e p a -&#13;
The old Greeks said that a man had -7 - , , • , , _ ^&#13;
t w o ears and one mouth, that he m i g h t J p e r w e n t t o s h o w t h a t t h e w o m a n&#13;
hear twice and speak once; and there | 0 f t o d a y h a s s u p e r i o r a d v a n t a g e s&#13;
is a great deal of good sense i n it. ' *;. »&#13;
Y o u will find that if y o u w i l l simply | t o l i e r s i s t e r o f fatty y e a r s a g o .&#13;
T h e f o l l o w i n g q u e s t i o n s w e r e&#13;
f o u n d i n t h e b o x a n d w e r e d i s c u s s -&#13;
Do right and God's recompense t o&#13;
you will be t h e power of doing more&#13;
right. Give, and God's reward t o y o u&#13;
will be t h e spirit of g i v i n g more; a&#13;
blessed spirit, for it i s t h e spirit of&#13;
G o d himself, whose Life is t h e blessedt&#13;
r a d e m a r k w h i c h w i l l m a s h o r t i n e s ^ o f giving. Love, und God wilt&#13;
pay y o u with the capacity of m o r e&#13;
love; for love is Heaven,—love is God&#13;
w i t h i n you.—F, W. Robertson.&#13;
T h e P e r e M a r q u e t t e r a i l r o a d&#13;
i o m p a n y h a s j u s t a d o p t e d a n e w&#13;
t i m e , a p p e a r o n e v e r y car, e n g i n e ,&#13;
t i m e c a r d a n d p i e c e o f s t a t i o n a r y&#13;
in t h e c o n t r o l o f t h e r o a d . I t i s&#13;
an o v a l s h a p e d b a n d c r o s s e d b y a&#13;
b a r a n d t h e r e a d i n g i s " T r a n s -&#13;
M i c h i g a n R o u t e . " I t i s t h e i n -&#13;
t e n t i o n o f t h e m a n a g e m e n t t o&#13;
m a k e t h i s s y s t e m s p o k e n o f a s&#13;
t h e p r i n c i p a l M i c h i g a n r a i l w a y .&#13;
e d . W e g i v e o n l y t h e p u r p o r t o f&#13;
t h e a n s w e r s :&#13;
W h a t m a k e s a c l u b e n j o y a b l e ?&#13;
T h e p r o g r a m , w h e n a l l w h o c a n ,&#13;
w i l l t a k e p a r t .&#13;
W h e r e i s h a p p i n e s s f o u n d ? I n&#13;
t h e h o m e i** t h e h o m e i s a c o n g e n -&#13;
A crystal is sometimes formed in t h e j i a l o n e .&#13;
embrace of a boulder of granite. T o | W f c f t j g th{ j b f Q&#13;
clear it of its rouKh enclosure, and t o , . , . , .&#13;
bring i t s beautiful facets t o t h e light, o o m e f o r t h e s o c i a b i l i t y s o m e f o r&#13;
nature submerges it in deep waters, ^he s u p p e r&#13;
shatters it by tempests, and abrades it « &gt; , , , . .&#13;
by contact with stones a n d m u d and &gt;Vny d o e s a p u m p k i n v i n e a U&#13;
rubbish of the sea. Thus a redeemed w a y 8 r u n t o t h e e a s t ? M r . F i s h&#13;
soul is b y t h e hand of God immersed&#13;
in t h e cares and toils and enticementf&#13;
,, , . ! and usefulness of a world of s i n , so&#13;
The work of moving t h e b i g i t h a t by sheer resistance to evil, and&#13;
p r i n t i n g - p r e s s p l a n t of T h e L a d - 1 abrasion with depravity, i t m a y be&#13;
f , T T ° , r , , , J polished t o t h e transparent image of&#13;
l e s H o m e J o u r n a l h a s b e g u n , a n d — •&#13;
w i t h i n a m o n t h t h e m a n u f a c t u r -&#13;
i n g p a r t o f t h e m a g a z i n e w i l l b e&#13;
i n i t s n e w h o m e . T h e r e w i l l b e&#13;
h i m w h o made it.—Austin Phelps,&#13;
D. D.&#13;
T h e Christian, finally produced, u n -&#13;
tarnished and symmetrical, is t h e&#13;
Christian continually reproduced&#13;
thought it might be for the same&#13;
reason that the sunflower turned&#13;
to the sun. Also thought that&#13;
nearly all vegetables or plants&#13;
tended to lean towards the east or&#13;
southeast. Others thought there&#13;
was no difference in the way a&#13;
WILL CURK&#13;
YOU KNILL'S RED PILLS&#13;
for WAN PEOPLE "Pale and Weak." Rflswre&#13;
Vim, Vigor and Vitality, make old people look&#13;
young, fee) young and act young. The great&#13;
Blood and Nerve Medicine.&#13;
KNILL'S WHITE LIVER PILLS&#13;
Are tbe great Liver Invigorator, System Renovator&#13;
and Bowel Regulator. You can work&#13;
while they work, never gripe or make yon&#13;
sick.&#13;
KNILL'S BLUE KIDNEY PILLS .&#13;
For backaches' 1 \me ox sore, and all Kidney&#13;
and Urinary troubles. Only 25c a box or Ave&#13;
boxes $1. Guaranteed by your druggist to do&#13;
as advertised or money refunded.&#13;
SOME FACTS! READ THEM!&#13;
• • «&#13;
EUREKA SURE STOP TOOTHACHE POWDERS&#13;
Gives quick and sure relief.&#13;
EUREKA COMPLEXION OINTMENT&#13;
Removes Black-heads and Pimples.&#13;
EUREKA CORN CURE&#13;
Cures all Come, Bunions, and Callous&#13;
places. '&#13;
EUREKA 0. K. WART REMOVER&#13;
Is certain in its results.&#13;
Each 10c, Coin OP Stamps&#13;
By R e t u r n M a l l .&#13;
Agents wanted—write today.&#13;
Address, EUREKA SUPPLY HOUSE,&#13;
Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
Railroad Guide.&#13;
took n o more and was e n t i r e l y cured." ! f o r t y - f i v e p r i n t i n g p r e s s e s i n t h e One w h o receives Christ is a s t r l i l y ' a ! y i n e ™ n s b u t t h a t t h e y w o u l d r u n&#13;
n e w fiPvmi a t o r v hniTfTTng a n d 1 7 c h i l d o f G o d t h e i n s t a n t h e t u r n s f r o m ' m &amp; n y d l r e c t l o u - T h e q u e s t i o n&#13;
n e w s e v e n - s t o r y D u i l U i n g , a n a u , &amp; s e l f . c e n t r e d t 0 a God-centred life a s j w i l l e v j d e n t l&#13;
6 0 0 s q u a r e f e e t o f floor s p a c e , h e is w h e n h e attains t h e glory of '&#13;
For sale bv P . A . S i l l e r . P i n c k n e v .&#13;
^ Mrs. Elizabeth Stuart Phelps&#13;
Wards new novel has been bought&#13;
by The Ladies' Home Journal, in&#13;
which periodical it is about to be&#13;
published serially. It is called&#13;
"The Succesors to Mary the&#13;
First," and is one of the most&#13;
humorous and yet real pieces of&#13;
fiction, touching the servant-girl&#13;
question, ever written.&#13;
"My baby was terribly sick with t b e&#13;
diarrhoea," says J . fl. Dosk, of Williams,&#13;
O r e g o n . " W e w e r e u n a b l e t o&#13;
cure him w i t h the doctor's assistance,&#13;
and as a last resort w e tried Charabelain's&#13;
Colic, Cholera a n d Diarrhoea&#13;
R e m e d y . 1 a m h a p p y to say it srave&#13;
i m m e d i a t e relief and a complete cure."&#13;
For sale by F. A . S i l l e r , P i n c k n e y .&#13;
set&#13;
A man cannot do two things at&#13;
a time. But a woman will broil a&#13;
steak, and see that the coffee does&#13;
not boil over, and watch that the&#13;
cat does not steal the remnant of&#13;
meat on the kitchen table, and&#13;
dress the youngest boy, and set&#13;
the table and see to the toast, and&#13;
•learn the oatmeal .and give orders&#13;
to fche butcher; and she can do it&#13;
«U at onoe and not half try.&#13;
The executive offices will all remain&#13;
in the present large building&#13;
which covers four city lots.&#13;
The entire plant is now the largest&#13;
of any p ublishing house in&#13;
America.&#13;
GEMS OF THOUGHT&#13;
K n o w l e d g e comes, but wisdom lingers.—&#13;
Tennyson.&#13;
Labor is but refreshment from repose.—&#13;
J. Montgomery.&#13;
Chance never helps the men who do&#13;
not wcrk.—Sophocles.&#13;
Love of virtue is as native to man as&#13;
love o f knowledge.—Celia P. Wolley.&#13;
T h e happiest woman, like t h e happiest&#13;
nations, have n o history.—&#13;
George Eliot.&#13;
T h e price of Liberty is eternal vigilance,&#13;
and the price of Wisdom i s&#13;
eternal thought.—Frank Birch.&#13;
A friendship which makes the least&#13;
n o i s e is very often most useful; for&#13;
w h i c h reason I should prefer a prudent&#13;
friend to a zealous one.—Budgell&#13;
Y o u n g m e n take a noble stand in&#13;
life's - g r s * t work. T h e more nobly&#13;
the young man conceives of this world,&#13;
the more noble will be h i s life.—Phillips&#13;
Brooks.&#13;
F o l d t h e arms of t h y Faith, I s a y .&#13;
but n o t of thy action; bethink thee o f&#13;
s o m e t h i n g that thou oughtest to do,&#13;
and g o a n d do it, tf i t be b u t t h e&#13;
s w e e p i n g of a room, or t h e preparing&#13;
of a meal, or a visit t o a friend; heed&#13;
y s e t s o m e t o w a t c h -&#13;
a v e n and is clad i n white robes b e - | i n g t o s e e i f a v i n e i s a t t r a c t e d i n&#13;
fore tire throne of God. . . . i t i s n o t a n y o n e d i r e c t i o n&#13;
implied that nothing remains to be&#13;
done; but faith is a principle which&#13;
w o r k s , which works b y love, and is e y -&#13;
er a t work until t h e actual m a n b e -&#13;
c o m e s t h e ideal m a n . T h e power o f&#13;
Christianity resides in n o small d e -&#13;
gree i n this creation of t h e new, t y p e&#13;
here and now. It has powerJ^ecause i t&#13;
Is true t o nature.—PrOf. George Harris.&#13;
Charcoal and salt, i n propor ion of&#13;
one eight of the latter, are valuable&#13;
correctors to a deranged digestive s y s -&#13;
tem.&#13;
Cholera is not only prompted by a&#13;
filthy food and drink, but by bad sanitary&#13;
conditions. T h e pens m i s t be&#13;
kept fresh and clean a t all times.&#13;
The government formula given below&#13;
will be found very effectual in checki&#13;
n g this disease w h e n an outbreak is&#13;
feared, and also even after the first&#13;
s y m p t o m s have appeared:&#13;
Wqod. charcoal, ome .pound; sulphur,&#13;
one pound; sodium chloride, t w o&#13;
pounds sodium bicarbonate, t w o&#13;
pounds; sodium hyposulphite, i w o&#13;
pounds; sodium BUlphate, o n e pound;&#13;
a n t i m o n y sulphide, o n e pound. T o be&#13;
thoroughly mixed a n d pulveriz d.&#13;
T h i s c a n be given i n feed i n doses of&#13;
a teaspoonful to a tablespoonful. a c -&#13;
cording t o t h e size of the animal a n d&#13;
severity of the attack.&#13;
A n i m a l s affected m u s t b e w a r m l y&#13;
h o u s e d a n d fed on milk, light slop o r&#13;
gruel. T h e quarters should be disin&#13;
The club decided not to hold an&#13;
August meeting and adjourned to&#13;
meet the last Saturday in September&#13;
with Mr. and Mrs. Ralph&#13;
Bennet. A supper of sandwihees,&#13;
coffee, ice cream and cake was&#13;
served and a social hour spent&#13;
which was beneficial to all.&#13;
x AND STEAMSHIP LINES*&#13;
P o p u l a r r o u t e for A n n Arbor, T o -&#13;
ledo and points East, S o u t h , a n d f o r&#13;
H o w e l l , Owosso, A l m a , Mt P l e a s a n t&#13;
Cadillac, Manistee, T r a v e r s e City a n d&#13;
p o i n t s in N o r t h w e s t e r n M i c h i g a n .&#13;
W. H . B E N N E T T ,&#13;
U . P . A . T o l e d o&#13;
PERE MARQUETTE&#13;
leallroewfL, a^a^r 1 3 , 1 3 0 0 . v&#13;
fected w i t h slaked l i m e and crude carnot&#13;
t h y feelings; d o t h y work.—George [ bolic acid and, burned t o prevent fur-&#13;
Macdonald. ther outbreak.—Farm Journal.&#13;
Speaking of newspapers, Sam&#13;
Jones says: "If I wanted to get&#13;
a right square judgement I'd&#13;
rather go to a newspaper office&#13;
than a court of justice. No man*&#13;
whose life is true, pure and just is&#13;
afraid of all the newspaper presses&#13;
in America. They are the best&#13;
detective force in the country today.&#13;
They have punctured more&#13;
shams, and so far as I am concernned&#13;
I say take the bridles off and&#13;
let them go. The only ones that&#13;
will be hurt will be the shams and&#13;
frauds."&#13;
'JONES HE F A Y S T H i FRCiGHT&#13;
"wtnrecT"&#13;
WACOM SCALES United Stttet taodMd. AUStzei AllBUndt&#13;
N q t m d e bf a trust or controlled by a com&#13;
Nutfftoo. f o r k * Book *nd Prlee Li&lt;»ddxeii&#13;
4 0 n K £ OF JflNQHAMTON,&#13;
/ • m O M A M T O M . N. Y&#13;
Ev"&#13;
Ar&#13;
Lv&#13;
Ar&#13;
GOING EAST&#13;
Urand Rs lids.&#13;
Ionia&#13;
Lansing . . . . . .&#13;
Howell&#13;
South Lyon...&#13;
Salem&#13;
Plympath&#13;
Detroit...&#13;
QOINO WEST&#13;
Detroit&#13;
Plymouth....&#13;
Salem&#13;
South Lyon....&#13;
Howell&#13;
Lansing.......&#13;
Ionia.&#13;
Grand Rapids.&#13;
a m&#13;
7 10&#13;
7 40&#13;
9 04&#13;
10 05&#13;
JO 36&#13;
10 46&#13;
11 00&#13;
11 40&#13;
• • « • « • • •&#13;
a m&#13;
~8~45&#13;
9 2fi&#13;
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9 4ft&#13;
10 88&#13;
11 28&#13;
19 50&#13;
1 80&#13;
p m&#13;
12 06&#13;
12 20&#13;
1 45&#13;
2 86&#13;
304&#13;
3 ¾&#13;
4QS&#13;
P m&#13;
1 10&#13;
148&#13;
208&#13;
2 85&#13;
3 30&#13;
445&#13;
6 10&#13;
P m&#13;
580&#13;
600&#13;
727 fr»&#13;
868&#13;
908&#13;
920&#13;
10 06&#13;
p m&#13;
TR&#13;
5 58&#13;
6 10&#13;
620&#13;
«66&#13;
766&#13;
920&#13;
10 00 FRANK B I T ,&#13;
Agent, South Lyon,&#13;
H. F* MOELLEK,&#13;
Actinn G. P. A., .&#13;
Grand Sapid*.&#13;
SO YEARS&#13;
EXPERIENCt&#13;
.•Vliff*&#13;
TRADE MARKS&#13;
D n i a w&#13;
COPYRIOHT* &amp; &amp;&#13;
ttuAonkvloyM aa toreardtainlng oaa srk oetpcihn iaonnd f dreeesc rwiphtieotnh remrm*&#13;
t—km. s s—tri ct«ly,. o.-o_n fldentia).* —Ha snedebwoortkt yonjp fPnatstya S&#13;
reoetw&#13;
Owokly asosrtaln oar opinion free&#13;
mrentton l« probably patentable. &lt;&#13;
tkms strictly oonfldentia). Handb&#13;
Patents taken tnrouirnMunn tpeekU notice, without oharge, in Scientific jtmericfflu _ £ C a&#13;
iharje, to the&#13;
eAo lhaatniodns oomfe alyn :I llustrated&#13;
:k 1&#13;
* * • • •&#13;
•V&#13;
&lt; * &lt;&#13;
iv&#13;
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••&lt;, * K&amp;K K &amp; K K &amp;&#13;
DISEASED MEN.&#13;
|NpCBf*E~NOPAY&#13;
T H B NBW METHOD TREATMENT,&#13;
ftlstol with Dr*. S . £ K.. wlU j»sW&#13;
Ively cure forever any form of Blood or&#13;
..Sexual disease.. I t is the result of 30&#13;
yean* experience in the treatment of&#13;
i$e*edi»»&amp;»ss, ,;/; WE CURE SYPHILIS&#13;
This terrible Blood Poison, the terror I&#13;
f'oUsh, etc. They may ruin your system.&#13;
f you have aoret in the month or tongue,&#13;
palm in the joint*, sore throat,.hair or&#13;
eyebrows falling o*U, pimples or blotches,&#13;
stomach derangement, sore eyes, beadaches,&#13;
etc., you have the secondary stage&#13;
| of this Blood Poison. We elicit the&#13;
most obstinate oases, and chullengo tpe&#13;
. world foracase we accept for treatment&#13;
[and cannot cure. By our treatment the&#13;
ulcers heal, the bait- grows again, pains&#13;
disappear, the shin becomes healthy, and j&#13;
marriage is possible and safe.&#13;
CURES GUARANTEED!&#13;
Thousands of young and middle-aged&#13;
men have their vigor and vitality sapped&#13;
by early abuses, later excesses, mental&#13;
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WECUREIMPOTENCY&#13;
And restore all parts to a normal condition.&#13;
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joonsult us confidentially. We can fur-]&#13;
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250,000 CURED&#13;
We treat and cure: EMISSIONS,&#13;
j VARICOCELE. SYPHILIS, OLEKT,&#13;
STRICTURE, IMPOTENCY. SECRET1&#13;
DRAINS, UNNATURAL DTSCHARU-.&#13;
ES. KIDNEY and BLADDER Diseases.&#13;
CONSULTATION FREE. BOOKS&#13;
PR BE. If unable to call, write for&#13;
t QUESTION BLANK for HOME&#13;
'TREATMENT.&#13;
KENNEDYS KERGAN&#13;
I Cor. Michigan Ave. and Shelby St.&#13;
D E T R O I T , M I C H .&#13;
K &amp; K K &amp; K K &amp; K K &amp;&#13;
THE QIRL I'D UOVE TO LOVE&#13;
T h e g i r l I'd l o v e t o l o v e te l a i r ,&#13;
A n a m o d e s t , y o a n g a n d l i m a .&#13;
H e r e y e s a r e d e e p w i t h l o v e , a n d t h e r e&#13;
t l a b e a u t y i n h e r m i n d .&#13;
S h e speak*- t o a l l t o m e g e n t l e w o r d ,&#13;
T e t n e v e r s e e m e t h s a d ;&#13;
S h e ' s N a t u r e ' s c h i l d , i u s t l i k e a b i r d ;&#13;
T o s e e her. m a k e s m e g l a d .&#13;
A n d i n t h e p e a c e f u l c o u n t r y w h e r e&#13;
S h e s i n g s a n d w o r k s a n d p l a y s ,&#13;
H e r l o n e l i n e s s Is p u r e , f o r . t h e r e&#13;
S h e t r e a d s n o t f a s h i o n ' s w a y s .&#13;
*Tte f e w of f o r t u n e ' s i d l e t h i n g s&#13;
S h e e v e r p o n d e r s o'er,&#13;
B u t w o r k s a n d j o y s a n d l o v e s&#13;
s i n g s : Why should she e'er do more?&#13;
and&#13;
S h e ' s s w e e t a n d t r u e ; ' t w i l l d o t o s e e k&#13;
I n l o v e h e r h e a r t a n d h a n d —&#13;
A f u t u r e a l l t h a t h o m e c a n s p e a k&#13;
I n l o v e r s ' l o v e l y l a n d .&#13;
— M i l t o n W . M u r r a y .&#13;
\ HIS BRAND OF COURAGE&#13;
A $4.00 BOOK FOR 75cis.&#13;
The Farmers'Encyclopedia. s&#13;
f Everything pertaining&#13;
to the affairs&#13;
or the farm,&#13;
h o u s e h o l d and&#13;
• , stock, raising. Em-&#13;
J: I] braces articles on&#13;
Uie horse, the colt,&#13;
horse habits, diseases&#13;
of the horse,&#13;
the farm, graces,&#13;
fruit cnlture, dnlrying,"&#13;
cookery,health,&#13;
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A large book, 8x5)4&#13;
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ooooooooooooooooo&#13;
0&#13;
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T e n of t h e b o y s o f H a r t f o r d h a d l e f t&#13;
t h e i r v i l l a g e a n d g o t t o t h e c o a s t ,&#13;
w h e r e t h e t r a n s p o r t s t o t h e P h i l i p *&#13;
p i n e s w e r e a w a i t i n g t h e m . T h e r e h a d&#13;
i b e e n a fine t u m u l t i n t h e t o w n w h e n&#13;
1 t h e y l e f t . V i c T o w n e , a v e t e r a n of t h e&#13;
i C i v i l w a r , m a d e a s p e e c h , flags floated&#13;
i f r o m t h e b u i l d i n g s , a n d t h e b r a s s b a n d&#13;
I w a s e v e n m o r e t h a n u s u a l l y d l s c o r d -&#13;
: a n t .&#13;
j T e n p r e t t y ^ g i r l s w e p t a t t h e depart*&#13;
; u r e of t h e i r l o v e r s . It i s t r u e t h a t&#13;
i s o m e of t h i s l o v e w a s of a n i m p r o m p t u&#13;
| n a t u r e . It h a d n o t s e e m e d fair t o l e t&#13;
! o n e of t h e f e l l o w s g o a w a y w i t h o u t a&#13;
s w e e t h e a r t , a n d t h e b o y s w e r e n o t h i n g&#13;
[ l o a t h t o a d d a n o t h e r e m o t i o n t o t h e&#13;
i m a n y w h i c h t h e y w e r e e x p e r i e n c i n g .&#13;
It w a s fine t o be a h e r o a n d t o v e n t u r e&#13;
! i n t o t h e s t r a n g e p a r t s o f t h e w o r l d a t&#13;
t h e b i d d i n g of o n e ' s c o u n t r y , b u t i t&#13;
w a s m a g n i f i c e n t t o t e a r o n e ' s self f r o m&#13;
t h e t e a r f u l e m b r a c e s of a b e a u t i f u l&#13;
g i r l . S o a l l t h e b o y s mad^jsa p o i n t of&#13;
d o i n g t h i s . ^ ^&#13;
B u t t h e p r e t t i e s t of a l l t h e p r e t t y&#13;
. g i r l s of H a r t f o r d w a s n o t w e l l s a t i s -&#13;
; fled. H e r l o v e r h a d n o t b e e n o n e of&#13;
| t h e h e r o i c t e n . H e w a s i n d e e d c o m -&#13;
f o r t a b l y a t h o m e w a t e r i n g t h e f r o n t&#13;
J l a w n of h i s f a t h e r ' s p l a c e w h e n s h e&#13;
| c a m e a l o n g o n h e r w l i e e l i n t h e e a r l y&#13;
i m o r n i n g . H e s a w h e r a n d c a l l e d o u t&#13;
c h e e r i l y :&#13;
A r e y o u t h e e a r l y b i r d o r t h e e a r l y&#13;
w o r m ? " ,&#13;
B u t s h e w a s n o t i n c l i n e d for j&gt;ersiflage.&#13;
S h e d i s m o u n t e d a n d approach-*&#13;
e d t h e g a t e w i t h g r e a t s e r i o u s n e s s of&#13;
. / * ? « * . » * &amp; &amp; £ » 3*«. XK&gt; y o u IMflaV L&#13;
s t a y e d a t h o m e b e c a u s e I w a s a&#13;
c o w a r d ? *&#13;
"I d o n t k n o w w h y y o u s t a i d a t&#13;
h o m e . I o n l y k n o w t h a t I f e e l a s h a m -&#13;
e d a t y o u . "&#13;
" B u t , N a n . l e t m e t r y t o e x p l a i n . I&#13;
h a v e n e v e r d e s i r e d a m i l i t a r y l i f e .&#13;
O n l y a f e w w a r s i n t h e w h o l e h i s t o r y&#13;
o f t h e w o r l d h a v e s e e m e d Justifiable t o&#13;
m e . I t h i n k I s h o u l d d i e if I k i l l e d a&#13;
m a n . I c a n n e v e r g e t It o u t o f m y h e a d&#13;
t h a t ' T h o u s h a l t n o t k i l l ' o u g h t t o b e&#13;
t a k e n l i t e r a l l y . A n d , r e a l l y , I w o u l d&#13;
find i t e a s i e r t o b e a sheriff a n d e x e -&#13;
c u t e a c r i m i n a l , d e t e s t a b l e a n d h o r -&#13;
r i b l e a s s u c h a t a s k w o u l d b e t o m e ,&#13;
t h a n t o s h o o t d o w n i n n o c e n t m e n . w h o&#13;
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c a u s e w h i c h s e e m e d r i g h t e o u s t o t h e m .&#13;
I firmly b e l i e v e t h a t w a r w i l l c e a s e&#13;
w h e n s o c i e t y b e c o m e s m o r e * c u l t i v a t -&#13;
e d . "&#13;
" T h e finest m e n i n t h e w o r l d h a v e&#13;
b e e n p r o u d t o g o t o b a t t l e , C u r t i s . It&#13;
n e v e r s e e m s t o m e t h a t a m a n Is q u i t e&#13;
a m a n t i l l h e h a s p u t h i m s e l f t o t h e&#13;
t e s t , i n t h a t w a y . A m a n ' s l i f e d o e s n ' t&#13;
s e e m c o m p l e t e , w i t h o u t s u c h a n e x p e r i -&#13;
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L e d g e , a n d G r a i d R a p i d s . j&#13;
T r a i n w i l l l e a v e S o u t h L y o n a t j&#13;
8 : 4 5 a. m . R e t u r n i n g l e a v e G r a n d ,&#13;
R a p i d s 6 : 3 0 p . m . , G r a n d L e d g e j&#13;
8 : 0 0 , I s l a n d L a k e 1 0 : 1 5 p . m . ! M&#13;
R a t e s l o w a s u s u a l . T u r n e r ' s&#13;
S o c i e t y a t G r a n d R a p i d s w i l l d e -&#13;
d i c a t e n e w b a l l w i t h g o o d t i m e i n -&#13;
c i d e n t t o G e r m a n c e l e b r a t i o n s .&#13;
t - 3 1&#13;
THE VILLAGE DIRECTORY,&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICERS.&#13;
PBKSIDE.VT . ~~ Alex. Mclntyre&#13;
TiiusTEKs E. L. Thompson, Alfred Monts,&#13;
Daniel Kichards, ueo- Bowmsa, Samuel&#13;
Sykes, K. it. Johnson,&#13;
C L E B K . . . . , ^ . R. H. Teeple&#13;
TREABCBER W. E. Murphy&#13;
A.-iCKssott W, A, Can&#13;
STREET CoMMiasioNEK -.. J. Monks.&#13;
MARSAHL A. E. Brown.&#13;
HEALTHUFFIOKR.... Dr. H. r". SiRler&#13;
ATTORNEY .„ „ „......«» \V. A. Carr&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
ETHOD1ST EPISCOPAL CHL'KCH.&#13;
4.T.1 H«v. Cbas. Siiui&gt;dua, pastor. Services every&#13;
Sunday morning at W.Aa, and every Sunday&#13;
evening at 7:0\» o'clock, Prayer meeting Thursday&#13;
evenings. Sunday scLool at cloee of uiornin;!;&#13;
service. LEAL ^IULEH, Supt.&#13;
OMittEUAiMONAL CKULICH.&#13;
Rev. «J. VV. Kice [&gt;a«tur. Service every&#13;
I s l a n d L a k e , S u n d a y , A n g n s t 1 2 .&#13;
S o l d i e r s i u C a m p .&#13;
S p e c i a l t r a i n s w ^ l l l e a v e S o u t h&#13;
L y o n a t 9 : 1 5 a. m . L e a v e t h e&#13;
L a k e a t 5 a n d 7 p . i n . R a t e 2 0&#13;
c e n t s . t - 3 2&#13;
C Sunday morning at 10:30 and every Sunday&#13;
evening at 7 :uc o'clock. Prayer meeting T h u s&#13;
day evenings, hunday school tit .dose of niornineserviue.&#13;
R. li. fe«pie, Suyi„ ilaoel Svvarthout&#13;
Sec&#13;
O T . MAUVT'S CATHOLIC CHURCH.&#13;
O Kev. M. J. Coaim-iri'ord, P*itjr. Sarvices&#13;
every Sunday. Low mass at 7;30 o'clock&#13;
bigli mass with seruioa at 'J :^i&gt; a. m. CdtechLsm&#13;
at a:00 p. iu.. vespersanabeuedictionat'. :;iu •J.UI.&#13;
SOCIETIES;&#13;
Ilhe A. O. H. Society of this place, msec* every&#13;
.third S i a d ^ ' iutne ^r. Mttinew Hall.&#13;
John ruo.mey and M. T. Kelly, Coaaty Delegates&#13;
EPWORTH LEAGUE. Meets every Sunday&#13;
evening at 6:00 oclook in the M. E. Cnuron. A&#13;
CHRISTIAN&#13;
iuu* every Sunday'evetiin? at i5: $&gt;.&#13;
ENTDEAVOLi SOCJIErV:—Meet.&#13;
Pr«'*iidnt,&#13;
Miss Etta Carpsutar; Secratary, .Mrs. C. W. Rioe.&#13;
S a t u r d a y . A u g u s t I S .&#13;
I t i s t h e o f d u t y o f e v e r y f a r -&#13;
m e r . t o v i s i t t h e A g r i c u l t u r a l C o l -&#13;
l e g e o n c e a y e a r a n d t a k e h i s&#13;
c h i l d r e n t o s e e t h e c o l l e g e a n d , , . - - . . -&#13;
^ I cordial invitation is extended tueveryoue, espe&#13;
g r o u n d s . T h i s a d v i c e a p p l i e s t o S ciMy »"ou°g P^P^- Mra. Stella (irahaal Prea&#13;
c i t y f o l k s a l s o . T o m a k e s u c h &amp;&#13;
t r i p w i t h o u t m u c h e x p e n s e , t h e&#13;
P e r e M a r q u e t t e C o m p a n y w i l l r u n&#13;
a s p e c i a l t r a i n o n a b o v e d a t e ,&#13;
l e a v i n g S o u t h L y o n a t S : 4 2 a. m .&#13;
a n d l e a v i n g t h e C o l l e e e r e t u r n i n g&#13;
a t 5 : 3 3 p . m . R o u n d t r i p r a t e&#13;
$ 1 . 0 0 c h i l d r e n u . n d e r 1 2 h a l f r a t e .&#13;
F i l l u p y o u r l u n c h b a s k e t s a n d&#13;
p r o p o s e f o r a d e l i g h t f u l o u t i n g .&#13;
'ItHE W. C T. U. meets the sirst Friday of each&#13;
1 month at 3:30 p, in, at the iio'ae of Dr. H. F.&#13;
Sigler. Evoryoue i n t e r e ^ d in tt-:ni&gt;eraQC9 is&#13;
coadially invited. Mrs. Leal Siller, Pres; Mrs.&#13;
Etta Durfee, Secretary.&#13;
The C. T&#13;
every third Saturday evening in the Fr. i i a t -&#13;
thew H a l l .&#13;
A. and 1&gt;. s&gt;oci«i,v •&gt;(this t&gt;lace, n»«»et&#13;
•aturuay Fr&#13;
John Donohue. President,&#13;
\TNIGHTS OF MACCABEES.&#13;
IVMeetevery Friday evening on or before fall&#13;
of the moon at their hall iu tue Swarthout bldg.&#13;
Visitiuj» brothers are cordially invited.&#13;
C « A S . (j*MPKtiX/, Sir, Knight Commandet&#13;
O l d&#13;
T h e U . S . G o v e r n m e n t h a s p l a c -&#13;
e d a t t l a e d i s p o s a l o f t h e e d i t o r o f&#13;
T h e L a d i e s ' H o m e J o u r n a l a l l t h e&#13;
i l l u s t r a t i v e a n d s t a t i s t i c a l i n f o r -&#13;
m a t i o n i n i t s p r i v a t e a r c h i v e s r e - A ' K D E K&#13;
l a t i n g t o t h e W h i t e H o u s e , w h i c h '&#13;
w i l l b e o n e h u n d r e d y e a r s&#13;
n e x t N o v e m b e r . T h e&#13;
w i l l ' u s e t h e m a t e r i a l i n c o n n e c t i o n&#13;
w i t h t w o a r t i c l e s o n t h e s u b j e c t i t&#13;
w i l l p u b l i s h s h o r t l y . T h a t s o m e&#13;
o f t h e v i e w s a r e e x c e e d i n g l y r a r e&#13;
i s s h o w n b y t h e f a c t t h a t i t w a s&#13;
o u l j " r e c e n t l y t h a t S t a t e D e p a r t -&#13;
m e n t l e a r n e d t h a t t h e y e x i s t e d .&#13;
Livingston Lodjje, No. 7-', ? A A. M. Re-j'ilar&#13;
Communication TuevJiv ovomng, on or before&#13;
the full of the moon. ' H. F. Sigler, VV. M .&#13;
0RD£R OF-EASTERN S TAR mewta each month'&#13;
the Friday evening following the •regular'F.&#13;
»fcA.M. meeting, MRS. MAHY REAO, W. M.&#13;
m a g a z i n e&#13;
OF MODERN WOOUMEX Meet the&#13;
ftursday eveainii of each Mmth in-the&#13;
Maccabee nail. C. L. Grimes V. C.&#13;
LADIES OF THE MACCABEES, Meet every 1st&#13;
and 3rd Saturday of eachmonth at 2:X) p m. at&#13;
K. O. T. M. hall. - Visiitin* sLstars cordially invited,&#13;
LIUA CONIWAV Lady Com.&#13;
* J&#13;
KMGHTS OF Tim LOVAL GUARD&#13;
meet every second Wednesday&#13;
evenlui* of every mouthinthe £ . O.&#13;
T. M. Hail at 7:30o'clock. All visiting&#13;
Guards welcome.&#13;
C. L. Grimes. Capt. Gen.&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
vit-torin alt'.i'o,&#13;
itave not g o t&#13;
t h e s e briys y r t .&#13;
S h o s t e p i v i l&#13;
a n d tluv noxt n v o m e m thoy&#13;
i n g d o w n t h e r o a d . S h e&#13;
M. KolGLER»&gt;V. D- C, L, SIGLER M, D&#13;
J3S.SIuL£R.&amp; SIGLER,&#13;
AU calls promptl&#13;
1 aaA occupy t h e tallesjl mercantile bulldlnf in t n e world.&#13;
iiMlaratriik" t l x t e o o hnodred clerks aro coasts&#13;
•ngacoorfllliaf out-of-town ordors.&#13;
W e have&#13;
:ty&#13;
O U R O B N B R A L C A T A L O G U E is the book of the p e o p l e - i t m o t e s&#13;
W h o l e s a l e Prices t o Bveryhedy, h a s over 1,000 peg**, H.ooo illaatrntions, and*&#13;
• • . O N dMertpttoM cifafttehM wftb prices. It costs 1% cents to- print end mail&#13;
each copy. W e w a n t you t o have one. S B N C F I P T S 9 N C S N T 1 t o s h e w&#13;
year good faith, and we'U send y e a a copy F R E E , with all charges prepaid.&#13;
MONTGOMERY WARB a CO." w oO-H;IO AttO&#13;
b r i r s h e r s f l f t o .speak, and C u r t i s s a i d&#13;
n o t h i n g .&#13;
T h e c o u n t r y w a s b e a u t i f u l w i t h t h e&#13;
s p l e n d o r of t h o l a t e s u m m e r u p o n it.&#13;
a n d s h e w a t c h e d it w i t h a p p r e c i a t i v e&#13;
e y e s . It s e e m e d a s if t h i s s w i f t juurn&#13;
e y m i g h t t a k e h e r a w a y f r o m t h e m i s -&#13;
e r a b l e f a c t c o n f r o n t i n g h e r — t h e f a c t&#13;
of h e r h e r o ' s f a l l .&#13;
A t t h e s i d e o f t h e r o a d , s e v e r a l&#13;
m i l e s f r o m t o w n , w a s a b a s k e t f a c t o r y&#13;
a n d t h e y o u n g h o r s e s , i n e x p e r i e n c e d&#13;
i n t h e n o i s e s o f t h e w o r l d , toofc g r e a t&#13;
f r i g h t . &amp;t~the s t e a m e x h a u s t . I n a&#13;
DR. A; B. GREEN.&#13;
DKNTIST—Eyery Frid*j; and on Thursday&#13;
ulien having appoiotmcnte. Odice oyer&#13;
Sijjler'ft Drus; store.&#13;
T h e q u e s t i o n o f a c a n t e e n a t ^ n y s i c i ^ i d a a d i u i y e o n s .&#13;
t h e I s l a n d L a k e e n c a m p m e n t ' l i a s vS^Sy^mlh!' ni*u' ° n ° e ° a M * i a s l r&#13;
p r a c t i a l l y b e e n s e t t l e d a n d a g a i n s t&#13;
t h e c a n t e e n . Q u a r t e r m a s t e r G e n -&#13;
e r a l A t k i n s o n s a y s t h a t A t t o r n e y&#13;
G e n e r a l O r e n i s o f t h e o p i n i o n&#13;
t h a t t h e s t a t e c o u l d n o t e s t a o b h s h&#13;
a c a n t e e n w i t h o u t t a k i n g o u t a&#13;
s t a t e l i c e u c e f o r t h e s a l e o f l i q u o r&#13;
a n d a s t h i s w o u l d i n v o l v e a n e x -&#13;
p e n s e o f ¢ 3 0 0 t h e c a n t e e n ' w o u l d&#13;
n o t b e e s t a b l i s h e d . — F o w l e r v i l l e&#13;
R e v i e w . W e h a v e n o d o u b t b u t&#13;
t h e r e w i l L b e s o m e w a y f o u n d&#13;
h o w e v e r — t o s e l l - t h e d a m n a b l e&#13;
*"V&#13;
beverage.&#13;
V E T E R I N A R Y S U R Q E O N .&#13;
Graduate of Ontario Veterinary College, also 0&#13;
the Veterinary Dentistry College&#13;
Toronto Canada,&#13;
Will promptly attend to all diseases of the domesticated&#13;
animal at a reasonable price.&#13;
Horses teeth examined Free. ' '&#13;
o r nee at I\\IA»% PINCKNEY.&#13;
*.&#13;
• * . ' - •?&#13;
••'jKpfc&#13;
• % •&#13;
'••••^m&#13;
^ 1&#13;
,-*&gt;2&#13;
^^&#13;
• M&#13;
f&#13;
.,. w&#13;
•*«*M&#13;
%.«&#13;
^&#13;
• - / '&#13;
5K'&#13;
• ? &lt; • • * ,&#13;
* ' &gt; • » • - • • ; • , ' •&#13;
f&amp;- \&#13;
' • » • • * '&#13;
it&gt;.:. "&#13;
U:&amp;&#13;
»':- . , , • . &lt; &gt; • ^ v i . ' : . - , ' : ^ , : , ' ;:1 ••.'&gt;•*.•:' v . : ,»,-fi.-.^-vy.V..&gt;&lt;;.-:&gt;&#13;
; 7 7 ^ ^ : ^.,••s^^.r/--:''^' -itK *"^V - : • M; - v :.;-.•.:-:&#13;
- . . - . • 1 . - 1 . - - . : . . - ' • - . • . . . . ' • • : • J, - . - . . : • • .'•' • . - • , - • •&#13;
.-. •„•;&gt;•. - r &gt; / , . -&#13;
t • , ' ,&#13;
:.v -r-1&#13;
' ..M' ••*-'•:&#13;
'•'-,- ''•••' " v i w - ' — .&#13;
/vi--'- '•&gt;.' ••"•'&#13;
• : r - - , - / - l ; : ! . ; &gt; . : - ' • • • • . , ' " ' • : '&#13;
/"./.&#13;
*t&#13;
'';-f'-,.,3«&gt;'-&#13;
«*»«*»* . «tft 4M '«•» MM&#13;
^"« *», ;"^ *•'- N ",- «?. **, 51¾ '*L&lt;r; 1— w •'- .1»*. - » . j &lt; ~ «&#13;
"* mtmTTTirmimr^^ &lt;&gt;i«t&lt;f'Mm}m*K'&#13;
In Missouri there'll a Dr. piggi who&#13;
baa just had hl» name chanted to&#13;
cousin pf ex-Governor Hogg, of Texas.,&#13;
A Viennese « M white expert&#13;
men^ttg at the Hygienic institute at&#13;
Wurxburg, claims to have discovered&#13;
the successful application Of electricity&#13;
lor the destruction of bacteria. It is&#13;
said that the treatment is very simple.&#13;
One' thousand cattle, two thousand&#13;
.nogs, two thousand sheep, five thousand,&#13;
four hundred bushels of potatoes&#13;
vrere items in the provision bill of&#13;
Kansas City against the week of the&#13;
National Democratic convention. After&#13;
all, people cannot live on enthusiasm&#13;
Alone. y' ^&#13;
Dexter M. Ferry, of Michigan, who&#13;
gave f25,000 recently to Olivet College,&#13;
made as one condition of the bestowal&#13;
that the name of the donor should not&#13;
be made known prior to the adjournment&#13;
of the Republican State Convention,&#13;
before which he was a candidate&#13;
for the nomination for Governor.&#13;
One result/of a new rule is that bicycles&#13;
now take part in the church parade&#13;
in Hyde Park, London. Likewise&#13;
motors. It is a new,'and people are&#13;
not sure whether admirable, addition&#13;
to the attractions, that the promenad-&#13;
«rs can took at tht*efoiufTone'of gaylydressed&#13;
cyclists and be cheered by the&#13;
snorting and backing and forwarding&#13;
of the motors.&#13;
mm m m&#13;
Detroit's Mayor Hea^t the Democratic&#13;
State Tfpket,&#13;
WAS CHOSEN BY ACCLAMATION&#13;
All t e e Other G»o44*»tee J U t a f Wltti*&#13;
4 n w n m His F»W^-PUitt«iW» » « M «&#13;
to Reform. -&#13;
Th« TtcMt.&#13;
For Governor—Wm. C^ Jlaybur;, of&#13;
Detroit.&#13;
For Lieutenant-GoveradPr-Jonathan&#13;
G. BaiMsitell, of Traverse City.&#13;
For Secretary of State—John ^ .&#13;
Ewinjr, of Graud Ledge.&#13;
For State Treasurer— Chaa. F. Sundstroin,&#13;
of Marquette.&#13;
For Commissioner of State Land&#13;
Office—George Winans, of Hamburg,&#13;
For Auditor-General—Hiram B. Hudson,&#13;
of Mancelona.&#13;
For Attorney-General—Jas. O'Hara,&#13;
of St. Joseph,&#13;
For Superintendent of Public Instruction—&#13;
Stephen H. Langdon, of&#13;
Monroe.&#13;
For Member of the State Board of&#13;
Educntion-rJames McEntee, M. D., of&#13;
'Mt. Pleasant.&#13;
A snowstorm started a fire on the&#13;
premises of a farmer living at Hebu- [&#13;
terne, Belgium. He placed a quantity I&#13;
(pf Quicklime near a shed on a farm&#13;
afcd left it there all nlgh^. In the&#13;
course of the night snow fell on the&#13;
lime and the heat thus developed became&#13;
j3o\greai that it set the shed on&#13;
fire, completely destroying it and its&#13;
contents.&#13;
For Presidential Electors—At large,&#13;
Philip Wachtel, Petoskey; Lorenz Hubinger.&#13;
Saginaw; 1st district, Dr. A. A.&#13;
Thuner, Detroit; 2nd district, Orrin&#13;
R. Pierce, Hudson; 3rd district, Joel C.&#13;
Hopkius, Btntle Creek; 4th district,&#13;
Thos. A. Walker, Benton Harbor; 5th&#13;
district. Dr. Henry Hulst. Kent; 6th&#13;
district, H. Alex. Crawford, Flint; 7th&#13;
district. Wra. Baker. Macomb; 8th district.&#13;
Galusha Pennell, St. Johns; Oth&#13;
district. Geo. S. Stanley, Cadillac; 10th&#13;
district, Geo. A. Robinson, Alpena;&#13;
11th district, W. P. Nisbett, Big&#13;
Rapids: 12th district, M. F. McDonald,&#13;
Sault Ste Marie.&#13;
Chairman of the State Central Committee—&#13;
D. J. Campau, Detroit.&#13;
-rr&#13;
A t Damendorf, in Schleswig, s a m e&#13;
peat-diggers recently found a wellpreserved&#13;
corpse in the peat, clothed&#13;
In a coarse woolen mr.t?r!al, w i t h rea&#13;
hair, and with gandala on the feet.&#13;
Dr. Splieth, of K : c \ estimated the ago&#13;
of the body at about 1,500 years. The&#13;
preservative properties of peat are&#13;
•well k n o w n , and there have t o s n m a n y&#13;
remarkable proofs of this in Ireland..&#13;
A submarine cable i n actual use will&#13;
form one of the exhibits of the Paris&#13;
exposition. It will ran from the electricity&#13;
building to the Vincennes ann&#13;
e x ; several miles distent a l o n g rnfl&#13;
S e l a e ^ A - c o m p l e t e cable station will&#13;
be "operated at each end to show the&#13;
public how transatlantic m e s s a g e s are&#13;
transmitted and received. Souvenir&#13;
m e s s a g e s m a y be sent by the public.&#13;
A An extraordinary phenomenon is reorted&#13;
from Assuan," Egypt. Some&#13;
days ago ..Quantities of fish were observed&#13;
' swimming uneasily near the&#13;
surface of the water above the- First&#13;
Cataract, and during the next fewdays&#13;
thousands of dead fish; large and&#13;
small, were discovered in the immediate&#13;
vicinity. The cause is not yet&#13;
known, but the authorities are taking&#13;
steps to ascertain it, as disastrous results&#13;
might ensue should the Nils be&#13;
found polluted with poisonous matter.&#13;
State Centr»l Committee.&#13;
T h e following is the n e w Democratic&#13;
State Central Committee:&#13;
First district—Geo. W m . , Moore, Ed*&#13;
w i n Henderson. Detroit.&#13;
Second district—Jas. B. Thorn, Lenaw&#13;
e e ; E l b e r L . Peck. Jackson.&#13;
Third district—John H.^Rurke. Kalamazoo;&#13;
Dr. Frank A. Weaver, Eaton.&#13;
Fourth district—Thos. Cook. Allegan;&#13;
A. C. H i m e b a u g h . St. Joseph.&#13;
Fifth district—L. K. Salsbury. Grand&#13;
Rapids; Geo. P. H u m m e r , Holland.&#13;
Sixth district—George W. Stone,&#13;
L a n s i n g ; Arthur P. Tripp. "Pontiac.&#13;
Seventh district—Chas. Schlagel, Lapeer;&#13;
Henry Marx. St. Clair.&#13;
Eighth disiriet—J. W. Messner. Sagi&#13;
n a w : ('lark D. Smith. Coruhna.&#13;
Ninth district—George W a n i y , Muskegon;&#13;
L. J. L a w / C a d i l l a c .&#13;
Tenth district—J. E. Kinnane, B a y&#13;
City; Caspar Alperin. Alpena.&#13;
p:ieyenih district—C. M. Brown, Ithaca;&#13;
Alfred A'. Friedrich, Traverse&#13;
City.&#13;
T w e l f t h district—Paul Perrino. Menominee;&#13;
Rush Culver;, MaTqup'tTe.&#13;
— » — — d a r t — • — — • • — —&#13;
money in the recent Republican&#13;
primaries, made the tdelegates feel&#13;
that ttiey had' a ftjfhting chance to •wta&#13;
in tht state* and they were correspond*&#13;
ingiy anxiotta to put forward their&#13;
best material&#13;
It took until &amp; o'clock at night to&#13;
reach a nomination for governor, but&#13;
after an hour's recess the delegates&#13;
went on with their work and completed&#13;
their ticket.&#13;
The nomination of Mr. May bury was&#13;
not the* only one that Indicated that&#13;
the Michigan Democracy is notjabtd&#13;
a* to 10 to X. Judge BamsdelJ, of&#13;
Traverse City, named for llcutgnantjtovernor.&#13;
was lukewarm as to Bryan&#13;
In 18M6. but the mention of this fact&#13;
In the convention had little effect on&#13;
the .delegates, though Ramsdell was&#13;
opposed by a strong man like Philip.&#13;
Wachtel.&#13;
On the other hand. Populism was&#13;
recognized in the uomlnation for secretary&#13;
of state of John W. Bwing. of&#13;
Grand Ledge, ex-chnirman of the&#13;
P&lt;w&gt;ul!st state committer, y -&#13;
The old eoldiers are represented in&#13;
the nomination of Hiram B. Hudson,&#13;
of Mancelona. for auditor-general.&#13;
It was not until the convention got&#13;
down to naming candidates for presidential&#13;
electors at large that the slight&#13;
of the Germans was noticed and then&#13;
two uames of that nationality were&#13;
placed on the ticket for elcetore-i&#13;
Philip Wachtel ana Lorenz Hubinger.&#13;
To demonstrate that there is no feud&#13;
between D. J. Campau and Mayor&#13;
Maj&lt;l&gt;ury, the convention re-elected&#13;
Mr. Campau for state chairman with&#13;
a whooy, and Mr. Campau will direct&#13;
Mnybury's campaign.&#13;
One of the peculiarities of the convention&#13;
was that not a single ballot&#13;
was completed, the weaker candidates&#13;
always withdrawing when they saw&#13;
they were beaten. This was only one&#13;
of the roany indications of harmony,&#13;
add only one incident occurred to mar&#13;
the. peace of the gathering.&#13;
When Senator George F. Monaghan&#13;
arose to nominate Wni. C. Maybury&#13;
for governor there was a shout of approval&#13;
from the delegates'at the mention&#13;
of the mayor's name. Senator&#13;
Monaghan predicted that Mr. Maybury&#13;
would be elected In November.&#13;
He spoke of the corruption in the last&#13;
Republican legislature and among Republican&#13;
state officials, and said these&#13;
things, made conditions of great hope,&#13;
for tXie Democracy of Michigan.&#13;
One after another of the candidates&#13;
withdrew in favor of Maybury. ami&#13;
on motion of Mayor Perry, of Grand&#13;
Rapids, the rules was suspended" and&#13;
the. secretary was* instructed fo cast&#13;
the unanimous vote of the convention&#13;
for Win, C. Maybury. This was the&#13;
signal for an uproar and the band&#13;
joined in, playing "Tlie Star Spangled&#13;
Banner."&#13;
ssas»=aatoBBBBB&#13;
The Platform&#13;
Thr&gt; Democrats of Michigan, in COR- .&#13;
ventlon assembled, in eoimnnn with&#13;
••very well wither of ocr beloved commonwealth&#13;
regret the present ct&gt;iidition of&#13;
tlv- political and nrttfi'nistrnilve agencies,&#13;
which,, under Republican control hav« so&#13;
riebsiuche,! cur grovernmental system as&#13;
to disgrace the st;ite and debase the&#13;
function?. 01' a free government. ' '&#13;
Wo denonice the maladministration,&#13;
which has produced the frultasi? of an investigation&#13;
by grand jury,, ruid the numerous&#13;
ertmirml trials which are pendlns&#13;
in the oourto.—We believe thut by an&#13;
extension of the process like disclosures&#13;
Gen. A, W. Greely, cbjef signal officer,&#13;
has received so many letters containing&#13;
suggestions for devices to be&#13;
used In the war against China that he&#13;
is bewildered. They present countless&#13;
ideas ranging from a cipher code to a&#13;
scheme for destroying the combined&#13;
forces of the Boxers at a single blow.&#13;
The cipher code came from a western&#13;
man who declares that "it baffles skill&#13;
to unravel this code." To this statement&#13;
Gen. Greely agrees most heartily.&#13;
The letter explains that the code consists&#13;
of a system of numbers which&#13;
are to be spoken. For instance, "137&#13;
plus 53 minus 8," would mean "attack&#13;
en the right flank."&#13;
. J&amp;an&amp;s City., buslnea* .men, prepari&#13;
n g to welcome the Democratic Con-&#13;
\yendon, took an oslglnal step toward&#13;
beautifying their city when they, Instituted'&#13;
* "good lawns contest" and&#13;
offered about forty prizes, aggregating&#13;
sixteen hundred dollar* The largest&#13;
price, two hundred and fifty d©K&#13;
lars, was gIyeft,tor"the prettiest lawn&#13;
of twentyifive fettoroVtrf* and there&#13;
were prises for the best lawn kept by&#13;
children, the neatest vacant lot, the&#13;
best display in window-boxes, the most&#13;
attractive school house lawn, and many&#13;
other decorative-features. The prizes&#13;
were awarded by "committees of wellknown&#13;
ladies from out of town," who&#13;
found the task difficult, but like everybody&#13;
else enjoyed the 'general rem&#13;
i t Why should not other cities&#13;
carry out, next summer, the same exaollent&#13;
ideaT Conventions come and&#13;
go, but a city abides, and all Its residents&#13;
profil permanently by any gain&#13;
Ig beauty. - ^&#13;
of further franchises by muntcipalit&#13;
**o«i* fcy th« direct - vow of 4Wr*9*0i&#13;
tttaoxn*a*f^ uajpn9e»ntiflfient e* *ul -•** oerpomt* priation anv *thhjo»sisea mraei,s eUde Ub^yM d iJroec ta : ifnetroo etphet tphraimt athry* csochrpooorl aftuen tda xe?h*a lnLofwee pseolt f&#13;
paid.&#13;
S e v e n t h - T h e faithful an* impartial uee&#13;
of present mean* to secure uniformity of&#13;
local taxation with tuch amendments t o&#13;
exiatlng laws a t ext&gt;er)ence suggeat to se*&#13;
9 ^ l ! K T C 6 e D e m S e F a t l c ' party fiT not&#13;
only to favor of equal taxation,' but ia oprepealing&#13;
the tax taw of 1891 relative to the tax"&#13;
atten of mortg-agea.&#13;
We believe that these pleasures, it&#13;
adopted and fairly appiieeX wilt result in&#13;
the.abolition of the direct tax upon property&#13;
for etate purposes and the relief 01&#13;
la&gt;nr from unjtint burdens. &gt;•-.*• •&#13;
We a«k that every UemocraMc senatorial&#13;
and representative convention exact&#13;
a pledge from Us candidal a that he wttl,&#13;
It elected, support by his* v°lce and vote,&#13;
in tetter and In spirit, the measures proposed&#13;
in thin platform.&#13;
Wo denounce the last legislature *enerally&#13;
« s the crownlw? infamy In the history&#13;
of the Republican party of Michigan.&#13;
We denounce It specifically for its failure&#13;
to submit to the people the constitutional&#13;
amendments relative to taxation&#13;
demanded by the state grange and farmers'&#13;
cUrcs; for its failure to increase the&#13;
specific tax on railroads; far its failure&#13;
to pas» the mining tax measure; tor Its&#13;
refusal to repeal the special railway&#13;
Charter; for its refusal to pass the anticolor'&#13;
"oieo" law demanded by the state&#13;
grange and dairymen of the state; tor&#13;
its refusal to submit to tho people the&#13;
constitutional amendment providing for&#13;
the so-called "initiative and referendum"&#13;
and for which submission every&#13;
Democrat in both house* voted; for Its&#13;
refusal to pass the measure- f«* the regulation&#13;
01! freight and switching oharges;&#13;
all of which reforms we pledge the Democratic&#13;
party to pass if given control of&#13;
legislation by the people. r&#13;
The principle of home rule is and always&#13;
has b*»en democratic. The nearer&#13;
the responsible discretion to the people&#13;
affected, .the better is the check upon Its&#13;
Wrongful exercise. We, therefore, advocate&#13;
the widest application of this principle&#13;
consistent with the sovereign control&#13;
of the state.&#13;
We believe that the fee system in pub-&#13;
He offices Is' ynjust, extravagant and corrupting&#13;
In., Its effects, and wo promise&#13;
wherever possible to abolish it as a&#13;
means of compensation" to officials and to&#13;
substitute a salary system.&#13;
The coercion of employes by their employers&#13;
by any means is a menace to free&#13;
Kovernment and a flagrant denial of the&#13;
equal rights our government has always&#13;
ostensibly guaranteed; and we denounce&#13;
the so-called corporate blacklist as a&#13;
slanderous and grossly unfair manifestation&#13;
ni its abuses.&#13;
•Wo pledge the party to a rigid., econ-.,&#13;
omy In tho ndnrinistration of every department&#13;
o* the government in order that&#13;
reduced taxation may accompany the&#13;
more equitable distribution, a,nd especially&#13;
that the use of offices for political&#13;
rewanis, rtjardless of public necessity&#13;
shf\U cease. And we pledge the Democratic&#13;
party to make the question of lower&#13;
taxation one of the burning issues ot&#13;
tho stato campaign.'&#13;
Wc sympathise with the settlers of the&#13;
upper peninsula in their prolonged strugglo&#13;
v.ith tho Michigan Lund &amp; Iroii Co..&#13;
l-.til.. that • corporate grabber of public&#13;
lendp, and ir^Pist that the issues Involvedbetween&#13;
them shall be speedily presented&#13;
to and deoHed by the courts, the proper&#13;
tribunals for dealing with questi'ons ot&#13;
fraud without interference from the officials&#13;
of the governmental land office.&#13;
To the end that the hazards incident&#13;
to a jrinrr's life may b*1 decreased, find&#13;
the mining industry having reached such&#13;
a stage of development, and the use of&#13;
jp.bor-paviny machinery having so vastly&#13;
Inci^isrHi the value of laiior in the mlne^,&#13;
we. therefore, insist that a law should be&#13;
enacted prohibiting milling corporations&#13;
in thip state from working their emploves&#13;
morn than eight hours per day&#13;
underground.&#13;
The Democratic party har always f«vvor*&#13;
d legisl;i tinn affording reasonable&#13;
comp^nratinn to worklngrecn in the di»&#13;
charge of their duties. We. therefore,&#13;
pledeo ourselves.if entrusted with power&#13;
in this.state to enact a law making corporation&#13;
employers of labor liable to their&#13;
employes in eases of injuries caused by&#13;
th^ nrs-lrr-t of their no-employee.&#13;
We hail with supreme satisfaction the&#13;
nomination .of Rryan and Stevenson and_&#13;
pledgo our untiring saprvort, and heart-&#13;
,ily indorse the Kansas City platform. In&#13;
letter and in spirit, in all its parts, and&#13;
in addition we express ourselves in favor&#13;
of an inronie tax that wealth may bear&#13;
its just burden of taxation.&#13;
We look with apprehension on the progress&#13;
of tl\o trusts toward the industrial&#13;
su-Mngatlon of the republic, and, recognizing&#13;
that their power of oppression is&#13;
founded on special privileges derived&#13;
from our statutes, we pledge ourselves&#13;
to repeal all laws by which special privileges&#13;
are confirmed..&#13;
We ask for the ticket nominated the&#13;
hearty support of all voters regardless&#13;
ot their views on national nolitlns and&#13;
promise it' entrusted with tho administration&#13;
jdf the state to administer its affairs&#13;
for the benefit of the whole people&#13;
and net as a party machine.&#13;
We sympathize with the South Africanrepublics&#13;
in their struggle for independence.&#13;
W M . C. M A Y B U R Y , D E M O C R A T IC N O M I N E E F O R G O V E R N O R .&#13;
1 The Democratic State Convention,&#13;
for the purpose of placing in nomination&#13;
candidates for the various state&#13;
offices, was called to order In the&#13;
Auditorium, Detroit, at noon on the&#13;
25th.&#13;
- It was the 'feeliti^ of the convention&#13;
from the first that Wm. C. Mavbiiry,&#13;
mayor of Detroit^ could poll mpro&#13;
votes than any other candidate, and&#13;
It was this confidence, together with&#13;
the good work performed by Ju&amp;tln&#13;
R. Whiting, of St. Clair, that the^tetroit&#13;
mayor wag made t&gt;he nominee of&#13;
the Michigan Democracy.&#13;
The convention was one of the few&#13;
great political gatherings that did its&#13;
work without the debauchery of&#13;
money or O? dictation of bosses. If&#13;
there was any disposition to dictate it&#13;
was abandoned in the face of overwhelming&#13;
sentiment.&#13;
It was not an enthusiastic gathering.&#13;
Its tone was one of hope. There was&#13;
a realising sense that a big natural&#13;
Republican majority would have to be&#13;
orercome, as well as the 16 to 1 aadicap,&#13;
bat the bad record of -the last Republican&#13;
legislature, the scandeU of&#13;
tho military board, -and the use of&#13;
would be forthcoming in other directions,&#13;
and we demand a full and. soarchln-r inqu.&#13;
iiy into the methods of every department&#13;
of the state government, and the&#13;
institutions under its control.&#13;
W« sincerely deplore tho corrupting influence&#13;
of wealth U^QQ our social «;nd political&#13;
machinery as displayed m the recent&#13;
campaign of three mililonurUfs for&#13;
ino honorable office of governor of this&#13;
commonwealth. We cannot believe the&#13;
peopio will permit this important position&#13;
to become the toy of wealthy men, anu&#13;
wo demand in the Incumbent an asauranco&#13;
of good , government, through the&#13;
purity of tho methods by which his&#13;
selection is procured.&#13;
The Democracy nan ever stood for&#13;
equality in the burdens nnd nrivileges&#13;
resulting from law. Improvident legialatlon&#13;
has produced gross unfairness In&#13;
both directions. Wo. therefore demand&#13;
and pledge the party to procure;&#13;
First—The prompt repeal of every&#13;
charter exempting corporations from the&#13;
equal burden of taxation.&#13;
. Second—A specific tax upon the great&#13;
mining interests of the * tat*, levied in&#13;
accordance with the value of their "neamed&#13;
stores of wealth, which otmht&#13;
never to hav« been gives *.o private coatrol.&#13;
ThlPd-A tax upon existing franchise*&#13;
,Jt 8 e »?-Pnhllc character commensurate&#13;
with their earning power.&#13;
Fourth—The regulation of property&#13;
taxes so as to prevent the shiftlpg olf the&#13;
burden onto the shoulders of productive&#13;
labor. • &gt; •'-*-•&#13;
Piftb-TBe protoiMtiea of the granting&#13;
W I T H T H E SAGES,&#13;
Purity, sincerity, obedience and sAlfsurrende?&#13;
$TZ VZZ ncrSJc steps that&#13;
lead to the spiritual temple—Bradford.&#13;
The wisdom of life is in preveating&#13;
all the evil we can, and in using what&#13;
Is Inevitable to the best purpose.—&#13;
John Ruskln.&#13;
All things die not; while the soul&#13;
lives, love lives; the song may be now&#13;
gay, now plaintive, but it is deathless.&#13;
—Mary Johnston.&#13;
Great memories, which retain all indifferently,&#13;
are the mistresses of an&#13;
inn, and cot the mistresses of a house,&#13;
—Madame Neckar.&#13;
The- surest sign of wisdom is charity,&#13;
and the best charity is that which&#13;
never ostensibly parades itself&#13;
•NUGGETS O F I N F O R M A T I O N .&#13;
Bound to sell—books.&#13;
Recent Immigration has been enormous.&#13;
* Men need a Bible conscience more&#13;
than a Bible commentary.&#13;
Love, rather than legislation, rales*&#13;
In the kingdom of Qod.&#13;
No song, or sermon, or sacrament is&#13;
acceptable without service..&#13;
The lmpartction of righteousness Is&#13;
better than ;ts Imputation.&#13;
It i* the Christian and. not the erttio&#13;
who aomes to know Christ&#13;
Boston's tax collector reports $653,-&#13;
422 of old and uncallecuble&#13;
T i i M j l j l s&#13;
«ss&gt;&#13;
^Mferfth*Mtws jn^4^jpt1qtfUmev&#13;
whose, f^ncjr ^tpjwxm* ******&#13;
of Jove," when summertime comes * »&#13;
itti turn our thought* tf» the consideration&#13;
of the, j m p o r ^ cjieetiQa^ ot&#13;
there are all kinds of .health an*&#13;
.njeafu^^mrt^thjwighw&#13;
land of ours, some, of them, unfortunately,&#13;
any thing but what M i r naiacf&#13;
Imply,1 and apparently operated for no&#13;
other purpose than to' relieve the Invalid&#13;
and pleasure seeker^ rinancVslly.&#13;
So much so is this the case that&#13;
it Is indeed gratifying to the one seeking&#13;
rest and recuperatlen f r&lt;mi'T the&#13;
cares of the business and social world,&#13;
as well as the pain racked invalid,&#13;
who is fortunate enough to discover a&#13;
piece wlfere to use a popular expression,&#13;
he "gets-his monsy's worth."&#13;
One of the most Interesting, picturesque&#13;
and delightful places* in this&#13;
country is unquestionably the resort&#13;
known as the Magno Mud and Lltsja&#13;
Water Cure, located at Indiana'Mineral&#13;
Springs, Indiana. Here come the&#13;
overworked business man; ^he worn&#13;
out devotee of society and the proiesslonal&#13;
men on the verge of nervous&#13;
prostratlou. as well as the sufferer&#13;
from rheumatism, kidney and skin&#13;
diseases for which the bathe are especially&#13;
beneficial. The placed also&#13;
largely patronised by those who only&#13;
seek pleasure and recreation. Us location&#13;
making it particularly adapted for&#13;
this purpose. There are many romantic&#13;
and beautiful spots ,aud. Places of&#13;
interest in the vicinity and It would&#13;
be hard to find a section, ot country&#13;
containing so many, beautiful drives.&#13;
The country is very hilly, but the&#13;
roads are all graveled and, kept in&#13;
good condition, This Is one of the&#13;
things that makes the place especially&#13;
attractive to those afflicted with rhoumatism,&#13;
as driving is about tha only&#13;
outdoor pleasure, on,e.vcTipp'led . witn&#13;
^rheumatism can indul'ge'iln. Some of&#13;
the cures effected are really marvelous&#13;
and many who have gone to the&#13;
Magno Mud Cure as a last resort have&#13;
returned home within a few weeks&#13;
filled with renewed health and&#13;
strength!&#13;
The accommodations, service, table2&#13;
and attendance Is all that can be desired&#13;
and the rates very reasonable&#13;
indeed. Th« Springs 'Is-'under the able&#13;
management of Major H. L. Kramer&#13;
and at • poniajl!. card inquiry addressed&#13;
to him will, bring complete detailed&#13;
information-^wel^a^a copy of the&#13;
"^u^tev^.,jji^az|«plj&#13;
M a.UfMQue and&#13;
Interesting publication.&#13;
- . 1 . ' ' ' • ' • * • • « ' ' ' ' • ' i *'&#13;
U N I V E R S I T Y O F N O T R E D A M E ,&#13;
Notre D*&gt;me, lad.&#13;
We c*u the i8j&#13;
to the" ad^vertls*&#13;
University^" one&#13;
tirmnl inpHMlMpflQ rtf t h f l . West, wM/»h&#13;
ention of our readers&#13;
neat of Notre Dame&#13;
of- the great educaoiappears&#13;
fn anotfier column . of this&#13;
paper. Those of our readers who may&#13;
have occasion to look up a college for&#13;
their sons during the coming year&#13;
would do, well to correspond with the&#13;
president, who will send them a catalogue&#13;
free of charge, as well as all&#13;
particulars regarding terms, course3&#13;
of studies, etc.&#13;
There Is a thorough preparatory&#13;
school in connection with the university,&#13;
in which students of all grades&#13;
will have every opportunity of preparing&#13;
themselves fbr higher studies. The&#13;
Commercial Course, intended for&#13;
young men preparing for .business,&#13;
may be finished in one or two years&#13;
according to the ability of the student.&#13;
St. Edward's Hall/ for boys under&#13;
thirteen, is an unique department of&#13;
tho Institution. The higher ,course3&#13;
are thorough in every respect, and students&#13;
win find every opportunity of&#13;
perfecting themselves In any line of&#13;
work they may choose to select. Thoroughness-&#13;
in-class work, exactness in&#13;
the care of'students, and devotion to&#13;
the best interests of all, are the distinguishing&#13;
characteristics of Notre&#13;
Dame University.&#13;
Fifty-six years of active wcu-k in the&#13;
cause of education have made this institution&#13;
famouB all over the cquhtry.&#13;
The soul ia the mainspring of the human&#13;
timepiece. '&#13;
The front horse always has to pull&#13;
the hardest.&#13;
Ueet for the Bowels,&#13;
No matter what ails you, headache&#13;
to a cancer, you will never get well&#13;
until your bowels' are put right&#13;
CASCARETS help nature1, euro you&#13;
without a gripe or pain, produce easy&#13;
natural- movements, coet you just '10&#13;
cents to start getting your health back.&#13;
CASCARETS Candy Cathartic the&#13;
genuine, put UP In metal boxes, every&#13;
tablet has C. C. C. stamped on it Beware&#13;
of imftatiQn,a.r&#13;
— i — , • '• * • ' " '&#13;
Cowardice is the tap root of all&#13;
tyvanny,&#13;
. Are Ten. Unto* Ml**1* Foet-Rnse?&#13;
It Is the only cure for Swollen*&#13;
Smarting, Burning, Sweeting—Feet,&#13;
Corns and Bunions. Ask for Allan's&#13;
Foot-Ease, a powder to be shaken Into&#13;
the shoes. At'all Druggists and Shot*&#13;
Stores, 26c Sample sent FREE. Address&#13;
Allen ft Olmsted. teRoy, N. Y.^&#13;
J-&#13;
• s&#13;
„...1&#13;
v&#13;
l?o man ever found fame by looking&#13;
for It&#13;
accounts. *&#13;
r si&#13;
&gt; •&#13;
* • * 1 ss&gt; ffsninra&#13;
[»/: "' J&gt;;-;v,v.-;/?;&#13;
-Vill':1&#13;
r * ' M i l !&#13;
•&lt;v! :ii;l!ili) ?&#13;
"A» Womttt at* *«VM«aHntd tw«&#13;
cUstet, either deslfntei aftrcntareafts&#13;
or fimperl^f doUb. As for me," quoth)&#13;
Httfcrt, cyttifeany. "give m« the" tJrtt I c*r«d, jet h« fiUt.thM he cooid not&#13;
to rtUurA to dpee*, farjthje e^wlnf, mnffdtJ|&#13;
y J* Jb* nw^.\^&gt;di|^. ott, dad&#13;
iW« *»tl»u,ed »b*»ee,ijiader, Allen un«&#13;
«j*y. ;$fr did «9|'»i|oir('W)|^Mh«r fl»l*&#13;
tort eared about nil rafuaaldo aceesipaay&#13;
him, but he knew that he hlmsell&#13;
*rtft ilM ?6* &lt;*n trutt to ah ad&#13;
T?pmure« to have a little gray matter&#13;
at leaat in her crauluin." He wa* talking&#13;
to* his secretary, young Allen, a&#13;
oalfoir youth, albaoit effeminate, ftuj&#13;
heVertheless brainy, too brainy; as Halbert&#13;
expressed it, tor hls"&gt;ise\ and&#13;
weight Allen, had gotten used to&#13;
these sinister observations concerning&#13;
womankind, and rarely wver offered&#13;
any comment either to agree or&#13;
to refute t h e n a r ' s statements. These&#13;
two individual* wera a study for one&#13;
another. The,hour in which Allen accepted&#13;
the position of private secretary,&#13;
a short t^rne before, they found&#13;
a pleasant communion of tastes and&#13;
ideas and a peculiar inexplicable sympathy&#13;
of feeling i&amp;at seemed to have&#13;
puszled both.&#13;
Halbert was a confirmed bachelor;&#13;
he boasted of never having proposed to&#13;
any woman.! he was afraid of them;&#13;
In his estimation they were all scheming&#13;
politicians and ready to marry him&#13;
or any man at a moment's notice.&#13;
"Keep the women away from me,"&#13;
snarled Halbert at times when driven&#13;
by force to a crush. "I'd rather smoke&#13;
or sleep." And the little secretary&#13;
with*.a strong, boyish ardor kept them&#13;
far away ami comforted Halbert- with&#13;
his companionable silence.&#13;
The one measure in Allen's make-up&#13;
which Halbert could not understand&#13;
was his reluctance to smoke. He could&#13;
never get him to indulge even in a&#13;
cigaret. And in the matter of drinking,&#13;
though Allen could mix a punchy&#13;
or a cbcktall with commendable art, he&#13;
brought them untasted to Halbert as a&#13;
kind of offering to that exalted wretch.&#13;
"You should have been a woman, by&#13;
gad," Halbert said once to him. "A&#13;
thousand pardons, Alien, but you would&#13;
have made a fine girl. You've got&#13;
grace and tact enough for it, you&#13;
know. Why, brieve me, Alien, if there&#13;
were women like you today, with the&#13;
brain and all, I believe I'd marry one&#13;
of them:" Allen actually blushed and&#13;
retreated in confusion. Halbert liked&#13;
this display of apparent shyness, and&#13;
thlf moment*"&#13;
i " ^ r i l S f f l f .&#13;
girl could&#13;
cried Halbert, aroused. The girl could&#13;
ssecaarroceellyy ssuupppprreessss aa ssmmiillee** tthhoouugghh sshhee i f ^ ™?J^JK%£^&#13;
satnrdujgwgalelkde dto q huete kaldya tmowanatr djShhee dtuoorrn.e d | feS # £ PeofSe" f ^ S ^ * S&#13;
"Come hack, glrjisi—don't go and&#13;
leave aw like this. You've wound yonr&#13;
w a i f T &amp; D SCO&#13;
Wmau sud OnUdrec to sty the » » n 1&#13;
and cheapest ptepsreUons ever offered toe t&#13;
otto. You don't take any chance* in tryi~&#13;
women's remedy of the day (the only genuine).&#13;
KntU's White liver Pill*, thegreet Liver IurWorator,&#13;
System Bdaovetora^l^welBegulator.&#13;
» doses, 26c. You esn work white the* work.&#13;
Never gripe or make you sick. KnlU's Blue Kide&#13;
e i £ •nlVt-fflTl'i-TaT fcs^-f.iT'n ff M^^iJS^mSSS^am U K B***«J*. etc.,&#13;
^p^pmmc . a^aw^^^^e^w^nwnwa^p^^pw^^e^^^^^a^^sw^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ " i ^e^t—a*&#13;
his affection for the boy grew. He&#13;
liked to slap him on the back.and he&#13;
said he felt lonesome when the chap&#13;
was away. "I tell you what, Allen, I&#13;
don't know whether to adopVyou as&#13;
• my son, considering the fact that I&#13;
4&amp;all never have one of my own, or&#13;
whether to let things slide on as formerly&#13;
and just double your salary."&#13;
Things slid on as formerly until Halbert&#13;
announced a hunting trip to Abysslnla.&#13;
He had actually completed plans&#13;
for both and was sketching out in his&#13;
imagination the delicious comraderie&#13;
of two in a tent in the wilds of Africa&#13;
when Allen announced his intention to&#13;
resign. •&gt;&#13;
''You ungrateful beggar, you can't&#13;
- resign," Halbert shouted. "Why, my&#13;
boy, 1 can't go without you. What's&#13;
the matter?"&#13;
"The fact of the matter is, sir," Allen&#13;
replied, respectfully. "I don't want&#13;
to go with you."&#13;
It was a blow, and it landed between&#13;
Halbert's eyes. He loved Allen, if he&#13;
ever loved any being on earth, and this&#13;
was the first time that he ever had&#13;
been thwarted. Not given to sentiment&#13;
or pleading, he nursed his agony silently—&#13;
for Allen's abruptness stung&#13;
him with all the agony of unfilial ingratitude,&#13;
or unrequited love.of treachery&#13;
In a friend—everything. It pained&#13;
Halbert as he had never been pained&#13;
before. That afternoon he. ordered hi?&#13;
horse for a-loag ride and. went out dejectedly&#13;
with a load on his shoulders.&#13;
He wanted to puzale out the situation&#13;
He had never to plead with any one&#13;
before In his life for what he wanted&#13;
—and he hated to plead now. It might&#13;
seem thrmanly, he feared. He went cut&#13;
without calling to Allen, and he did&#13;
not return for dinner. '&#13;
The secretary In the meantime' felt&#13;
an unhappy sinking of his heart a?&#13;
the hours dragged by-and Halbert did&#13;
'not iwtttSa'. irwas^IlSr custom-s». leto*-&#13;
acquaint fejfc friend with this real reason&#13;
dntil be, hid actually gone.&#13;
Aft «, o'clock Halbert, came baca&gt;*not&#13;
exactly on. a stretcher, bat leaning on&#13;
the aiin of his valet Ee had had a&#13;
bad fall somewhere on the riverside&#13;
drive, and had, turned his elbow badly&#13;
—sprained it, in fact They had actually&#13;
subjected him to the annoyance&#13;
of carrying him to a hospital because&#13;
he had been too dazed to remonstrate,&#13;
and when his mind was eventually&#13;
clear he demanded removal to his own&gt;&#13;
rooms.&#13;
His valet settled him, comfortably&#13;
on a divan1 and had left theToom when&#13;
Halber*. sank into a slight slumber. In&#13;
a few moments Allen came in, white,&#13;
haggard, limp with anxiety, and stood&#13;
there looking a t Halbert with startled&#13;
pain in his gaze. Then, with a sudden,&#13;
incontroUable impulse, he knelt down&#13;
beside the divan for a moment and,&#13;
grasping one of the sufferer's hands in&#13;
his own, crushed it to-his lips with a&#13;
sob of distress and pafn. ,&#13;
Halbert opened his eyes and turned&#13;
to look at him. He was almost too&#13;
dumfounded to speak. Allen got up&#13;
in confusion, and Halbert kept smiling&#13;
and staring at him in a riot of bewildered&#13;
Jd«s, groping as he did In a&#13;
Que?r labyrinth of uncertainties, like&#13;
a man struggling to face some peculiar&#13;
situation that his mind refused to&#13;
grasp. ,&#13;
"I trust you will pardon my intrusion,"&#13;
Allen said, standing by a window&#13;
and looking out into the night,&#13;
"but they told me you had been seriously&#13;
hurt, and—and—it almost broke&#13;
f my heart."&#13;
Halbert sat up on the edge of the&#13;
divan, and, drawing his dressing gown&#13;
around him closely, remained there,&#13;
loqking at Allen like one surprised in&#13;
half toilet and somewhat nervous because&#13;
of it. The kiss of the youth&#13;
burned still in the flesh of his hand,&#13;
and it traveled along the channels of&#13;
feeling and'warmed his heart&#13;
Something was groping In his mind&#13;
for recognition. He still stared at Allen&#13;
and took in, with careful, scrutinizing&#13;
gaze, the supple lines of his tall,&#13;
slender figure, the curves of his long&#13;
neck, the slender hands and feet.&#13;
"Allen," Halbert said, and he got up&#13;
and walked close to the youth and&#13;
stood near him, his eyes still searching&#13;
the boyish face, "Allen, I want to&#13;
ask you a question. In God's name,&#13;
don't be offended! f Tarn wrong. But&#13;
I don't tnink I am wrong. It never&#13;
occurred to me before, but I am a blind&#13;
fool, and it unnerves me. Look at me,&#13;
Allen, and answer this: Are you a&#13;
woman?"&#13;
—Allen winced—and—turned—farther&#13;
away and lecned against a table as If&#13;
to steady himself. The young face was&#13;
seamed with pain. There was a long&#13;
silence as Halbert waited for the other&#13;
to speak. "You are a woman," he repeated.&#13;
"Yes, I am a woman." The words&#13;
came at last, firmly, almost defiantly,&#13;
like thunder in Halbert's ears, stunning&#13;
hirn-v&#13;
"My God!" was all that came from&#13;
between the parted, eager lips of the&#13;
other. "But this costume—why this?&#13;
I don't understand."&#13;
"Because everyhody has a prejudice&#13;
against' petticoats in the professions,"&#13;
the girl answered, "and I was bound&#13;
I would not let that interfere with my&#13;
progress. Why should I be bowed&#13;
down, tied like a slave, because of a&#13;
mere selfish, unreasonable prejudice?"&#13;
The color-burned in her cheeks brilliantly,&#13;
and Halbert stepped toward&#13;
her with a sudden, quick movement,&#13;
his arms outstretched, love on his&#13;
tongue, in his eyes, in his gestures.&#13;
The girl stepped away from him as&#13;
he would have touched her arm.&#13;
"Mr. Halbert," she said, with dignity,&#13;
"I am your secretary, and in&#13;
your rooms, and you have discovered&#13;
that I am a woman. Please respect my&#13;
unhappy position, for I want you to&#13;
Selleve that I am neither a designing&#13;
adventuress nor a simpering dolt&#13;
There is another class that you seem&#13;
to be unacquainted with—that you dc&#13;
not seem to take Into ^«slderatlon."&#13;
She looked at him steadily, her eye?&#13;
burning with determination.&#13;
Halbert's head sank under the siege&#13;
of her look. Her speech hurt him; U&#13;
crushed him. Yes, he loved this girl;&#13;
he understood it now. He had been a&#13;
blind, self-absorbed fool. J, •&#13;
"Girl.: don't crush me under youi&#13;
heel." He had not thougkr ;hat thero&#13;
could- be lack of respect where lov«&#13;
dwelt.&#13;
"While I am your secretary you musl&#13;
not speak of lova. It is an unfair *l-&#13;
•vantage*" .— r -• -*•••-&#13;
Hon teodifOa,- I can't lot 7P* fo nowwi, 1 w&#13;
I went/en to be my wife. Xkjn't y&lt;*&gt;&#13;
*wre. a » f , You won*',¾. a w * 'jjgffj,&#13;
\ when X want yon «os»! **&#13;
She turned and smile* at hlnau He&#13;
waa pleading in abject humility.&#13;
"Don't you love meT" he cried out U&#13;
her~he&gt; Halbert, the cynic—con*&#13;
anensd^* '&#13;
•«Wl—yea;M she called hack, "I&#13;
think I do." gbe was laughing, but her&#13;
kiss. waa there on his hand stilt He&#13;
knew.." .:"&#13;
"Then you will go to Abyssinia after f&#13;
all, won't you—dear?" '&#13;
Her laughter still greeted him from&#13;
a distance, and he flung himself; back&#13;
on the divan and gave himself up&#13;
ri Dlfyaspae^psTiarIfwtblaea^TdiWwnyrJ ndt&#13;
^ 5 ¾ ¾ m l i W r e r u t&#13;
JBe?p^nftw3!Ee»ito&#13;
Ton can tfwaysitefl jdtfb a girl 1s to&#13;
jero. Wh«M^j»e*«*-Waftttini a*&#13;
nothing, she1 acV* foolish a» a man&#13;
when yon eaten him scratching&#13;
wodaoiileg,, -: • ,»;;,, " • - ,M&#13;
e, fK tnhowe iJn?g atth eC .m' Mereitjsfa olrfe t»hMe «p«rl!ecpfcaer aCtieoena*- ptte wst aotitn ** tt oL/ethttes , HpuobM., ew eth^etsth etb peyle ahsuavres&#13;
'tr1&#13;
:.¾&#13;
.v.li&#13;
Nettedto&#13;
dreams such jas never before thawed&#13;
the chilly exterior of the man who had&#13;
fled-from petticoats and" hid from them&#13;
in smoking-rooms for the last twentyfive&#13;
years. Halbert was overcome, in&#13;
love like a schoolboy, hia heart fluttering,&#13;
buoyant, ecstatic. And the kiss&#13;
was there on his aand.v He carried it&#13;
to his lips and drank the honey of the&#13;
spot where her own lips hsd been.—&#13;
Chicago Tribune.&#13;
Uy grown In favor with t h e , WibUc, not&#13;
havih* one failure t o report in fifty-nine&#13;
years. Their Benne Plant. Cunduranso,&#13;
et*., have beoozne household words.&#13;
. ' m y are now sold b y all druggists, A s h&#13;
\ for booklet free, and if y w ever g e t t h e&#13;
JMerrle*. Dysentery, or Cholere-Mortms.&#13;
ctv« 3«nne m a n t a trial, and you&#13;
Will he convinced; Every srtlcje made&#13;
by the Magttire Medicine Compeay Is.&#13;
'guaranteed to- do what i s claimed for ft.&#13;
• * &gt; * :&#13;
mm»qti*wimt$mm Is m&#13;
rnrnwrb mtrmim om » wo-&#13;
•WmWkmrW-'WWWkmm/jB-'' WW I s 4 V pminfoi mommthlmg lm&#13;
''••if*4 /•&#13;
' ' i'.t- r&#13;
C E C I L R H O D E S ' S I S T E R .&#13;
She I s SEascvline in Appearance ar.d Dislikes&#13;
Men. A&#13;
Groote Schuur, Cec^l Rhodes' beautiful&#13;
home, a few miles from Cape&#13;
Town, is presided over by his sister,&#13;
Miss Edith Rhodes. She is said to dislike&#13;
men as much as her brother dislikes&#13;
women. She, however, dispenses&#13;
hospitality on a most lavish scale and&#13;
entertains all of her brother's guests;&#13;
Miss Rhodes is of masculine appearance&#13;
and has been described as resembling"&#13;
"the^ English squire—ot&#13;
sporting prints." She is rich, generous,&#13;
and businesslike, and her impulsive&#13;
nature wins .her many friends.&#13;
Miss Rhodes has many peculiarities,&#13;
but as she has an ample fortune a&#13;
good deal is forgiven her. On board a&#13;
steamer not long ago she gained herself&#13;
a tremendous popularity by regulating&#13;
the handicaps for the running&#13;
matches and acting as umpire in the&#13;
tugs-of-war. Away from home she is&#13;
thoroughly masculine, and takes her&#13;
part with men in any sport; but at&#13;
home, where she has a lady companion&#13;
in constant attendance on her, she&#13;
is as feminine as any woman can be,&#13;
and makes a genial hostess. She is&#13;
greatly interested in the Zoo at Groote&#13;
Schuur, upon which Mr. Rhodes has&#13;
spent a fortune, and is fond of driving&#13;
about the estate, which comprises six&#13;
miles of splendid drives. Miss Rhodes&#13;
has a better grasp of South African&#13;
politics than.some members of the&#13;
colonial office, and it is needless to&#13;
say that she is the loyal champion of&#13;
her brother, Cecil, and all In which he&#13;
is concerned.&#13;
The woman who can pnt on her shoes&#13;
without sitting on the floor is about as&#13;
rare as the man who goes to bed without&#13;
handing bis necktie on the gas&#13;
&lt;et. .&#13;
important to Mothers.&#13;
Basmine ouetoily erery bottle of CAST0R1A.&#13;
a •*(«. and rare remedy for infants sad children,&#13;
sad we that it&#13;
Bears the&#13;
Signature of&#13;
In TJee For Over 3 0 Years.&#13;
The Kind Ton Have Always Bought&#13;
y** E. FWfciafe V&lt;g*kb 1&#13;
Holiness on earth is better than innocence&#13;
in Eden.&#13;
Qaeen's Favorite Preach are.&#13;
Queen Victoria has always taken a&#13;
great personal interest in her favorite&#13;
preachers-. Dean Stanley received his&#13;
first appointment at court as chaplain&#13;
to Prince Albert, to whom he had been&#13;
Introduced by Baron Bunsen, but he&#13;
did not come Into special contact with&#13;
the cueen until after the death of the&#13;
prince consort, when, in fulfillment of&#13;
an arrangement made by the prince&#13;
before his death, Dr. Stanley accompanied&#13;
the prince of Wales on a tour&#13;
in the east. He went uncomplainingly&#13;
at a time when his mother lay&#13;
stricken with a fatal illness and there&#13;
seemed little prospect that he would&#13;
return In time to see her alive. Her&#13;
majesty was unspeakably touched&#13;
when she discovered this act of loyalty,&#13;
and her own grief drew her into&#13;
close sympathy with one who likewise,&#13;
sorrowed for a loved one. Upon his&#13;
return from the east Dr. Stanley spent&#13;
a week at Windsor, where he conducted&#13;
a series of mournful and moving&#13;
&lt; services in connection with the&#13;
anniversary of the prince consort's&#13;
death, and was the means of affording&#13;
much spiritual comfort to the queen.&#13;
At that time a friendship was cemented&#13;
which, closed only with death.&#13;
Home Barly Risers.&#13;
An ornithologist; having investigated&#13;
the question of at what hour in&#13;
summer the commonest small birds&#13;
wake and sing, says the greenfinch is&#13;
the earliest riser, as it pipes as early&#13;
as 1:30 in the morning, the blackcap&#13;
beginning at about 2:30. It is nearly&#13;
4 o'clock, and the sun is'well above the&#13;
horizon, before the first real songster&#13;
appears'in the person of the blackbird.&#13;
He is heard a ^alf an hour before the&#13;
thrush, and the chirp of the robin begins&#13;
about the same length of time&#13;
before that of the wren. The house&#13;
sparrow and the tomtit occupy the last&#13;
place in the list. This investigation&#13;
has ruined the lark's reputation for&#13;
early rising. That much celebrated&#13;
bird is quite a sluggard, as it does not&#13;
rise until long after the chaffinches,&#13;
1 Janets, and a number of hedgerow&#13;
K-c« have been up and about.&#13;
I s d l M C«a Wear 8h&lt;&#13;
Ohe size smaller after u s i n g Allen's Foot*&#13;
E a s e , a powder. I t m a k e s t i g h t or n e w&#13;
s h o e s easy. Cores s w o l l e n , h o t , s w e a t i n g ,&#13;
a c h i n g feet, i n g r o w i n g nails, c o r n s a n d&#13;
h a h l o n s . All d r u g g i s t s a n d s h o e stores,&#13;
S 5 c Trial p a c k a g e F R E E b y mail. Add&#13;
r e s s A l l e n 8. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y.&#13;
J e a l o u s y i s t h e c o m p l i m e n t w e p a y&#13;
to our superiors.&#13;
Ball's Catarrh Cure&#13;
Is a constitutional cure. Price. 75a&#13;
wM promptly «ef Hghif H&#13;
mxooBslvB or irregular&#13;
• j j e H l n W ^^sa ^•gVaa^ak A M a T ^ g J a A a t A&#13;
WTWm&amp;t SSP tWtrmm rUmmMmWrnm^&#13;
Lynn, Mm**., forndvloe*&#13;
EvMonom mbottnds thmt&#13;
Mrs* PkakhmmFs mdvlom,&#13;
mnd nwtuolne have for&#13;
many years bean helping&#13;
women to be atrongm Mo&#13;
other advlee la ao unvaryingly&#13;
accurate, no&#13;
other meulome has such&#13;
USE THE GENUINE . . . MURRAY &amp;&#13;
LANMAN'S&#13;
Only the needy are known at the&#13;
Bank of Faith.&#13;
Each package of PUTNAM FADELESS&#13;
DTES colors either Silk, Wool&#13;
or Cotton perfectly. ^ « _&#13;
A ohurllsh courtesy rarely comes but either&#13;
(or gain or falsehood.&#13;
Stop Tour Hair from Falling.&#13;
Coke Dandruff Care will positively card&#13;
dandruff and keep hair from falling. 91.03.&#13;
"THE UNIVERSAL PERFUME**&#13;
' FoyrT tohilee t Haenndd kBeirrothh,l ef,&#13;
. . /REFUSE ALL 8UBSTITVTE84&#13;
A life spent worthily should bo measured by&#13;
deeds, not years.&#13;
Winslow*s Soothing Syrup?&#13;
For children teethia*, eofteaa the same, redoeee 1»&#13;
nammtloa, silaji paln.oaro» wlndcoUc iicaboitle.&#13;
. Love rather than legislation,&#13;
kingdom of God.&#13;
rules in the&#13;
Remove the ceuM* that make yonr hair Ufelerf&#13;
sad stay with pAaua't HAIR BALSAM. —Himf&gt;sffgwaJ&lt;ift"* ^ ^ &lt;*"r" 1"r «*»"»• I3ct*.&#13;
Men and women agree oftener in love than in&#13;
money matters.&#13;
Piso's Care oannot be too highly spoken of as&#13;
a oough cure.—J. W. O'BBIS.V, a*2 Third Are.,&#13;
N., Minneapolis, Mian., Jan. t, 1900.&#13;
Love is a disease of which the physicians&#13;
know nothing.&#13;
Baseball players: Golf players: all players&#13;
chew Whites Yucatan whilst playing.&#13;
The gospel is the heart of God seeking tfce&#13;
heart of man.&#13;
~ ~ 'i al lUSOl lIwa ^PaiMWJaOaHl iKt aWc t.oMnO, eWRXI »CTl&#13;
^roaeeutea Claimav&#13;
___la*rTrs. rmsloB Bureau.&#13;
war. 15 adjodieatiue claims, attj sioea&#13;
FARM MORTGAGE&#13;
LOANS&#13;
In amounts ranging from 1800 t o&#13;
$10,000 on choice improved farms&#13;
in the Western part of North&#13;
Dakota.'&#13;
Write us if you have money to Invest&#13;
and we will be pleased to send you&#13;
description of loans, rates of inter*&#13;
esc, etc. Personal examination of&#13;
al 1 loans. We hare in vested nearly&#13;
One Million Dollars in farm loans&#13;
In North Dakota since 1861 without&#13;
tfce loss of a dollar.&#13;
NORTH DAKOTA LAND a LOAN CO., Rutty. N. 0.&#13;
EDUCATIONAL.&#13;
THE UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME,&#13;
History*&#13;
Law.&#13;
LitmS?l!a&#13;
$O8Q333 SMI payaabilei wMeeklyy wStihi LexpienOses.&#13;
Ilea or Woman to represent oa la&#13;
their own atate, to take churve of&#13;
solicitors aod attend to collection*. NO III V I S T -&#13;
MINT REQUIRED. Thu to a strictly bonaftde&#13;
salary urop«wltiot&gt;. IT INVOLVES NO&#13;
CANVASSING whatever. Expenses remitted la&#13;
advance aad salary forwarded from headquarters.&#13;
NO I X P I R I I N C I NICISSAR-'. Give references.&#13;
Kactese stamp. Address.&#13;
MfT. CO-OPKRAT1VK CO., Star BM*&gt;, CHKASO&#13;
THE STsAnNmDi AfcuRcDiii t&#13;
COMPAMY&#13;
make twenty-Are different&#13;
styles, including the highest*&#13;
priced best; and bet* lowpriced&#13;
machines.&#13;
ftend for fttslnt*oe- sad&#13;
prices.&#13;
J. a. ALDR1CH. Stats •*.--.&#13;
S9B "Woodward Are.,&#13;
DXTBOIT, Mica.&#13;
NOTRB DAME, INDIANA,&#13;
Cassics, Letters, Bcoaoasles&#13;
' raaHsaV, Art, Scteaos, Pai&#13;
x. vtl, necJaatilcal and Electrics!&#13;
Architecture.&#13;
Theraawh Preparatory and Ceaaa*&#13;
Cessnas. Ecclesiastical students at Bpecial rates.&#13;
Its oass Free. Junior or Senior Year. Collegia!©&#13;
Courses. Reoms to Rent, moderate charges.&#13;
St. Edward's Man, for boy's under 13.&#13;
The 87th Year will open Septesnkcr 4th,190S&#13;
CatatoRves Free. Address&#13;
REV. A. MORRISSEY. C 8 C . Presides*.&#13;
ST. MARYS ACADEMY&#13;
NOTRE DAME, INDIANA&#13;
Conducted by the Sisters of the Holy&#13;
Cross. Chattered 1S55. Thorough English&#13;
and Classical education. Regular&#13;
Collegiate Degrees.&#13;
In Preparatory Department students&#13;
carefully prepared tor Collegiate course.&#13;
Physical and Chemical Laboratories well&#13;
equipped. Conservatory of Music and&#13;
School of Art. Gymnasium under direction&#13;
of graduate of Boston Normal School&#13;
of Gymnastics. Catalogue free. The i»xk&#13;
year opens Sept. 4, 1900. Address,&#13;
DIRECTRESS OF THE ACADEMY,&#13;
9t Marys Atsdtsy, - Notre Paste, Indiana&#13;
Whn sjtwriw? Ads, msn'lo* Is t paper.&#13;
BOOKLETS FREE,&#13;
v •*..:" t:&#13;
,. A C MAGUlRfc'3 EXIKACT BENNE PLANT&#13;
( : &gt; • &gt; • ; » ' . &gt; I '&#13;
,« ' D ' : &lt; ;. • • • l •». £ i sC • \uu 4r ,-^. u' i &lt;. :,&gt;i ui -&lt; • ."v ':^ . *- ."\ •: * i ' ' ' '&#13;
; R r F v"; rlt^&#13;
liX2\Xkm^Htn*4ml&#13;
W . N . U — D B T R O I T — N O . 3 1 — l O O O&#13;
AlSWMiaS AdVOftlSMawtta&#13;
• ' . • * ' • / . - &gt; • , .&#13;
' . ' • • • • • • • I * : • f&#13;
K *&amp;*&amp;••: I''&#13;
&lt;.•••."' ^ ; ^ r .v.&#13;
• • , . . : ' : : • ' • ' • • ^ r " ; . ; ' •&#13;
•'- • . ; # : • ' • • • ; • ? j&#13;
•.•.:•&gt;' :• %.*ff%&#13;
••••••''• -*\ -'r'h.&#13;
- -.--1..----..-^1&#13;
• •'•'it. •;••&gt;{&#13;
•&gt;&amp;&#13;
:m&#13;
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&gt; •'.!&#13;
:*&gt;!&#13;
k&#13;
f !••&#13;
•"}'&lt;•• •&#13;
I&#13;
•}ut--s. •.'•.•,, '.'''.• ••«*:r. .• • ,&gt;'».•'• v&gt;.•&lt;.&gt;?• ^-•:••• v.'1:... , vr.\&#13;
3* v&lt;"&#13;
»V&#13;
feh&#13;
&amp; •&#13;
$£-&#13;
fev&#13;
:.i&gt;.&#13;
r&#13;
•A ,&#13;
1-. i&#13;
I \','&lt;&#13;
; %&lt;v.- *&#13;
PURE AND FRAGRANT&#13;
IN SCALED PACKAGES ONLY MO motm-ntr IT"&#13;
PAR3HALLVIUE.&#13;
Mrs. Hirehner is very sick.&#13;
A. 0. Wakeman is failing quite&#13;
fast&#13;
Mrs. John Farhnam is very&#13;
sick.&#13;
The Rev. B. Mowers occupied&#13;
the Baptist pulpit Sunday,&#13;
Mrs. Taylor's mother and niece&#13;
from Midland are visiting her&#13;
this week.&#13;
Truman Glaspie has bought out&#13;
a candy store in St. Johns and has&#13;
moved there.&#13;
Miss Flora Pitts of Tyrone died&#13;
Sunday morning quite suddenly&#13;
of erysipelas.&#13;
John Bristol is in luck this time&#13;
has about 75 bushels of very fine&#13;
early apples to sell,&#13;
Hark the August cricket has&#13;
commenced bis annual concert&#13;
making melody terrible to hear.&#13;
George Austin who lost his leg&#13;
just a few days ago is to be about&#13;
on crutches. Dto Parker attended&#13;
him.&#13;
There wift be no Sunday school&#13;
next Sunday at the School House.&#13;
Mesdames MilHe Bates and&#13;
Jennie Baker of Pinckney called&#13;
pu friends in Anderson Friday.&#13;
Ltyra and Orla Hinchey have&#13;
gone ft&gt; Ann Arbor to spend a few&#13;
days with their sister Mrs, Oarl&#13;
Beule.&#13;
tSA&#13;
'$&gt;?•.• *&lt;&#13;
» * • » •&#13;
.f-&#13;
^ * -&#13;
fcAaT PU&#13;
Fossie Lewis is iisiting friends&#13;
in Iosco. .v&#13;
Mrs. Harrietpfbwn is, visiting&#13;
her children in Stockbridge.&#13;
There was a *ery large attendance&#13;
at the Farmers Club on Saturday&#13;
last&#13;
Alma Shehanhas been visiting&#13;
her brother in Detroit for the&#13;
last three weeks.&#13;
Maud Guly and Iva Placeway&#13;
spent Sunday in Marion as guests&#13;
of Mrs. Ured JUake.&#13;
Mrs. Franc Coburn of Ann Arbor&#13;
is spending a couple of weeks&#13;
with Geo. Hicks and wife.&#13;
Rev. Pierce led a very enter*'&#13;
tainiug C. E. meeting at the&#13;
School House on Sunday last.&#13;
Bruce Kennedy and Guy Hall&#13;
were at the county farm Sunday&#13;
presumbly to look for berths for&#13;
the winter.&#13;
PETTYSVILLE.&#13;
Wm. Mercer was at Howell&#13;
Tuesday.&#13;
Thressa Melvin is entertaining&#13;
friends from Howell.&#13;
Etta Shehan of Ypsilanti was&#13;
home over Sunday.&#13;
John Van Horn and wife were&#13;
in Howell Saturday.&#13;
Thressa Mehin will teach in&#13;
the Cordley district the coming&#13;
year.&#13;
Will and Emoy Peck visited&#13;
relatives in Marion the first of&#13;
the week. ,&#13;
Nettie Hall has been engaged&#13;
to teach the fall term of school in&#13;
this place. _&#13;
Eva Wines of Ann Arbor visited&#13;
her parents Mr. and Mrs. Geo.&#13;
Blades Sunday.&#13;
J. W. Plaoeway and daughter&#13;
Iva were at the county seat the&#13;
tatoi the week.&#13;
Don Harris was home from&#13;
Iosco last Sunday.&#13;
«&#13;
Mrs. Will Secore was quite sick&#13;
the last of last week.&#13;
Wirt Barnam and ,wife visited&#13;
friends South of Chelsea last Sunday.&#13;
Maud Bullis is spending a few&#13;
days with relatives in Grand&#13;
Rapids. z , .&#13;
olden DuBois from Leslie&#13;
visite^ under the parental roof&#13;
last&#13;
Thos. Budd and wife from&#13;
Stockbridge visited her parents&#13;
here Sunday.&#13;
Cass Obert and Wife from Durand&#13;
are visiting at A. 0. Watsons&#13;
for a few days.&#13;
Gertrude Webb spent last week&#13;
with her parents here and friends&#13;
at North Lake.&#13;
A. 0. Watson and wife visited&#13;
Thos. Budd and wife in Stockbridge&#13;
last Saturday.&#13;
Edd Secore from near Fowlerville&#13;
visited his brother Will here&#13;
last Friday and Saturday.&#13;
• Elmer Barton and wife from&#13;
Luther Lake Go. are spending a&#13;
f«W da y 8 w*tQ bis parents here.&#13;
Wm. Liveraore's horse ran&#13;
away in Gregory last Friday&#13;
breaking the front axel and thills&#13;
tri. fcis wagon.&#13;
The ball game between Iosco&#13;
and Unadilla advertised for last&#13;
week Saturday was posponed until&#13;
this week Saturday at Iosco.&#13;
There will be no Preaching in&#13;
the M. E. ehursh Sunday evening&#13;
Bev. Palmer going to a church&#13;
dedication near Pleasant Lake,&#13;
Jackson County.&#13;
Tnesdayt Ang. 7 thar* will h* *&#13;
Farmers Picnic at Stevenson's&#13;
Grove North Lake, under the auspices&#13;
of the Grange. Come and&#13;
have a good time.&#13;
/.*&#13;
• • &amp; Chel-&#13;
UNADIUA&#13;
^1 " Lon Lane &amp; home from&#13;
sea for a few days.&#13;
Gijbert Stock from Marion called&#13;
on friends in *hii pUoe Taei-&#13;
. &lt; ; •&#13;
* / • - • * &gt; :&#13;
ANDERSON.&#13;
Henry Whipple and Elva Hoff&#13;
visited at Jas. HofFs Snnday.&#13;
Geo. Hoy land and wife of Howell,&#13;
called on friends here one day&#13;
last week. X&#13;
Some of the young people attended&#13;
church at Parkers Corners&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Maud Gorden of Lansing is&#13;
spending a few days at the home&#13;
of Chaa Hoff.&#13;
Mary McCleer and daughter&#13;
May of Gregory called at Mrs. E.&#13;
J. Durkee's Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. Chas. Hoff and daughter&#13;
Kittie and Thanny and Nora Dnrkee&#13;
were in Stockbridge Tuesday.&#13;
Clair Beule who has been&#13;
spending the past two months with&#13;
his grandparents returned to his&#13;
home in Ann Arbor.&#13;
Norman, Mollie an&lt;L Samuel&#13;
Wilson and Arthur Bullis are&#13;
camping at Portage Lake with&#13;
Arthur's and Ben's families.&#13;
Emmett Folkerson, Frank&#13;
Williams and Belle and jf aggie&#13;
Birnie visited Olive and Lottie&#13;
Brearley west, of Gregory Sunday.&#13;
The next regular meeting of the&#13;
Anderson Farmers Club will be&#13;
held at Reeve's Mill Pond Saturday&#13;
August 11. Speakers from&#13;
Howell and Pinckney are expected.&#13;
A good program is being prepared.&#13;
Everyone come and bring&#13;
a "basket"&#13;
Prosperity.*&#13;
TRANSPLANTING&#13;
Fr«K T*«e» C M Only « • L*»rMcd \ty Hx-&#13;
|MH&gt;l«9»Ce.&#13;
The best way to transplant fruittrees&#13;
can hardly be given sa4sfac:or.ly&#13;
In the columns of a paper, for the . eason&#13;
that there Is much detail in regard&#13;
to it that can only be learned by experience.&#13;
In a general way, however,&#13;
among the important things in transplanting&#13;
trees are to prune . off the&#13;
broken portions of the root, and if the&#13;
roots have been shortened in the process&#13;
prune the top to correspond, taking&#13;
pains to leave the tree in good&#13;
form. In setting the tree it should be&#13;
set about two inches lower than it grew&#13;
in the nursery. In digging the holes&#13;
for them it is desirable to put the subsoil&#13;
and top soil separately, and in&#13;
covering the roots put in the dark soil&#13;
first. It is very important, also, to&#13;
thoroughly firm the soil about the&#13;
roots, so that the tree will be well&#13;
anchored. This should be done by&#13;
stamping in the soil around the roots as&#13;
the hole *is being filled up. Do not wait&#13;
until the hole is filled before doing so,&#13;
but do it every six inches as the hole is&#13;
filled. Dig the hole large enough fo&#13;
receive the roots without crowding.&#13;
Where a large number of trees are to&#13;
do is to stake out the land carefullv.&#13;
and then plow straight, deep furrows&#13;
where the rows are to go. Mark the&#13;
land the other way, puting stakes atJ&#13;
the ends of the rows. It is then Quite&#13;
easy, by sighting along the rows bow&#13;
ways, to get tne trees in position. If&#13;
the rows are very long it is deBlrable&#13;
to put up several stakes in the course&#13;
of the row. But the most important of&#13;
all directions is to start with vigorous,&#13;
healthy trees with a good root system.&#13;
Luwn-lttaklnt K»«y to S«|T«.&#13;
One of the greatest problems in general&#13;
gardening is the production pf *&#13;
good turf and maintaining it Yet it is&#13;
easy to solve, to, if carefully attended&#13;
to. - . ' . . * .&#13;
Tne cmef tning is to start rigbt.&#13;
There should be a good, rich, loamy&#13;
top soil six inches in depth, at least,&#13;
in which the seed should be sown.&#13;
Unless for some very good reason,&#13;
which would seldom be the case, one&#13;
kind of grass only should be sown,&#13;
which will make an ev.en, regular&#13;
growth if cared for. Dishonest contractors&#13;
are occasionally to be met&#13;
wth who-do not hesitate to "skimp"&#13;
with the top soil, and a weak, s t u n t e d - } ^ U 6 » a l e 8 CSLmh..&#13;
and tufted growth of grass is the result&#13;
Kentucky blue-grass is the most popular&#13;
and best for more northern states,&#13;
being very hardy and close-growing.&#13;
It Is a famous pasture-grass, and&#13;
thrives in almost all soils. For excessively&#13;
dry sons, -where il has been:&#13;
found difficult to establish ordinary&#13;
grass, she6D fescue, a vftry fine, "silky"&#13;
grass, will be found admirable. Around&#13;
the base of large trees where it is not&#13;
also shady it will grow right up to&#13;
their trunks. This is also recommended&#13;
for sowing in sod which is troubled&#13;
with annual grass or weeds, as it may&#13;
be cut very close and the, annuals prevented&#13;
from seeding- while telling&#13;
what to do it is well to add what to&#13;
avoid. Whatever kind of grass is employed&#13;
to seed with, it should be a&#13;
slightly creeping and not of a tufty&#13;
character. It is impossible to ciake a&#13;
close, even carpet with a tufty grass.—&#13;
Meehan's Monthly.&#13;
Bw&gt;«otv an&lt;| s«» ^»TK&gt;O&#13;
Qwell riu Friday faete^&#13;
B. H. T«ept» &gt;tud famifr vhJIsd at&#13;
CD. Bennetts in How^ov^ fcftnday.&#13;
J. 4. Teeple and wi^.«a»ped at&#13;
Long Lake near Howsii'a^ew days&#13;
ia«l week. ***.*&amp; .--.&#13;
• • . • • • . 4 s ?&#13;
F. J. Wright and wife have moved!&#13;
to Webster where Frank will work for&#13;
Will Steptoe.&#13;
We are glad to report that Mrs* 8.&#13;
Barton, who has been very s'ok, is&#13;
gaining slowly.&#13;
Arthur and Irene Crabb of Grand&#13;
Rapids, are visiting their cousins, Bex&#13;
and Fred Bead.&#13;
Cbas. Henry was called to Dexter&#13;
the first of the week by tbe severe ill&#13;
ness of his father.&#13;
Francis Carr and Robert Gnlhane&#13;
took a trip on their wheels to Howell&#13;
via Chilson one day last week.&#13;
The Cong'l church and Society will&#13;
hold a lawn social at the Cong'l parsonage,&#13;
Friday evening, August 10.&#13;
A cordial invitation to all.&#13;
Subject atftbe Cong'l Church Sonday&#13;
morning: "The Enthusiasm of&#13;
Jesus, the man who Was beside himself/&#13;
1 Vesper services in the evening.&#13;
tJW*s'^fl!*T*Pp^^ • • ^ W ^ ^ V y . mnjp^j+^m •^•Sw^^w'^P'&#13;
At thV grange picnic at North Lake&#13;
AngnJ 7. the following speaker* wjjt&#13;
HMSMPt^^Qeo. $, Eariow* maaslsv •»&#13;
ofjjpteQrwfi Bnn/ H. 0. Bos**,&#13;
and Chas. Biiley, D. 0., Adrian; Tf bev&#13;
B. Bark worth, Jackson; Bsv. 0. 8»&#13;
Jones, Chelsea; and others., £ *&#13;
Hay fnrniehed on the gronnds, also&#13;
refreshment*. Plenty of boats ior*r&#13;
hire, aJfb a gasoline launch. A good&#13;
band wilt furnish music and there will&#13;
be vocal mi sie.&#13;
ProhinittoB Convention.&#13;
- There will be a mass convention of&#13;
the Prohibition Party of lav. Co, at&#13;
the Court House in Howell on Monday&#13;
August 18, at 2 o'clock p. m. for the&#13;
purpose of electing eleven delegates&#13;
to State convention to be be held in&#13;
Lansing August 28, 1900, Also elect&#13;
delegates to Congressional and Senatorial&#13;
conventions and electing a new&#13;
Co. commissioner; nominating a Co.&#13;
Ticket and for tbe transaction of any&#13;
other business that may come before&#13;
the meeting. By order of Com.&#13;
All good citizens who have their own&#13;
best interests at heart will help along&#13;
their prosperity by buying groceries&#13;
from W. E. Murphy.&#13;
Saturday August 4 We offer,&#13;
50c Tea at 40c&#13;
40c Tea at 34c.&#13;
20c Coffee at 16c.&#13;
25c Coffee at 20c,&#13;
R. V. Salmon lie.&#13;
10c Bag Salt 7c.&#13;
5c Bag Salt 3c.&#13;
Best V. and C. Crackers 6c&#13;
Business Locals.&#13;
FT Service.&#13;
One thorough-bred Jersey&#13;
Inquire of J. W. Placeway.&#13;
For Sale.&#13;
Yeast 3c.&#13;
1 lb, Baking Powder 5c.&#13;
1 Can of Tomatoes 8c.&#13;
50c Overalls 48c.&#13;
50c Underwear 40c&#13;
25cUtfderwear20e.&#13;
KeyjSoip2c.&#13;
Bestpheese in Michigan 10c.&#13;
* lb Banner Tobaoco, 12o&#13;
Produce Wanted.&#13;
W.E.MURFHY.&#13;
A&#13;
Thfs store closes Friday afternoons at&#13;
12:30 until S e p t . 7th. 1». H. FIEL.D&#13;
August&#13;
bull,&#13;
Extra good road horse and carriage.&#13;
W. H. Sayles, Gregory,&#13;
LOST.&#13;
An order Book with red leather&#13;
cover, names of Pinckney, Fowlervilie&#13;
and Howell parties therein. Signers&#13;
name and address on inside of cover,&#13;
Finder leave at Anderson and receive&#13;
liberal reward. W. H. Giebel.&#13;
*&#13;
Subscribe for the Dispatch. •&#13;
MORE&#13;
1 i&#13;
LOCAL.&#13;
This is the month of picnics.&#13;
The yonng people of this place will&#13;
give a party at tbe Tnomey House, to&#13;
which all are invited.&#13;
We learn as we go to press that&#13;
fiagene Mann started Monday from&#13;
San Francisco, for China, his company&#13;
having been ordered there.&#13;
8ome of onr correspondents hays&#13;
evidently forgotten that we expect at&#13;
least twice each month to hear from&#13;
then to entitle then to the papejr for&#13;
«atyt*r, v.. . / ' V j&#13;
Will be a month for cleaning up odd lots of merchandise&#13;
left over after the Red Mark sale. These lots are, in many&#13;
instances, too small to advertise, but they will be offered&#13;
from day to day at very little prices to clean up. They&#13;
will be bargain goods at bargain prices, and it will be well&#13;
worth your time to come frequently to the Bee Hive during&#13;
August. -. .._.—&#13;
Remnants of&#13;
Wash Goods&#13;
The Re4 Mark Sale has made a big&#13;
stock of remnants in the Wash Good De&#13;
partmeat. Thee* we are now selling at&#13;
cheapest kinds of prices so clean up. Many&#13;
waist lengths here.&#13;
*n&#13;
Specials&#13;
About a hundred pairs of Lace Curtains&#13;
slightly imperfect. They are 64 and 60 in.1&#13;
wide ond ty yards long. We shall give&#13;
them to you at 9 8 c a pel pi&#13;
2 5 c Hose&#13;
Supporters 15c&#13;
A fine lot of Fancy Frilled Garter Side&#13;
Supporters, very pretty ones, we are now&#13;
•ailing at 10C.&#13;
= = s c = = , ,1 "I | ' •&#13;
Remnants of Laces&#13;
and Embroideries&#13;
We have made lots of Laos and Em.&#13;
broidery remnants during the ssie, which&#13;
we are selling through August at. just one -&#13;
half the regular price.&#13;
Hammocks to&#13;
Close&#13;
Wc Qomnooks wo are offering for 2 0&#13;
Wc Hammocks we era closing at 0 9&#13;
c«urt*H&#13;
OBfrefew Hammocks left, so If you&#13;
waftte b*%ain, come early.&#13;
lenmants of&#13;
ln$raht Carpets&#13;
5 to 90 yards, we are doting out at surprisingly&#13;
low prion. ;&#13;
L. HJMfii&#13;
m ' ; • $ * •&#13;
m&#13;
A&#13;
A&#13;
**r Jtokaoa. Utah.</text>
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              <text>Use the Windows Snipping Tool to capture the area of the document you want to save. If you want multiple pages printed please see staff to print the pages you want. &lt;a href="https://howelllibrary.org/technology/#print" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View the library's printing information.&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch August 02, 1900</text>
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                <text>August 02, 1900 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>1900-08-02</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="6620">
                <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>•Ofc.XVnX t&amp;OKNEY, LIVINGSTON CO., MICH., THU&amp;&amp;D£t, AUG+UST 0,11900. No. 32&#13;
Prices are right at&#13;
The&#13;
A Special Sale every day at&#13;
ifie "Surprise Store".&#13;
4c a bar.&#13;
£ and 10c&#13;
5 and 7c.&#13;
17c.&#13;
10c.&#13;
5,10 and 25c.&#13;
5, 10 and 15c.&#13;
5c.&#13;
Lenox Soap,&#13;
Good Hose,&#13;
Good half Bose,&#13;
Folkadot half Hose,&#13;
Black half How. ,&#13;
GoodTowelsT'&#13;
Good Parses&#13;
2 Bars Toilet Soap,&#13;
Turkey Bed Handkerchiefs, 5c.&#13;
Good Cigars, 8, 4 and 5c.&#13;
Brass Drapery Hooks per doz., 5c.&#13;
Gob Pipes, 2c.&#13;
New Style Beauty Pins, 2 for 5c.&#13;
Suspenders, 5,10,15 and 20c.&#13;
I handle nearly all kinds of&#13;
goods. Please call when in town&#13;
and see my stock.&#13;
Cftgs T a k e n&#13;
Same as Cash,&#13;
Youra to Please,&#13;
H. W. BL»1»!S, Prop.&#13;
LOCAL N E W S .&#13;
Dont&#13;
Forget&#13;
.t August 16,&#13;
St. Mary's picnic.&#13;
Miss Emma Haze of Ypsilanti is the&#13;
guest of relatives here.&#13;
Base ball game between Brighton&#13;
and Iosco on the day of Picnic, August&#13;
16.&#13;
Miss Gertrude Mann of Detroit is&#13;
the guest of her grandmother, Mrs.&#13;
Mary Mann. ,&#13;
H. G. Briggs and wife attended a&#13;
farmers picnic at Long lake near Howell&#13;
Saturday last.&#13;
A. T. Mann and wife of Detroit&#13;
were guests of his mother, Mrs. Mary&#13;
Mann, the past week.&#13;
Florence Andrews spent the past&#13;
week with Miss Florence Caster and&#13;
other friends in Howell.&#13;
Rev. Fr. Gomerford took a party of&#13;
ooys to Silver lake on Friday last for&#13;
a dsyp outing, ft is needless to say&#13;
that the boys enjoyed it.&#13;
The Ladies Aid society of the M. E.&#13;
church will serye ice cream and cake&#13;
at the town hall on Saturday evening&#13;
of this week, All invited. '&#13;
A.J. Yonker has sold out to F. Travis&#13;
an4 will move to Ypsilantrr^Mr&#13;
Y. and wife have made many friends&#13;
in this vicinity who will miss them.&#13;
On the bills announcing St. Mary's&#13;
picnic, the announcement that Brighton&#13;
and Oceola would play ball should&#13;
have read Brighton and- Iosco. The&#13;
error was not our fault but we are&#13;
glad to make the correction. This&#13;
game will probably be one of the hotest&#13;
contested games of the season.&#13;
The third annual picnic of the Livingston&#13;
County Maccabee Association&#13;
is to be held at Island Lake, August&#13;
16. The speakers are Hon. S. D. Williams&#13;
of Battle Creek and Gi-eat Lady&#13;
Lietenant Commander Rachel A. Bailey&#13;
of Grand Rapids.&#13;
| A few hot days this week.&#13;
G. W. Teeple was in Howell Thursday.&#13;
Several from here spent Sunday in&#13;
Jackson.&#13;
MrB. Epps of Detroit is visiting at&#13;
J. A.* Donaldson's.&#13;
Alex. Mc In tyre is arranging to&#13;
make a kiln of brick.&#13;
Geo. Teeple spent Sunday in Leslie.&#13;
Mrs. T. and daughter Mae, returned&#13;
with him.&#13;
Most of the Pinekney and vicinity&#13;
teachers are in Howell attending the&#13;
teachers institute.&#13;
Miss Grace Gardner and Miss Carrie&#13;
Erwin spent Tbnrsday last with Tbos.&#13;
Reads family at Portage lake.&#13;
Mrs. Edward Reynolds returned&#13;
from Detroit Saturday, where she has&#13;
been visiting the past three weeks.&#13;
Burt Hutchinson and wife of Detroit,&#13;
spent Sunday with Mrs. H's&#13;
parents, Mr. and Mr3. Albert Reason.&#13;
Mrs. Geo. Morris and son Thomas&#13;
and Mrs. W. T. Brown of Sterling&#13;
Kan, were visiting J. T. Chambers a&#13;
tew days.&#13;
Saturday Sept.lis the date of the&#13;
^TfH^s-eflHiretfc&#13;
big farmers picnic at Whitmore lake.&#13;
Bliss and May bury, nominees for&#13;
governor, are both billed to speak.&#13;
Tbe C. E. society of North Hamburg&#13;
will hold an ice cream social at the&#13;
home of Mrs. Wm. Hooker in Pertysville&#13;
on Friday evening of this week.&#13;
All are invited.&#13;
Chas. Kellogg, wife and daughter&#13;
Annabell, Mrs. Caroline Kellogg and&#13;
daughter Mae, of Detroit are guests of&#13;
H. W. Crofoot and other relatives here&#13;
and at Portage Lake.&#13;
These days the busy housewife goes&#13;
prowling about the house, turning up&#13;
the carpet and looking through chests&#13;
in search of the dreaded carpet bug&#13;
and few there be who fail to find it&#13;
We know of no remedy unless it is&#13;
the Evincible Carpet Bug Exterminator,&#13;
put up by, G. A. Sigler of this&#13;
place labels for which were printed at&#13;
this office.—It is selling liko hot cakes&#13;
Dr. C. L. Sigler was in Howell on&#13;
business last Friday.&#13;
Miss Rose Black visited Howell&#13;
friends last Saturday.&#13;
Quite a few from here spent the&#13;
Sunday at Zure lake to a picnic&#13;
Frank Shields of Howell called on&#13;
Pinekney friends the first of the week.&#13;
Messrs. Brokway and Culver of&#13;
Howell were in town the first of tbe&#13;
week.&#13;
•&#13;
Mr. Wilber Johnson and the Misses&#13;
Carrie Porter and Ruth Johnson spent&#13;
Sunday in the Montague—Wilson&#13;
camp at Portage Lake.&#13;
Farmers picnic in Van Winkles&#13;
grove Saturday of this week given by&#13;
the Anderson club. There will be a&#13;
bier dinner, good speacbes and a general&#13;
good time.&#13;
Tbe annual picnic of St Mary's&#13;
church will be held in Jack sons grove&#13;
on Thursday August 16. There will&#13;
be the u?dal big time and big dinner.&#13;
Everyone come.&#13;
n '••'.' •mtfm&#13;
We will deliver Hour&#13;
direct to ths people&#13;
at&#13;
50 cents for a 25-pound sack&#13;
95 cents for a 50-pound sack&#13;
$3.80 for a barrel.&#13;
10 pounds Graham 15 cents.&#13;
10 lbs. granulated meal lOcts&#13;
Seed Buckwheat.&#13;
Terms, Cash.&#13;
R. H . E R W I N .&#13;
Eeduced prices on all Summer Goods this week.&#13;
AH Walking iShoes^o be s o l d r A t C o s t .&#13;
Summer Underwear and all Thin Wash Goods A t C o s t .&#13;
Specials for Saturday:&#13;
General Hardware,&#13;
Have as complete an assortment of heavy and shelf hardware&#13;
as can be found in the county, and 1900 finds us&#13;
more thoroughly equipped than ever before.&#13;
Builders s Hardware a Specialty.&#13;
Doors and Common Sash always in stock.&#13;
Complete line of Buggies, Wagons and&#13;
Heating Stoves, Ranges, Wood Stoves&#13;
Wood and Coal.&#13;
in other villages and is claimed to be&#13;
a "sure cure.1'&#13;
The Grange picnic at North lake on&#13;
Tuesday was a great success, there be*&#13;
in if about 2,000 presant and everyone&#13;
seemed to enjoy themselves, the breeze&#13;
from the lake making the grove a very&#13;
pleasanTand comfortable place to be&#13;
in on a hot day. The speeches weie&#13;
interesting and profitable, and were&#13;
listened to by a large number. Tbe&#13;
ball game between Chelsea #and Unadill&#13;
a was a one sided affair, Unadilla&#13;
having a walk-away.&#13;
H t l l&#13;
THEIR ANNUAL PICNIC.&#13;
1 lb Baking Powder, 4c&#13;
1 lb Corn Starch, 3c&#13;
1 lb Best Bice, 5c&#13;
Ideal Mocha and Java Coffee 25c.&#13;
1 Can Good Salmon, 8c&#13;
1 Can. Good Peas 8c&#13;
2 Yeast Cakes for 5c&#13;
W. W. BARNARD.&#13;
If s Surprising&#13;
/ * '&#13;
Prosperity*&#13;
All good citizens who have their own&#13;
best interests at heart will help along&#13;
their prosperity by buying groceries&#13;
from W. E. Murphy.&#13;
urday August 11 We offeis&#13;
50c Tea at 40c&#13;
40c Tea at 84c.&#13;
20c Coffee at 16c.&#13;
• 25o Coffee at 20c,&#13;
B. T. Salmon lie.&#13;
10c Bag Salt 7c.&#13;
5c Bag Salt So.&#13;
1 lb Sweet Bnrley, 40o&lt;&#13;
A l l S a l e * O a t h .&#13;
X*i*oc|mo**WAiited.&#13;
W&gt;B.MURFHY&gt;&#13;
35c Molasses, 25c.&#13;
1 lb. Baking Powder 5*c&#13;
1 Can of Tomatoes 8 c&#13;
4 lbs, of Oatmeal 10c. ?&#13;
50c Underwear 40c.&#13;
25c Underwear 20c.&#13;
Key Soap 2c.&#13;
Beat Cheese in Michigan 10c.&#13;
i lb Banner Tobacco, 12c&#13;
/&#13;
On Thursday, August 16, the members&#13;
of St. Mary's church at thiB place&#13;
wilt hold their annual picnic in Jackson's&#13;
grove, just sonth of this village.&#13;
Arrangements are being made for a&#13;
big time and no pains are being spared&#13;
to make it the biggest ever held.&#13;
Take one day off, attend this picnic&#13;
and have a good time.&#13;
Tbe following is the program for&#13;
the day:&#13;
Address of Welcome, Hon. Q. W. Teeple&#13;
Scenes of the Put and Shadows of the future,&#13;
' James Greene&#13;
Michigan, D. 8. Hayes, Detroit&#13;
Address, Frank Shields, Howell&#13;
Pleasures of Life, *&#13;
Hon. T. E. Barkworth, Jackson&#13;
The Ladies, R. D. Roche, Howell&#13;
Remarks, Rev. Chas. Simpson&#13;
Rev. L. P. Ooldrick, of Northfield. and&#13;
M. P. Bardum, of Detroit, will sing selected&#13;
songs. *&#13;
The Brighton and Iosco ball teams&#13;
will contest on the diamond; and as&#13;
neither of these teams have been defeated&#13;
by any local teams this season,&#13;
a good game is bound to be the result&#13;
The orchestra will discourse sweet&#13;
(tausic while the people are filling the&#13;
inner man at the bounteously spread&#13;
i.'&#13;
How cheaply we sell our proprietary&#13;
medicines. Any of&#13;
the standard remedies that&#13;
you may want you will find&#13;
can be bought cheaper than&#13;
of any other druggist.&#13;
Our Patent Medicines • S V&#13;
••&#13;
v . &gt;rare always fresh^ We never&#13;
allow stock to stand aroumf&#13;
for years. We seB the best,&#13;
and for the least money.&#13;
* '&#13;
/&#13;
F.. ft. SIGLER.&#13;
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MICHIGAN N » W « ITS MS.&#13;
ftl. H* hM a. ti&#13;
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on the teth.&#13;
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AcnottKttg taufce tUfttfteXcJ^^Ictin&#13;
! a * w * ^ J F $ l the ^ a v £ &gt; a i n Y t o&#13;
the eoB^ern^^ntl.ea djiri^g the-earlf&#13;
P*** * O w - &amp; e k \ delated • herVest"&#13;
issued at St. Jojeph qn.tfce 5th, &gt; officiaUin th* aduoattonal dt&#13;
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&amp; * •&#13;
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•V\.&#13;
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P.&#13;
work, tMf^rujfoflon of h a y i n g s o d&#13;
and causecL, ww»t tp . sprput in the&#13;
ahock. r i &gt; * t i ^ i y r ' fc^^er^ ' the&#13;
F t n t i m t f ^ ^ r «peAi;! week has. Men&#13;
very favorably to ail cron growth and&#13;
harvest work, ' I«t,the upper peninsula&#13;
the drjr swnafej»yiweather was very'&#13;
favorable to hay tag which has been&#13;
the principal work in that section; in&#13;
the southern counties the rains have&#13;
been very beneficial to corn, beans and&#13;
potatoes.&#13;
Wheat and rye harvest is generally&#13;
completed in the southern counties and&#13;
in progress in the central and northern&#13;
counties; in the upper peninsula spritfg&#13;
wheat,is ripening and looks promising.&#13;
Oat harvest is well advanced in the&#13;
southern counties and has quite generally&#13;
"begun in the central section; oats&#13;
are generally a fine heavy crop. The&#13;
warm rains have been especially beneficial&#13;
to UtecornHn the taut hern counties,&#13;
where, the otoop is in good condition;&#13;
warm nights are still lacking to&#13;
make, it ideal corn weather. Late potatoes&#13;
in all counties are reported as&#13;
very promising and there is generally&#13;
little'complaint of the ravages of the&#13;
potato bogs. Beans and sugar beets&#13;
•continue to make a good growth and&#13;
.are generally in fine condition. Pasturage&#13;
in the southern counties is much&#13;
improve*). "'Bnokwheat' .*» growing&#13;
finely and is iu blossom. Fruit reports&#13;
continue about the same except that&#13;
apples are of poor quality in many&#13;
•counties. Peaches are beginning to&#13;
ripen and in the principal peach counties&#13;
promise a good yield.&#13;
— i m - • •&#13;
3S9 O. A.JEL Poet* in MIctalffan.&#13;
CoL, J&gt;. V. R, Pond, assistant adjutant-&#13;
general of the Michigan G. A. R.,&#13;
has completed his semi-annual report&#13;
to national headquarters relative to&#13;
the condition of the organization in&#13;
Michigan on July 1, 1900. On the first&#13;
•day of the present year there were in&#13;
this state 382 posts with 15,280 members.&#13;
This shows again of 154 members&#13;
notwithstanding the loss of 175 by&#13;
death during the period named. pur-&#13;
South Haven's peach crop promises&#13;
to be a reoard breaker this yeaj.&#13;
There was * balance of #837,889.55 in&#13;
the Wayne county treasury Aug. 1.&#13;
A large cement factory will be&#13;
erected at Holly1 in the near future.&#13;
The farmers' picnic and day'of sports&#13;
will be held at Nashville on the 14th.&#13;
The village of Stearns was almost&#13;
wiped out by fire on thenightof theSd.&#13;
The sugar beet crop, in Bay county&#13;
will exceed that of 1898, which was a&#13;
big year.&#13;
Sixty-six marriage lisences were issued&#13;
to Chicago parties at S t . Joseph&#13;
on the 29th.&#13;
The new cheese factory to replace&#13;
the one burned in July is in operation&#13;
at Birch Run.&#13;
A destructive wind, hail, and rain&#13;
storm visited Benton Harbor an* vicinity&#13;
dn the 3d.&#13;
PfclUppla*c**a%UeUa to Assume, fawen&#13;
power to take and appropriate inaulnr&#13;
plant i* n ^ ^ ^ e s ^ t f t h ^ d i S a l and educatic&#13;
«al'k*atelnsand'&gt; make and&#13;
*A&amp;&amp; ki'niiiL- aUl^ws. ^NomdneyVltrffi Dexmj&#13;
wM^onrroo.e" '^fy*^ b *^ »^uth^d^W x^a ^6en^ fotei% thffeu ecgo mwm| jit&#13;
"dxihrise certain executive functl&#13;
• M f&#13;
IT J&#13;
58531!&#13;
JLKiNtH«SASSINATEO&#13;
-J. &gt;, . . • . .&#13;
VICTIM.&#13;
The/ tpr« not CeasMel&#13;
..&#13;
and officers of municipalities, whi&#13;
the eomnaiaston w4U establleh pending&#13;
eiectiona Gen. Mac Arthur win be the&#13;
executive head to enforce the l*w» et&#13;
the eommiasion and he will-conduct&#13;
tne government in accordanoe wtth the&#13;
same until the commission recommends&#13;
to President McKinley the appointment&#13;
of a civil governor.&#13;
MooasMaam KaJce Trouaia . •&#13;
As a result of a pitched battle with'&#13;
moonshiners near Johnsons SO miles&#13;
from Pauls Valley, I, T., one deputy&#13;
marshal was slightly wounded and another,&#13;
Schrempsher, of Pauls Valley, is&#13;
misefog. The band escaped under&#13;
covesr of darkness. Searempaher is be-&#13;
W MSf B&#13;
tjHlNA WAH N*WaV&#13;
HeUfs by Aa«ri«e»f&#13;
S^%nreal(k Way Orateet&#13;
domed. A reporter Who sought adi&#13;
aloK'Wai^Tttlc^me^. as ti Was ttlrfff t&#13;
thae» anarehiats wanted the w^rlcfto&#13;
knoer their sentiments. The prSacipal1&#13;
spealcer at the meeting was Eimesta&#13;
Cravedla, 91 years of age. In the cejorae&#13;
of an Uapasaioned address she saidr.&#13;
We are members of the group'o*anarchista-&#13;
tQ which Breati belonged. Be&#13;
has doua what we would have him do.&#13;
Ask meVdo we approve of the kUltngte&gt;f&#13;
King HHaaibert. I will answer, the&#13;
quMtioAJThefore you ask i t Of court*&#13;
we do. Ob was not our instruction te&gt;&#13;
Bread to-»kill; but he has done what he?&#13;
lieved! to have followed the'band and-j knaw to herrigbt. and we willsustaiDi&#13;
* t n * telegraphic condition^ tri ChinaV&#13;
™"*irc niiitlrt1**^''* • ^ t t t #&#13;
nUinterested a w e n d e a v w *&#13;
better^flaira J'iflr^fJ*! oabl^&#13;
hm ChfaV&amp;eW | r sen*&#13;
onrf wajf 'Uhln oaa&#13;
Che* Foo i t&#13;
ant* W^lay-i1 M it mnder ton&#13;
thotities and&#13;
r BhentfTof wkinTso much baa ieen p»b»&#13;
I t l W i ^ n Mjtrotaiaj^HitiM- jghich&#13;
gbes over; The only commuMlemtioa&#13;
a¼»ltteJl•adaa¼•a«a«½a«•4eH w^aeae^Wkit&#13;
I and'Che Foo i*by,pavaj iwniela.- It in&#13;
toWffingof KfhH HJmbeTrrwaJ^: ptesun^v hnfUnotyifrjm* \U0' to*&#13;
I teajbl- lypatatsers a i d # « e e i d i A ^&#13;
Peterson, ft JT, on the 30th,. at wh&#13;
ing the month of July three new posts,&#13;
located in Jacksonr Tuscola and An&#13;
trim counties, were organued. The&#13;
report makes a remarkable showing&#13;
for an-organixation made up w holly of&#13;
elderly men, and one that cannot increase&#13;
its membership by the injection&#13;
of young blood. The number of recruits&#13;
mustered in the state during the&#13;
last six months was 456, of which number&#13;
Charles T. Foster Post,. Lansing,&#13;
mustered IM. Fifty of the latter number&#13;
stood at the post room altar at one&#13;
time to take the obligation. The&#13;
amount reported expended for relief&#13;
during the six months under report&#13;
was $735^0. "The report shows the&#13;
financial-condition of&#13;
tortfe very godd. "T The&#13;
that Michigan will.Uo weil represented&#13;
at the national encampment iu Chicago&#13;
this month.&#13;
Stole « • • • • S o a . i f l . e * of HrrCUtm.&#13;
A warrant for $305.341.34 was drawn&#13;
by the treasury department at Washington&#13;
on the 30tU in favor of the&#13;
state of Michigan. This money is to&#13;
reimburse the state for filing out the&#13;
National Guard during tbo Spanish-&#13;
American/ war. The entire claim&#13;
amounted to $447,000. The remaining&#13;
$141,750 is held up for further investigation.&#13;
Michigan's claims came to the&#13;
auditor of the war department in several&#13;
installments. TJiey included expenses&#13;
for typewriter operators; payment&#13;
for second-hand clothing which&#13;
belonged to the National Guard; pay&#13;
for officers and men. and subsistence&#13;
for the first 10 days in camp.&#13;
• —&#13;
Game W««t*»'* ttepnrt for July.&#13;
In his report for July. Game and&#13;
Fish Warden Worw bays that Ins department&#13;
investigated 337 complaints&#13;
and instituted prosecutions in (&gt;J cases.&#13;
The result wa* M convictions, two di.v&#13;
missals and no aci|uittaIs, seven cases&#13;
still pending. The total amount of&#13;
fines imposed MILS $vr&gt;3.»». The value&#13;
of the seizures tva» $1,333.-51. Reports&#13;
irom ever county iu the **tatc show an&#13;
increase in quaU and paftridge orcr&#13;
last year, and a marked increase in&#13;
brook trout and other game tiah.&#13;
in the vieiaity-of Lowell are confident&#13;
of finding it before long.&#13;
The proposition to bond the city of&#13;
PontW for $50,000 for water works&#13;
improvements was defeated.&#13;
The Michigan Bell and the New&#13;
State telephone exchanges at Ann&#13;
Arbor have been consolidated.&#13;
Gratiot county farmers are to establish&#13;
a to-operative cheese factory 3¾&#13;
miles southwest of St. Louis.&#13;
The Bepnbliean state central com-&#13;
. mi ttee are. planning to have Gov, .Roosevelt&#13;
visit Michigan in September.&#13;
The thermometer registered 98 in&#13;
the shade at Belleville on the 5th—the&#13;
hottest day of the season to date.&#13;
LapeerV assessment ] rolls, prepared"&#13;
by the city supervisor*,' nas been approved&#13;
by the state-ttttt censfaiasion.&#13;
A stock company has been organised&#13;
at ShepardsvUte :i&lt;k\ the - pdrpose&#13;
of erecting and operating a cheese factory.&#13;
The Church of Christ spekty-atCopentish&#13;
has purchased an old-s4o»4 building&#13;
and is having ft remodeled for Use&#13;
as a house of Worship.&#13;
The contract for the wprk has been&#13;
let, and before the snow flies it is expected&#13;
Ontonagon county will have onebeen*&#13;
killed. The outlaws are a part of&#13;
a bancb that was raideJ near Centre a&#13;
few day* ago, when, five of its members,&#13;
together with a stall and a quantity&#13;
of li&lt;$aor were taken. The leader,*&#13;
Experts who are prospecting for ofT * named Tieev a veteran' Arkansas, disof&#13;
the finest poorhousea in the state.&#13;
The state tax commission have decided&#13;
to make 13 complaints against&#13;
parties at Midland, who, it is alleged,&#13;
have been favored by the supervisors.&#13;
Three blocks rn the business portion&#13;
of Plain well were burned QO the 3d.&#13;
The Otsego fire department was called&#13;
out. How the lire originated is unknown.&#13;
There is considerable talk in Shiawassee&#13;
county of organizing another&#13;
fair society and resuming the practice,&#13;
dropped some years ago, of holding annual&#13;
fairs.&#13;
The Albion Mirror says that 8 to 10&#13;
the department bushels per acre is a good yield for&#13;
indications are \ wheat in that vicinity this season. And&#13;
thid is the best wheat raising county&#13;
in the state.&#13;
The schooner Fontana and San Diego&#13;
met in collision in the St. Clair river,&#13;
just above Fort GratioV-en the—night&#13;
of the :&lt;d. The former sunk quickly,&#13;
taking one man with her.&#13;
lThis is proving a banner year for all&#13;
crops in Shiawassee county excepting&#13;
wheat. The.yield per acre of hay,.oats,&#13;
barley, beans, and c|overseed is the&#13;
Looked Like 3« C«nt».&#13;
J as. W. Bradley, while at work on a&#13;
threshing machine near Adrian the&#13;
other day, attempted to hand his vest&#13;
over to a fellow workman.—lie let go&#13;
just in time to let the vest full into the&#13;
feed of tfie inachinc. Forty dollars in&#13;
bills and a gold watch nent with the&#13;
vest. When it came out at the other&#13;
end it all looked like 30 cents The&#13;
watch conld be passed for a-^pTtjjjTged&#13;
gold dollar, and the bills would made&#13;
a handsome rag doll.&#13;
Yale suffered a tire loss of $10,000 on&#13;
the 3d.&#13;
largesl known for years past.&#13;
Rochester citizens will have an opportunity&#13;
on August 14 to say whether&#13;
they think enough of good roads to&#13;
bond the village for $6,000 to be used&#13;
in improving the local highways.&#13;
One of the largest crops of flax that&#13;
has ever been grown in Sanilac county&#13;
is now being harvested around Croswell.&#13;
The rlax mill has started up for&#13;
the seasou, which gives plenty of&#13;
work.&#13;
Threshing in the vicinity of Hamilton&#13;
has begun and the yield of wheat&#13;
is light. The prospects for a good&#13;
peach crap are excellent and prices&#13;
will be moderate in the fruit belt west&#13;
tiller, andi other members of the band,&#13;
escaped.&#13;
ffobbwt • Whole Train.&#13;
On the nigh* of the 4«h two men&#13;
held up a Union&gt; Pacific passenger train&#13;
just west of Higgo, Col., and- robbed&#13;
the passengers-iu.the Pullman sleepers&#13;
of their money ami valuables* An old&#13;
man named Fay, a* resident ti California,&#13;
who had been* visiting in Denver&#13;
and was on his way to St. JLomis, refused&#13;
to surrender- his valuable* and&#13;
fired a shot at one of the robber* but&#13;
missed. Therenponi fhe robbers fired,&#13;
one shot entering Say's month and&#13;
coming out at the back of bia bend,&#13;
killing him almost instantly. The* robbers&#13;
Stopped the train and jumped off&#13;
totartinitontX; foneea have te*e#*#hi«&#13;
. . i k a ^ o^een.Tie^ V ^ « d&#13;
ak#.;, AfrTaku the coupons aarno*&#13;
a»&gt;isf*ctptyv $hn .intecna^onal fleet,&#13;
including ft* Aaaerican0 warshipfV U«&#13;
fa*otf-ahpf^and nie^agesmuat be^ient'.&#13;
crabtotheo&gt;by i^|j,.^yhe^Mon]^wr»&#13;
and escaped.&#13;
NEWSY BREVITIES,&#13;
Four cases and two &gt; deaths from* bubonic&#13;
plague is reported i n London,&#13;
Eng.&#13;
It is estimated that the Qber war&#13;
will cost Great Britain about $400,-&#13;
000,000.&#13;
As a result of eating toadstoefs-three&#13;
people, at Chicago are dead and four&#13;
others very sick.&#13;
According to the 1900 census- Mllwanftee&#13;
has a population of 285,315y again&#13;
Of 80,847 in 10 years.&#13;
Two deaths and several' prostrations&#13;
were reported in Chicago.' oat the 5th.&#13;
It was 94 in the shade.&#13;
According to the 1900" Geneva Louisville,&#13;
Ky., has a population of 3ft4r7*l,&#13;
an increase of 41,602 in. 10 years.&#13;
As a result of an encounter between&#13;
Bahama Negroes and. Mexioan police&#13;
at Tampico, Me-x., on?) Jul^r 31, four&#13;
Negroes and two soldiers • were killed&#13;
and 21 Negroes are suffering from injuries.&#13;
. ,&#13;
An earthquake -shook the /Katie mining&#13;
district, Utah, on the- 1st. The&#13;
shaft of the Mammoth mine1 was so&#13;
thrown out of shape: that ia was impossible&#13;
to get. the* cage, below the&#13;
1,600 foot level.&#13;
Gen. Grodekow telegraphs from&#13;
Khabarovsk Aug. l;.that l^Hotchkiss&#13;
and 10 other, guns- were captured at&#13;
Hunghun by the Russians, who, storming&#13;
the fortress Monday, July 30, drove&#13;
4,000 Chinese before them.&#13;
Three persons were-seriously injured&#13;
and six others- badly out and bruised&#13;
by the falling of five- heavy pieces of&#13;
structural iron from: the tap of a 12-&#13;
of there.&#13;
Rural free delivery service has been&#13;
established at Ludington, to take effect&#13;
the listh inst. The length of the&#13;
route is 40¾ miles; are covered, 57&#13;
square miles; population served, 1,338;&#13;
Dumber of houses on route. 293.&#13;
Fruit growers around Whitehall are&#13;
alarmed over the sudden appearance of&#13;
"yellows" among the peaches. • In the&#13;
region north of there whole orchards&#13;
have been stricken with it, and it is&#13;
estimated by some that not less than&#13;
10 per* cent of the trees thereabouts&#13;
-will have to be destroyed.&#13;
A tlintlock rifle was recently fished&#13;
from the bottom of St. Clair river near&#13;
Alyonac. There is in the breech of the&#13;
gun a little trap door which, when&#13;
opened, contained half a dozen bullets.&#13;
It is believed that it has been in the&#13;
water for over a cerftury and is an extremely&#13;
valuable and interesting relic&#13;
of bvflrooc days.&#13;
story building in^ course- of construction&#13;
at Newv York, om the 2d.&#13;
The aggregate Michigan earnings of&#13;
railroad companies for June were $3,-&#13;
372,962.52, an increase- of $216,352.67&#13;
over June, 1899. Thar total Michigan&#13;
earnings.for the first six. months of this&#13;
year were $18&gt;77X)4726.96v the increase&#13;
over the same period e£ 1899 being $2,-&#13;
278,507.50; or 13.75.net cent&#13;
The Odd Fellows hail at Ludington&#13;
is completed. The ftrst floor has been&#13;
converted into an. ideal ball room and&#13;
dining hall with a kitchen at the &gt;rear&#13;
and a ticket office- and a dressing room&#13;
in front. The second story will be&#13;
used for lodge rooms, exclusively in the&#13;
future. With the-additions just made,&#13;
the Odd Fellows have one of the finest&#13;
halls in the state..&#13;
Reports to the state board of health&#13;
show that rheumatism, diarrhea, nenralgia.&#13;
tonsillitis and bronchitis, in tne&#13;
order named* eanaed the most sickness&#13;
tn Michigan daring the past week.&#13;
Smallpox was reported at 1 place;, eerebro-&#13;
spinal meninjritia at 6; diphtheria&#13;
at 20; whoofing cough at 23; scarlet&#13;
fever at 52; measles at 63; typhoid fever&#13;
at 64. and consumption at 175.&#13;
The citiasns of Tekonsha are noted&#13;
for their generosity. No case of want*&#13;
sorrow or destitution is overlooked*.&#13;
The churches are not always the first.&#13;
to bestow oharit*. The roughest geo?.&#13;
pie in town are aa liberal as those mho,&#13;
make higher profession* If a ejtijzea&#13;
suffers from a fire, lone* a hora&gt; or a&#13;
cow the citizens straightway make on&#13;
a purse for him if. fc&amp; ia '». poxw ctcQttuastaacea.&#13;
him and gin* him our sympathy* • Wass&#13;
Humbert eve* kind to us? No. Waa&#13;
he good toMbe poor? No. He waa a&#13;
monarch, and all monarchs, according,&#13;
to our vows, must die.&#13;
"Let Nicholas of Russia tremble and&#13;
let the n e w king of Italy prepare for'&#13;
death.; TheyAareboth inhuman. They&#13;
are inhuman* because they "are monarchs.&#13;
They **oold not consent to take&#13;
the places on" the thrones were they&#13;
not Inhuman. It is a republic that we&#13;
want, and it is*, republic that the anarchists&#13;
in evevr country will have.''&#13;
'They have- run us oat of Italy,&#13;
where to have stayed would have been&#13;
to have starved.. W.e have come here.&#13;
Things are rio«» better here. We are&#13;
treated like dog* in the mills. We are&#13;
not considered human by Americana&#13;
We do not starrav but there is a worse&#13;
death than starvation. It ia neglect.&#13;
Who is responsible for this government?&#13;
We will tay to better it by fair&#13;
means, and if w« can't succeed, then&#13;
we will resort to*£her methods."&#13;
i Oar Foretga Coma 0F0w*»&#13;
. The report of tbo foreign commerce&#13;
of the United States- during, the year&#13;
ended June 30,190¾ shows the total imports&#13;
of merchandise- during the year&#13;
were $849,714,070^ the total exports,&#13;
$1,393,186,371. The total commerce&#13;
of the year surpasses by $319,729,250&#13;
that of any preceding year, and for the&#13;
first time in our history exceeds two&#13;
billion dollars. The exports exceed&#13;
those of any precedfaag year* and have&#13;
been more widely distributed throughout&#13;
the world than ever before. Manufacturers'&#13;
materials, were more freely&#13;
imported than ever before, and formed&#13;
a larger share at the total imports&#13;
than on any former occasion. Manufactured&#13;
articles were-more freely exported&#13;
than ever before and-formed n larger&#13;
share of the total exports than en any&#13;
former occasion.&#13;
trying to aveangw tor a cable&#13;
ShanghaiU*\Ch» Toft* Airendy a*&gt;&#13;
rangnnients hawe-been made to lay1 '*;&#13;
eabievacross, front Takn to 'Chee Fna&gt;&#13;
and tnw United States Will pay ^&#13;
share,, amouotaag to ¥lt6,00uV Soum&#13;
difficulty^is entcmntnTed in hrranginaj?&#13;
the details for the international cable?&#13;
from &lt;3*e -Foo (iieftoa'nghal, as all ther&#13;
Lgovernnienlts httee t«t be consulted andi&gt;&#13;
^mmhnication'^with. the cable offices^&#13;
land telegraphic* aotnpanies must be?&#13;
provided for. It iiaaheintention of the*\&#13;
IT. A ' g o tern ment to secure, at the-'&#13;
earliest praotioabie moment, nninter*;;&#13;
rapted telegrnphia-eommnnioation with^&#13;
the forces atiTie&amp;'&amp;aini '•..'&gt;.*&#13;
The secretary o# state at Washington&#13;
on the- 3ftt*'W«eived a dispatch-.&#13;
frem Mr. Fiwier«: Jttnecienn eonsul at&#13;
Chafu, datedtuxm* Jtdy 2¾ Mr. Fowler&#13;
nays: VA letter from the Herman&#13;
legation, ^dated thir SSaKr received at&#13;
Tien Tain. 0erma»lJ»a»ie 10 dead and"&#13;
12 wounded. Chtonreenaed their at- .-&#13;
taclavn the lith.. liaraa von Ketteler's&#13;
bodjieaid to betsafa-. The, Austrian,&#13;
Italian,. Dutch»'•.iniv. *pnnish legations&#13;
destroyed anaW thV JTranch partially.&#13;
A letter from the, JPananeae legation,&#13;
dated the 22^, arri^ae&gt;at T^nnTsin on^&#13;
the 23th. Te&amp;'battarifcMua of .v.Chinese''&#13;
shelled. Ihe Jagntionn consecutively&#13;
Of Interest U» Tobacro Wm.&#13;
The commissioner of internal revenue'&#13;
has issued a circular prohibiting the&#13;
use by manufacturers of cigars, cigarettes,&#13;
or tobacco when put up in statutory&#13;
packages, o£ labels, containing,&#13;
"any promise or oa$M* of, or any order&#13;
or certificate for, any gift, prise, premium,&#13;
payment or vf/ward.'* This regulation&#13;
is to tak« effect September 1,&#13;
1900. The view of the law taken by&#13;
Commissioner Wilson was sustained by&#13;
the United States^ns,tarict court of West&#13;
Virginia in a recent decision. The&#13;
order of Commissioner Wilson will not&#13;
prevent. manufacturers from sending&#13;
prize coupons to retailers for dissemination&#13;
among the purchasers of their&#13;
goods, but is designed' to prohibit the&#13;
use of the statutory package as a distributor&#13;
of gift enterprises.&#13;
Four Killed M 4 One WODD^ML&#13;
Four men killed and one fatally,&#13;
wounded is the* outcome of a shooting&#13;
affray between Wm. Dooley and his&#13;
four sons on i one side, and the four&#13;
Harris brothers on the other, as the&#13;
result of a fewi at Dee Run. one of the&#13;
raining towns of St. Francois county,&#13;
Mo. A few. Jays ago the Harris boy*&#13;
sent word tpj the Dooleys that theyp&#13;
would be attai picnic at Dee Run an»Vi&#13;
intended to* run the Dooleys off -thav&#13;
grounds. . Just how the shooting bar-.&#13;
gan is not okear, but once begun it was.&#13;
deadly. Ail the Harris boys excepa&#13;
one, Bill, ware shot. One was kiUed&#13;
instantly.-. Three of the Dooley **JJS&#13;
were unhurt&#13;
Hntfc*n4 and Wir*&gt;ro«o&lt;l Desdfc&#13;
.Rober* W. Sinclair,, aged 51 years* a&#13;
fruit commission merchant in FfctUadel&#13;
phia, and his wife.. Annie B., agjad 33&#13;
years,, were both found dead, o » the&#13;
night af the 4th w^tth a bullo^hoee in&#13;
each of their head*, in the gajrden in&#13;
fronhof their sucapmr home an Qreen&#13;
Tree&gt;atation, on tb&amp; Pennsylvania railroads&#13;
near that eity. Whotbnr it waa f&#13;
a case Of mutual: snicide or annrder «ndl|&#13;
aeMde will pt-&gt;bably nev^abnknowok/&#13;
fronikthe 20th ofJwne and stooped on.&#13;
,the liJth of Juhjr&gt;- but. aaay renew. The&#13;
enemgrvare decjrcasinjjp The German,&#13;
Russian; Amerionov British and half&#13;
the Japanese aaxfcFrenehj legations still&#13;
defended; Japanese- say they have -&#13;
food fa» six days* but little ammunition.&#13;
The emperor and empress are&#13;
reported.at Pekini."'&#13;
A rather startling- proposition was -&#13;
advanced July ^1: whien, if adopted,&#13;
might: ppt at onoe to the test the&#13;
Chinesetprofessiom that the "Boxers"&#13;
and not^the Chinese- government, are&#13;
responsible for what baa happened in&#13;
Pckin* This ~was&gt;tO/the effect that the&#13;
Chineeet- governcaent should be in-•&#13;
formadtfthat:' tfca- internatiqnal force&#13;
was ptepafed'tiotnfie- shat government*'&#13;
at itaword and':«-jnen forces with it&#13;
in crnahing one the insurrection. The&#13;
kernafeof just jsuak a proposition is to"&#13;
be foand injtho* £aat condition laid"&#13;
down-by the&gt;Presichtat in his reply to&#13;
the appeal of ths-omrperor. Kwang Hsu, '&#13;
and there may be- a development in *&#13;
that directiouTfipntaxsly.&#13;
The»U. S. ambassador, Jos. H. Choate, -.&#13;
saw Cord Salisbury on July 31, and as- *&#13;
certained his sviawes, with regard to the -&#13;
changes in the Chinese situation ,&#13;
brought about **y the direct despatches ,&#13;
froraPekin. liand Salisbury assured ;&#13;
Mr.-Choate thai(ireat Britaia had nq..,&#13;
intention of d r y i n g the advance on n&#13;
Pekin, nor, so-jter as he knew, had any.i&#13;
othec powers Hs«l Salisburjr entirely p&#13;
ac:jaiesced ia. Secretary Hay's desire»&#13;
that the advano* be undertaken as&gt;&#13;
speedily as possible. He had no inteu*-&#13;
tion of bargaining- with China in anyway,&#13;
shape ogs-forai, until tin minister**&#13;
ware safe -Joaiw their o\ m militajy&#13;
eacort.&#13;
A heai trending letter 1 as been ^^e*&#13;
ceived fron^i the Japanese legation^at&#13;
Pekin datedi inly 22, stalling that. £hft;*&#13;
casualties-, number .60 per cent, thai.&#13;
^nly 25 cantridges per nan are ^eit*'&#13;
twith rations, sufficient /fcr five Jansy'&#13;
iand that :U is feared th * legatio^wifci&#13;
succumbvAvitbin a week..&#13;
There-woe. a special cabinet ru**t?iag&#13;
at Washing-ton on the id which Jaated&#13;
about two and a half itours. The dascnssioniwas-&#13;
confined almost exci&amp;sinely&#13;
to thft- Ghanese situation, and. no&#13;
change- itt . the present polijj^of the&#13;
govexnmnnt resulted 3rom the meeting.&#13;
Thn&gt; gunboat Prioneton ba». sailed&#13;
froimA\nn»jr.for Sha^hai. Tjais. move&#13;
may-ha** been main owing to&gt; the disturbed&#13;
condition o&amp; affairs t^ajrShang*&#13;
hai»&#13;
TiltetoUl strength of ton- allies at&#13;
Xfok lain on the* 1st was IT.ttX) men.&#13;
and reinforcnaejaU have hnan arriving;&#13;
anilj-ever sine*&#13;
HT. S. troops, boarded m* transport&#13;
at Sam Francis*** bound ft*&#13;
otvth*&gt;4at.&#13;
The allied forces started a forward&#13;
• '.&#13;
Roger Wolcott. to who®. t)b* positian&#13;
at U.'S.* ambassador to ttaiy was reeently&#13;
offered^ has acotpied, and hia&#13;
eommisslon has been lAsned, He. sue*.&#13;
ceeds Draner, rrsignedl&#13;
When the Spanisjk, oruaser Infnntav&#13;
Isabel ncas about tfAleavofpr Ajwachon,&#13;
one of her boiler*, gate- way andthei,&#13;
eaeanlng steam .%p*ld*d ^1 fAiJowk killing&#13;
1 and serfcKa)y in^rU*? a others.&#13;
Tb« cru.l»er p&lt;»?.)j»aevl b irdcn&amp;xtwe,&#13;
movement «m Pekin o» th* 1st&#13;
The U. &amp; gunboat Bancroft has. been&#13;
ordered tn China.&#13;
Wince Albert Emeat Albe"U duke of&#13;
Saxe-Coburg, died at 10 o'cio*&amp; on the&#13;
eyenieg of the 30th at Ko&amp;eaau castle&#13;
from paralysis erf the heaiU,&#13;
Ciov. Beckham, of Kentnc^y. has de*"&#13;
cided to call a special wa&amp;ion of &amp;e&#13;
leglslaturc acnnetlme Jwtv/«on Aug. 15&#13;
and Sept, 1 ".o amend. \ l x Go.?bcl ^ o &gt;&#13;
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- Auo«l^ r»o« ia en^ooseirre "ttfrt nl&#13;
-jpadon; at* this r o ^ ww, though-&#13;
* ioor, tt*^«0l|*iy xtttot i m 4 ^ - • « * !&#13;
n&#13;
*aa even adorned V)#,% few toW£i%, jw4fii»jy.&#13;
*ad MO* $&amp;ftedr Brtnl* hun* \ipon .&#13;
{he Falla.1 Xc %ooia^ afid a'l&amp;ull werf ]&#13;
fitting *ttg«tner'.fc the; one &gt; i * * cbftix&#13;
that the nraoia tioesessedV {$* irdman,&#13;
Mght, *titf'young, . a i l a^ijtoia|ly,&#13;
•e»tft«tol; ;t»e c h K T W / &lt;* • j S j i .&#13;
irown, xjurly-naired chimin, with;th$js&#13;
lyea, whq; bay© fj^ung ^ &gt; # «***»%i(&#13;
it dlffiren^iatlSS^ j f t , 'wolnaa^Ia' JttlQteiU.t task before Mul, lie fcad&#13;
i»o« we have seen bejtor*. , Now. UM? ' - - -&#13;
anly alteiajWpu^iiiJt, « d «ne U.-.m.&#13;
Uvat ^,-did nQ| agse^jptv feaauty, waa ^&#13;
fr«at sado^aa, Axc»pt wi»o «steu«90ka&#13;
to tie chili, and than bar'wtnok» face&#13;
sbanged. •i,;.-.•• '-.»i •••.' »•&#13;
*'It is such a great city," site ^ a s&#13;
laying—"such e, great ofty. I did not&#13;
kaow it would i * BO dimcult *o nod&#13;
iny one. . I t&amp;ought taat whan onde ;\^got to England it wbuid all-be wetl,&#13;
•»ad now X bare been in England more&#13;
than a year, and-1 have z&amp;ot aean him.&#13;
And yet I am ao.longlnvxtossee h i m ]&#13;
'^nc« againyand to show him oar boy.&#13;
Dh, how happy he will be£ Hnw happy&#13;
"we both sball bei These -w«ary years&#13;
'will be aa. naught, and a stiall forget&#13;
everything once I feel his arms round&#13;
mexagain!*'" *•&gt;•••&#13;
There was a step oa ©re "Stairs. Veranica&#13;
listened. She baid ^grown more&#13;
' womanly ra these last f ourj» years, and&#13;
ihe looked more thoughtful: Sorrow,&#13;
&gt; ihe great master, hid .taught her' well that he fancied they must be&#13;
many things. NOW'sne'dfd_not look ^ 2 ^ - Alan would not give up Joyce&#13;
5 n n ' a p p &gt; \ ^ ^ r " e l g e F a ^ ^ x l o u i ; W K , ^ b e felt sure of that; then he must&#13;
'" be made to pay for his silence. He&#13;
must feel that he, Hutchinson, could&#13;
hold the sword over his head, that he&#13;
could let it fall at any moment. He&#13;
had rubbed his hands at the publicity&#13;
of the marriage. .Alan Mackenzie&#13;
would never give atp his beautiful&#13;
wife. Veronica would have to be paid&#13;
off. Joyce would not be Alan's lawful&#13;
wife. It was going to be a life&#13;
of misery for the young man, and at&#13;
the end there would be Hutchinson's&#13;
dagger for his heart. But the whole&#13;
thing heeded careful handling, and&#13;
Hutchinson felt that he was the man&#13;
undoubtedly who oould handle it carefully;-&#13;
Even if at the end Veronica&#13;
refused, as watt pus^ibTe,' tb'cbme forward&#13;
and make Alan unhappy, nevertheless&#13;
he would have to pay for his&#13;
silence.&#13;
"He live* i h - a nice little house in&#13;
the country," Hutchinson said at&#13;
last. "I will give you the address.&#13;
You had better gf&gt; by train. Have&#13;
you any money?"&#13;
"Yea" said Veronica. "I was paid&#13;
for my lessons yesterday. I must&#13;
write to her when I have seen,, Alan&#13;
again. He may not .wish me to go on&#13;
giving lessons,*' But all the time she&#13;
spoke' her face was transfigured. The&#13;
feeling that aoon i s r weary time of&#13;
probation would be ^over was strong&#13;
within her. She looked-jcrlth pride at&#13;
tbe beautiful boy, -whom.she still held&#13;
in her arms. "Will not his father; be&#13;
proud of him?" sfae asked, longing&#13;
for a little human sympathy. "He is&#13;
handsome, is he not?"&#13;
"Oh, yes, he's a good-looking child,&#13;
although I am no .judge," said the&#13;
man. In his *head he was revolving&#13;
plans. "I would not go straight up to&#13;
the house if I were you," he said.&#13;
"The servants might not understand&#13;
it:&#13;
evidently recognized thV^footsteps on&#13;
the stairs, a'fia'.Jt'tiid mot bring her&#13;
iny pleasure. She was shrinking together&#13;
In tbe chair *'ith the cbild&#13;
when the door opened :to her call&#13;
"Come in J" and Hutchinson entered.&#13;
"Good afternoon," she said, but&#13;
ihowed no pleasure ai -the sight of&#13;
lim. "How did you find me out?"&#13;
"How? It is always easy to find&#13;
iny one when you have a mind to,&#13;
and when you have any atense in&#13;
four head!" He scanned Veronica's&#13;
lace as he spoke, aad .-noticed that&#13;
she flushed slightly, "71. saw you go&#13;
Into a music shop, and J.followed you&#13;
borne the other day, and. I made a&#13;
aote of tbe road and tbe number,-and&#13;
iere I am."&#13;
"What do $ou, wap* ipf.fmeT'atfce**&#13;
Veronica, rather hopelessly*&#13;
"My dear girl''—Hafcchinson spoke&#13;
airily—"my dear girL, "why could you&#13;
aot have confided in your father? It&#13;
. would have, saved you -a ^grcat deal&#13;
.if you had." ,&#13;
"You are not my fatber,- said Veronica&#13;
quietly, "you told me so.yourlelf."&#13;
- M j&#13;
"Why quarrel about a n expression?&#13;
i am the man who taought you up.&#13;
Veronica, why did you .not toll me&#13;
.ifaat you had married Alan Mackenzie&#13;
and that this is his child*" •&#13;
Veronica gave a great start. She&#13;
tnew why she • had not mentioned&#13;
Alan's name to him. She knew of&#13;
the hartred that Rutefcinson ;bad for&#13;
\uixn, and even now she did not know&#13;
what to say* - "How do ,&gt;y»u Jknow?"&#13;
:ihe asked at last. "Whs Aold you?"&#13;
"He told me h i m s e l f said the&#13;
man, watching the agitation that&#13;
'.Veronica betrayed. "I .should .ndt&#13;
(have known unless."&#13;
"When did he tell yon?" ahe asked,&#13;
Ther lips almost refusing iloTuTter a&#13;
-K&gt;und.&#13;
VAbout two months ago.*'&#13;
Veronica sprang up. "He is .ixere,&#13;
,in London. Two months Ago J Oh,&#13;
take me to,him! Let me ese him.at&#13;
ancef Why did you not tell j»e J&gt;efore?"&#13;
"Kow cot*! I?" tire man £&amp;id dryly.&#13;
"I tell jwu you should nawe had&#13;
more confidence. I did not know you&#13;
**«re .his wife:"&#13;
"How was tee lookingT\ cried Werfonica.&#13;
"Oh, W darliag, my darling!&#13;
Did h* speak or me two months &gt;ago?&#13;
d thinV we sha}1 die of happiness&#13;
•vben w^ come together agatai"&#13;
aoujl$WQ baing rant aaunder.,, H V « r ^&#13;
OalcaJ O Ood! O Ood!" . I -, Hir^teU. backward* against aba itlla^&#13;
cohering his face with bis bands, aa if&#13;
to abut out tha aigbt of a gnaai horror.&#13;
about to come to pass. ^sii'.m ****? ^«*iita£r*aKa3^r»^s s&amp;&gt; HutchUupu looked V,&#13;
but wWab she, knew : a t ,&lt;OApa,;&#13;
\flfUM taiUj^i, pyar ,&amp;*#)*. &gt;&#13;
n atopa beipye bejf, ^ A u*, l{1^-&#13;
Bbe tottered to bar ^eet, hol«a|T out&#13;
me^ J i i l £ H$ looked &gt;*;haf *m*:&#13;
m#^mm**(ff 111 111 f i i i i » Hi " 11 iTT( a&#13;
^ ' « V ? a 'S^Swlmit&gt;ho£lXJi*** "tn^la^^tuoerculoais fil&gt;itrtetly&#13;
Sha stood trembl/ng before btan, puahwantad&#13;
to obliterate heraeJf and to ob-&#13;
.. twide tbe child; but be stood there,&#13;
' fM4Yqu; «eem fond of him," be a»M. j ^ k i n g and shivering moanlnf; at&#13;
.She gave a glance of contempt at the&#13;
•way he expressed himself. Sba caugnt •&#13;
itke child up in her arms.&#13;
«^My darlinf," she said, "ay little&#13;
Alan, you are going to your lather&#13;
aVteat!" ' .,.'&#13;
Hutchinson was thinking. He nad&#13;
alfowe4 Alan to get xaarrle*,i-an* bad&#13;
} given him some weeks of bappiness&#13;
before he began his work of destruction;&#13;
now he had to make sure of&#13;
Veronica. He would have infinitely&#13;
£a*e preferred a woman *cdu&gt; would&#13;
have blustered, and have sworn that&#13;
she, would have her rigbta; nut Veronica&#13;
was the sort o/ woman who&#13;
• Would shrink away and be lost to the&#13;
world rather than hurt the man she&#13;
loved. He had shrewdness •enough to&#13;
see that the girl would *sy'that h was&#13;
the only way to act, and that she&#13;
would sacrifice both ihe .dhfid and&#13;
[ herself; therefore it wae imperatively&#13;
necessary that she should know nothing&#13;
of Alan's marriage, of hie love for&#13;
another woman. That -must come to&#13;
ber as a surprise. She must be led to&#13;
expect that Alan was longing for her,&#13;
and would be overjoyed to see. her&#13;
again; then would .he/his, Hutchinson's,&#13;
Opportunity. Me knew men so&#13;
all&#13;
Your wait for him at the lodge&#13;
gates."&#13;
"Very well," said 'Veronica, docile&#13;
as always. She could not guess that&#13;
Hutchinson's one fear was lest she&#13;
should meet Joyce and jgn spoil his&#13;
whole plan. He had looked Into&#13;
Joyce's face as she was walking with&#13;
Alan one day, and be CDUUJ see innocence&#13;
and purity written upon it.&#13;
Joyce was not the woman ftp consent&#13;
#o the "paying off of the Hret wife.&#13;
And so it was decided that'Veronica&#13;
kafrould go down to Sumxnerbaye and&#13;
Vaveait the coming of Alan. It was a&#13;
lovely day in early July:, when she&#13;
went down, with that precious posses-&#13;
"No dpubti" said Hutchinson. ~J*jes | sioo, ber boy, hugged dose ;to her&#13;
toe know.of tbe boy?" fbeart. The jBun was shining an* the&#13;
"No. Hhe boy was- toom five ngpnthg&#13;
after the thipwreeje. I have told yon&#13;
I was so.iiS after tbe wreck that I lost&#13;
cry reason for a time."&#13;
sky iblue, tbe corn was waving in the&#13;
fteWs; and it was under tbe shade of&#13;
a lent? tree tkat Veronica awaited the&#13;
oomtnjg; of the man she loved. Hutch-&#13;
*Tity," a«fd Hutcbinson, reneethne-J4aeen Ikad diaeovered what train be&#13;
ry, °tbat wbenvyon told me BO nock&#13;
you (0id not toll me ail."&#13;
Veronica did not answer. Sometbing&#13;
In tbe man's .tone awakened ber sua*&#13;
piciona. "Are you sure," she asked,&#13;
after a little silence, "that you do1&#13;
not want to hurt him?"&#13;
"Wny should I?" asked Hutchinson.&#13;
"No, what f want to do is to&#13;
make money out of him. Hs will not&#13;
be able to deay me anything when .1&#13;
restore bin bis wife and child."&#13;
That sounded possible. Veronica&#13;
smiled, and let herself be happy in&#13;
A t thought sbat wbat\ f be had so&#13;
nwually .came by. It was so important&#13;
dAat -Veronica sbould see him alonei&#13;
JUH! sat there sjnietly straining bar&#13;
bar ears for tbe gsound of bis footsteps.&#13;
H took bar tack to ber gfrlisb&#13;
days at La Pas, wben she bad often&#13;
watched for him as ahe was doing&#13;
now. Truly there bad been no yean&#13;
of separation from hisa, and no boy&#13;
beside bar, As the time drew nearer&#13;
tbe strain' grew almost too intense.&#13;
She pat ber band ovir ber heart so as&#13;
to stop its wild beating, sad tbe rich&#13;
color that generally flooded bar cheeks&#13;
left ber, and she was pale. And sudintervals,&#13;
"Veronica! 0 God! 0 Ood!"&#13;
It waa she who spoke first; be could&#13;
not find words, or anything out the&#13;
.piteous moan, and ber voice was&#13;
touching in exquisite joy. "Tee, Alan,&#13;
it i s l , saved from the sea, my dearest&#13;
And hero' here is pur child. Are yotii&#13;
not pleased? Tell me you are pleased,&#13;
for I have longed so to see your dear&#13;
face again! I have longed So to bear&#13;
your voice Z cannot believe It has&#13;
come at last!"&#13;
She came quite near to hbn, advancing&#13;
as she spoke. It seemed as&#13;
if she were longing for ^im to uncover&#13;
his face, to take ber into his&#13;
arms.&#13;
"Alan," she cried, "oh, my darling,&#13;
are you not glad to see me?"&#13;
There was still no doubt in her&#13;
mind. She thought that the joy of&#13;
seeing ber had been too great, and&#13;
that be was trying to recover from&#13;
the shock. She had no doubt, poor&#13;
soul, at all. He loved her, therefore&#13;
ber coming to him must be inexpressible&#13;
joy. '&#13;
Then Alan uncovered his haggard&#13;
face. "Glad? No! It has ruined my&#13;
life!" be cried brutally. But for the&#13;
moment he could think of nothing but&#13;
Joyce—his Joyce, with whom life had&#13;
begun so joyfully, and whose heart he&#13;
must now break, as his own had been&#13;
broken. "I ,wish I were dead!" he&#13;
said, with a sob.&#13;
"Alan!" The anguish in her voi£e&#13;
matched his. "Is that what you^have&#13;
to say to me, your wife, the mother&#13;
of your child, who has undergone&#13;
all hardships, and who has just lived&#13;
on because, you were in the world?&#13;
Oh, Alan, if you do not want me, I&#13;
had better go."&#13;
She. turned, walking unsteadily,&#13;
holding ber child's hand tightly. And&#13;
then a great temptation assailed Alan&#13;
Mackenzie. The temptation to let&#13;
her go, to let her be lost to him, to&#13;
say nothing to Joyce; but to go on&#13;
as if the day's work had never been.&#13;
^ And then he saw in a flash what his&#13;
life would be. How every moment of&#13;
happiness with Joyce would have its&#13;
corresponding moment of bitterness&#13;
when he was alone; bow be must live&#13;
a double life, always on the brink of&#13;
detection. Not worse, perhaps, that&#13;
the life parted from Joyce; but- then&#13;
pie -would be~an~bonest man, and not a&#13;
traitor. He put his temptation away&#13;
from him, thanking God that he could&#13;
do so, knowing that Joyce would not&#13;
love a man who was dishonorable. So&#13;
before Veronica had staggeei'd a dozen&#13;
steps away he.- callfid to her hoarsely&#13;
to come back. She turned at owse.&#13;
obedient as always, and for a moment&#13;
he hated himself for bis brutality&#13;
to so gentle a woman^Her tears&#13;
were falling down the beautiful face.&#13;
She looked up at him with the old&#13;
look of faithful love, still pushing&#13;
the child towards him.&#13;
"Yes," she said, questioning him,&#13;
"what is it, Alan?"&#13;
"I am married," he said, crudely&#13;
and hoarsely, thinking it beat to tell&#13;
her at once. "I thought you were&#13;
dead. I heard nothing from you since&#13;
I left you; it is four years ago. They&#13;
told me all on board were drowned,&#13;
and I could hear nothing of you.&#13;
What wonder then I thought you&#13;
were dead ? And so I married, Veronica—&#13;
I am married now!"&#13;
And then for a long time there was&#13;
silence between them.&#13;
(To be continued.)&#13;
— J ^ ;—^&#13;
Delicate Surgical Operation,&#13;
A celebrated astronomer suffered&#13;
acutely for over twelve years from&#13;
an unknown trouble in his leg. Tbe&#13;
surgeons did not seem to be able to&#13;
diagnose bis case. He finally went to&#13;
the Johns Hopkins hospital at Baitlnutte,&#13;
and an examination by two&#13;
young surgeons showed that tbe lameness&#13;
was due to a diseased nerve in&#13;
tbe ieg. The patient was told that the&#13;
. operation would be painful, and in the&#13;
nature of an experiment, as It had&#13;
been tried only once before, in France,&#13;
in which instance ft was sncceaafuL&#13;
The patient refused to take anaesthetics,&#13;
as bo desired to witness tbe oper*&#13;
ation as far as possible. Tbe leg was&#13;
opened and tbe nerve waa found to&#13;
be diseased, and the patient directed&#13;
the surgeons to cut It out Tbe nerve&#13;
wss entirely removed, tbe .wound&#13;
closed and in ten days tbe patient waa&#13;
able to dress himself and walk about&#13;
die hospital, and be is now able to&#13;
go n» and down stairs and walk naif&#13;
a mile at a time.&#13;
Why should a clock be arrested" for&#13;
fUikiog tbe bonrf&#13;
anions&#13;
r&gt; .i9ns *P$ i Whff*&#13;
nr^a^i8V)&lt;£f^f a^v ri&#13;
toj a ^ t b V reading nowej^, ths&#13;
necipient Ubder such eond$ons as&#13;
generally &gt;reya4j"'ja Mtna artificial&#13;
handling of eattk and other douiesti-&#13;
«^%5,&gt;*-•&gt;: .,m&gt;r* (4**.&#13;
i&#13;
eontagiousv Under range conditions j&#13;
aa exist in the western states, ft i s&#13;
vary feebly, If at an, seotagioujl&#13;
quarantine maasnresma an ine«ect«-&#13;
al preventive against the-disease under&#13;
most conditions, and certainly unnacessary&#13;
and, impracticable . J M h a t&#13;
case of range cattle,. The.disease is&#13;
insidious in its action, and usually of&#13;
very slow progress, and absolutely impossible&#13;
of detection by ordinary inspection,&#13;
except in advanced cases.&#13;
The remedy against purchase of infected&#13;
breeding stock lies In the bands&#13;
of the individual more than of tbel&#13;
state, aa proof of freedom from the&#13;
disease can be exacted of tbe vendor.&#13;
^The tuberculin test is the only reliable&#13;
test of tbe existence of tbe disease.&#13;
The spread of the disease can be&#13;
checked by preventive measures based&#13;
upon the conditions favorable to its&#13;
occurrence, morev than by direct attempts&#13;
to isolate and destroy tbe germ.&#13;
Official action should be confined to&#13;
the prevention of the spread of the&#13;
disease to mankind by tbe sale of tu&#13;
berculons animal products, and be un&#13;
;-fc&#13;
dertaken by the public health authorities.&#13;
There is at present no fear&#13;
whatever of tuberculousis endangering&#13;
the range cattle of tbe western,&#13;
states.—Dr Chasi CresswelL&#13;
PopUr Stem Gall&#13;
A United States Entomological Report&#13;
says: The gall-louse, Pemphigus&#13;
popullcauli8, forms imperfectly globular&#13;
galls' the sixei of *a bullet at the&#13;
Junction of the leaf with its stalk,&#13;
these galls having a mouth-like orifice&#13;
on their under side, and a large cavity&#13;
within, crowded with small dull-white&#13;
lice and their white-cast skins, and,'&#13;
with winged lice of a blue-black color,&#13;
their antennae reaching beyond tbe&#13;
base ol their wings, the rib-vein of&#13;
their fore wings black, thick* much&#13;
thicker at its apex along the inner&#13;
margia of the stigma, and the short&#13;
veinlet bounding the anterior end of&#13;
this spot more slender than the ribvein;&#13;
its length is 0.10, and to the&#13;
tips of its wings 0.15.&#13;
rroflU of German&#13;
Oootml-Oeoeral Guenther writes&#13;
from Frankfort April 23, 1900: For&#13;
the parpoae of furnishing information&#13;
J with reference to new commercial&#13;
treaties, investigation concerning the&#13;
profitableness of a large number of&#13;
farms have been made by the authorities&#13;
in the kingdom of Wurttemberg.&#13;
Ninety-four were selected, including&#13;
the smallest and those of several hundred&#13;
acres. The appraised value&#13;
amounted to 12,970,000^ the average&#13;
value per acre, to $225, varying from&#13;
$7&amp; to $850. The average profit per&#13;
acre was $1, or 1.72 per cent of the total&#13;
appraised value. Tbe several establishments,&#13;
however, showed very&#13;
different results. Of the ninety-four&#13;
farms, nine worked with a loss.&#13;
Of the remainder, only sixteen returned&#13;
interest on the working capital;&#13;
nineteen yielded 5 per cent on tbe&#13;
working capital and 3 per cent on the&#13;
investment for buildings; fifty yielded&#13;
5 per cent on the working capital and&#13;
3 per cent on the capital invested in&#13;
buildings, and in addition an income&#13;
on the lands ("Grundrente"), which&#13;
latter In two Instances amounted to&#13;
6.17 per cant&#13;
which grasps one without warning;&#13;
the niucoas membrane which lines&#13;
the; entire body suddenly become*&#13;
weakened in some spot and disease&#13;
is established. It may be of the&#13;
lungs, the bead, throat, stomach,&#13;
bowels, or any other organ. Whereever&#13;
it is, and whatever it seems, jt&#13;
all springs from the same&#13;
CATARRH&#13;
or inflammation of this delicate pink&#13;
membrane.&#13;
The system is weakened in win*&#13;
ter. The delicate lining is more&#13;
susceptible to irritation of inflammation,&#13;
and thus we have pneumonia,&#13;
grip, colds, coughs, fevers, etc., all&#13;
(catarrhal conditions which may'&#13;
easily be checked by one catarrh&#13;
cure—Pe-ru-na,&#13;
That's.the only way out of it.&#13;
You may dose forever~-yoo will&#13;
not be well until you try the true&#13;
cure and that is Pe-ru-na. You&#13;
may think your trouble is some&#13;
other disease and not catarrh. Call&#13;
It what you will, one thing is sure,&#13;
your system is ajfected and mustbc&#13;
treated, and Pe-ru-na is tfee only&#13;
remedy which reaches the,right&#13;
place and does «ure.&#13;
It is always easier to forget bad habits&#13;
than to forgo them.&#13;
Every man thinks he can salve the&#13;
servant girl question.&#13;
A signal failure has wrecked many&#13;
a train of thought&#13;
O—I—C&#13;
When a preparation has an advertised&#13;
reputation that is world-wide, it&#13;
means that preparation is meritorious.&#13;
If you go into a store to bny an article&#13;
that has achieved universal popularity&#13;
like Cascarets Candy Catbartio for example,.&#13;
you feel it has the endorsement&#13;
of the world. The judgment, of the&#13;
people is infallible ^cauap j ^ j m .&#13;
personal The retailer who wants to&#13;
sell you "something else" in place of&#13;
the article you ask for, has an sac to*&#13;
grind. . Don't it stand to reason?.. rHe'strying&#13;
to sell something that, is not&#13;
what he represents it to be. Why?&#13;
Because he expects to derive an extra&#13;
profit out of your credulity. Are&#13;
you easy? Don't you see through hislittle&#13;
game? The man who wiH try&#13;
and sell you a substitute for CASCARETS&#13;
is a fraud. Beware of him! He&#13;
is trying to steal the'honestly earned&#13;
benefits of a reputation which another&#13;
business man has paid for, and if his&#13;
conscience will allow him to go so far,&#13;
he will go farther. If he cheats his customer&#13;
in one way, he writ in another&#13;
and it is not safe to do business with&#13;
him. Beware of the CASCABET substitutor.&#13;
Remember CASCARETS arc&#13;
never sold in bulk but in metal boxes&#13;
with the long tailed **C" on every box&#13;
and each tablet stamped C C. C&#13;
A man never believes in a love that&#13;
persecutes.&#13;
Mar^faette. on Lake&#13;
is one of the most charming summer&#13;
resorts reached via Chicago, Milwaa-&#13;
£ee &amp; St. Paul Railway.&#13;
Its healthful location, beautiful&#13;
scenery, good hotels and complete Un*&#13;
munity from bay fever, make a summer&#13;
outing at Marquette, Mich.,1 very&#13;
attractive from the standpoint of&#13;
health, rest and comfort&#13;
For a copy of "The Lake Superior&#13;
Country," containing a description of&#13;
Marquette and the copper country, address,&#13;
with four (4) cents in stamps t o&#13;
pay postage, Geo. H. Heafford. General&#13;
Passenger Agent, Chicago, l i t&#13;
Dogs delight to bark and cats prone&#13;
to spark. ' - '&#13;
Sewage farming in England has assumed&#13;
such proportions in some localities&#13;
that the products are met at tbe&#13;
shows in sharp competition with products&#13;
grown on other land. The Birmingham&#13;
Drainage farm especially has&#13;
taken/a large number of prises both&#13;
for vegetables and live stock. Potatoes&#13;
grow rwj fins on lands-thns enriched.&#13;
*&#13;
Best for tbe&#13;
No matter what ails yon,&#13;
to a cancer, you will never g e t well&#13;
until your bowels are put right&#13;
CASCARETS help nature, enra &gt;oJ&#13;
without a gripe or pain, produce easy&#13;
natural movements, cost you lust 1#&gt;&#13;
cents to s'art getting your health back.&#13;
CASCARETS Candy' Cathartic, the&#13;
tablet bag C. C. C. stamped on I t ~&#13;
ware of imitations." ~"&#13;
,,..M»|&#13;
$ $&#13;
v.- %?&gt;:••&#13;
':'•' • ; ; , ; • ' / &gt; ; »&#13;
• • • ' • * ; ; ' * * ; £&#13;
•••&lt;*,•'• i ' V *&#13;
I- If 1&#13;
• % m&#13;
• 7 / -&#13;
•&gt;'K&#13;
&amp;&#13;
&amp;&#13;
*&#13;
J " ; I'&#13;
:¾^&#13;
. i"&#13;
•"''3ii&#13;
, A bachelor usua"&#13;
j t* "It." ^ITlifasaWababy&#13;
ffc#.&#13;
".' :(:V&#13;
V * ' . " -•'"*&gt;:•&#13;
v^&gt; •''•'&#13;
Vv:V-&#13;
6. • • • • ' • • ' * . l-,T8^'v&#13;
'&gt;•.&#13;
'•V*;.''; * • &amp; * ^4-&#13;
1 *i.&#13;
W:&#13;
'*Vv»&#13;
f. v,:&#13;
r'-.f;&#13;
yv&#13;
/vA;.f&#13;
ij'i iHf,-&#13;
• ' • • * &lt;&#13;
&gt; . • K -&#13;
y '•V'iV-i--,-,&#13;
te.^'7&#13;
k / ; , ' * ; '•&#13;
tsto&#13;
!''V&#13;
ftttr' fioduuy gfcjaki, rart*&#13;
ft-:*'&#13;
-^,&#13;
$ '&#13;
&lt;i-y-f. L ANDREWS&#13;
"W j&gt;&#13;
tOMTOR.&#13;
- * . t,:„&#13;
THURSDAY, AUGUST ' 9f'1900.&#13;
* » * -:-'&#13;
•i &gt;&#13;
The University of Michigan&#13;
during th« paat year had 3,448&#13;
students, an iuoreaae of 9 per cent.&#13;
It spent 1110,000 in buildings and&#13;
equipments, and received $185,000&#13;
in gifts anfl endowments.&#13;
The law a of health require that the&#13;
bowels move once each day and one of&#13;
tne penalties lor violating this Taw is&#13;
piles. Keep your bowels regular by&#13;
taking a dose of Chamberlain's Stomach&#13;
and Liver Tablet* when necessary&#13;
and you will never have that severe&#13;
punishment inflicted upon you.&#13;
Price, 25 cents. For sale by F. A.&#13;
Siglar, Pinckney.&#13;
At a horse sale in Ann Arbor&#13;
last week Dan Hoey bought&#13;
twelve western horses and n o w&#13;
has them on his farm. None of&#13;
them had ever had a strap on and&#13;
Dan has a western horseman handling&#13;
them. They are nice looking&#13;
animals and will make good roadsters.—&#13;
Dexter Leader.&#13;
awpaeasas* mm&#13;
Tai OommissionerOakmanaffs&#13;
that fully 1250,000,000 will b e * &amp; :&#13;
ed to the several asaeataent rolls of&#13;
the state before the October session&#13;
of the supervisors. The&#13;
greater part of this increase is&#13;
made up of stocks, bonds, mortgages&#13;
and other taxable credits,&#13;
which have never been assessed&#13;
because the supervisor, unaided,&#13;
could not find them, and by increasing&#13;
assessments which have&#13;
heretofore been inexcusably low.&#13;
Mr. Oakman says the few who&#13;
have been escaping and dodging&#13;
taxes must pay into the several&#13;
treasuries $4,500,000 more than&#13;
they did last year; while the many&#13;
who have been paying taxes upon&#13;
full and lawful assessments are&#13;
relieved of that amount&#13;
What most people want is something&#13;
mild and gentle, when in need&#13;
of a physic. Chamberlain's Stomach&#13;
and Liver Tablets fill the bill to a dot.&#13;
They are easy to take and pleasant ia&#13;
-effect, For sale-by F. A. Sigler&#13;
Pinckney.&#13;
The gaurds on the special western&#13;
express that goes through on&#13;
the Michigan Central take no&#13;
chances on a hold up. Very recently&#13;
when the train was opposite&#13;
the Ann Arbor Water Co's plant&#13;
it was observed to stop suddenly.&#13;
The guards jumped off and with&#13;
leveled Winchesters made some&#13;
men who were riding between the&#13;
cars get off in short order.—Chelsea&#13;
Standard.&#13;
"Through the months of June and.&#13;
July our baby was teething and Wok&#13;
a running off of the bowel-' and sickness&#13;
of the Stomach," says O. P. M.&#13;
Holliday, of Deming Ind. "His bow*&#13;
els~^woutd move from five to eight&#13;
times a day. I bad a bottle of Chamberlain's&#13;
Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea&#13;
Remedy in the house and gave him&#13;
four drops in a teaspoonful of water&#13;
and he got better at once." Sold by&#13;
F. A. Sigler, Pinckney.&#13;
EXCURSIONS&#13;
V I A T H B&#13;
PERE MARQUETTE&#13;
A m i n i s t e r ' s G e w d W o r k .&#13;
—^X-had-a- severe attack .ot bilious&#13;
colic, got a bottle of Chamberlain's&#13;
Colic, Choleta and Diarrhoea Remedy,&#13;
took two doses and was entirely cured,"&#13;
says Rev. A. A. Power, of Emporia.&#13;
Kan. "My neighbor across the&#13;
street was sick for over a week, had&#13;
two or three bottles of medicine from&#13;
the doctor. Re used them for three&#13;
or four days without relief, then&#13;
called in another* doctor who treated&#13;
him for some days and gave him no&#13;
relief, so discharged him. 1 went&#13;
over To see him the next morning.&#13;
He said his bowels were in a terrible&#13;
fix, that they bad been running off&#13;
so long that it was almost bloody Buz.&#13;
I asked him if he had tiied Chamberlain's&#13;
Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea&#13;
Remedy and he said. 'No.' I went&#13;
home and Lrougbt him my bottle and&#13;
gave him one dose; told him to take&#13;
another dose in fifteen or twenty minut*&#13;
s if he did not find relief, but he&#13;
took no more andwab entirely cured."&#13;
For sale by F. A. Sigler. Pinckney.&#13;
Island Lake, Sunday, August 12.&#13;
. Soldiers in Camp*&#13;
Special trains will leave South&#13;
Lyon at 9:15 a. m. Leave the&#13;
Lake at 5 and 7 p. m. Bate 20&#13;
cents. t-32&#13;
Saturday, Angost IS,&#13;
It is the of duty of every farmer&#13;
to visit the Agricultural College&#13;
once a year and take his&#13;
children to see the college and&#13;
grounds. This advice applies to&#13;
city folks also. To make such a&#13;
trip without much expense, the&#13;
Pere Marquette Company will run&#13;
a special train on above date,&#13;
leaving South Lyon at 8:42 a. m.&#13;
and leaving the Colleee returning&#13;
at 5:30 p. m. Bound trip rate&#13;
11.00 children under 12 half rate.&#13;
Fill up your lunch baskets and&#13;
propose for a delightful outing.&#13;
S l o p t h e Coaajti ma d w o r k * off the&#13;
C o l d .&#13;
Laxative Bromo-Quinine Tablets cure&#13;
a cold in one.day. Nomre, no pay.&#13;
Price 25 cents.&#13;
The publisher of a newspaper&#13;
has one thing to sell and one&#13;
thing to rent. He has his paper&#13;
to sell and the space in its column&#13;
to rent Can any one inform us&#13;
why we should be expected to give&#13;
away either-one or The other? Of&#13;
course he can if he choses, and as&#13;
a matter of fact does furnish a&#13;
great deal of space rent free, and&#13;
supplies many copies of his papers&#13;
for which he never receives a cent,&#13;
they should be recognized by the&#13;
recipient as a contribution, exactly&#13;
as would be the giving away of&#13;
coffee, tea or sugar by a grocer.&#13;
",My baby was terribly sick with the&#13;
diarrhoea," says J. fl. Dosk, of Williams,&#13;
Oregon. "We were unable to&#13;
core bioo with the doctor's assistance,&#13;
and as a last resort we tried Cbambelain's&#13;
Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea&#13;
Remedy. I am happy to say it gave&#13;
immediate relief and a complete cure.''&#13;
For sale by F. A. Sigler, Pinckney.&#13;
I hold that it Is every maja's duty to&#13;
make as much as hz can, and to give&#13;
away as much as he can to good purpose.&#13;
True philanthropy, like charity,&#13;
begins at home. If the millionaire invests&#13;
his money In business that provides&#13;
employment for a large number&#13;
of men, if he pays his employees well,&#13;
so that they can work to their own&#13;
advancement, he is fulfilling his duty&#13;
to the community and doing the great-&#13;
*«fr ammiTi» n f gonri t o t h e WfirlHngmen.&#13;
As for the surplus wealth which&#13;
a man may accumulate beyond his own&#13;
needs and those of his family, there are&#13;
a variety of useful ways in which It&#13;
may be employed. I have always been&#13;
interested in church work-and conceive&#13;
it to be my duty to give to religious&#13;
enterprises. Next to that the cause of&#13;
education appeals to me.—Mr. John D.&#13;
Rockefeller.&#13;
T O C u r e a C o l d I n O n e D a y&#13;
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets.&#13;
All drugguts refund the money&#13;
ifitfaiteTo*-cirre;--*--vrT-GTTrvBV--Blg-x&#13;
nature is on each box. 25c.&#13;
A F o r m u l a for Cold CTranu-&#13;
Thankful.—There are a number of&#13;
different formulas fof cold cream. I&#13;
give you one that I consider extremely&#13;
good.&#13;
Cold Cream.—Almond oil, 3 ounces;&#13;
lanoline. 1 ounde; spermaceti. 1 ounce;&#13;
white wax. 1 ounce; tincture of benzoin,&#13;
1 dram; rose water. 4 ounors.&#13;
Melt the almond oih lanoline, spermaceti&#13;
and white wax together.. You&#13;
would better use the custard boilerfor&#13;
this operation". When the four Ingreients&#13;
are incorporated take off th*&#13;
stove, pour into a large bowl and beat&#13;
constantly with an egg beater, adding&#13;
slowly the benzoin and the rose water,&#13;
This makes a delicious cream, and will&#13;
keep sweet if, not exposed to constant&#13;
heat and dampness.&#13;
Subscribe for Dispatch.&#13;
turn it in. cram H m;&#13;
Children's beads are hollow,&#13;
Slam it in. Jam It in;&#13;
Still there's more to followw&#13;
. Hygiene and history,&#13;
Astronomic mystery,&#13;
Algebra, histology,&#13;
Latin, etymology,&#13;
Botany, geometry,&#13;
Greek and trigonometry.&#13;
Ram it in, cram it in;&#13;
Children's heads are hollow..&#13;
Rap it in, tap it in;&#13;
What are teachers paid for?&#13;
Bang it in, slam it in;&#13;
What are children made for?&#13;
Ancient archaeology,&#13;
Aryan philology,&#13;
Prosody, zoology,&#13;
Physics, cljnictology,&#13;
Calculus and mathematics.&#13;
Rhetoric and hydrostatics.&#13;
Hoax it in, coax it in;&#13;
Children's heads are hollow.&#13;
Scold it in, mould it int&#13;
All that they can swallow.&#13;
Fold it in, mould Jt in;&#13;
Still there's more to follow.&#13;
Faces pinched, and sad, and pale,&#13;
Tell the same undying tale-&#13;
Tell of moments robbed from sleep,&#13;
Meals untasted, studies deep.&#13;
Those who've passed the furnace&#13;
through,&#13;
With aching brow, will tell to you&#13;
.HOw" the teacher crammed it in,&#13;
Rammed it in, jammed it in,&#13;
Crunched it in, punched it in,&#13;
Rubbed it in, clubbed tt in,&#13;
Pressed it in. caressed it in,&#13;
Rapped it in and slapped it In—&#13;
When their heads were hollow.&#13;
—Rehoboth Sunday Herald.&#13;
fiat w h a t y * n l i k e .&#13;
E a t a s y o u l i k e . K e e p strong b y taking&#13;
K n i l l ' s D y s p e p s i a T a b l e t s . T h e y digest&#13;
any a n d a l l k i n d s o f f o o d . M a k e p u r e ,&#13;
sweet stomachs and breaths. T r y t h e m .&#13;
O n l y 26c a b o x .&#13;
X ^ K x p r e M i o n - t n t h e Ky«. "&#13;
There are no expressive eyes. The&#13;
expression of the eye is really in the&#13;
lid. The eye itself, independent of Its&#13;
surroundings, has no more expression&#13;
than has a glass marble. A prominent&#13;
Engl ins oculist makes this daring&#13;
statement, and he defends his position&#13;
with eniphasiB. "The eyes have no expression&#13;
whatever," he says. "How do&#13;
you explain the fact that the eyes of&#13;
one person are more expressive than&#13;
those of another?" I am asked. They&#13;
are not. The difference consists in&#13;
certain nervous contractions of the lids&#13;
peculiar to the individual.&#13;
"Observe for yourself, and you will&#13;
see that I am right. We will say that&#13;
I am greatly interested in something,&#13;
and my attention is suddenly called&#13;
from it by an unexpected interruption.&#13;
My uper eyelid raises itself just a&#13;
little, but the eye proper does not&#13;
change an lota in appearance. If the&#13;
Interruption is but momentary: the elevation&#13;
of the lid will be but momentary.&#13;
If the surprise caused by an interruption&#13;
is continued the lid may_be_&#13;
raised even a iittle morerantTIn ~"fact7&#13;
the whole of the forehead, including&#13;
the eyebrows, is raised and wrinkled.&#13;
But the eye remains the same.&#13;
"When a person is excited much the&#13;
same emotions are gone through," continued&#13;
the doctor. "His eyes are open&#13;
wide, in cases of intense excitement, to&#13;
their greatest extent, but the forehead&#13;
is not wrinkld, and the ball of the eye&#13;
is as expressive as a bit of glass. No&#13;
more.&#13;
"Observe the face of one who laughs.&#13;
You will see that the lower eyelid has&#13;
no muscle of its own, and it is only&#13;
by the contraction of the adpacent&#13;
muscles in smiling or laughing that it&#13;
is made to move. That Is why there&#13;
are many wrinkles about the eyes of&#13;
merry persons.&#13;
"The expressive of deep thoughtfulness&#13;
is produced by the drooping of&#13;
the upper lid. The lids of some persons&#13;
fall so low that the pupil of the&#13;
eye itself is the same. If the meditation&#13;
is over a subject that worries the&#13;
thinker the expression is given quite&#13;
different. The eyelids contract and&#13;
the eyebrefws are lowered and drawn&#13;
together. This is true of a reflective&#13;
mood. —&#13;
"As to emotional moods, there is the&#13;
expression of anger, for instance. The&#13;
eyes, instead of closing, are open wider&#13;
than they are normally, but the brows&#13;
are ctosely knit.&#13;
"In expressing sadness the entire&#13;
upper eyelid comes about half-way&#13;
down and the folds of the skin collect&#13;
there, giving the lid a thick, heavy appearance/'&#13;
Pleasant, Safe and sure&#13;
are Knill's Black Diarrhoea Pills. (Black&#13;
berry Compound) cure Summer complaints&#13;
Diarrhoea, Dysentery, Cholera Morbus and&#13;
all pains of the stomach and bowels; 25c a&#13;
box.&#13;
rssnr «WH&lt;IW.&lt;&#13;
E T i q U E T T ^ OF THE HAT.&#13;
S » F t e r » » e r e f t ? » r P » r t l a t h e 4iiU&gt;t-«ni»«»&#13;
• «ro)tae*»Tiuiln o f American*;&#13;
AJUKIK 'Jr'up. Fifteenth street r -&#13;
centry&gt; safe a Washingtonlar.&#13;
who has traveled extensively&#13;
*1 observed the Secretary oi&#13;
State remove his hat to two&#13;
gentlemen, who returned the&#13;
3S m^mmmm «iipi»5»»S3S»^SS^0»^*^S»ft«f&#13;
* - p&#13;
A FREE i&amp;TTEKff&#13;
• A M A M I MMMHMIMI • * •&#13;
aB&gt;8Bg^BCUa9CgSrEar*&amp;gfM?vr&#13;
MAGAZINE&#13;
Corps.&#13;
"As we all know, the American&#13;
style oNsalutatipn when two or more&#13;
gentlemen meet is an inclination of&#13;
the head or a w*ve of the hand. The&#13;
hat is doffed.to the gentler sex only.&#13;
On the Continent it would be an insult&#13;
tor a, gentleman to pass an acquaintance&#13;
without removing his hat, If&#13;
they are friends the salutation Is even&#13;
more formal and includes a shake of&#13;
the. hand and the exchange of a tew&#13;
complimentary remarks.&#13;
*The French are accounted the most&#13;
punctilious and ceremonial of people. I&#13;
think the Belgians are even more so.&#13;
Their customs are French, however.&#13;
They have a language of their own,&#13;
but the names of the streets in Brussels&#13;
are in both French and 'Beige* on&#13;
the same sign board.&#13;
"I spent a week in the Belgium capital,&#13;
where a member of the American&#13;
Legation piloted me about. I made the&#13;
acquaintance of many Belgian gentlemen,&#13;
and the salutation between my&#13;
diplomatic friend and those he met&#13;
was somethingvlike this:&#13;
"'Ah, Count' I am de'ighted Uo&#13;
greet you.' ( cordial smile, a ceremonious&#13;
lifting of the hat, a hearty shake&#13;
of the hand and an inclination of the&#13;
body In a polite bow.) w 'My dear Col. — , the pleasure Is&#13;
wholly mine. I am rejoiced to see&#13;
you. I. trust you are very well.' (Same&#13;
formula.)&#13;
"'My friend, Mr. •,— of Washington.'&#13;
(Same formula on my part and&#13;
that of the Count)&#13;
"After an interchange of mutually&#13;
complimentary remarks the ceremonies&#13;
attendingthe introductionwere&#13;
repeated as we respectively said 'au&#13;
revolr/, and replaced our silk hats for&#13;
the last time upon our heads. It was&#13;
a novelty at first, but when I repeated&#13;
It eighteen times an hour I experienced&#13;
a crick in the small of my back.&#13;
My friend explained to me that continental&#13;
gentlemen of high social position&#13;
were not pressed by political and&#13;
financial affairs as are Americans In&#13;
similar walks of life, and the hurry&#13;
and haste we display is unknown to&#13;
them."—Washington Evening Star.&#13;
^ ^ M S ^ S ^ ^ S ^ S&#13;
MS CALL&#13;
fAsmm pmt p i t to«th*r. Only It aad U Matt «£&amp;""»?&#13;
Bthw. Soldi* BMHJT tywf elw a n d • • * £ &amp; * £ £ " :&#13;
T H 1 W c C A L L C O M P A N Y ,&#13;
ttMU W«* 141* tin*. . . . . M*w lark ON* fc X*&#13;
OTATK pf MICH1GAK. County of Liviogatoa,&#13;
At a tMaioa of the Probate Court for Mid CouiJ&#13;
ty, held at the Probate Office ia the Village of&#13;
Howell, o o Saturday the 4th day of Aupuat. in&#13;
the year one thou arid-nine hundred.&#13;
Preeent, AXBIJU) Af. DAVMJ»Judge of Probate. ;&#13;
In the Matter of the Estate of&#13;
XUXJACKBON. Deceased. ' •&#13;
On reading and filing the petition duly verified, at&#13;
OrlaB. Jackson, praying that aoertain Instrument&#13;
now on file in this court, purporting to be the last&#13;
Will and Testament of said deceased, may be adjaitted&#13;
to probate.&#13;
Thereupon it Is ordered that Thursday, the 80th&#13;
day of Aug. next, at I o'clock in the afternoon&gt;t&#13;
said Probate Office, be assigned for the hearing at&#13;
said petition.&#13;
It Is further ordered that a copy of this order be&#13;
published in the PrycKNEY DISPATCH, a newspaper&#13;
piintedTandi circulating in said county, three&#13;
successive weeks previous to said day of hearing.&#13;
ALBUU&gt; M. DAVIS,&#13;
*•** Judge of Probate.&#13;
doorwind&#13;
• OV THK T H H K S H O L O .&#13;
T I have found flowers at my&#13;
Y Sill growing,&#13;
•Windflowers come when no&#13;
• is blowing,&#13;
Late and pale,&#13;
Cowslips that wait for the night&#13;
4 ingale - —&#13;
4 To leave his thorn for my elder&#13;
4 t r e e . ' ~ —=-•-=—&#13;
^ Friendly ivy that plaits for me&#13;
" -"'"rrposU of Ivory,&#13;
t&#13;
•4 Iflr • t&#13;
Folding my foolish dreams together ^&#13;
Against the trouble of windy •&#13;
weather. •&#13;
Near the door of my dreams there ^&#13;
grown •&#13;
A rose of roses—a tall red rose, X&#13;
With dreamy dews she is thick be-Y&#13;
set, Y&#13;
A fire in bud, she is folded yet. J&#13;
I shall ente&gt; in •&#13;
Love's untrod garden that rose t o f&#13;
win. •&#13;
Oh a day to come when my dreams $&#13;
1 wi l l g o * Straight to the heart of that rose, I ^&#13;
know. A&#13;
And the heart of the rose will&#13;
beat so high&#13;
That I shall hear it—aye, even I; *&#13;
And the bud will shiver and flush Y&#13;
and break J&#13;
To a splendid rose for Love's dear•&#13;
sake. „ •&#13;
Ah, dreams, go swiftly! Dear^&#13;
SOME FACTS! READ THEMf&#13;
EUREKA SURE STOP TOOTHACHE POWDERS&#13;
O i v e s quick a n d sure relief.&#13;
EUREKA COMPLEXION 01NTMEIIT&#13;
Removes Black-heads and Pimples.&#13;
JUREKA CORN CURE&#13;
Cures ail Corns, Bunions, and Calloue&#13;
— places.&#13;
EUREKA 0. K. WART REMOVER&#13;
Is certain i n its results.&#13;
B a c h 1 O c , CU&gt;iiM&gt;i^St«imps&#13;
By Return MalL&#13;
Agents wanted^writB-todiy.&#13;
Address, EUREKA Sum**. jjfatiai,.&#13;
Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
Railroad Guide&#13;
rose, awake!&#13;
—Nora Hopper.&#13;
-V&#13;
Stilt Useful In Many W a y s .&#13;
Prohibition Convention •&#13;
There will be a mass convention of&#13;
the Prohibition Party of Liv. Co, at&#13;
the Court House in Howell on Monday&#13;
August 18, at 2 .o'clock p. m. for the&#13;
purpose of electing eleven delegates&#13;
to State convention to be be held in&#13;
Lansing August 28, 1900. Also elect&#13;
delegates to Congressional and Senatorial&#13;
conventions and electing a new&#13;
Co. commissioner; nominating a Co.&#13;
Ticket and for the transaction of any&#13;
other business that may come before&#13;
the meeting. _ By orderof Com.&#13;
A strong solution of salt and water&#13;
may be used to clean bedsteads. The&#13;
cleansing properties of the brine make&#13;
it efficacious.&#13;
Willow furniture may also be&#13;
cleaned in the same manner. Rub it&#13;
with a nailbrush and dry thoroughly.&#13;
Salt dissolved in alcohol will remove&#13;
grease spots from cloth.&#13;
Salt dissolved in lemon juice is invaluable&#13;
for removing stains from the&#13;
hands.&#13;
Salt sprinkled about the garden&#13;
walks and places frequented by snails&#13;
will effectually remove those creatures.&#13;
Ink stains in linen can be removed&#13;
if they are first washed in a strong solution&#13;
of salt and water and then&#13;
sponged with lemon juice.&#13;
A brine of coarse salt and water will&#13;
destroy weeds. *-"&#13;
15--6 5&#13;
\ t f AOTED--6OTJfciUJL BBIQH1&#13;
• • AND HOlfaWT ptsvaf fa r«pxM«oi&#13;
an M Managers ia this tad tJose by oooa»&#13;
ties. Salary IMt a year and expeaeeta&#13;
* trail. honc-6d«, m SMte, ao lest, Pot&gt;&#13;
«IOD permanent.&#13;
Wok ia any&#13;
work oooditrtftd at&#13;
* f t a » Mdtf-*Hii&#13;
ArtD STEAMSHIP UKESt&#13;
Popular route for Ann Arbor, Toledo&#13;
and points East, South, and for&#13;
Howell, Owosso, Alma, Mt Pleasant&#13;
Cadillac, Manistee, Traverse City and&#13;
points in Northwestern Michigan.&#13;
W. H. BENNETT,&#13;
G. P . A. Toledo&#13;
PERE MARQUETTE&#13;
R a n r o a A j a c a v y 1 3 , 1 9 0 0 .&#13;
ET&#13;
Ar&#13;
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OOIKQ KAST&#13;
Ursnd Riiida&#13;
Ionia&#13;
Lansing&#13;
Hswell&#13;
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Salem&#13;
Plymouth&#13;
Detroit&#13;
GOING WKST&#13;
a m&#13;
f 10&#13;
7 40&#13;
9 04&#13;
10 06&#13;
10 86&#13;
10 46&#13;
Jl 00.&#13;
11 40&#13;
Detroit&#13;
Plymouth&#13;
Salem&#13;
Sooth Lyon...^.&#13;
Howell&#13;
Lansing ,&#13;
Ionia&#13;
Grand Baplds..&#13;
• - » * - * • • »&#13;
• « • • • • 4 •&#13;
a m&#13;
"T55&#13;
9 2 6&#13;
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9 4*j&#13;
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Afent, Booth Lyon.&#13;
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Am&#13;
H. F. MOELLER, 10 00&#13;
Actin* G. P. A.,&#13;
Grand Rapids.&#13;
SO YaURT&#13;
IXPIRIENOaV&#13;
•*+A0y f&#13;
i, - a « •&#13;
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lata ami a. KM.&#13;
m—toym, VMM&#13;
a, nwm «&lt;)«&gt;•&#13;
Subscribe for the DISPATCH&#13;
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free, oldest atesey forseearlaepatents.&#13;
Scientific flitftrtcan. A b u&#13;
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&lt;l!|y?»^yf^i»^&gt;^--,^p»,erwff -!w»mwmmnm j » n j u 1111 ' &lt;*•&gt;•»!'&#13;
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eorayofe&#13;
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CURE* NO PAY&#13;
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•Ho .matte* how serioc* your ea^ majn JOTHjaHstiswfci -onr th«or i^tn. orTmhael "cwonordmitiyo nv eainnsd" hreentuoren t thoe mmeoaitl TJHhefa oori garnoo*o bftefrco maceep riotrtt inaoaudr*isa hl-lj umnannalytu rpaol wderrsa inre*t uornr- .l ossNeso cteomaaja and I JWbseOnf&amp;eNf»i t.?J SDtyToPJt CladDE&amp;8e83rmA*£Ra4nYoT. n*t j rJfSaOPr eDS alIt&#13;
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148 SHELBY STREET,&#13;
otmorr. Mtcttv&#13;
H &amp; K K &amp; K K &amp; K K ^&#13;
•^•laartai&#13;
CAT WAS A HEROINE&#13;
B « U l y tMrael « ^ I 4 f » «C B a r Frieud&#13;
to Uvo i s AmerUA, w»«tbJ6 Boston&#13;
Beaeon. She a»4 beea^very cowfortablejn&#13;
hejr old how&amp;, with.» good hdiief&#13;
And large garden. But the bad never&#13;
been need to gae, and knew Mftlng&#13;
about i t 7 ' . '&#13;
One night while ihe wae visiting&#13;
•ome fttende in the new country; ehe&#13;
went up »tslri, taking her pet pussy&#13;
with her. The house was lighted by&#13;
gas. and her friend. nev.er thought to&#13;
explain to her how to manage It' She,&#13;
unthinking, blew out the light and&#13;
went to bed.&#13;
She was tired and soon asleep. But&#13;
it was not long before she woke, feeling,&#13;
very uncomfortable. There seemed&#13;
to be a weight on her chest, and she&#13;
could hardly breathe. Her pussy was&#13;
on the bed beside her, mewing,, rubbing&#13;
against her face, and patting her with&#13;
her paw. The gas was coming from&#13;
the pipe into the room.&#13;
She was not wide awake enough to&#13;
know what was the matter, and she&#13;
tried to quiet pussy and go to sleep&#13;
again, But Pussy persisted, and finally&#13;
roused her. She called her friend, who&#13;
came quickly, 'without a light, and&#13;
turned off the gas. If she had brought&#13;
a lighted lamp into the room, there&#13;
would have been great danger of an explosion.&#13;
The cat really saved the life of her&#13;
mistress. If she had not waked her&#13;
she would never have waked again.&#13;
Pussy was a little friend, but a very&#13;
faithful one.&#13;
A $4.00 BqOK FOR TRts.&#13;
Tbe Farmers' Encyclopedia. ^&#13;
EvtrylMMrpeT-&#13;
•^tftflpy fa tne af*&#13;
f a i n of the farm,&#13;
-ftfrnsekol* ana&#13;
stock ralslnf. Embraces&#13;
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the horse, the colt,&#13;
horse habits, diseases&#13;
of the horse,&#13;
the farm, grasses,&#13;
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cookery,heallh,&#13;
oattle, sheep^wine,&#13;
poultry, bees, the&#13;
dog, toilet, secis]&#13;
lift, etc, etc. Oo«&#13;
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p l e t e E n c y c l o -&#13;
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A large book, 8x5%&#13;
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• THE WCI|NE*lc«MP4lfY, f j .&#13;
'The Wem-r Company is tltbreuphly MlUbI«.1—Editor f&#13;
Child's Fairy Tale.&#13;
Auntie, listen! I'm going to tell you&#13;
a story. Once there was a little girl&#13;
out-doors playing with her kitty, and a&#13;
Fairy came along—oh, such a lovely&#13;
• Fairy, with long yellow curls and a&#13;
soft pinkey dress. And the Fairy said,&#13;
"Little Girl, come right along to Fairyland!"&#13;
And the Little girl got into&#13;
the fairy car, and sat down beside the&#13;
Fairy, and the Fairy .said. "Up! up!&#13;
up!"# And up they-went* of s a fast,&#13;
you can't think! Oh, a great deal&#13;
faster than the cars! faster than lightning!&#13;
ten thousand times faster thr.n&#13;
lightning! and then they got up to&#13;
Fairyland. And everybody was glad&#13;
to see that little girl. Listen! I was&#13;
that Little Girl. And the Fairy took&#13;
me all 'round and showed me more&#13;
pretty things than 1 could count in a&#13;
whole year—no, in twenty years! Do&#13;
you want to know what those pretty&#13;
things were? Listen! all sorts of&#13;
things! carnations and geraniums and&#13;
calla lilies, big beds of them, all grow •&#13;
ing wild. And big flocks of canary&#13;
birds flying about and—and little&#13;
white iambs! Do you want to know&#13;
how the houses look? Listen! very,&#13;
very pretty! Some are made of gold,&#13;
and some of silver, and some of glass,&#13;
and some have pearls and diamonds&#13;
On them. And»we can coast in the&#13;
streets all summer! I had a coast! A&#13;
nice little boy with red cheeks lent me&#13;
his sled. And I coasted very_fast, to&#13;
the end of the&#13;
r * « K I'ffllPupl&#13;
^APcaiiowiNa&#13;
I«r«i4»t to *be&gt; Simple* *w* Sarast&#13;
Layering is the simplest, fupeet and.&#13;
easiest method of in^iaslng the grape,&#13;
and is the best way to grow them&#13;
where but few vines are wanted. There&#13;
are two kinds of layers; called erring&#13;
and summer layers, from the season at&#13;
which they are made.&#13;
Summer layers are made in the summer,&#13;
generally the last of July, from a&#13;
branch of the same season's growth.&#13;
They are likely to be weak for several&#13;
years, and do not make as good plants&#13;
as the spring layers. In making them,&#13;
the wood should be slit for an inch or&#13;
so near the buds that &gt; are covered.&#13;
Bury about one foot of the cane four&#13;
inches deep in the ground and it will&#13;
be rooted by late autumn, when it&#13;
should be separated and treated as a&#13;
young vine; -and it" is generally best&#13;
to get them well started in a garden&#13;
or nursery before planting in the vineyard&#13;
permanently.&#13;
Spring layers may be made by laying&#13;
down any 'cane early in the spring. It&#13;
will root in one season. By fall it&#13;
will have made a good growth of roots,&#13;
when it may be cut from the main&#13;
cane, and if strong it may be divided&#13;
into two plants. This form of layer is&#13;
illustrated i&amp; figs. 1 and 2. By a little&#13;
rig. 1 represents a rooted layer*&#13;
Fig 2, the rooted layer separated,&#13;
making two plants.&#13;
Fig. 3, a rooted layer, each bud&#13;
making a new plant&#13;
•".»y,' . /.&#13;
-ABOUT GARDENING&#13;
Wstlsd I a t o r w t l si «f 0«s*er*l Interest f a$^w&gt;r«ftjui4iho money ori 'a 50&#13;
east bottle of Down's Elixir if it doe*&#13;
waftteir ,w.bautetr intgh aatf l wphhiwc&amp;ts , nheavse rj uusste tehtfeld not cure any cbugbv ooj&amp; whooping&#13;
chill taken away. If co}d water finwatering&#13;
purposes be need in the cool&#13;
weather, it chills the roots ;and if in&#13;
warm weather, after a day's lunahine,&#13;
tt would very likely kill a tender plant&#13;
e mifchiel i L ^ 1 4 ^ »oing to oed and small doses dor-&#13;
!a&#13;
Our fee returned if we fail. Any one sending&#13;
sketch and description of any invention win&#13;
promptly receive our opinion free concerning&#13;
the patentability of same. "How to Obtain a&#13;
Patent" sent upon request. • Patents secured&#13;
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Patents taken out through us receive special&#13;
notice^ without charge, in T H E PATENT RECORD,&#13;
an illustrated-and-widely circulated joornaL&#13;
consulted by Manufacturers and Investors.&#13;
Send for sample copy FREE. Address,.'&#13;
VICTOR J . EVANS A CO.&#13;
(Patent Attorneys,)&#13;
Crans Building, WASHINGTON. D. «.&#13;
street&#13;
never get run over when they coast!&#13;
No, never! Listen—the sleds are* fairy&#13;
.Sleds. a n r t Thfty t n r n n i l t theiraelves.&#13;
Do you want to know if they have&#13;
stores in Fairyland? I think so, bat&#13;
I only saw one litle one. What do you&#13;
'spose they had in it? Only two things!&#13;
roses and little babies! Wasn't that a&#13;
sweet little fairy store? And then we&#13;
came home faster than we went—and&#13;
_you did not know I had been away at&#13;
all. You* thought I was asteep on the&#13;
different treatment of the spring layer&#13;
a vine may be grown from each bud&#13;
on the layer cane. For this purpose&#13;
some thrifty cane should be selected in&#13;
autumn, pruned of its laterals and&#13;
buried, In the spring it should be uncovered&#13;
and only one shoot permitted&#13;
to grow from each joint. After the new&#13;
growth has started about six inches&#13;
from each but the whole cane&#13;
should be layered about four inches&#13;
deep, handling it carefully so as not&#13;
to break the new growth.&#13;
Fig. 3 shows such layer after it has&#13;
rooted. It is a good plan to cover it&#13;
not more than three inches at first,&#13;
and to fill up the trench as the shoots&#13;
grow._ If covered four inches deep at&#13;
once the young growth will sometimes&#13;
rot, though this seldom happens, and&#13;
___ some skillful growe«—fill the trench&#13;
The children {full-at once. In the autumn roots wiir&#13;
be found growing from each joint, and&#13;
these may be cut apart and treated&#13;
recommended for weak vines&#13;
dining-room sofa!—Emma F. Leonard,&#13;
tn Little Folks.&#13;
While most varieties of fruit are produced&#13;
year after year on the same&#13;
fruit spurs, the peach never produces&#13;
fruit but once on the same wood, and&#13;
that is on th° wood grown the preceding&#13;
year. We readily perceive that the&#13;
peach must not only mature a crop of&#13;
fruit each •'-ear. but also new wood and&#13;
fruit buds .or the next year's crop.&#13;
JONES HE PAYS T H E FREIGHT&#13;
"PERFECT"&#13;
WACON SCALES&#13;
United States Standard. A^llSlzea., All Kinds&#13;
Not made by a trust or controlled by a com&#13;
iiaation. For free Book and Price List, addruoa&#13;
'(ONES OF BINOHAMTON,&#13;
BINQHAMTON. N &gt;&#13;
Jhe fruit of the quince is in such&#13;
great demand in all large cities that it&#13;
should stimulate farmers and fruit&#13;
growers to greater efforts to succeed&#13;
with the trees they set out. Quinces&#13;
do b'est in deep-cool soil, though in&#13;
dryish places they will di fairly well&#13;
if mulched. oT have the foots cool is&#13;
a great step toward.success.&#13;
grown&#13;
from cuttings. If this method of propagation&#13;
is to be used to some considerable&#13;
extent vines should be grown&#13;
especially for the purpose. It is not a&#13;
good plan to use fruiting vines for layering&#13;
to any g^eat extent, though it&#13;
may be safely done in a small way.—&#13;
Farm and Fireside.&#13;
—similarly&#13;
cause to a Jb8fcaa being, i t wh{|a »*f&#13;
faring from heat, he or f&amp;£ ifg£*&#13;
plunged Into a cold bath.&#13;
Worms m roses.—These £ £ t e « 3 !&#13;
now be making havoc with the rose&#13;
•buds. They must be sought for and&#13;
crushed; no washing the plants will&#13;
kill the worms.&#13;
Violet*—Take off the runners, and&#13;
plant each singly in two-thirds of turfy&#13;
loam and one-third leaf-mould. Place&#13;
them in a coid frame, and keep closely&#13;
covered and shaded till tbe plants are&#13;
rooted.&#13;
Liquid manure for watering geraniums&#13;
and fuschias is half an ounce of&#13;
guano dissolved in a gallon of water&#13;
(four quarts); it injures plants if it&#13;
touches them.&#13;
Sow mignonette in boxes and pots&#13;
for standing on window sills, and thus&#13;
perfuming all rooms. J&#13;
In removing plants from.oots to the&#13;
open ground, give only e*i!g^;h water&#13;
to settle the earth round th . .acts, and&#13;
this only on the followhvi ^ y s then&#13;
give no more till the ear ^. V ; - ^ n e s&#13;
dry—so s*ys one author::^. "t *t we&#13;
have found the following pi*j«.i3 rarely&#13;
fails. In the hole that i s made toi&#13;
receive "the plant, say a geranium, put&#13;
about half a pint of tepid water, then&#13;
take the plant with the ball of earth&#13;
round the roots, and place it firmly in&#13;
the watered space, pressing down the&#13;
earth on the top of it; then do not&#13;
water the plant for a day or two. The&#13;
collars of plants should then not be&#13;
weitet£ but the" watering be done so as&#13;
to reach the roots.&#13;
Pinch __off__ great shoots from rose&#13;
trees to about the third eye or bud&#13;
seen above ground.&#13;
If plants are weakly, nip off all flowerbuds,&#13;
to thus promote a thicker ana&#13;
stronger growth.&#13;
Where it is possible without injury&#13;
to the bulb, remove all faded leaves.&#13;
and the bulbs themselves, and dry&#13;
them in the dark, or at least in the&#13;
shade.&#13;
Strike cuttings of pansies from the&#13;
young shoots, never from the old&#13;
stems.—S. A. Lassell, in The Market&#13;
Basket&#13;
1&#13;
cough, or throat tconbk. We alto&#13;
guarantee Down's Elixir to enre eonsumption,&#13;
whan used according to directions,&#13;
or money back. A roll doaa.&#13;
The Rouen Duck&#13;
The Rouen duck 4s a fine market&#13;
bird, but does not mature as early as&#13;
does the Peking or the Aylesbury. The&#13;
flesh is considered very delicate and the&#13;
breed is acknowledged to be superior&#13;
for table purposes, being easily fattened.&#13;
The Rouen will be found a profitable&#13;
bird to raise on the farm, beiu£&#13;
hardy, prolific, quiet in disposition and&#13;
of beautiful plumage. Their eggs are&#13;
not as large as those of the Peking&#13;
and are diverse in color.&#13;
The Rouen is undoubtedly closely related&#13;
to the* Mallard duck. Its plumage&#13;
alone would make good this belief. But&#13;
the shape of the domestic Rouen duck&#13;
has been greatly modified from that of&#13;
the wild Mallard. The body is grown&#13;
longer and heavier, with a tendency to&#13;
drop down in the reai* and the wings&#13;
have lost the power of flight which the&#13;
wild ancestor possessed. The plumage,&#13;
bowever, remains almost the same.—&#13;
Bulletin Department of Agriculture.&#13;
^"*" How to Judge Horse Mtaracter.&#13;
Horse phrenology is the latest discovery&#13;
of the Royal College of Veterinary&#13;
Surgeons of England. According^&#13;
to Harold Leeney, a member of the college,&#13;
it is easy to tell a horse's character&#13;
by the shape" of his nose. If&#13;
theje is a gentle curve to th? profile,&#13;
and-at-the same time . the~ears are&#13;
pointed and sensitive, it is safe to bank&#13;
on the animal as gentle, and at the&#13;
same time high-high-high. If. on the&#13;
other hand, the horse has a dent in the&#13;
middle of the no&amp;e. it is erjually safe&#13;
tp set him down as treacherous and&#13;
vicious. The Roman nosed horse IsJ.&#13;
certain to be a good animal, for hard&#13;
work and safe to drive, but he is opt&#13;
to be slow. A horse with a slight concavity&#13;
'r. the profile will be scary : nd&#13;
need coaxing. A horse that droops his&#13;
ears is apt to be lazy will as well be&#13;
vicious. Hard work sometimes make&#13;
a horse which started out properly lrt&#13;
his ears drop, as Is illustrated by the&#13;
animals that pull the North Side carettes.—&#13;
Chlctgo Tribune.&#13;
Stock Note*. ^*S!&#13;
Every time you worry your horses&#13;
you shorten their lives and days of&#13;
usefulness.&#13;
Many recommend sheep for feeding in&#13;
orchards rather than swine. They&#13;
leave no safe cover for insects to&#13;
breed, and will keep the orchard&#13;
healthy and the trees manured.&#13;
The_ sheep should be clipped clean&#13;
about the hind parts, lest filth gather&#13;
and attract blow flies. A mixture of&#13;
glycerine and fish oil in equal parts is&#13;
t to smear over such parts, —&#13;
The average life of the city horse Is&#13;
said to be six years. In view of the&#13;
enormous amount of horses used in&#13;
cities, it is no wonder the demand for&#13;
good ones is so large and steady.&#13;
Lime water is considered very good&#13;
for scours in iambs. Where it is to be&#13;
fed to all sheep a quart of slacked lime&#13;
is put in a trough and fifty gallons of&#13;
water put in. When thoroughly settled&#13;
the sheep will drink it without&#13;
hesitation.&#13;
A breeder of sheep who has lost&#13;
some of his animaTs from the dogs of&#13;
neighbors believes that Instead of&#13;
putting bells on sheep every dog&#13;
should have a bell or be destroyed. It&#13;
is an idea worthy of consideration by&#13;
those interested in protecting sheep&#13;
from dogs.&#13;
Teach colts to walk, and walk fast&#13;
by allowing no other gait until they&#13;
have fully accomplished the walk.. It&#13;
Is the best gair for the farmers' horse,&#13;
and the best preliminary training to&#13;
fast trotting.&#13;
If the hogs to be slaughtered are fed&#13;
wfthiu twelve hours of their killing the&#13;
food is wastedrrtfte meat will be more&#13;
disposed to sour, and it will be more&#13;
difficult to remove the distended intestines&#13;
and take from them the larcl.&#13;
- - - • - . £&#13;
While the people of Great Briain&#13;
pay $50,00'.'. 0./ for imported butter, no&#13;
American dairymen ought to be discouraged.&#13;
ing the day will care the most sever*&#13;
cold, and stop the most distressing&#13;
c o u g h . , * • • " '&#13;
~ F. \. gigler,&#13;
W. B. Darrcw,&#13;
Site f lurking ftepatr*.&#13;
FRANK L. ANDREWS&#13;
Editor and Proprietor.&#13;
Subscription Price $1 la Adranca.&#13;
Sntered at taa Postofflce at f laekaay, MieJU&lt;asu&#13;
as second-class matter.&#13;
Advertising rates made known on application.&#13;
Baalneaa Cards, S4.00 per year.&#13;
Itoata and marriage notices published free.&#13;
Announcements ol entertainments .may be paid&#13;
for, if desired, by presenting the office with tickets&#13;
of admission. In case ticket* are not brought&#13;
to the office, regular rates will be charged.&#13;
All matter i s local notice column will be charted&#13;
st 5 cents per line or fraction thereof, for each&#13;
Insertion, where no ti ma is specified, all notices&#13;
will be inserted until ordered discontinued, and&#13;
will be charged/or accordingly. * V A l l change*&#13;
of advertisements MUST reach this office as early&#13;
as TUESDAY morning to insure an insertion the&#13;
same week.&#13;
•s J OS MIJV 2IJfG /&#13;
In all its branches, a specialty. We hare ail kinda&#13;
and the latest styles ofType, ete., which enable*&#13;
us vo execute all kinds of work, such as Books,&#13;
Pampleu, Posters, Programmes, BUI Heads, Note&#13;
Heaa&gt;, Statements, Cards, Auction Bills, etc, in&#13;
superier styles, upon the shortest notice. Prices aa&#13;
OT as good work can bo done.&#13;
«LL BILLS PAYABLV FI&amp;3T 0 9 S7BBY KOMTH.&#13;
THE VILLAGE DIRECTORY.&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICERS.&#13;
PBKSCDBNT.. ..«*.......^. Alex. Mclatyre&#13;
TMCSTBBS £. L. Thompson, Alfred Monks,&#13;
Daniel Bichards,4ieo. Bowman, Samuel&#13;
Sykes, F. 1&gt;. Johnson.&#13;
CLIBK -...-^. ...;.^. B. H.Teeple&#13;
TBEASUBBB ^. „... W. E. Mnrphy&#13;
ASSSSSOB .....^.-^ ^, W. A. Can&#13;
SraBBTCoiixiaeioNkB., J. Monks.&#13;
MAMUHI. *~.A. E. Brown.&#13;
HEALTH orricCB Dr. H; F. Sigier&#13;
A/rroaNsY....-— ~.....—...~.~. W. A. Carr&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH,&#13;
itev. Chas. Simpson, pastor. Services every&#13;
Sunday morning at I0:3u, and every Sunday&#13;
evening at 7:00 o'clock. Prayer meeting Thursday&#13;
evenings, Sunday school at close of morning&#13;
service. LBALSIQLXB, Supt.&#13;
CONULEGATIONAL CHURCH.&#13;
Rev. c. W. Rice pastor. Service every&#13;
Sunday morning at 10:80 and ^rery Sunday&#13;
evening at 7:0C o'clock. Prayer meettngThurs&#13;
day evenings. Snnday school at .close of mornlntz&#13;
service. R. H. Teeple, Supt,, Msoel Swarthout&#13;
Sec.&#13;
S T. MAKr_S VATHOLIC CH URCH.&#13;
Rev. M. J. CominerbraV Pastor. H#rvices&#13;
every Sunday. Low mass at 7:30 o'clock&#13;
high mass with sermon at 9:30 a. m. Catechism&#13;
st 3:00 p. m^veepersand benediction at 7:40 p.m.&#13;
SOCIETIES;&#13;
The A. O. H. Society of this place, meets every&#13;
third Sunday in trie Fr. Matthew Hall.&#13;
John Tuomey and M. T. Kelly, County Delegates&#13;
EPWORTH LEAGUE. Meets every Sunday&#13;
evening at 8:00 oclock in the M. E. Cnurch. A&#13;
cordial invitation is extended to everyone, especially&#13;
young people. Mrs. Stella Graham Pres.&#13;
CHRISTIAN ENDEAVOR SOCIETY:-Meet.&#13;
tags every Sunday evening st 6:30. President,&#13;
Miss Etta Carpenter; Secretary, Mrs. C. W. Ric».&#13;
THE W. C. T. U. meets the first Friday of each&#13;
month at 2:30 p. m. at tbe home of Dr. H. F.&#13;
Sigler. Everyone interested ihTtemperanoe ^&#13;
coadlally invited. Mrs. l&lt;eal Sigler, Pres; Mrs.&#13;
Etta Durfee, Secretary.&#13;
Tie C. T. A. and B. society of this Place, n»*et&#13;
every third Saturday evening in the&#13;
thew Hall. 'John Donobue, President.&#13;
Fr.Mat-&#13;
Orange Hea4ache.&#13;
Knill's Orange Headache Pills, 10 dose 10c&#13;
Cure in 10 minutes, are the best and cheapest.&#13;
Never fail or leave any bad after effect.&#13;
Guaranteed by your druggist.,&#13;
KNIGHTS OF MACCABEES.&#13;
Meet every Friday evening on or before fail&#13;
of the moon at their hall in the Swarthout bldg.&#13;
Visiting brothers are cordially invited.&#13;
CHAS. UAMPBXLL, Sir Knight Commander&#13;
Livingston Lodge, No. 7«, F A A. M. Regular&#13;
Communication Tuesday evening, on or before&#13;
the fall of the moon. H. F. Sigler," W. M.&#13;
RDER OF EASTERN STAR meets each month&#13;
the Friday evening following the regular F.&#13;
Mas. .MARY RBAD, W. M. 0&#13;
A A.M. meeting, ORDER OF MODERN WOODMEN Meet the&#13;
first-Thursday evening of each Month in the&#13;
Maccftbee hall. C. L. Grimes V. C.&#13;
T A DIES OF THE MACCABEES. Meet every 1st&#13;
"' '" i. a&#13;
in.&#13;
XJ and Srd Saturday of eachmonth at 3:30 p m. at&#13;
£ 7 0 . T. M. hall. Visiting sisters cordially '&#13;
vited. LILA CONIWAY Lady Com. V KNIGHTS or THE LOYAL GUARD&#13;
meet every second Wednesday&#13;
evening of every month in tha K. O.&#13;
T. M. Hall at 7:30 o'clock. All visiting&#13;
Guards welcome.&#13;
C. L, Grimes. Capt. Ge*.&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
H. F. SIGLER M. DWANTED—&#13;
The Sabecriptdon&#13;
due on the DISPATCH,&#13;
C, L. SIQLER M, 0 -ER-&amp; SIGLEfc&#13;
Physicians and, Surgeons. All calls proinptl&#13;
attended to day or ought. Omce on Mainstr&#13;
Ienwr's Dictionary of Synonyms &amp; Antonyms,&#13;
lytMoty and Famlllai Pttiam&#13;
A book that should be in the vest - » w » » , „&#13;
pocket of every pepon, because it J»laekney^Mieh.&#13;
tellt you the right word t o V * .&#13;
NoTwo Wordi i n t h e English — — — — —&#13;
iSSfflfcffiS&amp;f^Wf DR. A. B. GREEN.&#13;
S W ^ i S W f f i ^ 'Si ! , „ DENTIST-BW P.KU-; ..d„. Tm*&#13;
18ynonyins is needed to avoid repe- d t T w h e n having appointments. Office over&#13;
Inaon. The stron_g est ffligurre of | Sigter's Drug Store. tsiMoneacrhy itsh ae ntaipthpeesnisd.e dI nA nthtoisn vdmics- vwaillul,a tbhleer.e forCeo, nbtea ifnosu nmd aenxytr eomtheelyr ^ fPeaatmuriellsA rs uAclhl usaio*n sM aytnhdol oFgyo,r - Phrjuaa' , proHf. awL oFlsoartgUest tinMg,e'm eotcry., , sentt tptotslatp abiodo kfo rb otuon.3d9 i.n aP nuella t - . • d f ^ ^ f O . postpaid. Order at A4d--dir—esa- a•ll» o rodoerr sla t^ob oofcoaUlogtie, free.&#13;
THE WERNER COMPANY,&#13;
AJOO»,0*IO.&#13;
•/o F. MtLJTM*&#13;
V E T E R I N A R Y . S U R G s C O N f c&#13;
Graduate of Ontario Veterinary College, alto o&#13;
the Veterinary Dentistry College&#13;
Toronto Canada.&#13;
Will promptly attend to alfrdiaeaaea of the do*&#13;
meatioated animal at a reasonable ptiea. -0&#13;
Horses teeth examined Free. ~~ —&#13;
ornce at ttiLU PINCKNEY*&#13;
/ • •&#13;
%&#13;
.'••••UrTf'%••.:•&#13;
:&gt;!**;.-f,v rt'-s&#13;
' .:^¾¾^&#13;
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..V AA^Ak'i i • ,*HfaULW,V&amp;x£ifok? • / .-^. 6 -tJA,: . ^ i ' n . t . l i ^..oirJc&#13;
:,&amp;&#13;
• ftmtti? ...»-i'i'-&#13;
••••,*; &gt; ^ # - • £ »*V;&#13;
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% . - , .&#13;
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• ' * : ;&#13;
-ji -&gt;•,&#13;
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w* mass*&#13;
W^SK*&#13;
^ &lt;&#13;
^ '&#13;
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&lt;t&#13;
i&#13;
'j&amp;ifi&#13;
1 « * .&#13;
•**&gt;.&#13;
Mittckn&#13;
W n w a,&#13;
The buckwheat cake ia no1&#13;
*dmir*d ae it wai. Notwi&#13;
the great increase of population, the&#13;
amount of buckwheat now r a i s e ^ j i a&#13;
this country to *&amp;ryt atibu^iraa^ltwvb&#13;
tMrty*rVe # * * * * * * &gt; I w s t 1¾&#13;
The largest balloon ever constructed^&#13;
s ^ » o a # » M « 4 f * 1 t f tin** Are* &gt; s l i tons,&#13;
^ 1 ¾ ^ ^ efite^'by a reiigtoa of human manu&#13;
w i W m m f m " r ^ S o f a lor&#13;
•oaarai w a t k f a a d -H»tth two beds.&#13;
Six "arreste were maae in&#13;
,- for, the&#13;
offense of docking horses' talis. The&#13;
within a single&#13;
hearings elicited the fact that so cruel&#13;
Is the process that owners of the horses&#13;
are neveraHowed to witness It, Compulsory&#13;
attendance upon such scenes of&#13;
*°£fW$ ^ ajl.^adyooate* of * Soaked-*&#13;
taus might hasten the end 61 the bar&#13;
barous custom. ''&#13;
TAlMAGE'S SES1I0N.&#13;
,r- &gt; " C 2ft'•••••• . i M j I C i t u W H I ! ^ ¾ J-' „ .&#13;
t \.'&#13;
IP»I.» *ssfr&#13;
^*«taw: waea &gt; i u ^ a a s « : ! ^ ^ ^ r »&#13;
CoBdiUftai*&#13;
JCopyrlght; 1900, by, Louis Klopsch.)&#13;
f r o m Troadh4em,.v|49PwaT, where&#13;
Dr. f aiastge it n©w*ta*ing\ he sends&#13;
the following discourse, in which he&#13;
showi that thq .worlds ,cah never be benfacture,&#13;
which easily yields to one's&#13;
surroundings, but must have a religion&#13;
let down from heaven; t e x t Amos vil,&#13;
d__the_juord said unto me,&#13;
Amos, what seest thou? And I said,&#13;
A couple of-thQurolful Christian*,&#13;
aware of the trouble the brethren have&#13;
i f «hang1ng&lt;Amerlcan money into the&#13;
coinage of their native land.-put a&#13;
couple of Chinese coins.on the contribution&#13;
plate in a Biddeford (Maine)&#13;
church. "The collection, it waa annotated,&#13;
was-for the foreign missions.&#13;
At the same service two brass beer&#13;
checks helped to swell the offering.&#13;
A • fat citizen, of' the sea coast town&#13;
of Luhec, Me., went down a ladder at&#13;
the side of a schooner to get a hammer&#13;
that he had dropped overboard.&#13;
He Inserted his body between the&#13;
rungs of the ladder that he might&#13;
reara down'and get the hammer from&#13;
the shoal water, and- became stuck&#13;
there. The tider was ^ s i n ^ and he&#13;
was -Tescued-tfcree *- hours,, afterward,&#13;
A^plumb line?'&#13;
The solid masonry of the world baa&#13;
for me a . fascination, , Walk, about&#13;
some of the triumphal arches and the&#13;
cathedrals 400 or 600 years old, and see&#13;
them stand as erect as when they were&#13;
built, walls of great height, for centuries&#13;
not bending a quarter of an&#13;
inch this way or that. So greatly&#13;
honored were the masons who builded&#13;
these walls that they were free from&#13;
taxation and called "free" masons.&#13;
The trowel gets most of the credit for&#13;
these buildings, and its clear ringing&#13;
on stone and brick has sounded across&#13;
the ages. But there is another'implement&#13;
of just as much importance as&#13;
the trowel, and my text recognizes it.&#13;
Bricklayers and stonemasons and&#13;
carpenters, in tV&gt; building of walls,&#13;
use an instrument made of a cord, at&#13;
the end of which a lump of lead is&#13;
fastened. They drop it over the Bid*&#13;
of the wall, and,, as the plummet naturally&#13;
seeks the center of gravity in&#13;
the earth, the workman discovers&#13;
where the wall recedes and where It&#13;
bulges out and just what is the perpendicular.&#13;
Our text represents God&#13;
as standing on the wall of character&#13;
which the Israelites had built and in&#13;
just in time to sAv* him frojga .4rown- that wa_^y testing it. "And the Lord&#13;
ing,-the, i n t e r l a y i n g ' reached within I s a jd B n t J, m e Amos, what seest thou,?&#13;
two inches..oi hia&gt;mouth. * &gt; •&#13;
The excavatidaa^ Of*'' Mantoche.&#13;
Haute-Saone, upon the site of a Oallo&#13;
Roman townk have brought to; light the&#13;
remains of a Roman villa: Tbe workmen&#13;
first came upon a beautiful hall,&#13;
eight metres wide by" •fifteen''''metres&#13;
long, paved With'" flftsa'IcV and with&#13;
walls covered wltl^.frpft^es^^aome. of&#13;
which had preserved their original&#13;
fresliness of colcrY/On',eafch side of the&#13;
hall;were passages opening upon small&#13;
sleeping chambers or cubicles. Two&#13;
other portions of the villa have yet to&#13;
be uncovered; and it is added that tha&#13;
researches give proofs that this locality&#13;
waS occupied &amp; long time previous&#13;
to tbe Gallo-Roman era.&#13;
While hunting on his farm, Isaac&#13;
Martin, a farmer, of Knox County,&#13;
Indian^ .was^ attracte^by^ wha^. appeared&#13;
to be A recent excavation- neara&#13;
large sycamore tree, and, upon investigation,&#13;
thi'Se* 't»%t' un3eV ground&#13;
he found two silver bricks. He took&#13;
them to Vincennes and a jeweler tested&#13;
them and pronounced them silver,&#13;
with a slight alloy of lead. One of&#13;
the brinks weighs 1&amp; pounds and _ the&#13;
other 18 pounds 9 ounces, Tjie small-'&#13;
er brick bears the-letters **J. £.," but&#13;
beyund this there was nothing to&#13;
serve as an identification marlL. The&#13;
find has created great excitement, as&#13;
it is thought there may be other&#13;
buried treasures in the neighborhood.&#13;
And I said, A plumb line."&#13;
What the world wants is straight up'&#13;
and down religion. Much of the socalled&#13;
piety of the day beads this way&#13;
and that to suit the times. It is&#13;
oblique, with a low state of sentiment&#13;
and morals. We have all been building&#13;
a wall of character, and it is glaringly&#13;
imperfect and needB~recdhstrucfcon.&#13;
How shall it t&gt;e brought into&#13;
perpendicular? Only b j .the divine&#13;
measurement. "And the ,]Lord ga4$.&#13;
unto me, Amos, what seest thou? And&#13;
I said, A plumb line." —&#13;
\ The whole tendency'of the time3 is&#13;
to mike us act by the"t standard of&#13;
What others do. We-throw, over the&#13;
wall of our character the tangled&#13;
jbhimb line of other lives and reject&#13;
the Infallible teat which £mos saw.&#13;
The question for me should not be&#13;
what you think is right, but what Sod&#13;
thinks iryight. This perpetual refer-&#13;
- * — . • . • . ,'. V&#13;
Doubtless in one respect the American&#13;
stands on a&#13;
"Thanks to the perfection&#13;
superior fooxt.i ng,&#13;
a of.sW.making&#13;
machinery, the Amirican-made&#13;
shoe has become noted^Chroughout the&#13;
world for its beaujty; comfort and inexpensiveness.&#13;
OVer three million dollars'&#13;
worth of shoes were exported last&#13;
year, and 6erman, French, Austrian&#13;
and English manufacturers make imitation&#13;
American shoes and sell them&#13;
under tbat name. Two travelers recently&#13;
sent, one from Paris and the&#13;
other from Berlin, to a store in a lit--&#13;
tie Ohio town, for shoes. "My sympathy&#13;
for Marie Antoinette," wrote&#13;
e^e, "has ^notably increased since I&#13;
read that she wore two new pairs of&#13;
French shoes every week. On such&#13;
conditions what American would ever&#13;
consent to be a oueen?"&#13;
"Fungshui,M according to a superstition&#13;
prevalent among the Chinese,&#13;
are certain spiritual influences acting&#13;
in particular places, which may be&#13;
friendly t o one person and hostj&amp; to&#13;
another. Hence to a Chinaman It is&#13;
the greatest Importance that his home,&#13;
and more especially his burial-place,&#13;
shall be \ in that ^fcfc^te'-Uar locality&#13;
where, t o r ''fungshujlt | r e most favorably&#13;
disposed toWartf'him, This .superstition,&#13;
©r, wn«m«n.t,^vseAffce^r, *her&#13;
lsbed ampnf ttfe'ChTnese, and.the.ddiisaregard&#13;
of it shown*by foreign engineers&#13;
and railway promoters in running&#13;
their linea through places^ thus&#13;
venerated is o p e . o t the reasons .given&#13;
in explanation of the present frightful&#13;
condition of" affair* In China Of&#13;
coarse, it only explains; it excuses&#13;
none of the atrocities that have excited&#13;
the horror of t t e whole world.&#13;
ence to the behavior of others;&#13;
though it decided anything but human&#13;
fallibility, is a mistake wide.^as&#13;
Y/orld". Th*re are 10,000. plumb twee&#13;
in use, but only one is true and/exact,&#13;
and that is the line of God^s eternal&#13;
right. There is a mighty/attempt being&#13;
made to reconstrm^tand fix,up the&#13;
Ten Commandments; To many they&#13;
seem too rigid^/ The tower of Pisa&#13;
leans over about 13 feet from the.perpend&#13;
icular&lt; and people go thousands&#13;
of m l l e s i o see its graceful inclination&#13;
and^fo learn how, by extra braces and&#13;
irious architectural contrivances, it&#13;
is kept leaning from century to cen-t&#13;
tury. Why not have £he ten grJnite*.&#13;
blocks of S i &amp; i M a little aslarft? wttyf&#13;
not hava the- t&gt;f»8r fof truth tf leaning^&#13;
tower? Why is not an ellipse a* goo£r&#13;
friends, we must have a standard.&#13;
Shall it be God's or man's?&#13;
Society Utterly Askew.&#13;
The divine plumb line'needs to be&#13;
thrown over all merchandise. Thousands&#13;
of years ago Solomon discovered,&#13;
the tendency of buyers to depTeciata&#13;
goods. He saw a man beating down&#13;
an article lower and lower and saying&#13;
it was not worth the price asked, and&#13;
when he had purchased at the lowest&#13;
point he told everybody what-.a sharp&#13;
bargain hehfc&amp; strttckiad h o V h e outwitted&#13;
the merchant ' "It is /naught,&#13;
saith the buyer, but when he is gone&#13;
his way, then he boasteth" (.Proverbs&#13;
xx, 14). Society is so utterly askew&#13;
in this matter that you seldom find&#13;
a seller asking the price that he expects&#13;
to get; he puts on a higher value&#13;
than he expects to receive, knowing&#13;
that he will have to drop. And if he&#13;
wants $50, he asks $75. And if ho&#13;
wants $2,000, *e asks $2,5Q0. "It is&#13;
naught," saitii the buyer., 'jThe fabric&#13;
is'defective; the styje ot goods Is&#13;
poor; X can get elsewhere a batter article&#13;
at a smaller price, it is out of&#13;
fashion; it is damaged; it will fade;&#13;
it will not wear wall." Aftef awhile&#13;
the merchant, from overperiuaalon or&#13;
.from desire to dispose of that particular&#13;
stock of goods, saysl "Well, take U&#13;
at your own price," and the purchaser&#13;
goes home with light step and calls i n -&#13;
to his private office his confidential&#13;
friends and chuckles while v«e tells&#13;
how for half price he .got the g o o t a&#13;
8SSS99S mm « *&#13;
f t *&#13;
time* t o good&#13;
a livelihood t o&#13;
ht^W» WfW Vtm&#13;
Nothing ^ o x U d - y a W t I&#13;
and the earniag^ot&#13;
easy a^ thf r ani^raal ajlaitida o r t h n&#13;
law of riiht. Suspicion ttrikes through&#13;
all oaftaM mettng. Men who tall&#13;
know not whether they will ever get&#13;
the W W ifur&lt;**&amp;H.?;*&amp;?*• apt&#13;
whether the goods shipped will be according&#13;
to the sample. And what, with,&#13;
the large number of clerks who are&#13;
making false entries and then- absconding&#13;
and the explosion of firms&#13;
that fail for millions of dollars, honest&#13;
men are at their wits' ends to&#13;
make a living. He who stands up amid&#13;
all the pressure and does right is, accomplishing&#13;
something toward the establishment&#13;
of a high commercial&#13;
prosperity. I have deep sympathy for&#13;
the laboring classes who toil with&#13;
hand and foot But we must_not_fQr-,&#13;
get the business'men who, without any&#13;
complaint or bannered procession&#13;
through the street, are enduring a&#13;
stress of circumstances terrific. The&#13;
•"'"H.11"1 =&#13;
vntldliaeat, .Hit sin.I are t o broad&#13;
hfi h a t » * ***im.Ams*.l%imi"******* «Ki*'KJ&gt;&#13;
b a e o o a t a a broad at temntailon, at&#13;
b^pad af: tha towi'ai darkneetv aaiteoad&#13;
a# hell. T b e j i w a a * a rallgion. that&#13;
w « aUtfw, | h e « 8 tOo&gt;Jwep&gt;i thair thai&#13;
and. the* a ^ d e a ^ . * a y a t a theav "Weil&#13;
d o * * good ajid iaithliil eeavana/1 a n *&#13;
t ^ t a l l a ^ a m ^ ^ A l l ^ . w e M , f a r t h e r *&#13;
it^ n o ^ell.M What a glorious heavea&#13;
they hold before u»! Gotten let Alt go&#13;
intend ie« i t Thera « e Herod and&#13;
all the babes he massacred-*^In«&lt;e anjt&#13;
^bArJear Gu#eau,imd Robetfierre, the&#13;
leader of 4he French g«illotiae,«nd att&#13;
% JlK1*' JM^vafa Jiowte aurnart, garr&#13;
rotert, pickpockets and Hbertrnee of all&#13;
the centuries. They have all got crowns&#13;
and thrones and harps -hd scepters;&#13;
and when they chant they ting,i&#13;
'Thanksgiving and honor and glory;&#13;
and, powers to the broad religion that&#13;
teia. uj^ all Into heaven ^withogt re*?*&#13;
pentance and without faith In thow&#13;
humiliating, dogmas of ecclesiastical.&#13;
mmmm « e ^ 9B m&#13;
THANftVAAL WAII tTiMeV&#13;
T O e t t tiunterre;&#13;
President Krugar and Commendaat^&#13;
fortunate people of to-day are those&#13;
who are receiving daily wages or regular&#13;
salaries. And the man most to&#13;
be pitied are those who conduct a&#13;
business while prices are falling and&#13;
yet try to pay their clerks and employes&#13;
and are in such fearful etraitt&#13;
that they would quit business to-morrow&#13;
If it were not for the wreck and&#13;
ruin of others. When people tell me&#13;
at what a ruinously low price they&#13;
purchased an article, it gives me more&#13;
dismay than satisfaction. I know it&#13;
means the bankruptcy and defalcation&#13;
of men In many departments. ' T h e&#13;
men who toil with the brain need full&#13;
as much sympathy a s those who toll&#13;
with the hand. All business life is&#13;
struck through with suspicion, and&#13;
panics are the result of want of confidence.&#13;
The pressure to do wrong is stronger&#13;
from the fact that i n our day the&#13;
large business houses are swallowing&#13;
up the smaller, the whales dining_ on&#13;
bhieflsh and minnows. The large&#13;
houses undersell the small ones, because&#13;
they buy in greater quantities&#13;
and at lower figures from the producer.&#13;
They can afford to make nothing,&#13;
or actually lose,' on some styles&#13;
of goods, assured they can make i t up&#13;
on others. So, a great dry goods house&#13;
goes outside of its regular line and&#13;
sells books at cost or. less than cost,&#13;
and that swamps the booksellers; or&#13;
the dry goods house sells bric-a-brac&#13;
at lowest figures, and that swamps&#13;
the small dealer in bric-a-brac. And&#13;
the same thing goes on in other styles&#13;
of merchandise, and the consequence&#13;
is that all along the business strae&#13;
of all our cities there are merchants&#13;
of small capital who are in ^terrific&#13;
struggle to keep their heads above&#13;
water. The ocean l i n e r s / r u n downthe&#13;
Newfoundland finning smacks&#13;
This is nothing against the'man who&#13;
has the big.&#13;
as large a store and as great a busi&#13;
ness as he/tfan manage.&#13;
e«d of Divine Support.&#13;
feel right -and do right under all&#13;
pressure requires martyr grkce,&#13;
requires divine support, requires ceteetial&#13;
re-enforccment. Yet there are&#13;
tens of thousands of such men getting&#13;
splendidly through. They see others&#13;
going up and themselves going down,&#13;
but they keep their patience and their&#13;
courage and their Christian consisteency,&#13;
and after awhile their success&#13;
will come. There is generally retribution&#13;
in some form for greediness. The&#13;
owners of the big business will die,&#13;
and their boys will get possession of&#13;
the business, and with a cigar in their&#13;
mouths, and full to the chins with the&#13;
best liquor, and behind a pair of&#13;
spanking bays, they will pass everything&#13;
on the turnpike road to temporal&#13;
and eternaLperdition. Then the&#13;
old fogyism."&#13;
My text gives me a grand opportunity&#13;
of saying a useful word to all young&#13;
men who are now forming habits for;&#13;
a lifetime. Of what use to a stonemason&#13;
or a bricklayer is a plumb line?&#13;
Why not build the wall by the unaided&#13;
eye and hand? Because they are insufficient,&#13;
because if there be a deflection&#13;
in the wall it cannot further on&#13;
be corrected. Because by the law of&#13;
gravitation a wall must be straight In&#13;
order to be symmetrical and safe. A&#13;
young man Is in danger of getting r&#13;
defect In Till wall of character tha?&#13;
may never be corrected.&#13;
One of the best friends I ever ha^t&#13;
died of delirium tremens at 60 years o/&#13;
age, though he had not since 21 yeai*&#13;
of age, before which he had been dis*&#13;
sipated, touched intoxicating liquor,&#13;
until that particular carousal that took&#13;
him off. riot feeling well in the street&#13;
on a hot summer day he stepped into&#13;
a drug store, just as you and I would&#13;
have done, and asked for a dose of&#13;
s o m e thing to' make him feel better.&#13;
And there was alcohol i n the dose,&#13;
and that one drop aroused the old&#13;
petite, and he entered the first Ihydor&#13;
store and staid there until thoroughly&#13;
under the power of rum. He- entered&#13;
his home a raving maniac; his wife&#13;
and daughters fleeing from his presence,&#13;
and at first he ;was taken to th6&#13;
city hospital to die: The combustible&#13;
material of earj^r habit had lain quiet&#13;
nearly 40 ye^ats, and that one spark&#13;
ignited it.&#13;
as a square? Why is not an obliqueL business will break up uud the smaller&#13;
as good as straight up and down? My' dealers will have fair opportunity. Or&#13;
the spirit of contentment and right&#13;
feeling will take possession of the&#13;
large firm, as -recently with a famous&#13;
business house, and the firm will say:&#13;
"We-have enough money for all our&#13;
needs and the needs of our children.&#13;
Now let us dissolve hualnpaa anrt m»V»&#13;
way for other men in the same line."&#13;
Ins*oad of being startled at a solitary&#13;
instance of magnanimity, It will become&#13;
z common thing. I know of&#13;
scores of great business houses that&#13;
have had their opportunity of vast accumulation&#13;
and who ouglit to quit.&#13;
But perhaps for all the days of this&#13;
generation the struggle of small&#13;
houses to keep alive under the overshadowing&#13;
pressure of. great louses&#13;
will continue; therefore, taking things&#13;
as they are, you will l?e wise to preserve&#13;
your faith and throw over all&#13;
the counters and shelves and casks the&#13;
measuring line of divine right "And&#13;
the Lord said unto me, Amos, what&#13;
teest ti'.ou? And I said, A plumb&#13;
line."&#13;
. Tfc* Only Religion,&#13;
I want you to notice this fact, that&#13;
when a man gives up the straight up&#13;
'and down religion of the.Bible for any&#13;
new fangled religion, it it generally to&#13;
suit his sins. You first hear of his&#13;
change of religion, and then you hear&#13;
of( some swindle he hat practiced in a&#13;
special mining stock, telling some one&#13;
if he will put in $10,00u&gt;he can take&#13;
out $100,000; or he ha* sacrificed his&#13;
rittejrrity or plunged into irremediable&#13;
Fan Is Wholciome.&#13;
ember that the wall may bo 100&#13;
t high, and yet a deflection one foot&#13;
m the foundations affects the entire&#13;
structure. And if jou live 100 years&#13;
and do right the last 80 years you may&#13;
nevertheless do something at 20 years&#13;
of age that wiH damage all your earthly&#13;
existence. All you who have built&#13;
houses for yourselves or lor-otfaers, am •&#13;
for every ^nan hasJ-J n o k-right. i n jsaxiag _to__these young&#13;
men, you cannot build a wall so high&#13;
as to ,be independent of the character&#13;
of its foundation? A man before-30-&#13;
years of age may commit enough 6tn&#13;
to last him a lifctime. New. John, or&#13;
George, or Henry* or whatever be your&#13;
Christian name or surname, say. «tie^&#13;
and now:* "No wild pata for me, no&#13;
cigars or cigarettes for me, no wine or&#13;
beer for me, no nasty stories for me,&#13;
no Sunday sprees for me. I am going&#13;
to start right and keep on tight • God&#13;
help me, for I am very weak. From&#13;
the throne of eternal righteousness let&#13;
down to me the principles by which.&#13;
I can be guided in building everything&#13;
from foundation to capstone. Lord&#13;
God, by the wounded hand«of Christ,&#13;
throw me a plumb line."&#13;
"But," you say, "you shut us j'oung&#13;
folks out from all fun." Oh, no! I&#13;
like fun. I believe in fun. I have had&#13;
lots of It in my time. But I have not&#13;
had to go into paths of sin to find i t&#13;
N a credit to-me, but ^because of an extraordinary&#13;
parental example and influence&#13;
I waa kept from outward transgressions,&#13;
though my heart was qad&#13;
enough and desperately wicked. T "iave&#13;
had fun illimitable, though i never&#13;
swore one oath and never gambled for&#13;
s o much a*- the value of a pin, and&#13;
never taw the inside of a haunt of sin&#13;
save at when many years ago, with a&#13;
commissioner of police and a detective&#13;
and two elders of my church, I explored&#13;
New York and Brooklyn by midnight,&#13;
hot out of curiosity, but that'I&#13;
might in pulpit discourse set before&#13;
the people the poverty and the horrors&#13;
of underground city life. Yet,&#13;
though I was never intoxicated for an&#13;
instant and never committed one act&#13;
of dissoluteness—restrained only by&#13;
the grace of God, without which restraint&#13;
I would have gone headlong to&#13;
the bottom of infamy—I have had so&#13;
much fun that I don't believe there Is&#13;
a man on the planet at the present&#13;
time who has had more. Hear it, m&amp;n&#13;
and boys, women and girls, all the fun&#13;
is on the side of right Sin may seem&#13;
attractive;;but it is deathful and like&#13;
the manchineel, a tree whose dews are&#13;
poisonous. The only genuine happiness&#13;
is in a Christian life.&#13;
Maude—If I only had my life to M7e&#13;
over again Clara (interrupting)—&#13;
Why, I thought that's what you were&#13;
doing. Maude—What do you me ah?&#13;
Clara—I heard you tell the census man&#13;
you would be 22 your nex.* birthday.&#13;
d w ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ t&#13;
v i d W ^ ^ D W r ^ r V ' r e -&#13;
coauaaakWer " " , s *'" n&#13;
C o m t t &amp; d a D t G e W &lt;&#13;
•niixgT ge^ttea ^ ¾ i&#13;
Lord Bobeitt, aakiog for aonflrmaMon&#13;
dftfc* report «rf W * *u*ten&amp;r of Gen.&#13;
? Printioo and r ^ u e ^ t t o g - p e ^ i t e m n t o&#13;
oomusmsicaW wttb ^fc&amp;qfcrfttttln* Do&#13;
-The correspondent of the" London&#13;
Daily Telegraph o n *hee 1^l a4iteHed&#13;
that documents of the higheat importance&#13;
emanating from- Efcgltffid beve&gt;&#13;
been discovered i n Pretorfo implicating&#13;
I membeas e* tae*non*a /W cbmtoont a n d&#13;
jither prominent persona &lt; in England,&#13;
w h o have: agitated i n ' favor -of "the&#13;
Boefa.. \% says. that startltog-^developmeatp&#13;
may be expected shortly. ^ ' *••&#13;
A epecial dispatch from Pretoria,&#13;
dated A a g t ^ , saj&amp;i Gea, Chriftten&#13;
I)ewet is completely tarronnded ttear&#13;
Reitzberg, and it is impossible for his&#13;
force* to ajfMtpe through the strong&#13;
Britiah cordon. The Boers say they&#13;
will naake a stand at Machadodorp.&#13;
They are- short of ammunition and&#13;
food.;, ,jdisxv HamiiUm, by thejrapidily/&#13;
of his movements, pr-av(H&gt;t£ retafocaements&#13;
.reaching CommaudanMieneral&#13;
Botjia. .'v _"V.' ,.\/ .&#13;
A belated dispatch from .Minister&#13;
Conger v*as received at the^ftate department&#13;
on the 5th. It oanqe frhrough&#13;
Consul Goodnow, at Shanghai, w h o&#13;
transmitted messages received by Mr.&#13;
Uagsdale, U. S. consul at Tien Tsin,&#13;
from Mr. Conger/and Mr. Squiers, secretary&#13;
of t b e j j f S. legation at, ^ekin.&#13;
In effect thVadvices are the tame as&#13;
those received a day or two ago by the&#13;
state department from Consul Fowler,&#13;
at Che Foa&#13;
. i i u e Boer animosity to President&#13;
ruger growSf on a»?opvnt «f the faot&#13;
that He and his officials axe persuading1&#13;
the people that South African Republic&#13;
paper money i« -as ^rood* rEs^)an1r of&#13;
England notes because il is based On&#13;
inalienable stat^ securities, even though&#13;
the state should be eonquered. As the&#13;
Enjrlishj have not ^ecogn"|zed this contention",&#13;
many bi^rjrhers have been&#13;
rxiine,dyand mtfenmisery prevails^ The&#13;
wivft ap*c*Mt4rek»»f the poore^Bcters&#13;
are almost starving^ ,, , , , ^ • t,&#13;
A dispatch, receive^ at the London&#13;
war office on the 3lst from Lord .Roberts&#13;
materially modjfles the statecraft&#13;
of the surrender of 5.000 federals wader&#13;
Gen. Prinsloo, as ^ W r t e d the day " o%-&#13;
fore. It now appears that Gen. Prinsloo,&#13;
Vilfters'aaoTCf^vther surrendered&#13;
with 96fSfce4r 1,433 horses- 95S flfles&#13;
iind a ffiiuppaajne-pounder. Some of&#13;
thJeietJers in'seme distant riartetoi the&#13;
hills hesitate to come in, on -the plea&#13;
that they are iodepenoenti of Gen.&#13;
Prinsloo. Lord Roberts adds that he&#13;
bad directed Gen. Hunter'to'resum'e&#13;
hostilities forthwith and to listen to&#13;
no excuses. —&#13;
Fottr young ladies were drowned&#13;
while in eathing'tet Oscean City, JT. J.,&#13;
on July 31. They were carried out by&#13;
« heavy under t o * .&#13;
An anarchist riot occurred at Chicago&#13;
on tho ftth at which 25 people' were&#13;
bruised, in; a struggle 'with 4¾1 police,&#13;
summoned to quell the disturbance.&#13;
Five persons were arrested.1&#13;
BASE B A L U ' '. -&#13;
Below we submit the official Ktandlnr of the&#13;
clubs of the National and American leajfdci 0.9&#13;
toand Including Sunday, August 5th:&#13;
Won. Lo«^ Per eu&#13;
Brooklyn 5i £9 v .046&#13;
Philadelphia 45 87 .5«&#13;
Pittsburg &lt;M 40 .MT4&#13;
Chicago 41 41 .494&#13;
Boston 40 42 .4(8&#13;
Cincinnati £8 43 .4&amp;!&#13;
S i Louis 3 6 . 41 AhQ&#13;
New York 31 48 .392&#13;
AMKHIUttt LBAGU*&#13;
Won. Lost Pepr ct.&#13;
Chicago. ftS 30 .691&#13;
Milwaukee &lt;0 44 JSi&#13;
Indianapolis 4« 41 .&amp;»&#13;
Detroit ,. 4« 46 4*H&#13;
Cleveland 43 45 .48*&#13;
KanttaaCity ^.. 44 60 -^IXSL&#13;
Buffalo 43 50 .463&#13;
Miuncapolis 4J 54 .4^6&#13;
THE M A R K E T S .&#13;
LIVE STOCK.&#13;
2f«w York-- Cattle Sheep Lamb* Hbrt&#13;
B«M grades.. \i 30^5 70 »4 «5 id m ag ou&#13;
Lower «radea.^ ^U04 2b »00 r5 00" * CO&#13;
Chloaro— " I - " -&#13;
Best grades....5 35^6 00 4&lt;75 6 75 I N&#13;
Lower grades. 4 00^5 -' 4 25 ., 4 7^. ,B 04&#13;
Detroit—&#13;
Be«t grades....3 75®4 75 4 75 6 03* 5 0&#13;
Lower g»aUe»..3 ttifri 75 3 to 4 75 ' 5 &amp;)&#13;
BaffMlo—&#13;
Best grades.^..4 40^5 25 6 03 6 25- 6 8»&#13;
Lower grade*.* 00»4 40 4 2(0 5 75 6 66&#13;
CloelMMtti—&#13;
Best gra4e»,.„6 OOO*.* • 4HA-\- »00 • ¥ «&#13;
Lower gr*desv4 40^6 00 a hi 6 » M«&#13;
Mttsbnrg*** /&#13;
Best trades....6 1BOS 70 4 50 5 50 5 55&#13;
Lower grades..4 6o%6 00 4 OJ 6 00 5|5&#13;
GRAIN, ETC&#13;
%• Wbfat, Corn. Oats.&#13;
^. No. m i No. S mix No. 2 white&#13;
2T«W York 79079« 43011* , 26026&#13;
t,hlr»a*» 7J©71ft 33^37 flQSn^&#13;
•lyermt 7^078¾ 40©DH 8 ^ / ^&#13;
ToladO 77077¾ 4IOM 2&amp;12&#13;
CifMlaMll 70^77 4 r^41 2 Q31g&#13;
PlttaiOT* 8.-080¾ 4.04,^ » 0 . 9 *&#13;
Uoffalo 79079» 4104m S80S8)&lt;&#13;
- "Detroit—Hajr. No. 1 Timothy. 11* 03 per ton.&#13;
Potatoes, 40c per ba Live Poultry, sprin*&#13;
ehlckens,8Mo per lb; fowls, 80: tarkeys, 100;&#13;
ducks, 9%c Eggs strictly fresh, lSo per doj*a&gt;&#13;
Butter, best dairy, l«c per lb; creamery, 19a,&#13;
•••;**"[&#13;
:A± iViU.kJkiskJ -^i^k Mi^ftV r^fi •&lt;•{.?" T--U-.&#13;
.1'.&#13;
/4 . 4" • ••' •&gt;i.&#13;
:fc- V ' ' ' : , i &lt; ^.&#13;
•• &lt; * * .&#13;
..•^liC •.'»'&gt;••&#13;
v . . • • -«•.., .&#13;
• ^ . • • • £ A&#13;
. . . « • » * . i&gt;|i,iW«H«&#13;
«&#13;
i.r: qxoiq ami&#13;
t i n his g l o w i i ^ &amp; a j ^&#13;
so . old, papa/' pretested&#13;
VA^ma* sjftnd&amp;beiieveraL.ywu* t h *&#13;
•s&amp;lor of his wife," declared Quintu*&#13;
B e s s ^ r .&#13;
"4f£ lie ha* a glass eye!V &lt;&#13;
'tyr* lass with which t a observe&#13;
«bqitc(«^Mp^», my dear!"&#13;
- "A&amp;d has false teeth."&#13;
-*»"fo law*Trr Jfes^p^iiSif*, * e s e n -&#13;
eiW*, SJ4 think it over."&#13;
Barbara thought it over, and* decided&#13;
that 41 be4n*.sensible meant marrying&#13;
Giles Ferguson she mast persist in being&#13;
foolish. The next time her father&#13;
reU»rne&lt;t to t i e charge he put Ms plea&#13;
on personal grounds. His pathetic&#13;
representation of his position was&#13;
rather effective. The improvements&#13;
in his office building had cost much&#13;
more* than he 'had fancied they would.&#13;
An Eastern firm, on whose leniency ho&#13;
hat retted/ were pressing* htm for an&#13;
immediate payment o f a heavy account.&#13;
Ferguson had practically reused&#13;
him further advances because&#13;
Barbara 'had declined to marry him..&#13;
Htf-could And1,better use for his money&#13;
than loaning It to the man whom he&#13;
was anxious to accept as a father-in-:&#13;
.••i wouldn't urge you," concluded&#13;
)N#3inger(&#13;
4*ff I thought you cared for&#13;
• a ? on6 else. There isn't any one else&#13;
—eh, Barbara?''&#13;
w r r T J " 1 " i ! « 5 *&#13;
Of&#13;
trim young form, a brunette face full&#13;
of life and sparkle, arch hazel eyes,&#13;
and a lovely scarlet mouth.&#13;
"No one else, papa!" There was no&#13;
doubting the frank sincerity of the refvQ^&#13;
S^. ^ ^ H B I H L&#13;
l^^W A^^mmwmLmmW&#13;
^ " J B i f l B / mmil BrMEvMHta* /&#13;
em\m\mm lBl^aSW^^BBlV&#13;
B^L^L^B^^T B^BV B ^ B *&#13;
l MWmT ^ ^ ^ ^ B F '&#13;
WSI^^^t&#13;
hat &amp;** raftectlon in t i e fiaaa.&#13;
fUn'.ahe ft** |0i iMfcpyTwfcy^ *ud-&#13;
4MQ\J saw aeemed -to ses agsda the)&#13;
homage of^th«e&gt; Aaahinr bhrt aye*.&#13;
Not Bhe sorely war not so silty as&#13;
that! i s delrriwosv girlish shave ttie&#13;
pressedtwr slim fingers over %**&gt; ejret/&#13;
to shuti out thole sihenr? But ihef&#13;
would M t t e b a i t e d A T b e r g a s a ^ intV&#13;
hers still!• All at once' a dreadfuj&#13;
thought thrilled her. " ' '&#13;
To-night Giles Ferguson would come&#13;
for hia answer, -&#13;
A sharp sense of repulsion overwhelmed&#13;
her. She ooaW not marry&#13;
himr i$he would n o t She bathed;&#13;
coiled her darar halY afresh, went down&#13;
to'dinner i n a gown of rosy lawn. At&#13;
&amp; o'clock the hopeful suitor made his&#13;
appearance. He wore a brand new&#13;
suit, and was apparently prepared for&#13;
conquest. He and Beaslnger talked.&#13;
At 10 Barbara was to give her final jle?&#13;
claion. She'watched the clock In an&#13;
agony of nervousness. Half past 8?&#13;
The hands were moving around the&#13;
dial with appaling speed. Nine! She&#13;
did hot know the bell had rung—&#13;
that a visitor was shown in. He was&#13;
young, tall, good looking. With a&#13;
start she recognized the agile captor&#13;
of her veil.&#13;
"The small gentleman is Mr. Ferguson,"&#13;
she heard the servant say.&#13;
The. stranger walked straight up to&#13;
Barbara's suitor.&#13;
* "How do you do, father?** he said.&#13;
••What's that?" screamed the old&#13;
man. He had turned ghastly.&#13;
"My name is Robin Ferguson. I only&#13;
arrived yesterday from California.&#13;
Your man told me I would find you&#13;
here. My mother -died three months&#13;
ago. Dying, she told me the story of&#13;
your desertion of her, when I was a&#13;
little lad. She made me promise to&#13;
look you Up. For her sake Tve done&#13;
i t I can prove all I say."&#13;
"I-*—I—I can't discuss the matter&#13;
,11 n 11,11,1,11)1 3E=3B5C Wi •'/• .'Xil&#13;
Barbara was 18. She had a round, w J t n y o u here—now!" His teeth chat&#13;
ply. "Give me two weeks more to&#13;
consider. Then—I'll say yea, if I can&#13;
—for^ouTHLWfce-—you pck&gt;l7~dearr olfl&#13;
worried thing!" ;&#13;
Beasinger made the most of Barbara's&#13;
concession, Ferguson was profoundly&#13;
gratified. "His one movable&#13;
eye expressed his happy anticipation.&#13;
"Tell her," said he, "that I have&#13;
never married because my ideal was so&#13;
lofty. Never until I met Miss Barbara&#13;
did I meet any woman possessing&#13;
every perfection."&#13;
"Tell her yourself," advised Quintus.&#13;
"Girls don't like to be courted&#13;
through their parents."&#13;
So Ferguson called every evening.&#13;
His deliberate compliments and languishing&#13;
glance set her wild with rejentment..&#13;
Two weeks! Why hadn't&#13;
she said two months? Surely the&#13;
hours were racing by. It seemed to&#13;
her the days fairly, galloped out of&#13;
sight. Her father grew more haggard&#13;
—more depressed. She used to catch&#13;
him watching her furtively. Ferguson&#13;
would stave off failure, would build&#13;
up his business, would put his credit&#13;
on a firm basis, if only-^— He had&#13;
been a good father to her. She would&#13;
probably never fall in iove anyway.&#13;
Perhaps she ought to do as he wished&#13;
—there she shuddered;&#13;
The- fateful day of her decision arrived.&#13;
A glorious day it was, crisp and&#13;
golden, with a rollicking wind skurry-&#13;
Ing along State street and playing&#13;
pranks at the corner where'towers the&#13;
Masonic Temple. Just there it swirled&#13;
a girl's skirts around her slender'ankles,&#13;
and—not content with this audaeity—&#13;
snatched oft her veil and flirted&#13;
it out of reach. But a tall- young, man&#13;
tn a gray suit gave, prompv pursuit;&#13;
"0, thank yon!" cried Barbara Beasinger,&#13;
blushing, when he stood before&#13;
her, hat in hand, returning the truant&#13;
trifle. "You are very kind!"&#13;
A murmured deprecation, a lingering&#13;
look of admiration, a deep bow,&#13;
and he was lost in the crowd. Barbara&#13;
went home in a strange state of&#13;
exhilaration. Some little ones at her&#13;
gate offered her roses. She took the&#13;
roses and kissed the children. She&#13;
had never thought flowers and child&#13;
faces so beautiful before'. She found&#13;
tered so he feared they would drop out.&#13;
"Even rf—if It were so—I'd not give&#13;
you a cent!"&#13;
The newcomer burst out laughing.&#13;
"I'll never ask you for one. My mother's&#13;
brother left all his property to&#13;
me, and there's a rattling lot of it,&#13;
too."&#13;
"O!" gasped Ferguson senior. This&#13;
gave matters a new aspect. But—&#13;
there ftwas Barbara. The clock struck&#13;
10.&#13;
"Barbara," said Bessenger, rising,&#13;
"you agreed to tell Giles Ferguson at&#13;
this hour whether or not you would&#13;
marry him."&#13;
White as a l i l y Barbara came forward.&#13;
The young fellow stared In delighted&#13;
surprise, as turning, he faced&#13;
her.&#13;
"Never! You, would not wish me&#13;
now, papa, to do so. - He has deceived&#13;
me. At any rate, I could never love&#13;
him." Then she bowed slightly and&#13;
took herself and her peach-bloom&#13;
gown from the room.&#13;
But soon Barbara learned how easy&#13;
it was to surrender one's whole heart&#13;
when the one destined lover came. Out&#13;
of confidential talks grew reconciliation&#13;
between father and son. The&#13;
former came to the wedding^ —z7~&#13;
"Lord, what an old focH I was!" he&#13;
said. "Things are only as they ought&#13;
to be! Bessingerand I are going into&#13;
partnership. Together we will make&#13;
the' business pay. And Rob, would&#13;
you—have you—any objection if I&#13;
were to—to kiss .the bride?"&#13;
"No, indeed!" cried the groom,&#13;
heartily.&#13;
"No, indeed!" echoed the bride&#13;
sweetly, as she held up her glowing&#13;
cheek.&#13;
E.aftticlty of Marble.&#13;
The Nuova Cimeato contains an interesting&#13;
article by P. Gamba, giving&#13;
the result of his experiments upon the&#13;
elasticity of marble. Plates of marble&#13;
were impregnated with different&#13;
liquids' and the effect measured. The&#13;
experiments are best carried out with&#13;
water, a3 by drying the marble may&#13;
be slowly brought back to its original&#13;
condition, the curves of deformation&#13;
being the same befbre and after..the.&#13;
action. The deformation is greater for&#13;
ths wet plate and the residual effect is&#13;
also greater; there is thus a considerable&#13;
increase in the flexibility of the&#13;
wet marble. OUT, glycerin and solutions&#13;
of paraffin give similar results,&#13;
although the marble cannot be forced&#13;
from the liquid and brought back to&#13;
its original state as with water. Petroleum,&#13;
however, causes no difference&#13;
in the flexibility. Glycerin gives tiie&#13;
greatest effect.&#13;
Bate O M W Elephant'* Feet.&#13;
Keepers at the Central Park zoo in&#13;
New York are vainly looking for some&#13;
means of preserving the elephants&#13;
from rats. The latter gnaw the feet&#13;
of the big brutes until they are lacerated&#13;
and no way has yet been found tn&#13;
protect them.&#13;
To 9tody Yellow Ferer.&#13;
An at early date the Liverpool&#13;
School of Tropical Diseases will send&#13;
an expedition to the Amazon to study&#13;
yellow fever. This will be the third&#13;
Being Matte-to the tnflatrft Mineral&#13;
n W *r-&#13;
« • ! . " "yHVi./.*' v:.*&#13;
AT AN WJTtW OF »#80M0 0,&#13;
Growtfe «f Xaterpriee&#13;
pe«4Uare of ,»SSP,e*0-*iue»»tt&#13;
B« I*. Krai&#13;
. F. J. CHENEY*CO..Prop«.rToie&lt;iO,a&#13;
Sold byjaroffgiataL price Tto.&#13;
H»U» Famfly PlUi are the best.&#13;
Ten years ago the ground vhere tha&#13;
AMgnifieent hotel property of the Indiana&#13;
Mineral Springs Company is located&#13;
at Indiana Mineral Springs, Indiana,&#13;
WM wholly unimproved and almost&#13;
a wilderness. Now, owing to the&#13;
discovery of the valuable medicinal&#13;
qualities of the springs and the heating&#13;
virtue of the soil itself, together with&#13;
the enterprise of Major H. L. Kramer,&#13;
there is located there one of the finest&#13;
sanitariums in the United States. The&#13;
natural picturesque surroundings&#13;
have been made mare attractive and&#13;
the hotel is a model of comfort and&#13;
elegance.&#13;
For the greater accommodation of&#13;
guests who come in constantly Increasing&#13;
numbers from every section of the&#13;
United States, arrangements have now&#13;
.. been made for the enlargement of the&#13;
hotel buildings. The contract was let&#13;
yesterday by Major Kramer for additions&#13;
that will cause an outlay of over&#13;
$30,000. The improvements will consist&#13;
of a new bath house and an addition&#13;
to the hotel. The addition will be&#13;
two stories in height and will occupy&#13;
a ground spaee 80x160 feet. It provides&#13;
forty additional guest chambers. The&#13;
entire addition will be handsomely&#13;
t-nd elegantly furnished. The bath&#13;
house, when completed, will be the&#13;
finest in the United} ,Statea.&#13;
Besides the bath house and the&#13;
guest chambers there will be on the&#13;
first floor a dining hall, a music room,&#13;
a billiard ball, physicians' offices und&#13;
a barber shop. In connection with the&#13;
bath house there will be ladies' and&#13;
gentlemen's dressing rooms and cooling,&#13;
rooms. The dressing and cooling&#13;
rooms will be elaborately decorated&#13;
and the floors will be laid in white tile.&#13;
In both cooling rooms will be built&#13;
large ornamental fire places which will&#13;
be used for heating purposes in addition&#13;
to the regular steam heating. The&#13;
work will be entirely completed in 90&#13;
days.&#13;
The improvements and the entire&#13;
arrangements of the hotel and grounds&#13;
are made, keeping in view the artistic&#13;
effect of the whole, and when the improvements&#13;
arranged for are completed&#13;
the hotel and surroundings will be&#13;
much more attractive than before.&#13;
Major Kramer states that a still further&#13;
addition to the hotel is contemplated,&#13;
and that plans are now being&#13;
prepared for an additional structure to&#13;
contain 150 rooms for guests.&#13;
Already a quarter of a million dollars&#13;
has been expended on the Indiana&#13;
Mineral Springs enterprise and under&#13;
the present . management greater&#13;
growth and development in the future&#13;
Daily Ledger.&#13;
ebulorood h o ry oeuo amautlst£uttatakaeaJal jdairsasaMjle r,e tannedd leiae, o JrBdaelriw's&#13;
&gt;dHiraelel'us yC aotna rtrhhe C ba&amp;fe o4ts *aost4» jaBvuseuoameki smuerdfaiccien*e. . fua wtahsi sp croetaxonrtrlbjre dfo bry yoenaen o,f a tnhde blae sat rpefrearisalcria parae -&#13;
fSta«l^W 4m*4V«m"»M«• &gt;w«i*tf*i t»h«eo b«e«sat&lt; W«borofda etWror*t fTlehne. pfcetrafse)c tp caoemdtbfliMna ti»ounc o*fw thoei^ tfwuror lon««^reudliFrncu(er llan g&#13;
The world doe*n*tcare whether youjhaire ear-&#13;
*™^^*SV em^^^peBBemwM^Bpt ssmmmijBmrjBmgBQ)^p£ ••^eamiiJBMOeww* ShIet lwaiall waelxarenw hoanvwaeeavayeawo dprreasis*e. s her husband.&#13;
If von want to *« ptoteeted trottt Ughtnlar&#13;
put a horasAhoe under your bett. '• ^ : ^&#13;
ferIfin ygo ua osrroee *menorpttaelds uton dreerpgino.e , think of the suf-&#13;
The Dueber Watch. Work*, at Canton, O&#13;
The Dueber Watch Works, at Canton, O..&#13;
oian the finest and most complete watch&#13;
plant in the world. The twin factories&#13;
producing both watch movements and&#13;
watch cases are devoted exclusively to&#13;
the manufacture of high - grade watch&#13;
movements and watch cases. Every resource&#13;
and every effort Is concentrated&#13;
in the single direction of making watch&#13;
movements and watch cases as nearly&#13;
perfect as lies within human power. All&#13;
common watches are pendant set. and&#13;
consequently dangerous and unreliable.&#13;
The Hampden 17 Jewel watch is I^ver&#13;
Set and pronounced by all experts as the&#13;
most reliable and p^curate watch on&#13;
the market. In buy!*: a watch, ge: the&#13;
very best you can aftord. It,will be the&#13;
cheapest In the end and give the greatest&#13;
satisfaction. Railroad men. in the&#13;
nature of their employment, are necessarily&#13;
good judges of a timekeeper. They&#13;
will tell you that no watch made equals&#13;
the "Special Railwav 21 Jewel" manufactured&#13;
by the Hampden Watch Co..&#13;
Canton, Ohio. Thousand* of these&#13;
watches are the standard in train service,&#13;
and their accuracy of movement&#13;
and reliability under all conditions have&#13;
earned for them the enviable reputation&#13;
of surpassing all others in the world.&#13;
The latest production of the Duebir-&#13;
Humpden factories is the smallest ladies'&#13;
watch made* In America. The name of&#13;
this unique production la "The Four&#13;
Hundred." Any lady who Is the proud&#13;
pesressor of one of these gems has a&#13;
thing of utility and beauty not exceeded&#13;
by anything that money can purchase.&#13;
The mechanical equipment of the Dueber-&#13;
Hampden Watch factories is of the&#13;
finest quality, and its experienced workmen&#13;
stand without peers in the watch&#13;
industry. To-day the Dueber-Hampden&#13;
watch is supreme; and the Dueber-Hampden&#13;
Works the greatest watch plant in&#13;
the world. All first-class Jewelers keep&#13;
these goods, demand the Dueber-Hampden&#13;
watches and accept no substitute.—&#13;
Irish World, July 7th. 1900.&#13;
Tern Uslag A U M I reot-Kavef&#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 to be shaken into&#13;
the shoes. At all Druggists and Shoe&#13;
Stores, 29c, Sample sent FREE. Adores*&#13;
Allen S. Olmsted. LeKoy, N. Y.&#13;
Some people are like geese—make a&#13;
racket as they run.&#13;
Carter's Ink •&#13;
is so good and so cheap that no family can&#13;
afford to be w.thout it. Is;y ours Carter's?&#13;
Good intentions do not always bring&#13;
beneficial results.&#13;
expedition they have organized withinl&#13;
i r r ' T singing. as she ran upstair*. \ the pait nine znontos.&#13;
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES do not&#13;
stain the hands or spot the kettle.&#13;
Scientists tell us that toes are slowly&#13;
disappearing.&#13;
Ladles C M Wear Shoes.&#13;
One slxe smaller after using A lien's Foot-&#13;
Ease, a powder. It make* tight or new&#13;
•hoeseasy. Cares swollen, hot,swe*ting,&#13;
aohing feet, ingrowing nails, corns and&#13;
bunion*. AH druggists and ahos stores,&#13;
too. Trial package FREE by maiL Address&#13;
Allen S. Olmsted, Le Boy, N. Y.&#13;
reTlahteiv mesa nw iwllh ho acvaen hliivs er eawt apseda.c e With hi* wife's&#13;
GUSTS, STO^-NNG GOODS&#13;
sad Flshtoff Tackle. Our eaialoswg rives jutt&#13;
whgt hunters are looking for. lowest prices on&#13;
latest and most reliable Gunr. Hlflea and Honters"&#13;
ontflts. Latest game law*. Largest Sportug&#13;
goods house In Michigan. V.Klndkr.Saginaw&#13;
To correctly stand touch the nose, the chest&#13;
and? the toes to the wall.&#13;
FITSIVnnanentlyOaied. KoCW ornarroqsnm artwr&#13;
first day'i use of Dr. KQM'» Great Nerve Restorer.&#13;
Sand for FREE 934)0 trial botU» and treatise.&#13;
Da. B. H.. Xufti, Ltd., Ml Area St, faiUdelphia, Pa.&#13;
Does (he husband of a boarding house keeper&#13;
kick with the boarders?&#13;
Mrs. irinsloWs Sootaiag Syrnp.&#13;
For children teething, softens the gnats, reduces t»&#13;
SammaUea. allays pala.oaias wind ooUc. 2½ a bottle.&#13;
There can be perfect love only when there is&#13;
perfect confidence.&#13;
When the hair to this sad grar. PAKSXB'S HA2B&#13;
BAUAX renews the growth sod colur.&#13;
Uufoxscbass, the best care for euros. Ucu.&#13;
It has been computed that about 70 babies arc&#13;
born each minute.&#13;
I do not believe Piso's Cure for Consumpticn&#13;
has an equal for coughs und colds.—JOHN FBOYJCB,&#13;
Trinity Springs. Ind.. Feb. 5, 1600.&#13;
Theaeasjet of good work Is doing-it as well as&#13;
it can be done.&#13;
Some articles must be described. White's&#13;
Yucatan needs no description; its the real&#13;
thing..&#13;
It is always easy to tlad excuses for things we,&#13;
want to do.&#13;
ABSOLUTE&#13;
SECURITY,&#13;
Genuine&#13;
Carter's&#13;
Little Over Pills.&#13;
w.M&#13;
• \ &gt;•••&#13;
• ' • : " ! #&#13;
• ' . o&#13;
wom—u Htomm* up&#13;
gmmmrmi bmmltb, mm*\&#13;
do wm o vmrwroMgkt&#13;
mmrvom, *«*»# ihomm&#13;
mwfuSi&#13;
• • -M&#13;
H do— this&#13;
maim dirmmUy mm thm fm-&#13;
H hmmtthy, rmiimvlmg&#13;
ouNmgt-idl htfimmmmikm&#13;
mmdtim$*lmmmmmmtmm&#13;
Hothtng mism Im Jumt mm&#13;
gomdmmdntmmytMmmmikmi&#13;
mmy bm suggested&#13;
dmngsrousm This&#13;
• 'V' J&#13;
r "•'•tl&#13;
•' 3¾&#13;
,"M&#13;
mmtttolmm hmm m oomsimmi&#13;
record of eurom Thousmnds&#13;
of women testify to&#13;
it, Reed their Setters oomstentiy&#13;
appearing im thim&#13;
pmperm&#13;
t*&gt;\&#13;
m&#13;
USETHECENUI^c&#13;
pRRAYA LANMAN'&#13;
,&gt; . ' . . » •&#13;
yME*&#13;
FOR '""easAi. 9**l 5f&#13;
THE, HANDKERCHIEF&#13;
TOILET a B&#13;
JJ_ S u a S T f T U T C S&#13;
Must Bear Sisnatur* of&#13;
FARM MORTGAGE&#13;
LOANS&#13;
In amounts ranging from 1300 t o&#13;
$10,000 en choice improved farms&#13;
in the Western part ot North&#13;
Dakota.&#13;
Write us if you have money to invest&#13;
and we will be pleased to send you&#13;
description of loans, rates of interet*\&#13;
etc. Personal examination of&#13;
all loans. We have invested nearly&#13;
One Million Dollars in farm loans&#13;
in North Dakota since 1881 without&#13;
the loss of a dollir.&#13;
NORTH DAKOTA LAMP 1 LOAM CO., RuffSy. N. D.&#13;
EDUCATION!*&#13;
TN IEABACHE.&#13;
FOI ilZZIMCSSs matutiiuEtSe&#13;
FOI Toim uva.&#13;
FM COMSTIPAT10H.&#13;
FBI SAUJW SKII.&#13;
FBinCMMPlHIH&#13;
^ CURS Sl6K H S A 0 A C H E .&#13;
MONEY FOR&#13;
SOLDIERS^ HEIRS Heirs of Union Soldiers who made homesteads of&#13;
less than 160 acre* before Joce 22,19il &lt;«o matter&#13;
tf abandoned). If the additional homestead right&#13;
was not sold or need, shoald address, with ran&#13;
HKMftY N . COPP, Wisliams, a 9.&#13;
THE UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE OAME.&#13;
NOTRE DAste. INDIANA,&#13;
( Cassaca, Utters, EcetJoeates aad Hlststr.&#13;
'tnasHsas, Art, fldesjee, Ptsarsaacy, Law,&#13;
\ IVcbatrtcal and Electricaf r i j a n i i m&#13;
.. whitcctufa.&#13;
Tberawgli Prapasatery and Ciiiaiiii clsl&#13;
Coorses. Ecclesiastical students at special rates.&#13;
Reoaas Free. Junior or Senior Tear. Collegiata&#13;
Courses. Roesn&lt; to Reset, moderate charges.&#13;
S t Edward** HaP, for DOT'S under IS.&#13;
The S7th Year will open 5spUssbcf 4th, 1900&#13;
Catafornes Fre&lt;*. Adtfrrs.*&#13;
REV. A. MORRISSEY. C. S C . Presides*.&#13;
SI. lARY'S A(ADWT&#13;
NOTRE DAME. INDIANA&#13;
Conducted br the Sister* of the Holr&#13;
Cross. Chartered 1855. Tboroagfa English&#13;
and Classical edocation. Begnlar&#13;
Collegiata Degrees.&#13;
In Preparatory Department students&#13;
* ^&#13;
* ; • •&#13;
• ::&#13;
'* *:'#&#13;
1¾&#13;
THE STANDARD S^SPSttZSOtitt&#13;
SEViMfil&#13;
C0MUIY&#13;
SEWIfi JUCMJME 2 ^ ¾ ¾ ^ n . ^ . t o r y of Mtufc and&#13;
make tweaty-ave dfffereat&#13;
sty tea, teclndia* the higaeav&#13;
priced best; aad best low&#13;
priced maehiees.&#13;
prSiceensd. for catalogae and&#13;
J. B. ALDSfCH. Soto star.,&#13;
2B Woodward A T * ,&#13;
DrraoiT, ilica.&#13;
Gymnasium under direction&#13;
of graduate or Boston Normal School&#13;
of Gymnastics. Catalogue free. The 46ta&#13;
year open* Sept. 4. 19C0. Addreas,&#13;
D1RECWESS OF THE ACADEMY.&#13;
St. m*ry* Acadtsty. . f4otrt&#13;
Btatkm IMs rasec&#13;
BOOKLETS FREE,&#13;
, S C. M A O l i i R E S r X ! R A C T BENNE PLANT&#13;
X L N h&#13;
LADIES! Ssr-fflS t* fan to i*»&#13;
.lL&amp;;ttaev«rtafl*i&#13;
W . N . U — D K T R O I T — N O . 3 2 — 1 9 0 0&#13;
i WIMA sMwtrini M i . p!tats Ksslifsj tMt atasr&#13;
i i i : f ' &gt; , . ; • : . . ' . ; . . - . • • •&#13;
v ' ••••! *'••&#13;
• : * # • : •&#13;
• ' ' !* 'V''&#13;
•x*:&amp;\ ^v&#13;
"V - \-&lt;* •&#13;
K,&#13;
i r,-..&#13;
%&#13;
9 5KSSS&#13;
« 2 *&#13;
•• • • i ;&lt;,"n'|i'r n.n"***!——.i u.. n i r\ mim CROP fiEPOBT&#13;
MOVEMENT ON F O O T T O S T A M P&#13;
• V ^ M T H O O CHOLERA.&#13;
:¾&#13;
We Baroarith submit tits Dates «f tfcs&#13;
Vsrtoaa Coo»t7 Fairs to Ua Beta" ta&#13;
Tale State ThU Fall —• Weekly Crop&#13;
Baport-r-Otber Items,&#13;
Cecal? Fain TbU Fall.&#13;
Following is a list of county fairs to&#13;
bo bold in Michigan this year:&#13;
• Michigan State" fair, at Grand Rapids,&#13;
September 24-28,-L H. Butterfield,&#13;
secretary; Albion Fair Association, at&#13;
Albion, September 25-28, A. L. Mc«&#13;
Cutckeon, secretary; Armada fair, at&#13;
Armada, October 3*5, A. J. Freeman,&#13;
secretary; Caledonia union, at Galedonia,&#13;
October 3-3, C. H. Kinsey, secretary!&#13;
Calhoun county fair, at Marshall,&#13;
October 8-5, W. H. Arthur, secretary;&#13;
Baton county fair, at Charlotte, October&#13;
2-5, Geo. A. Perry, Secretary; Fowlerville&#13;
fair at Fowlcrville, October 2-5,&#13;
D. C. Carr, secretary; Hillsdale county&#13;
fair, at Hillsdale October 1-5, C W.&#13;
Terwilliger, secretary; Huron county&#13;
fair, at Bad Axe, September 25-38, Geo.&#13;
W. Clark, secretary; Harry—County&#13;
Agricultural Society fair, at Hastings,&#13;
Oct. 9-13, C L. Beamer, secretary; Imlay&#13;
City fair, at Imlay City, Oct. 2-4,&#13;
F, Rathsburg, secretary; Ionia district&#13;
fair, at Ionia, Oct. 2-5, E. A. Murphy,&#13;
secretary; Marquette county fair, 'at&#13;
Marquette, Sept. 26-28, M. £ . Asire,&#13;
secretary; Midland county fair, at&#13;
Midland, October 3-5, J. G, Culver,&#13;
secretary; Muskegon county,&#13;
fair at Muskegon, Sept 18-31, Chas. S.&#13;
Marr, secretary; Oakland county fair&#13;
at Poatiac, Sept 18-21, F. W. Burch,&#13;
secretary; South Ottawa and, \yest Allegan&#13;
fair at Holland, Oct. 0-12, L. J.&#13;
Ranters, secretary; Tuscola, Huron and&#13;
Sanilac fair at Cass City, Get. 2-5, A.&#13;
N. Ale, secretary; Washtenaw county&#13;
fair at Ann Arbor, Jennie Buell, secretary:&#13;
Stockbridge fair a t Stoekbridge,&#13;
Oct. 0-11, A. J. Cain, secretary; Clinton&#13;
county fair at S t ' Johns, Sept 25-23,&#13;
M. Frink, secretary; Bancroft fair at&#13;
Bancroft Oct 10-12, F. J. Nixon, secretary;&#13;
Brighton fair at Brighton, Oct.&#13;
5-13, Sturberg &amp; Case, managers; Plymonth&#13;
fair at Plymouth, Sept 18-21,&#13;
H. J . Baker, secretary; Lapeer Agricul&#13;
tural Street fair at Lapeer, Sept. 4-7.&#13;
3,3 SB People Servls* Ttn»t.&#13;
A total of 3,380 persons were confined&#13;
in the various penil and reformatory&#13;
institutions of Michigan on the&#13;
first day of May last:, according t o&#13;
figures collected by Labor Commissioner&#13;
Cox. The above'total Is made&#13;
up of 2,988 males and 398 females. The&#13;
native born population far exceeds the&#13;
foreign born, the figures being 2,530&#13;
and 847 respectively. The prisoners&#13;
are classified as to offenses as follows:&#13;
Crimes against life, 285; crimes involving&#13;
virtue, 407; involving property,&#13;
M47; involving good government, 875;&#13;
involving morality, 357. There were&#13;
fifteen insane persons in the. jail* of&#13;
the state on the date of the canvas.&#13;
The prisoners are divided among the&#13;
different institutions as follows: Jackson&#13;
prison, 766; state house of correction&#13;
and reformatory, at Ionia, 408;&#13;
branch prison at Marquette, 203; Detroit&#13;
house of correction, 4237 Industrial&#13;
school, 630; Adrian industrial&#13;
home for girls, 305; in county jails, 552;&#13;
city prisons, 69; village lock-ups, 30.&#13;
Water Spout at the Flat*.&#13;
People who visited the S t Clair&#13;
Flats on the 12th to get away from the&#13;
heat, experienced quite a warm and&#13;
uncomfortable time between 5 and 6&#13;
p. m. A water spout was seen making&#13;
its w a y up the river with most disgusting&#13;
rapidity right in the direction&#13;
of the many resorts, but fortunately&#13;
the funnel-shaped cloud when within&#13;
50 feet of Joe Bcdore's place took a&#13;
turn and followed the river up stream.&#13;
The only damage recorded by the twister&#13;
was at Grande Pointe, where a&#13;
whole row of trees were torn up by&#13;
the roots, without hurting a soul.&#13;
Weekly Crop Report.&#13;
The weekly weather crop bulletin&#13;
issued on the 7th says t h a t the mean&#13;
dally temperature for the week ending&#13;
Aug. 4, 68.0 degrees, was identical with&#13;
normal. The average total precipitation&#13;
of 0.24 of an inch, was 0.25 of an&#13;
inch below normal The sunshine&#13;
averaged 7? per cent of the possible&#13;
amount In the lower, peninsula the&#13;
wheat and rye harvest has been quite&#13;
generally completed and the oats harvest&#13;
well advanced. There are a few&#13;
complaints of rust and smut in oats&#13;
but generally the crop is very fine and&#13;
heavy. It is being well secured and in&#13;
the southern counties its threshing is&#13;
well advanced. Late potatoes are do-#&#13;
ing finely cad their present condition&#13;
is very promising. Beans vary somewhat&#13;
bat for the most part are doing&#13;
welL Sugar beats continue to make&#13;
'good growth and remain promising.&#13;
Pasturage i s better than usual during&#13;
August In southern counties plowing&#13;
for fall wheat and rye is quite general&#13;
and correspondents report the soil in&#13;
Osgoodvoadition. Peaches are ripening&#13;
• and are ejuite plentiful. Plums and&#13;
apples indicate rather poor crop.&#13;
Threshers returns say that while wheat&#13;
is a very short crop it is&gt; generally of&#13;
good quality; rye is a full, good crop,&#13;
and oats arc heavier than usual.&#13;
MICHIGAN NEWS ITEMS.&#13;
Mt Clemens is to have a burial casket&#13;
manufactory.&#13;
Lightning caused a $4,000 tire near&#13;
Vicksburg on the 12th.&#13;
One death from heat prostration was&#13;
reported at Imlay City on the 8th.&#13;
Wheat around Portland is turning&#13;
out much better than was expected.&#13;
Three deaths and three prostrations&#13;
were reported in Detroit on the 0th'&#13;
The thermometer registered from 04&#13;
to 100 in the shade at Saginaw on the&#13;
8th.&#13;
The first labor day parade, held at&#13;
Port Huron in four years, will be held&#13;
there on S e p t 7.&#13;
Out of 305 prosecutions in Washtenaw&#13;
county in six months 315 convictions&#13;
are recorded.&#13;
A Hasting's man makes a good thing&#13;
out of catching turtles and shipping&#13;
them to large cities.&#13;
Allegan was visited by an $18^000&#13;
fire on the 7th. A wagon shop and five&#13;
barns were consumed.&#13;
Peter Novet, one of the oldest citizens&#13;
of Hart, suicided oah the 8th_by_&#13;
the carbolic acid route.&#13;
The thermometer registered 104 in&#13;
the shade at Houghton on the 4th, tlie&#13;
hottest day in 10 years.&#13;
The forest fires in the vicinity of&#13;
East Taw as was extinguished by the&#13;
heavy rains on the 12th.&#13;
The Swlae Plagoe.&#13;
The state sanitary live stock commission&#13;
is making a determined effort&#13;
to stamp ont the swine plague or hogcholera&#13;
in this snate. President Brown,&#13;
of the live stock commission, who was&#13;
in Lansing on the 8th, asserted that&#13;
the disease has cost the farmers of&#13;
Michigan hundreds of thousands of&#13;
dollar*, the losses in a single township&#13;
often aggregating 53,000 or 8(&gt;.ooo.&#13;
While there is no recognized cure for&#13;
the disease it is the opinion of the commission&#13;
that by intelligent restriction&#13;
and the employment of sanitary methods&#13;
the ravages of the disease may be&#13;
prevented to a great extent. The commission&#13;
has therefore secured an allow- , .&#13;
aacc f \wn the state board of auditors ! =&gt;a»*,nBW'&#13;
for the purpose of printing circulars&#13;
describing the disease, giving methods&#13;
of preventing infection, care of animals&#13;
and disinfection of premises. These&#13;
circulars will be placed in the bands of&#13;
supervisors whose duties under tbe law&#13;
are to sake every possible step to limit&#13;
— I t cost jSagipaq; county gJ3,S3.'».25 to&#13;
care for her poor last year. Ninetyseven&#13;
paupers were caned for.&#13;
Through jealousy Edward L e t t&#13;
colored, of Jackson, shot and killed&#13;
his wife on the night of the 0th.&#13;
The £age Fence company, of Adrian,&#13;
iK-HnancialLy embarrassed, and a receiver&#13;
now has charge of the business.&#13;
A Woodland woman who wanted to&#13;
disfigure herself, and had the money&#13;
to pay for having it done, has had two&#13;
large diamonds set in her front teeth.&#13;
Sparrow hunters are becoming so&#13;
numerous and so aggressive at Eaton&#13;
Rapids that ihe residents are almost&#13;
afraid to go out doors without armor.&#13;
= The first of the state's Spanish-&#13;
American war loan bonds were retired&#13;
on .the nth. It was only a small one—&#13;
$200. but others will follow now rapidly.&#13;
The Michigan National Guard pitched&#13;
tents at Island Lake on the 7th for a&#13;
seven days' encampment. About 2,200&#13;
officers and men were iu camp on the&#13;
\ first day.&#13;
Glass is not made it, Michigan at&#13;
present, the nearest. factory being located&#13;
in Toledo. However, a project&#13;
! is on foot to establish a factory at&#13;
Allege* Is to have- an apple avapora*&#13;
tor which .will be operated by electricity.&#13;
It is estimated tliat tbe coat of&#13;
running the machines by, that power&#13;
will be from £8 to $10 per day less than&#13;
by hand.&#13;
Burglaries have be.cn so frequent of&#13;
late at Muskegou, tbat the resident*&#13;
are becoming afraid t o keep much&#13;
money in the house, and t h e savings&#13;
banks report a large increase iu their&#13;
deposits.&#13;
Tbe Automobile Uapid Delivery Co.,&#13;
of Detroit, with a capital o f $25,000&#13;
has been incorporated, to conduct a&#13;
•general package delivery business iu&#13;
that city. Six automobiles have been&#13;
purchased.&#13;
The electric lighting plant and flour*&#13;
ing mill, burned at Morriee a few weeks&#13;
ago, will be rebuilt at once, the villagers&#13;
having voted in favor of issuing&#13;
bonds for $2,000 to asslst^the proprietort&#13;
to do so. ,&#13;
The Prohibitions of Calhoun* county&#13;
were unable to make any nominations&#13;
for prosecuting attorney ou their&#13;
County ticket because there is not a&#13;
lawyer of that political faith anywhere&#13;
in the county. '&#13;
A man near Albion has a 10-acre&#13;
mellon patch, and the small boys of&#13;
the vicinity—and some that are not so&#13;
small—are licking their chops in anticipation&#13;
of the time when the juicy&#13;
globes will be ripe.&#13;
Rev. Fr. C. J. Roche, pastor of St.&#13;
John's Catholic church at Essexville,&#13;
and dean of the Saginaw Valley, was&#13;
drowned at West Bay City on the 8th.&#13;
He was alone and it is not known how&#13;
the accident happened.&#13;
Rural free delivery will be ordered&#13;
established at Saginaw, August 15.&#13;
The length of the route is 82 miles and&#13;
the area covered is 104 square miles.&#13;
The population served is 3,505; number&#13;
of houses on route, 770.&#13;
There was a baby born at the university&#13;
hospital at Ann Arbor a few&#13;
da3's ago that promises to be a hustler.&#13;
When two days old two teeth appeared,&#13;
and at the age of "five days the&#13;
little one had four teeth.&#13;
Ralph DavLs, of Port Huron, disappeared&#13;
seven years ago and no trace&#13;
has been found of him. He was insured&#13;
for $1,000 in the K. O. T. M., and&#13;
that organization has just decided to&#13;
pay this sum to his widow.&#13;
Forest fires are raging on all sides&#13;
of Whittemore, doing unestimable&#13;
damage to property. The fires are beyond&#13;
control, and it is feared that&#13;
the worst is yet to come, unless there&#13;
is a heavy fall of rain soon.&#13;
Forty-three dollars per acre in three&#13;
months is the result of the experiment&#13;
at the Agricultural college for pasturing&#13;
lambs on sand lucerne by means&#13;
of a pen moved slowly over the pasturage&#13;
by an electric motor.&#13;
Aliens cannot be licensed by the&#13;
j t a t e board of veterinary examiners.&#13;
Consequently Canadians who are practicing&#13;
in this state will be obliged to&#13;
become citizens or go back home if&#13;
they wish to continue practicing.&#13;
Three Rivers is all torn up over an&#13;
attempt to get the city council to pass&#13;
a curfew ordinance. Many of the residents&#13;
say it will load to nothing hut&#13;
HIGHER ,v*.&#13;
QN ALL FOOD S T U F F S&#13;
PUERTO RICO*&#13;
IN&#13;
The Coasts Took Kffeet An*tut l a s *&#13;
Caught Mas/ Uoprepar#d — Tt»a&#13;
Banks Wars Crowds* Attar Ooala^&#13;
Hours—Other Event* of tha Weak.&#13;
SrJiNA . ^ ^ 1 4 3 % mm*&#13;
A Cold ttiooded Murder.&#13;
Chas, B. H. Ferrell, a former employe&#13;
of the Adams Express company,&#13;
was arrested at Columbus on the afternoon&#13;
of the 12th, and confessed t o ' t h e&#13;
k l l l i n g o f Messenger Chas. Lane and&#13;
the robbery of the way safe of the express&#13;
company oa the Pennsylvania&#13;
eastbound train, which arrived in Col*&#13;
nmbns a t midnight on the loth. One ^ wvt - w t ( „ „ w „ 4 . m¥&#13;
thousand doHara-whloh ho bad stolen [ ^ S e a ^ ^ f e r ^ t h a T T o&#13;
was recovered.. Ferrell was t o have&#13;
been married on the 10th i n s t to Miss&#13;
Lillian Costlow, daughter of Patrick&#13;
Ccstlow, an engineer on the Pennsylvania&#13;
lines, Ferrell bed been discharged&#13;
from the employ of the Adams&#13;
Express company about three months&#13;
ago and had not since been'able to secure&#13;
employment. He confessed that&#13;
the motive of the robbery was to secure&#13;
money of which ho felt in great&#13;
need on account of his approaching&#13;
marriage. The money recovered he&#13;
had given to Miss Costlow to keep for&#13;
him, saying that it was money be had&#13;
saved from fits earnings. He was at&#13;
the home of his affianced and in her&#13;
company when placed under arrest&#13;
Forrell ia but 22 years of age.&#13;
Prices Ruised ID Puerto Rico.&#13;
August 1 marked the beginning of a&#13;
genuine raise in prices throughout the&#13;
island of Puerto Rico, caused by a m i s -&#13;
understanding of .the exchange of cur- J&#13;
rency. Until a week ago it was widely !&#13;
known that after Aug. 1 no more&#13;
Puerto Rican silver would be exchanged&#13;
but the notice of the indefinite extension&#13;
of time was published far and&#13;
wide. Still, the idea prevails that&#13;
hereafter the peso will be of no value.&#13;
On July 31 the banks were crowded&#13;
after hours. Through a combination&#13;
of tbe traders throughout the island,&#13;
food stuffs and other necessities rose&#13;
in price. With a verytargr. number it&#13;
was moving day—a day for flitting&#13;
from excessively increased rents to . , .. .- - „, .&#13;
cheaper lodgings. It was also a day «q«adrpn». reconnoitcring near Teche&#13;
* B &gt;ouVbt j engaged 1,000 Chinese with two guns.&#13;
Mrs, E. B, Draw, wife o t the British&#13;
commissioner ofT customs at Tien Tain,&#13;
w h o recently arrived a t San Francisco&#13;
famine orient o n the transport Log&#13;
o * , .fc&gt; speaking of t h e brutality in&#13;
China, says: During, tbe bombardment&#13;
we lived most of r th* time in the&#13;
cellar .of Our housed Our house w a s&#13;
partially wrecked by big sheila Bleep&#13;
was out o M u e ftttestion most, oi tho&#13;
ptimeand w e were so unstrung that but&#13;
' l i t t l e food s e i i s i e d us. There was&#13;
ever present the haunting fear of the&#13;
Chinese triumphing and slaughtering&#13;
every foreigner and convert Some,&#13;
probably all, of tho women were prepared&#13;
to sot in case the' Chinese&#13;
effected an entrance. But, aside from&#13;
tbe unpleasant recollection, it appears&#13;
the allied officers were prepared to a c t&#13;
I did not know it at the time, but I&#13;
or 20 men had&#13;
been detailed to kill all the YoreJgn&#13;
women i n case tbe Chinese were the&#13;
victors.&#13;
Indications of the desire of China&#13;
for a peaceful settlement of her present&#13;
difficulties have been multiplying&#13;
for several days. Official evidence of&#13;
that desire was presented to the department&#13;
of state at Washington on&#13;
the 12th. It was in the forjn of an&#13;
edict promulgated by tbe emperor,&#13;
Kwang Hsu, appointing Earl Li Hung&#13;
Chang as envoy plenipotentiary to negotiate&#13;
with the powers for an "immediate&#13;
cessation of hostilities," peudiog&#13;
a solution of the problems which have&#13;
grown out of tho anti-foreign uprising&#13;
in the empire. Earl Li is t o act directly&#13;
for the-emperor and a fair inference&#13;
is that whatever terms of settlement&#13;
he may reach w i t h tbe powers&#13;
will be approved by t h e imperial government&#13;
Among the refugees from China w h o&#13;
arrived at San Francisco ou tbe Logan&#13;
were the wife of Prof- C". D. Tenney,&#13;
of the Imperial university in Tien&#13;
Tsin, and her- children. They were&#13;
among those who took refuge in Gordon&#13;
hall during the bombardment and&#13;
escaped uninjured. She and her husband&#13;
had been together in China for IS&#13;
years. Prof. Tenney is- now accompanying&#13;
the allied forces on the&#13;
march to Pekin as an interpreter.&#13;
A dispatch received at the war pffiee&#13;
in S t Petersburg from Gen. Grodekoff,&#13;
dated Khabarovsk, Aug. 4, Kays t w o&#13;
m&#13;
w&#13;
f&#13;
on which money that usually bought&#13;
breakfast and dinner, bought breakfast&#13;
alone. Eggs that heretofore were&#13;
bought for t w o or three centavos, cost&#13;
10 centavos, the carbon for boiling&#13;
these egg&amp;, instead of costing 10 centavos&#13;
cost 35 cectaTos. The cost of every&#13;
other article of food was raised in&#13;
about the same proportion. The wail&#13;
of complaint was general.&#13;
Caaaty to the Front.&#13;
L i k e county Is generally considered j&#13;
a worthless heritage, fit only to prodace&#13;
f s h , huckleberries and thieves,&#13;
•^bot this year the crops are excellent,&#13;
aad farmers throw down the gauntlet&#13;
t o the beat farmers of the state. One&#13;
t a n a of 25 acres of land produced at&#13;
the first catting 80 tons of mixed clover&#13;
aad Uawtby bay. and a very superior&#13;
sf^seatferofi is now growing upon the&#13;
.leant laisf.&#13;
Ferest i r e s have already destroyed&#13;
W r a i aad crepe in the vicinity of&#13;
The Genesee avenue bridge at Saginaw&#13;
has been condemned and will remain&#13;
closed until a new bridge is constructed,&#13;
which is estimated will take&#13;
18 months.&#13;
A Mrs. Watkins, of near Decatur, on&#13;
the 8th committed suicide by saturattbe&#13;
spread of the disease whenever i ing her clothing with kerosene, then&#13;
notified of an outbreak. i setting herself on fire. She died-in&#13;
terrible agony.&#13;
The thermometer registered 90 in the&#13;
shade at Howell on the 6th. Farmers&#13;
are fearful unless rain comes soon the&#13;
bean crop of the county will be seriously&#13;
damaged. •&#13;
The Michigan Stove company, of Detroit&#13;
makers of Garland stoves and&#13;
ranges, has been awarded first prise a t&#13;
the Paris exposition, in competition&#13;
with the entire world.&#13;
Rural free delivery service has been,&#13;
ordered established at Flashing, Genesee&#13;
county, Aug. 15. Length of route,&#13;
24 miles: area covered. 35 square miles;&#13;
population served, 904.&#13;
trouble and litigation if enforced, and&#13;
if not enforced, then what use to&#13;
pass i t ?&#13;
An old bear and her cub have taken&#13;
charge of a blackberry patch near&#13;
Standish and refuse to be disturbed&#13;
by pickers, although hundreds would&#13;
like to go and pick^ the ripening fruit.&#13;
They make it interesting for all who&#13;
go in sight.&#13;
It is estimated that 15.000 excursionists&#13;
visited St. Joseph on the 12th.&#13;
County Clerk Need ham admits he never&#13;
had a better day for his business. Two&#13;
justices and one minister officiated at&#13;
70 weddings at the clerk's residence&#13;
during the day.&#13;
Commissioner Evans" annual report&#13;
shows that Michigan had 44,298 citizens&#13;
on the pension rolls on June 30&#13;
last as against 45,170 on the same date&#13;
one year ago. The total amount paid&#13;
to Michigan pensioners during the past&#13;
year aggregated $6,642,878.&#13;
Attorney General Oren holds that&#13;
the law requiring manufacturers to&#13;
label all packages containing compounds&#13;
or mixtures with their names&#13;
is valid, and the names and addresses&#13;
must be placed on packages in such a&#13;
manner us not to deceive the purchaser.&#13;
John Groulix. an aeronaut, aged 10,&#13;
of Grand Rapids, was killed at Ottawa&#13;
Beach on the 7th, where be w a s giving&#13;
an ascension. The balloon w e s t up&#13;
about 2,000 feet. He cut loose tbe&#13;
parachute and was performing on the&#13;
bar as he descended, when' h e lost his&#13;
hold and fell about 2,200 feet into the&#13;
water. He was instantly killed.&#13;
According t o tbe August crop bulletin,&#13;
issued by Secretary of State Stearns&#13;
on tbe 0th, the estimated yield of&#13;
wheat for the present year in Michigan&#13;
is placed at 10,000,000 bushels, He&#13;
also says the crop is not such a universal&#13;
failure as it was last year, as&#13;
there is some good crops in certain&#13;
sections of the state, but that the 1900&#13;
crop Is said to be of poorer quality&#13;
than that of last year.&#13;
By a wreck on the Southern Pacific&#13;
near Iowa Station, La., o n t h e IStb,&#13;
several persons were killed and 40 injured.&#13;
The trucks of the engine left&#13;
the track and the entire train, except&#13;
the sleepers, was ditched.&#13;
Fifteen Dead—Grade Croeeiac Aeeldeat.&#13;
Fifteen persons were instantly&#13;
killed and 11 others, several of whom&#13;
will die, were serionsly injured in a&#13;
grade crossing accident, three miles&#13;
east of Slatiugton, Pa., on the-night of&#13;
the 12th, by a passenger train on the&#13;
Lehigh &amp; New England railway crashing&#13;
into an omnibus containing 25 persons.—&#13;
All the dead and injured were&#13;
hi the omnibus, and but three espaped&#13;
uninjured. The occupants of tbe omnibus&#13;
were returning home from a&#13;
funeral, when the train, a special con&#13;
sisting of an engine -and o n e&#13;
crashed into it.&#13;
Nine Parsons Killed by Llffbtnlna;.&#13;
Nine persons, of New York, w h o bad&#13;
decided to spend the 12th in the woods,&#13;
were the victims of a flash of light&#13;
nifig. The party had obtained shelter&#13;
under a large oak tree when the father&#13;
told them to seek .shelter jsome place&#13;
'He as he was afraid of stightning hitr.&#13;
g the tree. Part df them ran down&#13;
little pathway under a bluff and&#13;
crouched under a bush and the others&#13;
scampered to some sheltering bushes&#13;
on top of the bluff. They had hardly&#13;
bidden themselves when there %vas a&#13;
blinding flash and a crash. a&#13;
and 250 cavalry.- After a stubborn&#13;
fight the Russians were reinforced by&#13;
another squadron with two guns and,&#13;
defeated the Chinese, killing 200. The&#13;
Russian loss was eight men killed and&#13;
eight wounded.&#13;
Excluding t h e . 4th brigade the&#13;
strength of the forces proceeding t o&#13;
China is 446 British officers, 1,064 noncommissioned&#13;
and native officers, 13,-&#13;
070 men^ 11,850 followers, 1,150 drivers.&#13;
2,520 horses, 4,300 ponies and mnles, 12&#13;
guns,' 14 Maxims, jfrnd 1,800 imperial&#13;
service troops, it is expected that the&#13;
entire force will have sailed before the&#13;
middle of next month.&#13;
A Shanghai special, dated Aug. 6,&#13;
says: Li Hung Chang has officially informed&#13;
the consuls that the ministers&#13;
left Pekia for Tleu Tsin&#13;
• • ! • * • —&#13;
Z%t*l Quarrel at a Svasaaer Raaost.&#13;
Angry over his inability to live as he&#13;
wished on the sum allowed him by his&#13;
father, Jos. Rabiner, a consumptive,&#13;
on the 8th shot and instantly killed his&#13;
brother-in-law, Stein, badly wounded&#13;
his father and then turned the weapon&#13;
on himself w i t h what is said to be&#13;
fatal effect The- shooting occurred&#13;
on the piazza at the Rockaway Beach&#13;
hotel in full view of scores of persons&#13;
who had been attracted by the quarrel&#13;
which preceded the tragedy. All the&#13;
parties to the shooting were from New&#13;
York.&#13;
T H E N E W S C O N D E N S E D&#13;
One death and seven prostrations&#13;
were reported at Pittsburg, Pa., on&#13;
tbe 7th.&#13;
The number of people w h o are facing&#13;
destitution at Cape Nome is placed at&#13;
from 5,000 to 10,000.&#13;
Three persons were killed at South&#13;
Raub, I n d . on the night of tbe 6th as&#13;
a result of a collision between a passenger&#13;
train and an engine..&#13;
Thirty-one fatalities from the heat&#13;
were reported from four cities on the&#13;
8th, as follows; Milwaukee, 38 infants;&#13;
Chicago, 9; Pittsburg, 2; Toledo, 2.&#13;
The U. S. transport McPhersoo, from&#13;
Santiago, Aug. 2, with nine officers&#13;
and 413 men of the 5th infantry oo&#13;
board, arrived at New York on the Oth.&#13;
on Aug. o,&#13;
with Gen. Yung Lu in command of the&#13;
escort. The consuls are by oo_jneaina&#13;
disposed to credit Earl Li's s t a t e m e n t&#13;
All other reports that have reached&#13;
^ a - J London indicate that the ministers&#13;
have nokjefjrpekin.&#13;
In a heavy engagement eight miles&#13;
northwest of Tien T.sin on the 5th it&#13;
is reported that the allies' fierce fighters&#13;
killed nearly 0,000 celestials. The&#13;
losses of the international forces are&#13;
placed at 1,200 casualties, chiefly&#13;
among the Russians and Japanese.&#13;
The number of volunteers from the&#13;
German army reserves who have signified&#13;
their willingness to go to China is&#13;
said to be 120,000. From this number,&#13;
a corps not exceeding 20.000 will be&#13;
formed. A portion of the corps, will&#13;
leave within a fortnight&#13;
The following dispatch w a s received&#13;
from Minister Conger on the ?th:&#13;
Help at once if at all. Besieged^in&#13;
British legation. No government i n&#13;
Pekin except military chiefs, w h o are&#13;
determined on the destruction of-forj&#13;
eigners.&#13;
I t is reported that C*. Sv Consul Goodnow&#13;
strongly opposes Admiral Seymour's&#13;
intention to la ml .1,000 troops,&#13;
on the ground that "such an act would&#13;
not be warranted by the circumstances&#13;
and would be likely tt&gt; eause trouble.&#13;
The gunboat Princeton has sailed&#13;
from Amoy for Shanghai. This move'&#13;
may have been made owing to the disturbed&#13;
condition of affairs near Shanghai.&#13;
-Grave fears are again entertained in,&#13;
official circles at Washington fox.the&#13;
safety of the imprisoned ministers *in&#13;
Pekin.&#13;
Count von Waldersee, a German, has&#13;
been selected for the chief command&#13;
of the co-operating foreign forces i n&#13;
China. '&#13;
Both Germany and Russia have a&#13;
common cause for declaring war&#13;
against China and acting jointly.&#13;
Two detachments of Indian troops at&#13;
Hong Kong have been ordered to prepare&#13;
to proceed to Shanghai.&#13;
During.the fight which resulted In&#13;
taking Yang Tsun t h e Americans suffered&#13;
00 casualties.&#13;
It is said that the march to the relief&#13;
of Pekin will be anything but a&#13;
walkover.&#13;
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Veronica's (ace was at bag$arfl at&#13;
ilia's. The blow had been to cruah—&#13;
tttg&gt; to unexpected—that be had not&#13;
isemed glad to gee her, that bit heart&#13;
and by her sadness, "you would have&#13;
dona very, wrong It you had not&#13;
come"&#13;
6he gave him her addreta and left&#13;
h|m. When the had gone a little way&#13;
"He&#13;
are&#13;
she&#13;
tad not leant out to.ber, at'here dld^irom bim the took her boy in her&#13;
* him,, that hit eyea did not rett tor&#13;
me moment upon the boy, waa bad&#13;
*nough; but that there abpttto be another&#13;
woman in her place! Oh, that&#13;
**as anguish, intolerable! At latt she&#13;
spoke. "You lore her, Alan?" she&#13;
tsked.&#13;
^Better than my life!" he answered&#13;
passionately.&#13;
"Oh!" She gave a little shudder.&#13;
-Then I will go and leave you to your&#13;
Happiness," she said quietly. "It's foe&#13;
only way—the only way. I will take&#13;
aur boy and go!*&#13;
"But you cannot go!" he groaned.&#13;
"I made you my wife, Veronica, and&#13;
is long as you live you will be my&#13;
wife, although my heart and hers may&#13;
break."&#13;
"I break your heart?" cried Veronica.&#13;
"Why, I would give my life&#13;
for you. I would not have you unhappy&#13;
for a moment if I could help it.&#13;
I love you as much as in the old&#13;
days, Alan, before the shipwreck. Oh,&#13;
why was I saved?"&#13;
He looked at her, and poor Veronica's&#13;
heart failed her. There was no&#13;
love in that look. All the love of&#13;
Alan's heart w,as given to Joyce.&#13;
There was pity and despair, but no&#13;
love. When a woman loves a. man&#13;
she can soon see the difference. He&#13;
uld not say that he praised God that&#13;
he was saved, and he did -not. "Tell&#13;
me about it," he said mechanically.&#13;
If she talked he would be able to&#13;
think what it would be best to do^ for&#13;
her. But as for him, the despair of&#13;
his heart almost choked him when he&#13;
thought that in about half an hour&#13;
he must pull down that beautiful fabric&#13;
of their Uvea, must ruin Joyce forever!&#13;
He could scarcely think of Veronica&#13;
in his overwhelming agony;&#13;
but she spoke, glad to see his interest&#13;
"I was washed in shore, into a&#13;
sandy bay, Alan. I had gone through&#13;
the anguish of dying; but when -the&#13;
people found me they brought me to,&#13;
but the shock had been too much for&#13;
me; I could not remember anything.&#13;
And then in about five months baby&#13;
was born, and then it all came to me&#13;
slowly. 1 was ill and weak and could&#13;
do nothing; I could scarcely think.&#13;
Then at last when I wrote the letters&#13;
were sent back to me. and I beard a&#13;
rumor that you had gone back to England,—&#13;
T was penniless. I did not&#13;
know i t you wanted our 'marriage acknowledged,&#13;
so 1 did_not write to Mr.&#13;
Dempster; but as my strength returned&#13;
my courage did also. I began&#13;
giving singing and guitar lessons.&#13;
People were good to me. I worked&#13;
hard, and at last scraped together&#13;
enough money to take me in a sailing&#13;
boat to England. I hate the sea. I&#13;
was afraid of it; but you were there,&#13;
and I came. But it was a year before&#13;
I could And anything of you, and I&#13;
should not have found you at all but&#13;
Hutchinson told me he had seen you&#13;
and had spoken to you."&#13;
"When did he tell you that?"&#13;
"Two days ago. ,But he told me&#13;
that he had seen you two months ago,&#13;
and you had spoken of me. You had&#13;
told him we were married, Alan,&#13;
which he had not known. He tracked&#13;
me heme from a music shop, where&#13;
they get me music lessons; but I cannot&#13;
tell why he delayed."&#13;
Bu*. Alan could. Hutchinson, in his&#13;
cruelty, knew that it would be the&#13;
ruin of Joyce's life as well as his own&#13;
if this marriage with her could be&#13;
consummated first. He knew Hutchinson&#13;
hated him,.so this was his revenge!&#13;
He tried to* think of Veronica, but&#13;
it was of no "use. Joyce's image came&#13;
before him whenever he tried to think&#13;
of the poor girl who was his wife.&#13;
The little toy, also, was looking at&#13;
him' with his, Alan's, own blue eyes,&#13;
Which were so great a contrast to his&#13;
curly dark hair. That these poor&#13;
creatines, dependent upon him for&#13;
love which he could not give, troubled&#13;
him.&#13;
"Veronica," he said at length, "will&#13;
you go back to where you live and I&#13;
will write to yon when I have seen&#13;
her?*&#13;
"The wife you love?" asked poor&#13;
Veronica.'&#13;
"Yet," said Alan. "Will you do&#13;
that? Ton know that you can trust&#13;
me."&#13;
"Of courte," said Veronica, simply.&#13;
"I will do what you say always. It&#13;
It misery to me to think that I havo&#13;
made you t o unhappy, when I thought&#13;
only to make yon happy" ,&#13;
"My poor girl," he said, deeply&#13;
touched by the contrition in her tone&#13;
arms and hugged him fiercely,&#13;
never looked at you, my own"&#13;
said—"never once! « u t you&#13;
mother's joy! Oh, Alan, Alan,"&#13;
wailed, "why Was X saved!"&#13;
But Alan was standing where she&#13;
had left him. He told himself that&#13;
he was no coward, but that his heart&#13;
failed him tor this. There was no&#13;
way out of it. He and Joyce, his wife&#13;
of six weeks, must part!&#13;
At last he roused himself; it was&#13;
getting late. Joyce already would be&#13;
uneasy about him. The thought of&#13;
her pretty wifely solicitude, and how&#13;
after today it might never be put to&#13;
the test, overcame him altogether. To&#13;
feel that Joyce was living, and that&#13;
he must give her up, that they were&#13;
both young and loving, and must go&#13;
on living apart forever, was too nfuch&#13;
for him. "My God, help us to bear it!"&#13;
Afterwards it came back to him with&#13;
profound regret that he had never&#13;
thought ...of Veronica at all; but . he&#13;
could be thankful that he had seen her&#13;
and had not hated her.&#13;
He crept home slowly^like a wounded&#13;
animal going to its—lair. Home!&#13;
The very word hurt hira. And be ana&#13;
Joyce had only this morning talked&#13;
of buying the pretty house for their&#13;
summer residence. This morning was&#13;
it, or years ago Could it be only an&#13;
hour or so since he left the -station,&#13;
all unsuspicious of what was to befall&#13;
him?&#13;
For he had been unsuspicious. H&lt;?&#13;
had entirely forgotten the woman who&#13;
he now easily identified as Veronica.&#13;
He had been happy as it is given to&#13;
few mortals to be happy. He groaned&#13;
aloud as he opened the door which led&#13;
into the pretty hall. His throat was&#13;
dry; be could not call Joyce.&#13;
But Bhe had evidently heard the&#13;
opening door, for she came out of the&#13;
raorning-room, which they furnished&#13;
with the hangings they had bought&#13;
on the day he had seen Veronica. She&#13;
called gaily to him and a little reproachfully.&#13;
"Oh, Alan, how late you&#13;
are, you naughty boy! And GUT r i d e -&#13;
will you have tea first?"&#13;
He timply could not answer. It wa3&#13;
impossible; his tongue clove to the&#13;
roof of his mouth, and his dry throat&#13;
could net articulate a sound.&#13;
"Alan,"- she "called again, "come&#13;
along, darling."&#13;
"I am coming." His voice was, howover,&#13;
so muffled, in a moment she was&#13;
alarmed, bhe cftmo 'running out. tu&#13;
him.&#13;
"Alan, Alan, what is it? Are you&#13;
ill, dearest?"&#13;
Her unconsciousness almost killed&#13;
him, together with the thought that he&#13;
would have to tell her. Then she&#13;
came up to him and saw his face. In&#13;
an instant she knew that something&#13;
awful bad occurred. Her jaw fell, and&#13;
she staggered up to him, putting out&#13;
her hand and feeling as if she were&#13;
blind. She was unconscious no longer,&#13;
for she remembered vividly the day&#13;
when he had turned so white, and had&#13;
told her the reason afterwards cs they&#13;
sat together at the hotel. Her quick&#13;
mind told her that his-ashy greyness&#13;
and tba misery on his face had something&#13;
to do with his dead wife. Hand&#13;
in hand they went together into the&#13;
pretty morning-room* into which the&#13;
sun was shining, and they sat down&#13;
speechless. A bird in a bush close by&#13;
set up its joyous son^. Nature was&#13;
full of gladness.&#13;
Then suddenly he wrenched his&#13;
hand out of hers and threw himself&#13;
headlong upon the couch. Sobs broke&#13;
from him and his shoulders heaved.&#13;
For a moment she let him weep, and&#13;
then she knelt down beside him and&#13;
flung her pretty, soft arms round his&#13;
neck, and pressed her cheek,' down&#13;
which the tears were running, against&#13;
his, so tha^ their tears mingled together.&#13;
"Tell me like this," she said. But&#13;
he could not speak, his grief was uncontrollable.&#13;
And so in whispers she&#13;
began: "It is something about your&#13;
wife, Alan—your first wife, I mean,&#13;
poor Veronica?"&#13;
He groaned, and an awful knowledge&#13;
came to Joyce—a knowledge that&#13;
clutched her heart and made her very&#13;
being stand still. For a moment the&#13;
saw nothing distinctly, heard nothing&#13;
distinctly, only felt Alan's tears upon&#13;
her cheek. Then, when the mist&#13;
cleared away: "Is she alive?" she&#13;
whispered.&#13;
"Yea!" he cried.&#13;
"Alive? Oh, my poor heart! Alive!&#13;
Your wife? And X—I "&#13;
He aat up then and grasped her&#13;
hands in his. "You, you!" he cried.&#13;
And the agony of hit voice came back&#13;
to Joyce tor years after. "You! I've&#13;
got to give you up, Joyce? You,' the&#13;
wife of my heart, my own, my soul!&#13;
You've got to be as nothing to me!&#13;
How can 1 do it"&#13;
ri dont know," the tatd feebly,&#13;
"And-yet, Alan, we must!"&#13;
&lt;*Do you think I don't know it?': n«&#13;
cried, "Do yon think I would have you&#13;
live with me while my wife wae living?&#13;
Do you think I should let one&#13;
person in this world point a finger of&#13;
acorn at yon? Do you think 1 should&#13;
let you toil your beautiful white soul&#13;
tor me? Oh, Joyce, 1 love you too perfectly&#13;
for that, you are too dear to me&#13;
for that! I will aay good-by to. you,&#13;
my own, and never look at your face&#13;
again; but I will not let you live disgraced.&#13;
But the parting—the parting!"&#13;
Joyce's white face uplifted to his,&#13;
Joyce's hands grasping his, Joyce's&#13;
Whole being suffused oy love for him,&#13;
and he had to give her up! No more&#13;
exquisite agony had to be imagined&#13;
than this moment's, and yet, when it&#13;
came to the actual doing of it, it so&#13;
far transcended the imaginings of it&#13;
that this interview almost seemed&#13;
sweet in comparison.&#13;
"The parting?" she re-echoed. "The&#13;
parting? You mean that we must&#13;
cease living in the same house, in the&#13;
same place, together?' Alan, can we&#13;
do it? Will strength be given us? Oh.&#13;
what shall we do?"&#13;
(To be continued.)&#13;
HOMESEEKER9'&#13;
55552HE22S&#13;
U R $ I O N 8&#13;
ENGLISH TIPTOPPEBS' PAY.&#13;
What the Lead log; Men or AU Profession*&#13;
Earn In England.&#13;
It pays to be at the top of things.&#13;
Money is always attendant upon reputation,&#13;
for nowadays the successful&#13;
man is well rewarded for his ability.&#13;
Diplomacy seems to be one of the most&#13;
paying professions to follow. "The&#13;
salary of an ambassador," is a wellknown&#13;
saying when any one wishes to&#13;
indicate that such and such.a person is&#13;
possessed of great wealth. Sir E. J.&#13;
Monon, our ambassador at Paris, is&#13;
the most highly paid of all those vigilant&#13;
gentlemen who guard our interests&#13;
abroad. He receives for his services&#13;
the princely income of £9,000 a&#13;
year. After him comes Sir H. Rumbold&#13;
at Vienna, with £8,000; Sir F. C. Lascelles,&#13;
at Berlin, with the same yearly&#13;
sum, and Sir Charles Stewart Scott,&#13;
who draws £7,800 from the public&#13;
purse to represent us in St. Petersburg.&#13;
All the English diplomats are&#13;
well paid. "Here is a list of some of&#13;
them, giving the place at which they&#13;
reside and the income that comes to&#13;
them for it: Washington, £6,500;&#13;
Rome, £7,000; Turkey, £8,000; Tokio,&#13;
£4,000; Egypt, £6,000; Teheran,&#13;
£5,000—a list taken at random, which&#13;
serves to show the large earnings of&#13;
our representatives. The English&#13;
church is still a paying profession for&#13;
the men at the head of it. The archbishop&#13;
of Canterbury, Dr. Temple, enjoys,&#13;
and-indeed earns, the nice little&#13;
sum of £15,000 a year, while'his colleague&#13;
of York is, like the bishop of&#13;
London, paid £10,000 for his arduous&#13;
and never-ending labors. The carl of&#13;
MllUo, lh\t governor of Canadat heads&#13;
the list of governors with £.10,000, and&#13;
after him comes Sir Alfred Milner of&#13;
£ape Town with £8,000. Lord Beauchamp&#13;
of NewSouth Wales gets £7,-&#13;
000, as also does Gen. Grenfell, who&#13;
looks after that island fort, Malta.&#13;
Sums of £6,000, .£5,000, and £4,000&#13;
are common salaries. Consul-generals&#13;
are munificently paid. Two of them—&#13;
Viscount' Cromer 6f"~Cafro and Sir H.&#13;
M. Diirand of Teheran—each receive&#13;
£5,000 a year. For being first lord of&#13;
the admiralty Mr. Goschen draws £4,-&#13;
500, while Sir Richard Webster, until&#13;
the last few daysT enjoyed as attorneygeneral&#13;
£7,000. Mr. Chamberlain has,&#13;
besides his own large private fortune,&#13;
£5,000 as his .official salary, while for&#13;
commanding the array Lord Wolseley&#13;
gets £4,500. The home secretary, Sir&#13;
Matthew White Ridley, has £5,000 in&#13;
salary. Despite the large figures given&#13;
above, no one, not even the archbishop&#13;
himself, can- compare in his earnings&#13;
with those of a successful barrister.&#13;
Of all "tip-top" men, your leading&#13;
counsel is the most fortunate. Lord&#13;
Russell of Killowen as a barrister&#13;
made something like £20,000 a year.—&#13;
London Mail.&#13;
Tie. Cbtoag* aV Western Illinois Jksttread*&#13;
On the first and third Tuesdays of&#13;
July and Auguat the Chicago *&#13;
Eastern Illinois Railroad will place on&#13;
tale Homeaoafcew* Excursion tickets&#13;
to various points in Alabema, Arkansas,&#13;
Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana,&#13;
Mississippi, Missouri, North&#13;
Carolina, Bouth Carolina, Tennessee,&#13;
and Texas.&#13;
One fare pint $2.00 for the round&#13;
trip.&#13;
Ticket! are limited on going trip&#13;
fifteen dayt from date of tale with&#13;
atop .over privileges in Homeaeekart*&#13;
territory. Returning tickets are limited&#13;
twenty-one dayt from date of tale.&#13;
Remember that we, now have In service&#13;
a new wide vestibuled train between&#13;
Chicago k Waco A Ft. Worth*&#13;
Texas, leaving Chicago daily at 1:60&#13;
9. BL Through. Pullman sleeping can&#13;
and free reclining chair cart. For&#13;
further particulars call on or addreta&#13;
any agent Chicago 6 Eastern' Illinois&#13;
Railroad or C. L. Stone. G. P. &amp; T. A.,&#13;
Chicago.&#13;
T H E BOXERS OP C H I N A&#13;
are attempting to solve a gigantic&#13;
problem, but they are going about it&#13;
in the wrong way and will never succeed.&#13;
Some people, in this country,&#13;
seem to think that they have at great&#13;
a puzzle on their hands in selecting a&#13;
location for a home. They will certainly&#13;
go about it in the wrong way&#13;
unless they inspect the beautiful farming&#13;
country on the line of the Chicago,'&#13;
Milwaukee ft S t Paul Railway' in Marinette&#13;
county, Wisconsin, where the&#13;
crops are of the best, work plenty,&#13;
fine markets, excellent climate, pure,&#13;
soft water; land sold cheap and on&#13;
long time. Why rent a farm when&#13;
you can buy one for less than you pay&#13;
for rent? Address C. B. Rollins, Land&#13;
Agent, 161 La Salle St, Chicago, 111.&#13;
As a result of a collision between a&#13;
passenger and freight train on the St.&#13;
Louis Southwestern (Cotton Belt) railroad&#13;
at Aurich&gt; 40 miles north of Pine&#13;
Bluff, Ark., on the 611¾. five men were&#13;
killed and two seriously injured.&#13;
More Cheap Excursion* to Colorado.&#13;
Special Trains, one night out to Denver,&#13;
Colorado Springs and Pueblo via&#13;
the Great Rock Island Route, will leave&#13;
Chicago August 21, Sept. 4 and IS, at&#13;
4:45 p. m. On these dates excursion&#13;
tickets from Chicago to Denver, Colorado&#13;
Springs, Pueblo, Glenwood&#13;
Springs, Salt Lake City and Ogden,&#13;
Utah, will be sold at rate of one regular&#13;
fare plus $2.00 for round trip, return&#13;
limit Oct. 31, 1900. Tickets also&#13;
good on regular trains. For full information,&#13;
berth reservations and&#13;
beautiful book "Colorado the Magnificent,"&#13;
sent fiee, address&#13;
JOHN SEBASTIAN, G. P. A. Chicago.&#13;
' ^ ^ t ii i it?*&#13;
• When a preparation; ha* en adver- •&#13;
tised reputation that is world-wide, it&#13;
meant that preparation U meritorious.&#13;
If you go into a store to. buy am article,&#13;
that has achteved-universa! popularity&#13;
like Caaoarete Candy Cathartic for « * ,&#13;
ample, you feel it hat tfee endorsement '&#13;
of the world. The Judgment of the&#13;
people is infallible because it is in*;&#13;
personal The retailer who want* to&#13;
sell you "something else" in plap* e&lt; ;•.&#13;
the article you ask for, has. a* ax | o&#13;
grind. Don't it stand to reason? Ha'si&#13;
trying to sell something that ia not&#13;
what he represents it to be. Why?&#13;
Because he expects-to derive an ex-'v&#13;
tra profit out of your credulity. Are&#13;
you easy? Dont you see through nitu-&#13;
UtUe frame? The man who will try&#13;
and sell you a substitute for CAflOAEV&#13;
ETC is a fraud. Beware of himt Jut&#13;
is trying to steal the honestly earned&#13;
benefits of a reputation which another&#13;
business man has paid for, and if hit -,&#13;
conscience will allow him to g o so far,&#13;
he will go farther. If he cheste kfeew*- ;&#13;
tomer in one way, hie will fn another*'&#13;
and it is not safe to do business'%lih &gt;&#13;
bim. Beware of the CASCARET *ubstitutor.&#13;
Remember CASCARET8 are&#13;
never sold in bulk but in metal boxee&#13;
with the long tailed "C" on every box&#13;
and each tablet stamped C C C&#13;
The human race is but a contest for&#13;
dollars.&#13;
lMA$m-Cmn ffur Bhoea.-•-•,&#13;
One size smaller after usinar Allen's FooV&#13;
Ease, a powder. It makes tight or new&#13;
shoes easy. Cures swol lea, hot,sweating,&#13;
aching feet, ingrowing nails, corns anoV&#13;
bunions.. All dm * gists and shce stores,&#13;
*5c Trial package FREE by maiL Address&#13;
Alien S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N.T.&#13;
A woman's part in life is self-sacri*&#13;
fiee.&#13;
Nothing comes borne to a man so&#13;
much as an unsettled bill.&#13;
Some people love ice cream, while&#13;
others scream, "Ice!"&#13;
Be happy, though hot; be calm,&#13;
though cold.&#13;
President Receives Afeoat SBO.OOO.&#13;
The president receives a salary of&#13;
$50,000 a year, his house free, and this&#13;
-includes the heating and lighting. The&#13;
grounds are cared for, his conservatory&#13;
is filled with flowers, and the&#13;
gardener,who cares for it is paid by&#13;
the government The only servants&#13;
whose wages the president is called&#13;
upon to pay are his own personal ones,&#13;
for the doormen, messengers, clerks,&#13;
and, in fact, every one connected directly&#13;
or indirectly with the executive&#13;
department are, of course, government!&#13;
employes. He receives, also, aa the&#13;
head of the army, fodder for hit horses&#13;
and his stable is the property of&#13;
the government. There are other allowances&#13;
and, taken all in all, it it&#13;
estimated that the president receives&#13;
in various ways between $80,000 and L&#13;
$90,000 a year, or ita equivalent -&#13;
It hat been found that smallpox patients&#13;
are leatt marked when kept in&#13;
rooms darkened with red curtains.&#13;
TOE-GUM ¾?sar!^l;«^¾,w""^&#13;
THE STANDARD&#13;
SEWING&#13;
MACHNECO.&#13;
mth"e\k oen 2l5y sttwyloe-sin, -ionncelu dloinckg aAnldso c hbaeisnt slotiwtc hpr micaedch minoe-. chines. For prices address&#13;
J. B. ALDR1CH, State Mngr.,&#13;
DXTBOIT, Mica.&#13;
NEBRASKA&#13;
THE LAND&#13;
OF PLENTY&#13;
I wonder whjr it 4a tbafc-se-many&#13;
men spend their days working bard&#13;
on rented farms, barely making&#13;
enough to get along,, with no great&#13;
prospect ahead of owning their&#13;
own homes, when within a few&#13;
hours' journey is a land of plenty&#13;
—Nebraska— where all kinds of&#13;
grain and fruit can be raised with&#13;
the least amount of labor; where&#13;
cattle and hogs fed on corn bring a&#13;
handsome profit; where the climate&#13;
is healthful and churches and&#13;
schools abound; where land is&#13;
cheap and can be bought on very&#13;
easy terms.&#13;
Think of this, and if yon want&#13;
information about the country send&#13;
to .me for "The Corn Belt," a&#13;
beautifully illustrated monthly&#13;
paper that tells all about Nebraska,&#13;
and also for "The West Nebraska&#13;
Grating Country," aa interesting&#13;
illustrated booklet containing a&#13;
l a m sectional map of Nebraska.&#13;
On the first and third Tuesdays&#13;
of each month during the balance&#13;
of this year cheap excursion&#13;
tickets will be sold over our road&#13;
to Nebraska, so that people may go&#13;
asd see for themselves. Ask your&#13;
ticket agent about this.&#13;
p. a. mans.&#13;
ffiSBsspfi2tt^&#13;
LARGEST MAKERS&#13;
of Men's S3 and!&#13;
S3^0shoesinthe:&#13;
world. We acllj&#13;
more $3.00 and',&#13;
; $3.50 shoes thnn5&#13;
: any other twol&#13;
! manufacturers inl&#13;
the U.S. 1&#13;
The reason snore'&#13;
W.L.Douglsa S3.00".&#13;
'and S3£0 shoes are"_&#13;
sold than any other'&#13;
'mako is because they are'&#13;
'the best in the world.&#13;
A $4.00 Shoe for $¢.00.&#13;
' A $S Shoe for $3.60.&#13;
^'Ov«rJljajjODW»ag^g|g| p m&#13;
SSMbtf TeIo»m Rceaaln KWiowrthto fefftW Qum/ $tk3M an&amp;a $W3.t5o0W S.t o,« BftTtn* tbe larvett |a and Suso shoe bari- nm* In the world, nn&lt;\ a perfect system of&#13;
rhannrvtO'-trKr. enable* n§ to produce&#13;
higher prvlft $\ft) *-&gt;d $3.ra shoe* than&#13;
can tie hal elsewhere. Your dealer&#13;
L•hexodnltdu tKa)e eapa itfhi leam e:a cwhe tioriwTne .o ne dealer&#13;
\ T u k e m •ilmilfciift .&#13;
I on haTin«W. L. DoRfrlM ahoee with,&#13;
\ n&amp;meatxl priceaUinpedon bottom.&#13;
i Uyonrdealer will not get them fori&#13;
Woo, send direct to factory, e n - /&#13;
\ closing )&gt;nce and 8Se, extra i&#13;
i folera tchaerrr,i a•gixe*, . Satn adte wktinridth o,f k&#13;
plain or cap toe. Cmr&#13;
shoes will leiirliyoii&#13;
EDUCATIONAL.&#13;
THE UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE OAK,&#13;
NOTRE DAME. INDIANA.&#13;
JoCuarsnsateli.s%m , LAettretr, sS, cEiecnocneo, mPicbs arawndac yt,t lsLtaarwy*. CAirvcihl,i treicetcuhrae.c'k al and Electrical ~ ' CoTubroserso.o Ethcc lesPiraesptiacraalt sotruyd enantsd a t special rates. CoRuorosmes.s FRreoeo.m J u&lt; ntoio Rr oenr tS, emnoiodre rYaetea rc hOaorUgeesa.i ata TSth.e E Sd7wtha rYde'sa rH wpti*ll, foopre nbo Sye'fpf tuenmdbeerr 1 43.t n,l#0O CatatRoEniVa.s AP.i eM*.O RARddISrSeEs*Y . C. 8 C. President&#13;
ST. MARY'S ACADEMY&#13;
NOTRE DAME, INDIANA&#13;
Conducted by the Sisters of the Ho??&#13;
Cross. Chartered ISM. Thorough' Kn&amp;&#13;
lish and Claisicial education. Regular&#13;
Collegiate Degrees.&#13;
In Preparatory Department students&#13;
carefully prepared for Collegiate oourse.&#13;
Fhyaieal and Cbemioal Laboratories'well&#13;
equipped. Conservatory of Musio and ,&#13;
fccbooi of Art. Gymnasium under diree*&#13;
tion of graduate of Boston Normal School&#13;
of Gymnastics. Catalogue free. The 46th&#13;
year opens Saps. 4,1900. Address,&#13;
DIRECTRESS OF THE ACADEMY.&#13;
8t M a m Acacsay. - Notre DSSK, Isdtsaa&#13;
LADIES! When doctor* and ether, tail to re*&#13;
Here yon, try N. F.X.H.; Itaerst faoL&#13;
Nnfree. *&gt;•»». kS*wsfcB9s«ws«*wV&#13;
HM&#13;
'•VX1&#13;
,r.YA&#13;
•&lt;.M&#13;
.'*!&#13;
•*5?&amp;&#13;
iffifcJ&#13;
:¾&#13;
&gt;d&#13;
•*--**»*fo*^--«' ,X£L. ^ Liefcss4&amp; mlM&#13;
.%«-'«* ^ • W t J * . -nW* - ^ ^ w r i w a j s m ^ ^ ^&#13;
C I W&#13;
: # $ &amp; « * •&#13;
v'a&gt;' »-. • &gt; ' * £''•'*&#13;
* ,&#13;
'W^?':r^''": V ' • ; ' ' • ' ' ' • r ' : " . ' • • " • . ' " " • • v ^ L ' " " • • ' / • ' ' . - : - - : - • • ; • • ' ; : . : • • • " : • ' » ; ' • . • . &gt; • - • • • • • - " , - • . • ' " • • • ' " • : * ' : " - : . ^ : *&#13;
. # « ! ' •&#13;
•fa*® :-:^-.&#13;
• v V * • : ' • : •«•'&#13;
,"Jf*S.: k'-V:^'-' •*ca nwRr"&#13;
c i C ^&#13;
-¾&#13;
M^-%*&#13;
-V t '&#13;
.,¢11.71 "1&#13;
• . * 1&#13;
*&amp;'&#13;
fhwlttrtj iwjmtfh.&#13;
—»-&#13;
/ . L. ANDREWS t W O R .&#13;
rfiUHSDAY, AUGUST 16, 1900.&#13;
The immense peach orop this&#13;
year is reeultinR in low prices.&#13;
,A Goblevili man sent a shipment&#13;
&lt;&amp;i*arly peaches to Chicago and&#13;
received only two cents per basket&#13;
$oir them alter paying all the expenses&#13;
of shipping.&#13;
, The Jaws of health require that the&#13;
bo we U move once each day and one ol&#13;
H B ^ b e penalties tor violating this law is&#13;
5 1 piles Keep your bowels regular by&#13;
,^| taking a dose of Chamberlain's Stomath&#13;
and Liver Tablet* when nece&amp;siry&#13;
and you will never have that severe&#13;
punishment inflicted upon you.&#13;
Price, 25 cents. For sale by F. A.&#13;
Sillier, Pinckney.&#13;
ft&#13;
H&#13;
M&#13;
si;&#13;
».'&#13;
V&#13;
i&#13;
The wholesalers of Saginaw are&#13;
preparing to entertain the country&#13;
merchants in their territory in a&#13;
short time. Every business man&#13;
within a radius of 100 miles of&#13;
Saginaw will receive an invitation&#13;
to visit that city at that time.&#13;
What most people want, is some*&#13;
thing mild and gentle, wben in need&#13;
of a physio.. Chamberlain's Stomach&#13;
and'Liver Tablets fill the bill to a dot&#13;
They are easy to take hud pleasant in&#13;
effect, For sale by F. A. Siller&#13;
Pinckney.&#13;
I&#13;
*&#13;
i&#13;
*&#13;
v&#13;
c&#13;
\f&#13;
h&#13;
\-&#13;
- • • * ' • t&#13;
The Bell and New Stpte telephone&#13;
exchanges at Ypsilanti arc&#13;
to be consolidated. I t is only a&#13;
question of time when this policy&#13;
will be carried out in every town&#13;
and village where there is an exchange&#13;
of each of these companies.—&#13;
Dexter Leader.&#13;
Vs-&#13;
A Minister's Gaod Work.&#13;
"I had a severe attack of bilious&#13;
* colic, got a bottle of Chamberlain's&#13;
Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy,&#13;
took two doses and was entirely cured,"&#13;
says Rev. A. A. Power, of Emporia.&#13;
Kan. "My neighbor across the&#13;
street was sick for over a week, had&#13;
two or three bottles of medicine from&#13;
the doctor. He used them for three&#13;
or four days without relief, then&#13;
••. ».i |. *•*£.&#13;
mmm*m+~+m&#13;
4&#13;
called in another doctor who treated&#13;
him for some days and gave him no&#13;
relief, so discharged him. 1 went&#13;
over to see him the next morning.&#13;
Be said hrs bowels were in a terrible&#13;
fix, that they had been running off&#13;
so long that it was almost bloody flux.&#13;
I asked him if he bad tried Chamberlain's&#13;
Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea&#13;
Remedy and he said. 'No.' I went&#13;
borne and brought him my bottle and&#13;
gave him one dose; told him to take&#13;
another dose in fifteen or twenty minutes&#13;
if he did not find relief, but be&#13;
took no more and was entirely cored."&#13;
For sale by F. A. Sifiler, Pinckney.&#13;
lh&lt;-&#13;
At the Uuiversity hospital there&#13;
js a rather unusual sight. A few&#13;
days ago a baby was born. On&#13;
the third day after its coming&#13;
^ into the world it developed two&#13;
H teeth. On the fifth day two more&#13;
teeth, appeared. Thus the baby&#13;
at the age of five days has four&#13;
teeth. This will make mothers&#13;
look back a long ways before anther&#13;
instance can be found which&#13;
tjeat this record.—Courier.&#13;
iff.;&#13;
•Wp the CoQffh and works oft the&#13;
Cold.&#13;
| j Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets cure&#13;
,a cold in one day. No&lt;ure, no pay.&#13;
Price 25 cents.&#13;
'Through the months of June and&#13;
July our baby was teething and tjok&#13;
';'a running off of the bowels and s»ckleas&#13;
of Uw Stomach," says 0 . P. M.&#13;
BolHday, of Deming Ind. "His b o w&#13;
«U would move &lt;rom five to eight&#13;
et'A day. 1 had a bottle of Cbamcl|&#13;
fcVUl.ic, Cholera and Diarrhoea&#13;
mady in the bouse and gave nim&#13;
^oujfuropi in a teaspoonful of water&#13;
J f a n i l w g o l better at once." Sold by&#13;
ft A- Sigler, Pinckney.&#13;
Council Procedings,&#13;
ForThe Vlliaf«WP4nckaey*&#13;
Special, - Auf. 31900.&#13;
Council convened and called to&#13;
order by president Mclntyre.&#13;
Present:—Bichards, Bowman,&#13;
Erwin, Love, Beasoui&#13;
Absent —Monks.&#13;
The following resolution was&#13;
presented and adopted:&#13;
Be it resolved by the Common&#13;
Council of the village of Pinckney&#13;
that the warrant for collection of&#13;
taxes on Village Boll 1900—be extended&#13;
until Oct 11900.&#13;
Upon motion council adjourned.&#13;
R..H. Teeple, clerk.&#13;
Regular. Aug. 6, 1900.&#13;
Council convened and called to&#13;
order by president Mclntyre.&#13;
Present:—Trustees, Bichards,&#13;
Bowman, Love, Erwin, Beason.&#13;
Absent:—Monks.&#13;
Minutes read aud approved.&#13;
Street Com. report read and approved.&#13;
Street bills were presented as&#13;
follows:&#13;
Geo. Reason and con 431b nails, $1.72&#13;
Teeple &amp; Cad well 201b anils. .80&#13;
Geo. Sigler filing saws etc, 1.10&#13;
T. Read lumber, • 22.48&#13;
Dud Grieve draying, .85&#13;
S. Grimes Poll, labejr for R. Erwin, 1.25&#13;
W.J. Black, 1.00&#13;
W.Harris, 1.25&#13;
Chas. Grimes poll and labor, 1.25&#13;
F. H. Smith " 1.25&#13;
Thos. Turner labor,' * 5.98&#13;
T T&#13;
ANOCR80X FARMER'S 1XUB.&#13;
flcnle ia YaBWIntte&gt;stirore gator day&#13;
Anft-mt 11.&#13;
Total, $38.93&#13;
The following contingent bills&#13;
were presented and accepted.&#13;
F. L. Andrews printing, $7.55&#13;
Roger Carr lighting and set posts, 10.10&#13;
G. \V. Reiwn &amp; S:m lamps, burners, 21.76&#13;
W. E. Mnrpby 1 day b'd election, 1.50&#13;
Jas. Greene " 1.50&#13;
Wra. Hoff gate keeper, 1.50&#13;
Total, $43.91&#13;
S. Brogan's bid for marshall&#13;
services for balance of year was&#13;
presented and accepted at $40.00&#13;
per annum.&#13;
Upon motion Council adjourned.&#13;
Sttbacribe for Dispatch.&#13;
B. H. TEEPLE, Clerk.&#13;
"My baby was terribly sick with tl e&#13;
diarrhoea," says J. H. Dosk, of Will-&#13;
We unable to&#13;
assistance,&#13;
isms, Oregon, " w e were&#13;
cure him with the doctor's&#13;
and as a last resort we tried Oharabelajn's&#13;
Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea&#13;
Remedy. I am happy to say it gave&#13;
immediate relief and a complete care."&#13;
For sale by F. A. Sialer. Pinckney.&#13;
EXCURSIONS&#13;
V 1 A T H B&#13;
P E R E MARQUETTE&#13;
Annual low rates to Fetoskey, Traverse&#13;
City, Charlevoix, Ludlagton, Mack- J&#13;
inac Island, September 4.&#13;
Train will leave South Lyon at&#13;
7:20 and 9:45 a. m. Bate 15.00&#13;
to Petoskey and Traverse City via&#13;
Pere Marquette through or via&#13;
Grand Bapids, Howard City and&#13;
G. B. &amp; I. By. Bate to Mackinac&#13;
Island $1.00 more than Petoskey.&#13;
Bate to Ludington ¢5.00. All&#13;
tickets good to return until Sept&#13;
12 inclusive. See bills or ask agents&#13;
for full particulars. t-34&#13;
Saturday, August 18.&#13;
It is the of duty of every farmer&#13;
to visit the Agricultural College&#13;
once a year and take his&#13;
children to see the college and&#13;
grounds. This advice applies to&#13;
city folks also. To make such a&#13;
trip without much expense, the&#13;
Pere Marquette Company will run&#13;
a special train on above date,&#13;
leaving South Lyon at S:43 a', m.&#13;
and leaving the Colleee returning&#13;
at 5:83 p. m. Bound trip rate&#13;
$1.00 children under 12 half rate.&#13;
Fill np your lunch baskets and&#13;
propose for a delightful outing.&#13;
TO Cure a Cold In&#13;
Take Laxative Bromo Qtuain* Tab&#13;
lets.AII druggitt* r*fdo4 tkenwnt/&#13;
if it fails to curs. E-,W, ftrat%Y *V&#13;
nature ii on each bo*. fjtot ..&#13;
On Saturday last the members&#13;
of the Anderson farmers club held&#13;
their first annual picnic in Van&#13;
Winkle's grove southwest of this&#13;
village and everyone went to enjoy&#13;
the day and scenery. I t is without&#13;
doubt oue of the most picturesque&#13;
places in this part of the&#13;
country many places being as wild&#13;
and rugged as can be found among&#13;
the rocks of northern Michigan.&#13;
In the background there is a&#13;
beautiful body of water which extends&#13;
for several miles through&#13;
ponds, rivers and lakes whose&#13;
shores are bold and covered with&#13;
groves. It is an ideal spot for a&#13;
picnic and sight-seeing.&#13;
At noon the tables were spread&#13;
"on the grass" and the different&#13;
parties fell to and replenished the&#13;
inner man. Just as dinner was&#13;
over a little shower hustled the&#13;
people for a few momentfl but save&#13;
a slight wetting no one was injured&#13;
and the program was carried&#13;
out as arranged.&#13;
N. D. Wilson acted as toastmaster&#13;
and after a song by Mrs.&#13;
Kirk Van Winkle, he introduced&#13;
Bev. Fr. Comerford who gave a&#13;
short address in which he said&#13;
that he thought the life of the farmer&#13;
was the happiest in the world.&#13;
It may not be the richest but the&#13;
farmer is M all times in touch&#13;
with nature and nature's God.&#13;
Jas. Greene th*»n followed with&#13;
a toast "Our Ancestors" in which&#13;
he extolled the works of those who&#13;
settled and fought for the freedom&#13;
of this country and thought we&#13;
should ever be on our guard that&#13;
nothing should overthrow the&#13;
freedom which was so dearly&#13;
bought. We should look with&#13;
shame on the man who would use&#13;
his money or allow his ballot to&#13;
be purchase at either a caucus or&#13;
an election.&#13;
Miss Clair Ledwidyje gave a&#13;
recitation after which Frank&#13;
Shields of Howell responded to&#13;
"Our Country" in an eloquent addi'eas.&#13;
He^ said that while our&#13;
country wes among the youngest&#13;
of all, yet we were in advance of&#13;
nearly every other in nearly all&#13;
matters. Go to any nation or&#13;
country you may and you can ride&#13;
in American cars drawn by American&#13;
engines over American steel'.&#13;
We can eat American fruits almost&#13;
anywhere in the world.&#13;
Bev. K. H. Crane gave a short&#13;
talk in which he said that he hoped&#13;
the time would come when this&#13;
picnic would take in the whole&#13;
township of Putnam and every&#13;
farmer and son of of a farmer attend&#13;
with their families.&#13;
Altogether the picnic was a successand&#13;
everyone expressed them-&#13;
8e Ives as well pleased with the&#13;
days outing.&#13;
L'at whnt yon like&#13;
Eat as you like. Keep strong by taking&#13;
Knill'8 Dyspepsia Tablet*. They digest&#13;
any and all Linds of food. Make pure,&#13;
sweet stomachs and breaths. Try them.&#13;
Only 25c a box.&#13;
JP!ea«nnt» Safe and Sure&#13;
are KmU's Black Diarrhoea Pills. (Black&#13;
berry Compound) cure Summer complaints&#13;
Diarrhoea, Dysentery, Cholera Morbus and&#13;
all pains of the stomach and bowels; 25c a&#13;
box.&#13;
O ran ye H eadacb e.&#13;
Knill's Orange Headache Pills, 10 dose 10c&#13;
Cure in 10 minutes, are the best and cheapest.&#13;
Never fail or leave any bad after ef;&#13;
feet. Guaranteed by your druggist.&#13;
A. 3 . Stewart of Webberville,&#13;
has a fine threshing outfit. Besides&#13;
a very large and modern&#13;
traction engine, he has a self feeder&#13;
separator, it weighs the grain,&#13;
bags it and stacks the straw. Ten&#13;
men comprise the crew; they live&#13;
in tents and board themselves.&#13;
The price for threshing wheat U.&#13;
4cts a bushel and 2Jcts for oats.&#13;
All the farmer has to-do is draw&#13;
off the grain.—Williamston En-&#13;
~: WILDCAT STRATEGY.&#13;
The Clew? 1T«y In Weieh th» Animal outwltteil•&#13;
lack ©f Fmvutn* HotuuL*&#13;
In many.parta of Tennees^ aW--&#13;
ing wildcats is as popular a tT&lt;** ;'s&#13;
the fox chase. The wildcat ia as&#13;
tricky as the fox. He has n B'IU&#13;
mote dogged way of sticking to the&#13;
thickest cover and the most rugged&#13;
ground, and when overtaken will generally&#13;
fight till lia dies.&#13;
Some years ago I witnessed a wildcat&#13;
perform an act of cunning qui e&#13;
as remarkable an any I have heard&#13;
attributed to the fox. With six other&#13;
young men I was camped near the&#13;
head waters of Buffalo Creek, not far&#13;
from the Alabama line, when we determined&#13;
to try a wildcat chase, and&#13;
for that purpose went to a thickly&#13;
wooded strip of country lying between&#13;
the Buffalo and one of its tributary&#13;
streams. In the dense woods there nre&#13;
occasionally small openings connected&#13;
by a few old roads which we could&#13;
traverse on horseback. Only at the&#13;
lower end of this strip of woods were&#13;
there any caves or holes To which vha&#13;
wildcats would be likely to retreat.&#13;
Our chase began on a cloudy* drizzling&#13;
morning, a capital time for the&#13;
hunt, for in such -weather the game Is&#13;
easily'started and the trail Is strong.&#13;
Three of our party, including ruygelf&#13;
took positions near the junction of the&#13;
two streams, in the edge of a small&#13;
space tha? was clear of undergrowth,&#13;
but set with taller tress. The other&#13;
four, taking the dogs, went some two&#13;
miles up the river to start the game,&#13;
which would probably pass near our&#13;
position, either to take refuge in a&#13;
neighboring bluff on the river bank,&#13;
or as was more likely to dodge 1he&#13;
hounds by winding among the rocks,&#13;
and then doubling on their trail.&#13;
We had waited fully two hours when&#13;
we heard the distant cry of a hound,&#13;
and soon afterward a full chorus of&#13;
the dogs. They were coming toward&#13;
our place of concealment, although as&#13;
yet far off. and to judge from their&#13;
cry the trail was growing hotter every&#13;
moment. After a run of some twenty&#13;
minutes the steady baying was succeeded&#13;
by a din of short, sharp yelps,&#13;
and then we knew the pack had sighted&#13;
the game. We kept perfectly quiet&#13;
among the bushes, our guns ready for&#13;
action and when the hounds were&#13;
about a quarter of a mile distant we1&#13;
heard a rustling among the bushes&#13;
between us and the dogs, a succession&#13;
of light, springing leaps, and then an&#13;
enormous wildcat bounded Into the&#13;
clearing.&#13;
We should have fired but that our&#13;
curiosity was roused by the eccentric&#13;
movements of the creature. For an&#13;
instant he looked back in the direction&#13;
of the hounds, then making several&#13;
active springs to the left he returned&#13;
to his trail and made as many&#13;
springs to the right. Then turning he&#13;
jumped upon the trunk of a leaning&#13;
chestnut tree, which, having been&#13;
blown down, had been broken off&#13;
some forty feet from the root. Th9&#13;
break was seven or eight feet from&#13;
the ground, and the leaning trunk was&#13;
pointing in the direction from which&#13;
j the hounds wer*&gt; ^ftr^ff&#13;
'ine cat ran quickry—to the upper&#13;
end, but instead of leaping off, as we&#13;
expected, he scrambled underneath the&#13;
trunk, and crawled out upon a broken&#13;
limb that projected two or three foet&#13;
from the lower side. Here he sat,&#13;
close crouched with his short ears&#13;
thrown back and his great yellow eyes&#13;
glaring fiercely.&#13;
Pretty soon the dogs came up in full&#13;
cry on the trail. Three old hounds led&#13;
the pack and these were a little puzzled&#13;
when they came to where the cat&#13;
had turned aside. The other hounds,&#13;
most of them being young, scat! fired&#13;
over the open place, all the while baying&#13;
lustily, but without striking the&#13;
trail at #11. The leaders, having made&#13;
several starts in different directions,&#13;
finally struck the trail, and were forthwith&#13;
joined by the others. Up the&#13;
trunk they went with sonorous bay.'&#13;
one right after the other.&#13;
Under the end of the log on the&#13;
broken limb still crouched the wildcat,&#13;
motlonle&amp;s as atone7 except as he bent&#13;
his fierce yellow eyes around him and&#13;
moved his short tall slowly from side&#13;
to side. Only the thickness of the log&#13;
was between him and the foremost&#13;
hound; still he did not move, but only&#13;
crouched closer to the limb. Ills pursuers&#13;
paused but for a moment on the&#13;
log, and then leaped to the ground in&#13;
quick succession. After a little confuion&#13;
in searching for the trail, they&#13;
started off at full speed on the back&#13;
track, and were soon some distance&#13;
from the place.&#13;
The cat did not move from his plac3&#13;
until the hounds were well out of&#13;
sight. Then, raising his head, he cautiously&#13;
looked-around, and, lindim? no&#13;
enemies in sight he sprang lightly to&#13;
the ground and started to mako off&#13;
another way. I wished to reward the&#13;
animal's sagacity by allowing it to&#13;
escape unhurt, but a shot irom one of&#13;
the party stopped Its course,—Yon:h 'a&#13;
Companion.&#13;
A'FRfifi&#13;
^EAR&#13;
^3SHS&amp;32«a?&#13;
rta&lt;wft ItfttydifMlS. a™lMc5of?, tSterclit «nnodt laittutltea Mehl.Utody ntah.e Th*t*w MLOTU othir pitww*" H»»« M aqua! &lt;oritylB*ad pwfxXflt&#13;
MS CALL&#13;
A BAZAR, fc 'PATTERNS Euilr rut toother. Only 10 *n« )»«*»« "SkT-«TO^M! •BIllBk bteor"r VtbotlmdT. oAnteaaortluyt erty wwr y el»'te| iyt tt"p*-to»^JM^*? •»j*S••'&#13;
THE MeCALL COMPANY,&#13;
STATE of MICHIGAN, County of Livingston,&#13;
SS.&#13;
At a «0ssion of the Probate Court for said County,&#13;
held at the Probata OIHce In the Village of&#13;
Howell, on Saturday tnMth day of August, In&#13;
the year one thousand nine hundred.&#13;
Present, AtB'RJ&gt; M. DAVW; Judge of Probate.&#13;
In the Matter of toe Estate ef&#13;
DAN JACKSON, Deceased.&#13;
On reading and filing the petition dnly verified ot&#13;
Or)a t: J ackson, praying that a certain instrument&#13;
now. on file in this oonrt, purporting to be the last&#13;
Will and Testament of said deceased, may be admitted&#13;
to probate.&#13;
Thereupon it is ordered that Thursday, the 80th&#13;
day of Aug. next, at 1 o'clock in the afternoon,)art&#13;
said Probate Office, be assigned for the hearing-of&#13;
said petition.&#13;
It is further ordered that a copy of this order be&#13;
published in the PI.VCKNEY DISPATCH, a newspaper&#13;
printed and circulating in saiu county, three&#13;
successive weeks previous to said day of hearing.&#13;
ALBXHD M. PA VIS,&#13;
t-86 J udge of Probate.&#13;
SOME FACTS! BEAD T H E !&#13;
EUREKA SURE STOP TOOTHACHE POWDERS&#13;
Gives quick and sure relief.&#13;
EUREKA COMPLEXION OINTMENT&#13;
Removes Black-heads and Pimples.&#13;
EUREKA CORN CURE&#13;
Cures all Corns, Bunions, and CallotM&#13;
places.&#13;
EUREKA O.K. WART REMOVER&#13;
Is certain in its results.&#13;
B a c h 1 0 c , C o i n OP S f a m p s&#13;
By Return Mail.&#13;
Agents wanted—write today.&#13;
Address, EUREKA SUPPLY HOUSE,&#13;
Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
Railroad Guide.&#13;
l^&amp;3»g&gt; *"*&#13;
A/YD STEAMSHIP LINES,&#13;
Popular route tor Ann Arbor, Toledo&#13;
and points East, South, and for&#13;
Howell, Owo8so, Alma, Mt Pleasant&#13;
Cadillac, Manistee, Traverse City and&#13;
points in Northwestern Michigan.&#13;
VV. H . BENNETT,&#13;
G. P . A. Toledo&#13;
Ar&#13;
BBIGH1&#13;
( • • A l C D H O W W r&#13;
M M Maaagvit ta Ifclt a*d tlen by oou»&#13;
tim. feltrv H 0 t • jmt a*4 axpasMfc&#13;
ftnlt. bono4d* • » M M , m I w . Port.&#13;
p u i m l , Oar •afaraaota,' aaa&#13;
la aaj laws. 1 1 ½ aalaly oflat&#13;
tfcMfino* oon»Ajnr. •»CanoAoo*j&#13;
Sttjporib* for the DISPATCH&#13;
PERE MARQUETTE&#13;
R a i l r o a d , a-fi^y 1 3 , 1 9 0 0 .&#13;
L.V&#13;
Ar&#13;
GOING KAftT&#13;
uraua Hk lids.&#13;
Ionia . , , ,&#13;
Lansing&#13;
Howell&#13;
South Lyon,.,&#13;
8alera&#13;
Plymouth&#13;
Detroit&#13;
» • * * « « * •&#13;
&gt; • • • * • # •&#13;
OOtNO WK8T&#13;
iXrtfeit.&#13;
Plymouth...'.&#13;
Salem&#13;
South Lyon&#13;
Howell&#13;
Lansing&#13;
Ionia&#13;
Grand Rapids.....&#13;
* • « t *&#13;
* » • • • «&#13;
a m&#13;
r\0&#13;
7 40&#13;
0 04&#13;
10 w&#13;
10 S6&#13;
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11 00&#13;
11 40&#13;
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8 40&#13;
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9 86&#13;
9 4»&#13;
10 88&#13;
11 23&#13;
18 50&#13;
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U 20&#13;
1 46&#13;
8 »&#13;
8 04&#13;
323&#13;
406&#13;
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148&#13;
208&#13;
885&#13;
8 30&#13;
4 45&#13;
5 10&#13;
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586&#13;
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7*7&#13;
98W&#13;
858&#13;
908&#13;
980&#13;
10 05&#13;
p m&#13;
5 15&#13;
556&#13;
6 10&#13;
6 »&#13;
658&#13;
7 M&#13;
At*&#13;
10 0»&#13;
Finnic Bi/r,&#13;
Agent, South Lyon.&#13;
H.F. MOBLLEH,&#13;
Actin* G. P. A.,&#13;
Gran 1 Rapids.&#13;
50 YIARft'&#13;
PXPEMINOI&#13;
Tftaoc MARK*&#13;
DcaiaNa&#13;
Co#vm«HT« A c&#13;
oar opinion p—whtih^rJk ib1rr&gt;"tent»bT«. CoimnnnkJh*&#13;
i landing a sketch and Mart&#13;
„ _ _ . jBAcrtatn owr o~'&#13;
pvmtiap ts probablyr&gt;&#13;
iiltrjo taiw tMs Ttatn&#13;
^.fM. . .4-u~^ d„.M&lt;o1roensstat iwdsaeonwytil"oBfyJo . fyoH.rsa «n^aderobtnofoViknwi tOtjfpet naPtteianwUt tf.t tt '•tents taken thro' utb Maninn tAno C o. rectiva "mm imety Ulastrited wertly. Lsrwat «x*&#13;
j&#13;
i&#13;
•i&#13;
i,;&#13;
/ •&#13;
m .,^ ^»&lt;rf:»:a&#13;
.' : vi.:',:!'':»--,-.&#13;
• ' • : " ^ , •. ; •• ' f'.',(•;'', V"'': ' i ' - . • ' . ' • • : , - ' • .-•• • • : • &gt; : : ; ' : . 1 ' : * . - ) • . • • - r • • ' •• . . • • . • " . ' • • " ' • ; ' • . - . . ' • • - i - ' - , - . . ; • * • » • . v . .• • - , • • • • . • ' • . • - . ; • . '• &lt;. • , . . - . • - • . &lt; ' • • • • ' • • . ' • - .&#13;
!U&#13;
i •••: ' -..' • V "\,V-. • .-•'•:'•' '&#13;
~ '- ''.'&#13;
K .¾ tt K &amp; K K ^ K K &gt;H&#13;
Thoasands «t yotmt end&#13;
Bfenue h a v i n g w m o .&#13;
Titahtyjxmtmoally sapped&#13;
- f # f ^ l W i p J •pwi^BWW Vl.svBJBlBBxj&#13;
WECURESTRICTWEl&#13;
, Thousands of young and middle-aged&#13;
mmare tToubledjriththisdisease* -many&#13;
innoonaeiously. They* may bay© e&gt; smart&#13;
ing sensation, HQftU, twisting -ewe***&#13;
sharp cutting pates1 pt tfnwput i%ht dis»&#13;
charg*,-difficulty In oommeneing, weak , laSSHbtSaSKpiB: TORE. i W t let deetora experiment on'&#13;
yon, by patting, stretching, or tearing&#13;
TENT SAWH&amp; the iirlcttt» t i n e ;&#13;
»Q^r«MTeitlM^«btxrep«rmu)CDtly. I&#13;
J 4 U M T W retain. No.pataaojtnBW&#13;
int. no detention from badness by oar&#13;
»«thod. ThesexiudoMansare strongthsned..&#13;
The nerves areInvigorated* and&#13;
tbe WIM of manhood returns.&#13;
WfiCUREGLEET&#13;
.^-. They ir* frequently anooneeioai&#13;
ottheoaiue of these symptoms. General,&#13;
Weakness, Unnatural Discharges. Fail- j&#13;
*«* 9 W r N « f * e m e « , PoprMem-&#13;
; times Smarting Senwith&#13;
dark circle*,&#13;
•? • y , t - T - j Depression, Lack&#13;
Part«, etc ' G L K B T and S T R I C T D J R I&#13;
may be the caute. Don't oonsalt family&#13;
doctors, as they have no experience in&#13;
these tpeoial diseases—don't allow&#13;
Quacks to experiment on yotu Consult&#13;
specialists, who have made a life study of&#13;
Diseases 01 Men and Women. Oar NEW&#13;
METHOD TREATMENT will positively&#13;
core you. One thousand dollars&#13;
for a ease we aooopt for treatment and&#13;
cannot sure. Terms moderate for a cure.&#13;
CURES GUARANTEED: We treat and cure: EMISSIONS.&#13;
VARICOCELE. SYPHILIS, GLEET.&#13;
STRICTURE. LMPOTENCY. SECRET&#13;
DRAINS.UNNATURAL DISCHARGES,&#13;
KIDNEY and BLADDER Diseases.&#13;
CONSULTATION FREE. BOOKS&#13;
i'REE. If unable to call, write for&#13;
QUESTION BLANK for HOME&#13;
TREATMENT.&#13;
KENNEDYFKERGAN&#13;
Cor. Michigan Awe. and Shelby St.&#13;
DETROIT, M I C H .&#13;
K &amp; K K &amp; K K &amp; K K &amp;&#13;
A $4.00 BOOK FOR 75cis.&#13;
The Farmers' Encyclopedia. *&#13;
ErsTTtkhupertainlnrte&#13;
tfie affairs&#13;
of tkt farm,&#13;
h o u s e h o l d and&#13;
1 , /'&lt;*&#13;
&gt; ) &gt; • • !&#13;
mm*mmmm*-*&gt; i • a 1 &gt; • * M W&#13;
Wk«te«t^Utwt*8«4UfA&#13;
Tberw t«emt to be a mwnnder.&#13;
atftD^fng amonog tb^ flabermen of&#13;
t^e State as to what eoattitates, a&#13;
flat lin« the use of which is prohibited&#13;
by law, and in order that&#13;
all may understand how the officials&#13;
interpret the term, Game&#13;
garden Horse has announced the&#13;
ruling of his department.&#13;
He says that a set line within&#13;
the meaning of the law, is any&#13;
line in use for the purpose of&#13;
catching fish in any of the inland&#13;
lakes of this state, and not held&#13;
in the hand or under the' immediate&#13;
control o! the party using i t&#13;
This would include bobs, tip-up&#13;
lines tied to brush or poles set in&#13;
the mud or ice, lines stretched&#13;
across lakes with short lines with&#13;
hooks attached, in short any device&#13;
for catching fish other than a&#13;
single apparatus held in the hand&#13;
of the operator or under his immediate&#13;
control.&#13;
SCAVENGERS Of AFRICA&#13;
Voltcrw Mar* the) Of*** a*« florrlWe' n i a t e • » Hew ^ o S t s * Bl*n&#13;
•*••'•••• Fteldof Carsuifey 2 *««#•».&#13;
stock raisins;,&#13;
braces articles on&#13;
the horse, the colt,&#13;
horse habits, diseases&#13;
of the horse,&#13;
the farm, grasses,&#13;
fruit culture, dairy,&#13;
lng.cookery, health,&#13;
cattle, 8heep,swine,&#13;
Soultry, bees, the&#13;
og, toilet, social&#13;
life, etc,, etc One&#13;
of the most comp&#13;
l e t e E n c y c l o -&#13;
pedias In existence.&#13;
A large book, 8x5%&#13;
z 1% Inches. 636&#13;
pages, fully illustrated,&#13;
bound in&#13;
green cloth bindins;&#13;
and equal to&#13;
other books costing&#13;
ti.00. If you desire this book send us our special&#13;
offer price, $0.75» and 90.20 extra for postage and&#13;
I J n w t o D e a l W i t l i Dr'ulc.&#13;
T h e true object of legal punishment&#13;
Is to • eliminate crime by rescuing or&#13;
reforming and our punishment should&#13;
combine the deterrent and reformatory&#13;
elements.&#13;
About 26,000 of the 62.000 drunks In&#13;
the State of Massachusetts belong in&#13;
Boston. About half of them are discharged&#13;
after a night, in the stationhouse,&#13;
7,000 are fined and -1,000 suffer&#13;
imprisonment. Of the 26,000 only 1,270&#13;
g o on probation. T h u s the best form&#13;
of discipline is used least and the&#13;
w o r s t form is used most.&#13;
Most of the judges "of the municipal&#13;
court, the police captains, superintendents&#13;
and chaplains of the reformatory&#13;
a n d charitable institutions say t h r '&#13;
tho most promising field for reducing&#13;
the evils of drunkenness lies in the direction&#13;
of an extension of the probation&#13;
system. They agree in emphasizi&#13;
n g the value of the personal moral&#13;
relationship.&#13;
A n d that 4s partly an answer to the&#13;
question as to whether the State is&#13;
properly meeting its responsibility&#13;
that g o e s with its extraordinarily s e -&#13;
vere treatment of drunkards.&#13;
It is necessary to impress upon&#13;
every individual in the community&#13;
h i s personal responsibility for the lai&#13;
and its administration. At present w e&#13;
are doing for drunkards not w h a t will&#13;
reform but what degrades them. I refer&#13;
to the 11,000 fined or sent to prison&#13;
every year.&#13;
T h e system of fines violates the fundamental&#13;
principle of democracy, because&#13;
it is no p u n i s h m e n t to the&#13;
well-to-do, while it is a pun^&#13;
i s h m e n t to the poor. The rich&#13;
m a n is able to secure his i m -&#13;
mediate discharge, while the poor man&#13;
h a s to go to prison for want of ; lie&#13;
m o n e y to pay his fine, and there he&#13;
, I f l t l s n o t m f r - asHoHatPK w i t h fhp m i w t HoprroHo^ ^ .&#13;
factory return it and we willexo2l * J g®* J ° y™^ pie and becomes permanently corruptyour&#13;
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lease their bread-winner. It is the innocent&#13;
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s y s t e m . — B y Prof. B d w a r d - e u m m i u g s .&#13;
A L u m i n o u s Sou C r n b .&#13;
One of the marine curiosi'tes _r^-&#13;
cently fished from the bottom of"1 ho.&#13;
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Our fee returned if we fail. Any one sendinj&#13;
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AONCS OP BINQMAMTON,&#13;
BINQHAMTON M *&#13;
escent luminosity kindled br our comm&#13;
o n glow worms. The oddity w a s&#13;
captured in the day time and placed in&#13;
a large tank, n o t h i n g peculiar except&#13;
its immense size being noticeable in&#13;
t h e broad glare of the tropical ~sun.&#13;
A t night, however, when all w a s&#13;
pitchy darkness, the crab surprised&#13;
the naturalists by lighting up the tank&#13;
s o t h a t all the oth«r sea creatures,&#13;
great a n d small, could be plainly seen.&#13;
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y*\&#13;
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1' e t&#13;
saasJIe bulging in tnt world. We have&#13;
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OUR O E N B R A L C A T A L O f U * / l f tk« book of the people-it quotes&#13;
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— — • — — — • 11 « 1 — W &gt; P — • m m A m ~ * m m . • • • « • . i i I . * - .&#13;
rtlORf80MEpf WAjBQ &amp; CO.&#13;
5?&#13;
HtcMgM Avo. and Mtdtaon 8tmt&#13;
- OH1OA0.O&#13;
Jutiaa R a l p h Omcrihlnt recently a&#13;
ride t o Bloemfontein l a t a e w a k e of&#13;
Roberts's victorious a r m y m o t e : .&#13;
**I s a w ahead of m e a s w a r m or v m •&#13;
tures soaring i n a s thick a cloud a s If&#13;
t h e y had been m o t h s . A s I dre v&#13;
nearer I noticed t h a t t h e bulk of e a c ^&#13;
one's body w a s v e r y g r e a t . On the&#13;
ground, where there were t w o score&#13;
w a d d l i n g about* t h e y seemed e v e u&#13;
larger. They marked t h e outer ed*e&#13;
of t h e great a n d horrid « e l d o f c a r -&#13;
nage. Many dead h o r s e s lay on t h e&#13;
veldt, and these birds were eat i n s&#13;
g o m e a n d p e r c h i n g o n t h e backs of&#13;
others.&#13;
"Foul, nauseous, ugly, beastly birds&#13;
are these. T h e y were t o 1 » my c o n -&#13;
s t a n t companions for three days.*l w a s&#13;
t o see hundreds upon hundreds of&#13;
t h e m , and never once, by day, fail t o&#13;
see them. Yet there w e r e not enough&#13;
of t h e m t o m a k e a w a y w i t h all t h e&#13;
fobd that war bad g i v e n them."&#13;
Natural as Is t h e feeling of repulsion,&#13;
which the presence of these scavengers&#13;
of the battle field arotftes. i n&#13;
t h e economy of nature t h e y perform a&#13;
m o s t useful work. T h e y lessen t h e&#13;
danger of pestilence. They really&#13;
m a k e war less terrible t o those w h o&#13;
eseape death by the e n e m y .&#13;
"Aasvogels," w h i c h m e a n s carrion&#13;
scavengers, the Boers call them. Of&#13;
recent years It h a s been noticed t h a t&#13;
their number has greatly decreased,&#13;
o w i n g to the destruction of the , bi«&#13;
game, which greatly diminished their&#13;
funeral banquets. But apparently t h e&#13;
tidings that man's hand had turned&#13;
a g a i n s t man In one small portion of&#13;
_Africa h a s traveled far and w i d e&#13;
a m o n g them, and t h e y h a v e gathered&#13;
together from great distances to participate&#13;
in the feast.&#13;
A war correspondent also teHs of&#13;
s e e i n g the secretary bird—"a stately&#13;
bird, holding himself proudly and&#13;
stalking along w i t h noble strides as&#13;
he glanced about h i m for a breakfast&#13;
of snakes." The secretary bird in a p -&#13;
pearance presents a s t r i k i n g contrast&#13;
to the vulture. Man hails it as a&#13;
friend. Because of its usefulness ni&#13;
destroying v e n o m o u s snakes it is protected&#13;
in all parts of Africa.&#13;
As many as three large snakes h a v e&#13;
been taken from the s t o m a c h of one of&#13;
these birds, besides lizards, tortoises&#13;
and a quantity of grasshoppers. W h e n&#13;
attacking a cobra the secretary bird&#13;
defends itself from the venomous f a n g s&#13;
by holding Its w i n g in front as a&#13;
shield and strikes the snake down by&#13;
vigorous blows of its feet. Frequently&#13;
it kills a large snake by carrying it&#13;
high in the air and then dropping U&#13;
tne grptiha.&#13;
It is called the secretary bird because&#13;
of its fancied resemblance to a&#13;
secretary, who is supposed to carry&#13;
quill pens behind, his ears.&#13;
WHEN.'.PASTURES FAIL.&#13;
—Ocettn L a u n d r y .&#13;
A n "ocean laundry" is an experiment,&#13;
first to be tried o n the steamship&#13;
New England, of t h e Dominion&#13;
Line. The usual practice with on&#13;
ocean liner is to allow its own laundry&#13;
to assume large proportion somewhere&#13;
down in the hold, while the soiled lin-&#13;
Ov«» Us* Dry&#13;
W h a t t h a l l I d o ? My pasture* are&#13;
g e t t i n g dry a n d m y c o w s are all d r y i n g&#13;
up too. H o w can I get back the mtlk&#13;
I h a v e been l o s i n g t h e s e past f e w&#13;
w e e k s *&#13;
T h e s e are questions w e often hear i n&#13;
t h e Fall w h e n the flush feed of Spring&#13;
a n d S u m m e r are gone. And t h e y are&#13;
serious questions to t h e m a n ' w h o i s&#13;
depending upon h i s c o w s for t h e surplus&#13;
m o n e y t o pay up the i n t e r e s t o n&#13;
t h e m o r t g a g e n e x t W i n t e r o r t o tarnish&#13;
the necessary funds for the cold&#13;
days, s o o n t o c o m e .&#13;
We are m a n y of u s n o t a s far s e e i n g&#13;
as s o m e of the so-called lower a n i -&#13;
mals, for t h e y m a k e every preparation&#13;
Cor the. dreary days w h e n there will be&#13;
n o gathering grain and n u t s for w i n :&#13;
try days. T h e fore handed m a n h a s&#13;
made plans to tide over t h e dry t i m e&#13;
after t h e good pastures of Spring h a v e&#13;
p a s s e d b y , as t h e y surely w i l l . W h a t&#13;
has h e done? H e has put i n a piece of&#13;
oats a n d peas, w h i c h are j u s t in their&#13;
prime by the last of July or t h e m i d d l e&#13;
of A u g u s t . Upon this h e will n o w beg&#13;
i n t o draw; a n d h o w t h e m i l c h c o w s&#13;
do e n j o y this fresh feed. A n d h o w&#13;
t h e y respond to this care o n the part&#13;
of their_pwner. W h e n the m i l k check&#13;
comes n e x t , instead qf s h o w i n g a f a i l -&#13;
i n g off, a s m a n y of t h e neighbors do,&#13;
it will probably come up to t h a t for&#13;
t h e m o n t h preceding. T h e m o n t h of&#13;
A u g u s t i s a l s o a good time t o b e g i n&#13;
feeding a s m a l l ration of grain. T h e&#13;
wise d a i r y m a n w i l l see to it t h a t h i s&#13;
bins a r e n o w filled up. B r a n c a n b e&#13;
bought a t that t i m e f o r quite a l i t t l e&#13;
less- t h a n It can later.&#13;
But w h e n the oats and peas are g o n e&#13;
what t h e n ? W e l l by this t i m e the c o r n&#13;
Which t h e provident m a n took t h e&#13;
p a i n s t o put in last June will come in&#13;
good play. "We of the state of N e w&#13;
York were m u c h troubled last Spring&#13;
because we could not get as m u c h&#13;
3weet corn as we would h a v e liked to&#13;
s o w . . There w a s very little t o be h a d&#13;
at any price, and the acreage p u t i n&#13;
was therefore small. In their a n x i e t y&#13;
to provide seed to supply the demands,&#13;
3ome s e e d s m e n palmed off a kind of&#13;
:orn w h i c h looked s o m e w h a t like&#13;
sweet corn. B y this t h e y will g a i n&#13;
nothing, for the dairymen will not forget&#13;
the trick t h u s played upon them.&#13;
B u t the corn field w i l l , n o w yield a&#13;
good supply of s w e e t feied, a n d put into&#13;
the pocket of the m a n w h o had the&#13;
w i s d o m to provide it m a n y extra dollars.&#13;
A s the days go on, the grain ration&#13;
will be increased until the c o w s&#13;
are ready to g o Into W i n t e r quarters in&#13;
first-class condition. It is a comforting&#13;
s i g h t to see a herd of cows t h u s&#13;
cared for, in contrast with' a drove&#13;
which have m e t the fortune of the average&#13;
herd and been compelled to grub&#13;
through the hot days of a u t u m n and&#13;
early Winter for the little they h a v e&#13;
had to eat. W i t h them life has been&#13;
a constant struggle for an existence,&#13;
s a y i n g n o t h i n g about putting a n y&#13;
money into the pocket of the man w h o&#13;
o w n s them.&#13;
But suppose the dairyman has n e i t h -&#13;
er oats and peas or green corn to feed&#13;
his c o w s what then? Well, then it&#13;
m*qmmn*v^—****p mmm = •r*a&#13;
We the ondar«sTn*d drturfvt^&#13;
er a. ewa/d of 50 cents t# to/ psriBti&#13;
who put chases of as, two 26e bose*&#13;
of IUtCei-'e- tfaaJrake Bitteri T*WeCa,&#13;
if it foils to cureeoa-tfipitioo, biliousness,&#13;
sick-headache, jaundice, lots of&#13;
appetite, soar stomaohe, djrsjwjftf/&#13;
liver complaint, or any of the diteaso*&#13;
for which ft is recommended. Price&#13;
25 cents tor either tablets or liquid.&#13;
We will also refund the mraejr on ou&gt;&#13;
package of either if it fails to giro&#13;
satisfaction,&#13;
F. A.gigler,&#13;
W. B. Darrow,&#13;
a&#13;
»*" ",T* Sne ftttrttttg $&lt;*]fttNv&#13;
rCBUUSO I T O I TVttBtftSY XOSfZSf a x&#13;
FRANK L. A N D R E W S&#13;
Xditor and Peoprtotor*&#13;
bnbecripUoa Price $1 la Advaaea.&#13;
Snterec at the Poatoffloa at Piookaor, JUabi***,&#13;
aa second-claee matte*. ^&#13;
Advertising rate* made kaosrat oa application.&#13;
Baelnew Cards, $4.00 p«r yea*.&#13;
r&gt;eath sod marriage nStieM published fro*.&#13;
Announcements of entertainments may bo paid&#13;
! tor, U desired, by presenting tne omoa wito. tick-&#13;
•ta of admission. -XaHase tickets are not brought f to tneoffice, regular rates will bo charged.&#13;
All matter la local notice eolama will bo eoaraed&#13;
at 5 cents per line or fraction thereof, for eaek&#13;
insertion. Wbere no t i n s is speciAed, ail notice*&#13;
will be inserted until ordered discontinued, end&#13;
viU be e*arg*d for accordingly. jjg sllihswioa&#13;
ofadvertiaamesiu MUSTreich tola office aaearly&#13;
aa TuaaDAY morning to insure an insertion the&#13;
same week.&#13;
JOS miJ/lIJTG /&#13;
specialty. We haveallkinda&#13;
&gt;f Type, etc., vnleh enable*&#13;
M K&gt; execute au amds of work, such as Hooka,&#13;
Pamplets, Posters, Programmes, Bill Heads, Note&#13;
Heads, Statements, Cards. Auction Bills, etc., In&#13;
superior styles, upon tne shortest notice. Prioes as&#13;
0^ as good work can b* done.&#13;
mLh BILLS PATABL7 flBST OF BVBSr MONTH.&#13;
THE VILLAGE DIRECTORY.&#13;
en of its passengers becomes an in- r ^ „ , . . . . . . . fc 4&#13;
dividual care and trouble tintn the f&gt;nci I m a y be that be will think it best y*&#13;
of the voyage. r&#13;
T h e passenger will n o w give his&#13;
linen to the steward, and from the&#13;
laundrynian below, in a few hours, it&#13;
will be returned to him fresh and&#13;
clean. The new plant will handle ori&#13;
an average of 7,0^0 pieces of linen a&#13;
day, with the capacity for doing cheentire&#13;
washing for about 800 people.&#13;
It will be as complete as a laundry on&#13;
shore. The plant has a daily consumption&#13;
of fifty barrels of soap and&#13;
t w e n t y barrels of starch.&#13;
One item is the use of 4,000 gallons&#13;
of water per day, which is condensed&#13;
on the ship by special apparatus. The&#13;
machinery of the plant consists of a&#13;
large steam m a n g l e and washing and&#13;
ironing machines. N a p k i n s and towels&#13;
can be "fed" to t h e mangle machine&#13;
at the rate of 4,000 pieces a n&#13;
hour. There are two large w a s h i n g&#13;
machines, which, by skilful manipulation,&#13;
can turn out linen, well w a s h -&#13;
ed and wrung out, to the number nf&#13;
10,000 pieces a day.&#13;
W a s h i n g is the first consideration in&#13;
the process of laundry work, and the&#13;
successful results from these machines&#13;
are assured. Appliances include those&#13;
for starching properly and to suit individual&#13;
tastes. One of the most difficult&#13;
operations of the laundrynian i s&#13;
ironing. In the m a c h i n e s which h a v e&#13;
been provided, however, this pare of&#13;
the work may be done w i t h entire s a t -&#13;
isfaction. One m a c h i n e is capable of&#13;
ironing from 8,000 to 10.000 collars&#13;
and cuffs a day, t o say n o . h . n g of o t h -&#13;
er articles.&#13;
let his_herd into the meadow aft?r ;h&#13;
g r a s T h a s started in the Fall, although&#13;
I a m very sure this is not a good t h i n g&#13;
to do. The only way it is to be tolerated&#13;
at all is to let the c o w s into "tho&#13;
m e a d o w w h e n the ground is dry a n l&#13;
so not easily tramped up by the h c o f s&#13;
^ h 4 c h tread upon it. But I have alw&#13;
a y s thought that all a m a n gained in&#13;
this w a y be more t h a n lost w h e n he&#13;
comes to secure the next year's croo.&#13;
And if a dairyman does at all. it shoul 1&#13;
be w i t h the firm determination t h a t&#13;
another year he will be in such ghaco&#13;
that he will not be compelled to resort&#13;
to this expedient.&#13;
Once a m a n h a s tried the modern&#13;
plan of suplementing his meadows, he&#13;
will not be quick to go back to the ol I&#13;
way, for surely profit and justice :^&#13;
one's animals dictate a change iron;&#13;
the old s y s t e m . — E . L. Vincent.&#13;
O r i g i n ol' " S H t h i t h e Itiver on r l r o "&#13;
In old English times, when each&#13;
family was obliged to . s i f t its o w n&#13;
flour, k s o m e i m e s happened that nn&#13;
t r . n g ^ i c man would turn his s i e v e&#13;
so rapidly as to cause It to catch fire.&#13;
The s . y l e of sieve used in those d a y s&#13;
w a s called a "temse." and if ,became a&#13;
ens oiuary sa:*In% that a lasy m a n&#13;
would never set the ten-so on fire,&#13;
N o w i . happens that the n a m e of t h e&#13;
river Thames is pronounced like i h t "&#13;
n a m e of this oid flour sie-&lt;-r&gt;. and after&#13;
m a n y years, w h e n the ' .'-fashioned&#13;
temse was forgotten, It w a s thought&#13;
that setting the t e m s e or. fire meant&#13;
sett n g the river o n fire and that la&#13;
w h y to-day w e s a y t h a t a stupid pers&#13;
o n will n e v e r set t h e river o n are.—&#13;
Ladles' H o m e Journal.&#13;
WANTED-The Subscriptioii&#13;
due on the DISPATCH.&#13;
".John's jrcne Ao practisin' law; Bill's&#13;
out exhortlti'. Dick*s teachin' fc'iool,&#13;
Tom's in the dry goods Hue. an' Rufe's&#13;
tunnin' fer f h e TiegislaturV&#13;
"An' the ol' m a n — w h a t ' s he a-^oin'&#13;
of?"&#13;
"Oh, he'? ^-suliportin' of John, r n '&#13;
Bill, an' D i - k , . a n ' Tom, an' Ru£e."—&#13;
A t l a n t a Consiiuirior.&#13;
Rosewood ar.d Mahogany r.rs so&#13;
plentiful In Mexico that some of the&#13;
popper mines there are timbered w i t h&#13;
rosewood, while majiogany is used aa&#13;
fuel tor the eneinfiJ&#13;
iener's Dictionary of Synonyms &amp; Antonyms,&#13;
lytioloCT ail FaBUltrPlrases.&#13;
A book that should be in the vest&#13;
poeket of every person, because it&#13;
tells you the right word to use.&#13;
Ho Two Words in tho English&#13;
Language Have Exactly the&#13;
Same Btgniflcaace. To express&#13;
the precise meaning that one intends&#13;
to convey a dictionary of&#13;
Synonyms » needed to avoid repetition.&#13;
The strongest fignro of&#13;
speech M antithesis. In this dictionary&#13;
the appended Antonyms&#13;
will, therefore, be found extremely&#13;
valuable^ Contains many other&#13;
raaturea sooh as Mythology,&#13;
_ ^ _ ^ F a m i l i a r AUraalons and For*&#13;
MadSng sad sent postpaid for Bo.Sft. Full&#13;
afAjiiradge, ,$*.«•; PMtP»Jd7 Order at&#13;
i a O T a ¥ o S L i f f * f c * * * 1 * * * 1 * ' *•••&#13;
^ S f c \ T O N C R &lt; O M P A N Y,&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICERS.&#13;
PBBSXDBNT ^„_«......_. Alex. Mclniyre&#13;
TKOSTSBS £. L. Thompson, Alfred Monks,&#13;
Daniel Biohards, ueo. Bowman, eiamael&#13;
tiykes, f. l&gt;. Jonnson.&#13;
CLXBK. ........^ ,..B. H. Teeple&#13;
^HBASOBsa.....M.M .MMMI.O.^M. . W. E. Mnrphy&#13;
A M N B U R . . . . . . . . .».«»..•. . . . . . .««.»MM«».... Irf , ^L» XjlUf&#13;
STBMTCOIUUSBIO ***&gt;.. J. Monks.&#13;
MASSABI. :...^JL B. Bro«ra.&#13;
HftALTHOmosa Or. H. f. gigler&#13;
ATTORMBT. ...W\ A. Carr&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
MBTHOUIUT EPISCOPAL CHC7BCH.&#13;
itev. COM. Simpson, pastor. Service* every&#13;
Sunday morning at I0:&amp;i, and every Sunday&#13;
evening at 7:00 o'clock. Prayer meeting Tn areday&#13;
evenings. Sunday school at close of morning&#13;
service. LBAJ. SIQLBB, stapt.&#13;
CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH.&#13;
Bev. &lt;j. W. Kice pastor. Service every&#13;
Sunday morning at l0:4u and every Sanday&#13;
evening at 7:0C o'cijek. Prayer meetingThnre&#13;
day evenings. Baaday school at ,cJoee 01 mornin&#13;
if service. B. H. Teeple, 6 apt,, M&amp;oel Swartbout&#13;
Sec.&#13;
ST. MAUY/'g CVTHOUC CHURCH.&#13;
Bev. M. J. Cominerford, Pastor. Services&#13;
every Sanday. Low mass at7:3uo'clock&#13;
high mass with sermon at 9:S0 a. m. Catechism&#13;
at3:0u p. m., veepers and benediction at 7:80 p. m.&#13;
SOCIETIES:&#13;
rp&amp;e A. O. H. Society of this place, meets every&#13;
1 third Sun'Uv iatne Kr. Uittnew rf ill.&#13;
John fuomey ani M. T. Kelly,CouutrDoldgstee&#13;
L^PWORTU LEAGUE. Meets every Sunday&#13;
XJUevemng at fctKJ ociocfc in to.* M. bi, Cnurcn. A&#13;
cordial invitation is extended to ev&lt;3ryou«, especially&#13;
youug people. Mrs. Stella Graham Pre*.&#13;
• 1 r 1 1 ' . A . . . . . . .&#13;
CHRISTIAN ESUEAVOR SOCIErV:-Nfwt.&#13;
iaizs every Su iday evening at C:V). Preji i^ut,&#13;
MlisEiu Carprtutar; Secretary, Mrs. C. W. Kicd.&#13;
— — _ — «&#13;
rpHE W. C. T. U. meets the first Friday of each&#13;
I month at 2:$, p. tn. at trie home of Dr. H. r\&#13;
Sigler. feCveryono .interested in tomperaac1* Is&#13;
coadlally invit^l Mrs. '^eal Sigler, nes; Mr*.&#13;
Btta Durfee, Secretary.&#13;
The C. T. A. and B. society of this place, tr^tt&#13;
every third Saturday evening in the Pr. fcatthew&#13;
Hall. John Donohue, Freeldeat.&#13;
NIG UTS Or* MACCABEES.&#13;
Meet every Friday evening on or before tall&#13;
of tbe moon at their hall in the Swarthout bldg.&#13;
Visiting brothers are cordially Invited.&#13;
Csus. USSIPBBIX, Sir Knight Commander&#13;
Livingston Lodge, No. 7&lt;S,P A A. M. Beggar&#13;
Communication Tuesday evening, on or before&#13;
tbe full of the moon. H. P. Sigler, W. M.&#13;
ORDER OP EASTERN STAR meets each mouth&#13;
the Friday evening following the re^uu*^ *\&#13;
AA.M. meeting, Mas. MABY KSAO, W. M.&#13;
0 RDEK OF .MODERN WOODtfE.V Heet the&#13;
dr.41 Tnureday eveninst otearh Mouth iu the&#13;
Macuabee nail. C. L. Grimes V. C.&#13;
f AOIES OF THE MACCABEES. Aioet every 1st&#13;
\jandJJrd-Saturday of eachmonfa at&lt;J:30 p m. at&#13;
K7«». T. M. haU. Visiting s^te^s eoriialiy in-&#13;
Mted. LILA CONIWAX Lady Com.&#13;
Si KNIGHTS os* THE LOYAL GU \RD&#13;
meet every second Wedn&amp;titay&#13;
evening of every month in tbe K.. 0 .&#13;
T. M. Hall at 7:30o'orock. AU viattin^&#13;
Guards weloonie.&#13;
C. L, Grimes, Capt. Gen.&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
H. F. SiOLCR M. O- C, L, SIGLER M, O&#13;
DRS. SIGLER &amp; SIGLER,&#13;
Physicians and Surgeons- All call*,promptl&#13;
attended to day or night. Odlce on Maiastr&#13;
Pinckney, Mioh.&#13;
DR. A. B. GREEN.&#13;
DENTiST-Eyery Frld*); aud on Thnraday&#13;
when having appointments. Office over&#13;
Sigler's Drug Store.&#13;
e/o JP. MlLJfMw&#13;
VETERINARY 8URQEON*&#13;
Graduate of Ontario Veterinary College, also o&#13;
the V eterinary OeaUatry College&#13;
Toronto Canada.&#13;
Will promptly attend to all diseases of the do-&#13;
&gt;atltnatod snims) at s reseonabss prloa.&#13;
Hereea teeth examined Free. • —&#13;
OPriCC a t rAILU PINCKNEY.&#13;
XM&#13;
d&#13;
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M&#13;
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fv,&#13;
wv W^^~,in*J&amp;ZM•^tiM•&amp;m!&amp;mlMm1&amp;&amp;tQlB^&#13;
&gt;. - ^ L i J . » . . . j ^ W u ii'-SW'.**'&#13;
'ilft&#13;
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If **•**•*» » 4 « K «^L tftttaal nail&#13;
.,VV H;&#13;
vtr+r&#13;
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i-'-r.--&#13;
*&#13;
«•«*"&#13;
Ml I i^l'wiPMI&#13;
f l a x * L. ANDEBWS, Publisher*&#13;
PIHCKNEY, • ' . MICHIGAN&#13;
U. E. SoUenbeigor, the head or a&#13;
faith cure orphanage in Philadelphia,&#13;
baa been held by a^coroner's jury for&#13;
the death of a 7-months-old child who&#13;
died under his charge without medical&#13;
attention.&#13;
The lerynx of a man In Sydney, Australia,&#13;
became useless through disease,&#13;
and be lost his voice. Professor&#13;
Stuart, of the University of Sydney is&#13;
said to have made an artificial one,&#13;
and it can. be ao regulated, as to make&#13;
the voice soprano, tenor, contralto or&#13;
bass at will.&#13;
Among many entertaining tricks R e -&#13;
played by a welt known dog in Evans*&#13;
ton, 111., was the ability to smoke cigarettes.&#13;
His master had taught him&#13;
this habit, and master and Chute, as&#13;
the dog was called, were often seen parading&#13;
the streets, each smoking a cigarette.&#13;
Lately the dog became mad,&#13;
and hit every other do) g it met.&#13;
The Supreme Court of Massachusetts&#13;
has decided that a bicycle Is not a "carriage,**&#13;
and that the cities and towns&#13;
are not legally required to keep their&#13;
roads in such a state of repair and&#13;
smoothness that bicycles may pass&#13;
over eaem in safety. A bicycle rider&#13;
was hart near Danvers because of a&#13;
depression in the road. A suit followed,&#13;
and the plaintiff was awarded |S5 damages.&#13;
The Supreme Court has annulled&#13;
the verdict&#13;
The four men placed before the&#13;
country by the two great political parties&#13;
are exceptionally well known. One&#13;
of thorn ts new the President, another&#13;
was four years ago his chief competitor&#13;
Cor that office, a third was for four&#13;
years Vice-President, and the fourth&#13;
probably the_best-known governor of a&#13;
state in the land. The country has&#13;
four months in which to think them&#13;
over, weigh their characters, qualities&#13;
and tendencies, and make up Its mind.&#13;
For years the male residents cf&#13;
IleaJdefcurg, CaL, talked of certain improvements&#13;
the town needed. Nothing&#13;
came of the talk, and then the&#13;
women took the matter up and formed&#13;
a Ladies' Improvement Club. This organisation&#13;
has transformed, the place, i&#13;
having by- tt3 active influence and organized&#13;
labors procured for the town&#13;
a municipal water system, a municipal&#13;
electric Hght plant, comfortable seat&#13;
in the plaza, an intelligible name sys-&#13;
.am for the streets, sign boards with&#13;
street names at all corners and a&#13;
drinking fountain costing $600. These&#13;
improvements were brought about&#13;
without Increasing taxes, except to?&#13;
the two purposes first named.&#13;
The extraordinary carelessness at&#13;
&lt; * * ,&#13;
parents rn leaving dangerous drug;&#13;
within reach of children is in marked&#13;
contrast with governmental-supervision&#13;
over druggists and physicians. A&#13;
few weeka ago a man bought some&#13;
chloroform with which to kill a dog.&#13;
and wnfle waiting to use it, wrapped&#13;
the bottle in a cloth and tucked it into&#13;
a work-basket. Two Ilttle~children&#13;
found it, presumably fancied it a sick&#13;
doll, and took it to bed with them. la&#13;
the morning the child clasping the uncorked&#13;
bottle was found dead; the&#13;
other unconscious, past recovery. S3&#13;
bit(er an experience emphasizes the&#13;
ft-rereated and oft-forgotten warning&#13;
that the first essential for the family&#13;
medicine-ehest is a lock and key.&#13;
One of the charges which the Chinese&#13;
make against the "foreign devils"&#13;
is that they dig up the soil and there-&#13;
-by-release evil spirits which prey upon&#13;
human life. It is true that much mortality&#13;
followed the founding of the&#13;
English settlement at Hongkong, and&#13;
deaths have been frequent since the&#13;
digging in and around the new German&#13;
town of Tsing-tan. A writer in&#13;
the Forum offers the explanation,&#13;
.which the Chinese are too superstitious&#13;
to accept. The soil In both places&#13;
jis disintegrated granite, and has been&#13;
('so long occupied by a dense population&#13;
that, except where it is frequently&#13;
aerated by agriculture, it is reeking&#13;
'with disease germs. The "evil spirits"&#13;
released by the spade are bacteria.&#13;
Bishop Walsham How, the hymnwriter,&#13;
once induced a workingmanto&#13;
attend church. Asked afterward how&#13;
he liked it the parishioner replied:&#13;
4I learned one thing. I learned that&#13;
Sodom and Gomorrah were places. I&#13;
always thought they were husband&#13;
and wife." Lawyers affirm that the&#13;
cases which beget the most hatred&#13;
aad vitvrperatlon and are most difficult&#13;
to settle are those between near&#13;
kindred. Moreover, the differences&#13;
are largely of the trifling and imaginary&#13;
kind which better information&#13;
would have prevented. The plan of;&#13;
^earthing the Scriptures has loet none&#13;
of ita potency. Not infrequently, the&#13;
ages through, has it settle! more peraooal&#13;
enigmas than the identity of&#13;
4 o 4 w aadONRTtah.&#13;
TALMAGtfS SEfiJiON.&#13;
HE TALKS OP THE GOOD DONE&#13;
BY CITIES.&#13;
They Are the Birthplace of Civilisation&#13;
and Are Not N«eeM*rUy KTII —'&#13;
The Farmer as OUhooeet as&#13;
Merchant*&#13;
(Copyright, 1900, by Louts Klopsch.)&#13;
From S t Petersburg, the Russian&#13;
capital, where he was cordially received&#13;
by the emperor and empress ano&gt;&#13;
the empress dowager, Dr. Talmage&#13;
sends this discourse.in which he shows&#13;
the mighty good that may be done by&#13;
the cities, and also the vast evil they&#13;
may do by their allurements to the unsuspecting&#13;
and the unguarded. The&#13;
text is Zechariah 1. 17, "My cities&#13;
through prosperity shall yet bo spread&#13;
abroad."&#13;
The city is no worse than the country.&#13;
The vices of the metropolis are&#13;
more evident than the vices of the&#13;
rural districts because there are more&#13;
to be bad if they wish to bo. The&#13;
merchant is as good as the farmer.&#13;
There is no more cheating in town&#13;
than out of town—no worse cheating;&#13;
it is only on a larger scale. The countryman&#13;
sometimes prevaricates about&#13;
the age of the horse that he sells, about&#13;
the si-a of the bushel with which he&#13;
measures the grain, about the peaches&#13;
at the bottom of the basket as being'&#13;
as large as those at the top, about the&#13;
quarter of beef as being tender when&#13;
it is tough, and to as bad an extent&#13;
as the citizen, the merchant, prevaricates&#13;
about calicoes or silks or hardware.&#13;
And as to villages, I think that in&#13;
some recocts they are worse than&#13;
the cities because they copy the vices&#13;
of the cities in the meanest shape, and&#13;
as to cosalp its heaven is a country&#13;
village. Everybody knows everybody's&#13;
business better thr.n he knows it himself.&#13;
The grocery store or tho blacksmith&#13;
shop by day and night is the&#13;
grand depot for masculine tittle tattle,&#13;
and there are always in the village&#13;
a half doze~». women who have their&#13;
sunbounets hanging near, so that at&#13;
the first it?m of derogatory news they&#13;
can -fly ort and cackle it all over the&#13;
town. Countrymen must not be too&#13;
hard in their criticism of the citiaon,&#13;
nor must the plow run too sharply&#13;
against the yardstick.&#13;
Cain w?.s the founder of the first&#13;
city, and I suppose it took after him&#13;
in morals. It takes a city a long while&#13;
prisons are the shadow of those founder.&#13;
Where the founders of a city aie&#13;
criminal exiles, the filth, the vice, the&#13;
prisons are the shadow of their founders.&#13;
It will tr.ke centuries for New&#13;
York to get over the good influence of&#13;
the pious founders of that city— the"&#13;
founders whese prayers went up in the&#13;
streets whore now banks discoi'.nt and&#13;
brokers bargain and companies Aeclrtie&#13;
dividends ana smugglers swear&#13;
•SSwiwE&#13;
all the cities *&gt;f the north and all the&#13;
cities of the south, some distinguished&#13;
for one thing, some tor another, one&#13;
for professional ability, another for&#13;
affluence, another for fashion, Igut pot&#13;
one to, he spared. What advantages one&#13;
advantages all. What damages Boston&#13;
Common damages Washington square.&#13;
Laurel Hill, Mount Auburn.Greenwood,&#13;
weep over the same «rief. The statue&#13;
of Benjamin Franklin in New York&#13;
greeting the pronto statue of Edward&#13;
Everett in Boston. All the cities a&#13;
confraternity. I cannot understand&#13;
how there should-go on bickerings and&#13;
rivalries. I plead tor a higher style&#13;
of brotherhood or sisterhood among&#13;
the cities.&#13;
Important.&#13;
But while there are great differences&#13;
In some respects I have to tell you that&#13;
all cities Impress upon me and ought&#13;
to Impress upon you three or four very&#13;
important lessons, all of them agreeing&#13;
in the same thing. It does not&#13;
make any difference in what part of&#13;
the country we walk the streets of a&#13;
great city there is one lessen I think&#13;
which ought to strike every intelligent&#13;
Christian m^n, and that is that the&#13;
world is a scene of toil and struggle.&#13;
Here and there you find a man in the&#13;
street who hr».s .his arms folded and&#13;
who seems to have no particular errand,&#13;
but if you will stand at the corner&#13;
of the street and- watch the countenances&#13;
of those who go by you will&#13;
see in most instances there is an intimation&#13;
that they r.re on an errand&#13;
which must be executed at the earliest&#13;
moment possible, so you are jostled&#13;
hither and thither by business men, up-L terfuge, what double dealing, what&#13;
custom house lies, and above the roar&#13;
of the wheels and the crack of the auctioneer's&#13;
m?ll#t ascends the ascription,&#13;
"Wo worship thee, O thou almigbLV&#13;
dollar." The old church that&#13;
used to stand on Wall street is to this&#13;
day throwing its blessing on the scene&#13;
of traffic, and on all the ships folding&#13;
their white wings in the harbor, in&#13;
other days people gathered in cities&#13;
for defense—none but the poor, who&#13;
had nothing to be stolen, lived in the&#13;
country, but in these times, when&#13;
through civilization and Christianity it&#13;
is safe to live anywhere, peopie gather&#13;
•n the cities for purposes of rapid&#13;
sain. • —; —&#13;
Highway of Prosperity.&#13;
Cities are not evil necessarily, as&#13;
some have argued. They have been&#13;
thp birthplace of civilization. In them&#13;
popular liberty has lifted Its voice.&#13;
Witness Genoa and Pisa and Venice.&#13;
After the death of Alexander the Great&#13;
among his papers were found extensive&#13;
plans of cities, some to be built in Europe,&#13;
some to be built In Asia. The&#13;
cities in Europe were to be occupied&#13;
by Asiatics; the cities in Asia were to&#13;
be occupied, according to his plan, by&#13;
Europeans, and so there should be a&#13;
commingling and a fraternity and a&#13;
kindness and a good will between the&#13;
continents and between the cities. So&#13;
there always ought to be. • The strangest&#13;
thing In my comprehension is that&#13;
there should be bickerings and rivalries&#13;
among our American cities. New&#13;
York must stop caricaturing Philadelphia,&#13;
and Philadelphia must stop picking&#13;
at New York, and certainly the&#13;
continent la large enough for St. Paul&#13;
and Minneapolis. What is good for&#13;
one city is good for all the cities. Here&#13;
hi the great highway of our national&#13;
prosperity. On that highway of national&#13;
prosperity walk the cities.&#13;
A city with large forehead and great&#13;
brain—that is Boston; a city .with deliberate&#13;
step and calm manner—that&#13;
is Philadelphia; a cKy with ita pocket&#13;
full of change—that is New York; two&#13;
cities going with a rush that astounds&#13;
the continent—they are St. Louis and&#13;
.Chicago; a city that takes ita wife and&#13;
children along with it—that Is Brooklyn.&#13;
Cincinnati, Louisville, Pittsburg,&#13;
this ladder with a hod of bricks, out&#13;
of this Jbank with a roll of bills, digging&#13;
a cellar, shingling a roof, binding&#13;
a book, mending a watch. Work.with&#13;
ita thousand eyes and thousand feet&#13;
and thousand arms, goc3 on singing&#13;
its song, "Work, work, work!" while&#13;
the drums of the mill beat It and the&#13;
steam whistles fife it. In the carpeted&#13;
Elsies of the forest', in the woods from&#13;
which the eternal shadow is never lifted,&#13;
on the shore of the sea over whose&#13;
iron coast tosses the tanslcd foam,&#13;
sprinkling the cracked cliffs with a&#13;
baptism of whirlwind and tempest, is&#13;
th-3 best place to study God, but In the&#13;
rushing, swarming, waving street is&#13;
the best place to study man.&#13;
Going down to your place of business&#13;
and coming home again I charge&#13;
you look about;.see these signs of poverty,&#13;
of wretchedness, of hunger, of&#13;
sin. of bereavement, and as you go&#13;
through the streets, and come back&#13;
through the streets, gather up in the&#13;
arms of your prayer all the sorrow, all&#13;
the losses, all the sufferings, all the&#13;
bereavements oi; those whom you pass&#13;
and present them in prayer before an&#13;
all sympathetic Go;l. In the great day&#13;
of eternity there will be thousands of&#13;
.persons with whom you in tnis world&#13;
never exchanged . one word will, rise&#13;
up and call you blessed; and there&#13;
will be a thousand unger3 pointed at&#13;
you in heaven, saving. "That 13 tho&#13;
man, that is the women who helped&#13;
W when I was hungry and sick and&#13;
wandering and lost an.l heart-broken.&#13;
That is the man, that is the woman;"&#13;
and the blessing will come down upon&#13;
you as.Christ, shnll say: "I was hungry&#13;
and ye feu me, I was naked and ye&#13;
clothed mo. I wns sick cr.d in prison&#13;
and ye visited mo; inasmuch as ye&#13;
did it to these poor waifs of the streets&#13;
ye did it t:nto mo."&#13;
Wicked Kxr:u«iv*nes».&#13;
•Asain, in r.U cities I am impressed&#13;
with the fact that all classes and conditions&#13;
cf society must commingle. Wc&#13;
sometimes cultivate a wicked exclusivencss.&#13;
Intellect despises ignorance.&#13;
Refinement will have nothing to do&#13;
with booris'mess. Gloves hate the sunburned&#13;
hand, and the high forehead&#13;
despises the flat head, aad the trim&#13;
hedgorow will have nothing to do with&#13;
the wild copsewood, and Athens hates&#13;
Nazareth. This ought not so to be. I&#13;
lik* the democratic principle of the&#13;
gospel of Jesus Christ which recognizes&#13;
the fact that we stand before&#13;
God on one ?nd the same platform.&#13;
Do net take on any airs. Whatever&#13;
position you have gained In society,&#13;
you are nothing but a man. born of&#13;
the same parent, regenerated by the&#13;
same 8pirit,cleansed in the same blood,&#13;
to He down in the same dust, to get&#13;
up In the same resurrection. It is&#13;
high time that we all acknowledged&#13;
not only the fatherhood of God, but&#13;
the brotherhood of man.&#13;
Again, in all cities I am impressed&#13;
with the fact that it is a very hard&#13;
thing for a man to keep his heart right&#13;
and to get to heaven. Infinite temptations&#13;
spring upon us from places of&#13;
public concourse. Amid so much affluence,&#13;
how much temptation to covetousness&#13;
and to be discontented with&#13;
our humble lot! Amid so many opportunities&#13;
for overreaching, what&#13;
temptation to extortion! Amid so&#13;
much display, what temptation to vanity!&#13;
Amid so many saloons of strong&#13;
drink, what allurement to dissipation!&#13;
In the maelstroms and hall gates of the&#13;
street, how many make quick and&#13;
eternal shipwreck! If a man-of-war&#13;
cornea hack from a battle and is towed&#13;
into the navy yard, we go down to tot&#13;
2253HB • M g ^ r .1.1^ 5 •» *I"I '' H» 2&#13;
Tttft O t f t Y WOMAN C U M I N Air.&#13;
, LAWYE* M AMBRICA*&#13;
fthe Cent to' ThU Country from Bnssia&gt;&#13;
•a* Has r a n M i n s Until the H*»&#13;
Jlttp©!,^ the Top—Practice* la the&#13;
N*w York ffewrts*&#13;
at the apiUtUrcd spars a a d ^ u a t t$e j WI&amp;&amp; , J l L £ C E 8 E K B E R .&#13;
bullet holes and look with p a t r i o t i c » * M W m WF.W* ww** * *&#13;
admiration on the flag that floated lit&#13;
v-iory from the masthead. But that1&#13;
man Is more of a curiosity who' has;&#13;
gone through. 30 -years of the' sharpshooting&#13;
of business life and yet eeil*&#13;
on, victor over the temptations of the&#13;
street. Oh, how many hava cone down&#13;
under the pressure, leaving not so&#13;
much aa a patch of canvas to tell&#13;
when they perished! They never had&#13;
any'peace. Their dishonesties kept&#13;
tolling ia their^ears. If I had- an ax&#13;
and could split open the beams of that&#13;
flne house perhaps I would find in the&#13;
very heart of it a skeleton. In his&#13;
very best wine there is a smack nf&#13;
poor man's sweat. Oh, is it strange&#13;
XhaTwhen a man has devoured widow's&#13;
houses he is disturbed with indigestion!*&#13;
AH the forces of nature are&#13;
against him. The floods are ready to&#13;
drown him, and the earthquake to&#13;
swallow him, and the fires to consume&#13;
him, and the lightning to smite him.&#13;
Aye, the angels of God are on the&#13;
street, and In the day when the crowns&#13;
of heaven are distributed some of the&#13;
brightest of them will be given to those&#13;
men who were faithful to Qod and&#13;
faithful to the souls of others amid the&#13;
marts of business, proving themselves&#13;
the heroes of the street Highty were&#13;
their temptations, mighty was their&#13;
deliverance, and mighty shall be their&#13;
triumph.&#13;
Hoilowneu of Society.&#13;
Again, in all these cities I rtm impressed&#13;
with the fact that life is full&#13;
of pretension and sham. What subtwo&#13;
facedness! Do all people who wish&#13;
you good morning really hoj&gt;e for you&#13;
a happy day? Do all the people who&#13;
shake hands love each other? Are all&#13;
those anxious about your health who&#13;
inquire concerning it? Do all want to&#13;
see you who ask you to call? Does&#13;
all the world know half as much as it&#13;
pretends to know? Is there not many&#13;
a wretched mock of goods with a brilliant&#13;
store window? Passing up and&#13;
down the streets to your business and&#13;
your work, are you not impressed wifrh&#13;
the fact that society Is hollow and that&#13;
there are subterfuges and pretensions?&#13;
Oh, how many there are who swagger&#13;
and strut and how few, people who&#13;
are natural and walk? While fops&#13;
simper and fools snicker and simpletons&#13;
giggle, how few people are natural&#13;
and laugh! I say these things&#13;
not to create in you incredulity or misanthrophy,&#13;
nor do I forget there arv&#13;
thousands of people a great deal bet'&#13;
ter than they seem, but I do not think&#13;
any man is prepared for the conflict&#13;
of this life until he knows this particular&#13;
peril. Ehud comes pretending&#13;
to pay his tax to King Eglon and,&#13;
while he statfds in front of the king,&#13;
stabs him through with a dagger until&#13;
the h?'t went in after the blade.&#13;
Judas Iscariot kissed Christ. * * &lt;•&#13;
Dljhontftty "Sever Prosper*.&#13;
I want to tell you that the church&#13;
of God is not a shop for receiving&#13;
stolen goo tin find—that if yon have&#13;
taken anything from your fellows yoj&#13;
had better return it to the men to&#13;
whom it belongs. In a drug store in__&#13;
Philadelphia a young man was told&#13;
that he must sell blacking on/the&#13;
Lord's day. He said to the head man&#13;
of the firm: -'I can't possibly do that&#13;
I am willins to sell medicines on the&#13;
Lord's day, for I think that is right&#13;
and necessary, but I can't sell this patent&#13;
blacking."R He was discharge!&#13;
from the place. A Christian man hearing&#13;
of it took him into his employ,&#13;
and he went on from one success to&#13;
^nolhfix_unliI-Jie was known all over&#13;
the l?nd for his faith in God and hi?&#13;
good works as for his worldly success,&#13;
When a man has sacrificed any temporal,&#13;
financial good for the sakejO.&#13;
his spiritual interests the Lord is on&#13;
his side, and one with God is a majority.&#13;
I stood one day at Niagrara Pall?&#13;
and I saw what you may have seen&#13;
there—six rainbows bending over that&#13;
tremendous plunge. 1 never saw anything&#13;
like it before or since. Six beautiful&#13;
rainbows arching that great&#13;
cataract! And so over the rapids and&#13;
angry precipices of sin, where so man?&#13;
have been dashed down, God 'a beautiful&#13;
admonitions hover, a warning&#13;
arching each peril—six of them, 50 of&#13;
them, 1,000 of them. Beware, beware,&#13;
beware!&#13;
Young men, while you have tin*&#13;
to reflect upon theae__thingJt and before&#13;
the duties of the office and the store&#13;
and the shop come upon you again,&#13;
look over this whole subject, and after&#13;
the day has passed and you hear in&#13;
the nightfall the voices and footsteps&#13;
of the city dying from your ear, and it&#13;
gets so silent that you can hear distinctly&#13;
your watch under your pillow,&#13;
eyea and look out upon the darkness&#13;
and see two pillars of light, one horilontal,&#13;
the other perpendicular, but&#13;
changing their direction until they&#13;
come- together, and your enraptured&#13;
vision beholds it—the cross.&#13;
Imitation may be the sincerest flat'&#13;
tery, hut !!Js_difflcult_to convince a&#13;
girl that such is the case when she&#13;
la presented with en imitation diamond.&#13;
New OU Field F o a a d .&#13;
There is much excitement among&#13;
'the miners in the eastern part of San&#13;
Diego county, California, and the residents&#13;
of Yuma, over the discovery o*&#13;
what is believed to be a bed of oil in&#13;
the pot-holes district of the Colorado&#13;
river, about fifteen miles north of&#13;
Yuma. A rush was made for the scene&#13;
of the discovery, and the scramble for&#13;
land within the belt became so exciting&#13;
that some of the first locaters were&#13;
compelled to use rifles in protection of&#13;
/heir rights.&#13;
Wales Geta « Dlploi&#13;
The prince of Wales is now a fellow&#13;
of the Royal College of Surgeons. The&#13;
-~« ..*« ». n »... *v i Pwaldaat of the college, Sir William&#13;
going, "tick tick," then open your McCormac, headed a deputation that&#13;
presented his royal highness with the&#13;
diploma at Marlborough house the&#13;
other morning.&#13;
(Special Letter.)&#13;
Miss Alice Barter of Hew York has&#13;
the distinction of being the only woman&#13;
lawyer In America who makes a ape*&#13;
dalty of criminal practice. There aremany&#13;
other successful woman lawyer*,&#13;
but thair practice is given to other&#13;
branches of the legal profession. Miss&#13;
Serber selected criminal practice aa her&#13;
special field of endeavor •because she&#13;
believes that H an accused woman has&#13;
one of her own sex to depend on she&#13;
will natucally talk more frankly than&#13;
she would with a manT Then Miss Serber&#13;
finds that civil practice 1B slow and&#13;
does not require the same quickness&#13;
and alertness of thought on short notice&#13;
as does criminal procedure* She&#13;
has already been successful in many&#13;
important cases and judges and law*&#13;
yers have paid tribute to her thorough&#13;
legal training, sound knowledge of the&#13;
law and genuine oratorical ability.&#13;
The career of this woman advocate&#13;
has been remarkable, and the difficulties&#13;
that she had to overcome to attain&#13;
her present position were great-&#13;
MISS ALICE SERBER.&#13;
Ten years ago she came to New York&#13;
City from Russia, without money,&#13;
friends, influence or any knowledge of&#13;
the English language. She saw the opportunities&#13;
that the new world held&#13;
out to enterprising and determined&#13;
women and resolved to take advantage&#13;
of them. She had to work during the&#13;
daytime; to support herself, but studied&#13;
(diligently evenings. Often when morning&#13;
broke she would be found bending&#13;
.over her books. Three years after she&#13;
came to this country she entered the&#13;
!New York University Law school and&#13;
-in 1896 received the degree of LL. B,&#13;
'One year later she was admitted to the&#13;
bar and was the first woman to be admitted&#13;
to practice in the United States&#13;
.District court.&#13;
To K e e p Boys Off t h e Street*.&#13;
Stockholm, Sweden, has found a way&#13;
to keep its pu%Hc-8choc^Hjoys~-off^the~&#13;
streets after st-hool hours. A year ago&#13;
school principals were instructed to'&#13;
encourage the gathering of pupils in&#13;
the public parks after school hours for&#13;
the purpose of playing outdoor games,&#13;
and several of the larger boys in each&#13;
school were officially selected to lead&#13;
the games. The innovation proved&#13;
popular and many boys who formerly&#13;
were in the habit of spending their&#13;
late afternoons smoking cigarets and&#13;
learning bad habits on the street corners&#13;
may now be seen each evening&#13;
playing baseball, football, and other&#13;
athletic games. The board of education&#13;
of Stockholm thinks so well of the&#13;
experiment that it has recently appointed&#13;
three men teachers to the positions&#13;
of superintendents of outdoor&#13;
exercise. It will hereafter be their&#13;
duty to get together all pupils who are&#13;
willing at the close of school and lead&#13;
them to the parks, where, under the&#13;
auspices of the board, games will be&#13;
provided daily during the season from&#13;
4 to 8 p. m*. -&#13;
Professor Charles Eliot Norton,&#13;
RusTtln:s literary executor, says that&#13;
Rusktn left hia manuscripts and notes,&#13;
in perfect order, as if he expected&#13;
death. He had destroyed such manuscripts&#13;
its ha did not wish to h*ve&gt;&#13;
printed n , ^ *&#13;
— ' / . • . ' ' •&#13;
l""lllf»llJPIJ ippppynpun" '•t'P'JP1'mmj|ui min uyigpji!', w&#13;
A l » * &gt;iw»li» i ' " 1 1 ' 1 * * -•"•^•v-t^tv**^**.,',*««'t*»*M» HII iiitr ii «\* «» « M&gt; » n-ii in .' »m Vn«» '•*•'»"»*"• , ^ - ,&#13;
. ••••v •;•'•* •&#13;
"•J^V&#13;
t '&#13;
•r'*'''. '•"&#13;
:'"" i ' V ^ r &amp;&#13;
v:' ..&#13;
; » ' * " • • . . » ' &gt; • • # • ' - i /&#13;
• ' , • , . . • • ; » ;v#-; : : ' &gt; • . . ' * , ' • * -&#13;
&lt;&gt;*-&#13;
.* „••'&lt;&gt; i " - « M V ; , , : ' ; :&#13;
« » — &lt; ^ W W W — i •*•&#13;
•saw*&#13;
u&#13;
sapsnwpwh&#13;
•j. * i / a&#13;
a KMHi&#13;
Wears Cgic«!ly of His f.'«n!;N&#13;
tiorj,&#13;
STEVENSON ALSO NOTIFIED.&#13;
J a Hcply t o Xotincattoa Mr. Kryan &amp;»ys&#13;
That It Eieetetl 0 « IV1U Convene&#13;
Congress in JCxtrnordtaary Seesien and&#13;
Give PlUjilnoe Tlteir Independence,&#13;
Indianapolis, Aug. 8.—W, J. Bryan&#13;
"was officially notified of bis nomination&#13;
for the presidency before several,&#13;
thousand people at Newby oval today.&#13;
Atllai E. Stevenson was also notified&#13;
of bis nomtnatloa for the office pTtteer&#13;
president. In reply to the notification&#13;
Mr. Bryan said in part:&#13;
Mr. Bryan'* Speech.&#13;
Mr. Chairman and Members of the Notification&#13;
Committee: 1 shall, a t an early&#13;
day, and in u more- formal manner, accept&#13;
the nomination which you tender,&#13;
and I shall at that time otscusa the varloub&#13;
questions covered by the Democratic&#13;
platform. It may not be out of place,&#13;
however, to submit.u, few observations at&#13;
JhiB tlrao upon the general character of&#13;
the contest before us, and upon the question&#13;
which 1» declared to be of paramount&#13;
importance In this campaign. .&#13;
"When 1 say that the contest of 1900 is a&#13;
contest between democracy on the one&#13;
hand and plutocracy on the other, I do&#13;
not mean 10 aay that "all our opponents&#13;
have deliberately chosen to give to organized&#13;
wealth a predominating Influence&#13;
in the affairs of tho government, but 1&#13;
do assert that on the important issues of&#13;
the day the Republican party is dominat-*&#13;
cd by those influence* which constantly&#13;
tend to elevate pecuniary considerations&#13;
and ignore.human rights.&#13;
In 1*50 Lincoln said that the Republican&#13;
party believed In the raan and the dollar,&#13;
but that in cuse of conflict it believed in&#13;
the man before the dollar. This is the&#13;
proper relation which should exist between&#13;
the two. Man, the handiwork of&#13;
God, comes i l m money, the handiwork of&#13;
man, 's of inferior importance. Man is&#13;
the master; money the servant, but upon&#13;
all important questions today republican&#13;
legislation tends to make money the master&#13;
and man the servant.&#13;
The maxim of Jefferson", "equal rights&#13;
to all and special privileges to none," and&#13;
the doctrine of Lincoln that this should&#13;
bo a government "of the people,.by the&#13;
people and for the people," are being disregarded&#13;
and the instrumentalities of government&#13;
are being used to advance the interests&#13;
of those who ure in a, position to&#13;
secure favors from the government.&#13;
The Democratic party is not making&#13;
war upon the honest acquisition of&#13;
wealth; it has no desire to discourage industry,&#13;
economy and thrift. On the contrary,&#13;
it gives to every citizen the greatest&#13;
possible stimulus to honest toil, when&#13;
it promises him protection in the enjoyment&#13;
of the proceeds of his labor. Property&#13;
rigbtB are most secure when human&#13;
rights are respected. Democracy strives&#13;
for a civilization In which every member&#13;
of society will share according to his merits.&#13;
No one h a s a right to expect from society*&#13;
more than a fair compensation for&#13;
the service which ho renders to society.&#13;
If he secures more, it is at the expense&#13;
of sdtneone else. It is no injustice to him&#13;
to prevent his doing injustice to another.&#13;
To him who would, either through class&#13;
legislation or in the absence of necessary&#13;
legislation, trespass upon the rights of&#13;
another, the Democratic party says "Thou&#13;
shalt not."&#13;
Against us arc arrayed a comparatively&#13;
small, but politically and ilnanclally powerful,&#13;
number who really profit by Republican&#13;
policies; but with them are associated&#13;
H large number who. because of&#13;
their attachment to their party naraerare&#13;
eve/ differences of opinion naay have existed&#13;
an to the bfgt method of opposing f&#13;
the colonial poller.* there never w*a any&#13;
dJfcifUco u^ to tha steal, importance ol&#13;
the question ona thero is no difference&#13;
iK'W as to the course to be pursued,&#13;
The Utlo of Spain *odng extinguished,&#13;
we u c . a at liberiy to dt-ai v.'Ua the Plllpinoa&#13;
riecorriintf, lo , American principles.&#13;
i ho Bacon n-foluton, Unreduced a month&#13;
before hostilities broke out at Manila,&#13;
promised independence toMte Filipinos on&#13;
the same terms that it was promised to&#13;
the Cubans. I supported this resolution&#13;
and believe that its xdopttou prior to the&#13;
breaking out of hostilities would have&#13;
prevented bloodshed, and that its adoption&#13;
at any subsequent time would have&#13;
ended hostilities.&#13;
Defend* His Own Coarse.&#13;
If the treaty had been rejected, constderable&#13;
time would have necessarily&#13;
«&gt;*jfift$.before,« new treaty could' have&#13;
been agreed upon and ratitled. and during-&#13;
S - # " T&#13;
T R A N S V A A L W A R I T E M * . "'&#13;
i n n ji I "&#13;
The foUQwinft from Lord Roberts,&#13;
dated Pretoria. Aug. 0, was received&#13;
on the 7th: IlarrisraUh smrendjerad&#13;
on Aug. 4. The neighboring country,&#13;
seems to be quiet. Kitchener is with&#13;
the force sonth of the VaaJ river. He&#13;
waa joined yesterday by a strone; detaehment&#13;
of Brabraut's horse and the&#13;
Canadian, rejriment. The Boers at*&#13;
tacked the garrison at Eland's river On&#13;
the morning of Aug. 4v Information&#13;
was sent to CarrinjftonNayho was on&#13;
the way to the river. Ian Hamilton,&#13;
who reached $uatenbnrg yesterday, reported&#13;
hearing heavy firing in the di-&#13;
. _ rectionof the river. Today the firing&#13;
t h a t t i m e t h e q u e s t i o n WOUld h a v e *&gt;•*«- « * - » » * raor» b l a t a n t w h i n h IrirtUa A S if&#13;
pgitatlns; the public mind. If tho Bacon Jf—Jf, m o .r ® a i 8 t a n t resolution had been adopted by the Sen « vf^ieh iooks a s JX&#13;
atte and carried out by the President,&#13;
either a t the time of tpe ratification or&#13;
the treaty or ut any time afterwards, U&#13;
would have taken t h e question of imperii&#13;
allsm out of politics and left the Anjer&gt;&#13;
caT-rpeopJe free to deaTwlth their domestic&#13;
problems. But the resolution waa defeated&#13;
by the vote of the Republican Vice-&#13;
President, and from that time to this a&#13;
Kepublican Congress has refused to take&#13;
any action whatever in the matter.&#13;
When hostilities broke out at Manila&#13;
Republican speakers and Kepublican editors&#13;
at once sought to lay the blame upon&#13;
those whc~nad delayed the ratification of&#13;
the treaty, and. during: the progress of the&#13;
war, ihQ same Republicans have accused&#13;
the opponents of Imperialism of giving&#13;
encouragement to the Filipinos. I n i a u&#13;
a cowardly evasion of responsibility.&#13;
if it is right for the United States to&#13;
hold the Pnlhpplno islands permanently&#13;
and Imitate Kuropcan empires in the government&#13;
of colonies, the Republican party&#13;
oi.ght to state its position and defend it.&#13;
but it must expect tfco subject races to&#13;
r.rotest against such a policy and to resist&#13;
to the extent of their ability. The&#13;
Filipinos do not need any encouragement&#13;
l'roin Americans now living. Our whole&#13;
history has been an encouragement1, not&#13;
only to the Flhpinos. but to all who are&#13;
denied a voice in their own government.&#13;
Jf the Republicans are prepared to censure&#13;
all who have used language calculated&#13;
to make the Filipinos hate foreign&#13;
domination, let them condemn the speech&#13;
of Patrick Henry. When he uttered that&#13;
passionate appea.1, "Civo me liberty or&#13;
give me dcatn." lie expressed a sentiment&#13;
which still echoes in tha hearts of men.&#13;
Let them censure Jefferson; of all the&#13;
statesmen of history, no»o have used&#13;
words so oilensivo to those who would&#13;
feold their fellows in political bondage.&#13;
Lot them censure Washington, who declatt&#13;
d that the colonists must choose between&#13;
liberty and slavery. Or, if the&#13;
statute _of limitations has run against "the&#13;
sins of J i e n r y and Jefferson and Washington,&#13;
lot them censure Lincoln, whoso&#13;
Gettysburg speech will ho quoted in defense&#13;
of popular government when the&#13;
present advocates of force and conquest&#13;
are forgotten. • • " .&#13;
Those who would have this nation enter&#13;
upon a career of empire must consider&#13;
not only the effect of imperialism on tho&#13;
Filipinos, but they must also calculate&#13;
its effect upon our own nation. We cannot&#13;
repudiate the principle of self-government&#13;
in the Philippines without weakening&#13;
that principle here.&#13;
The Uoer War.&#13;
Even now we art beginning to see the&#13;
paralyzing influence of imperialism.&#13;
Heretofore, this nation has been prompt&#13;
to express its sympathy with those who&#13;
were lighting for civil llbprty. While our&#13;
sphere of activity has been limited to&#13;
the Western Hemisphere, our sympathies&#13;
havo not been bounded by the seas. We&#13;
have felt it due to ourselves and to the&#13;
world, a s well as to those who were&#13;
struggling for the right to govern themselves,&#13;
to proclaim tho Interest which&#13;
our people have, from the date of their&#13;
own independence, felt In every contest&#13;
between human rights and arbitrary&#13;
power. Three-quarters of a cenrtry ago,&#13;
when our nation was small, the struggles&#13;
of (Jreeee aroused our people, and Webbier&#13;
and Clay gave eloquent expression&#13;
to the universal desire for Grecian independence.&#13;
In 1S96 all parties manifested&#13;
a lively interest in the success of tho&#13;
*?s*s T « f • « P P # *&#13;
t h e Eland's river g a r r i s o n h a d b e e n relieved&#13;
and w a s r e t i r i n g t o w a r d Zeerust.&#13;
A d i s p a t c h f r o m P r e t o r i i d a t e c L A u g i&#13;
^ e l m c a l n e d ~ t E e f o l l o w i n g : A plot to&#13;
s h o o t all t h e British officers a n d t o&#13;
m a k e Lord Roberta a prisoner, h a s been&#13;
o p p o r t u n e l y discovered. T e n of t h e&#13;
r i n g l e a d e r s w e r e arrested! a n d are n o w&#13;
i n jaiL P r o b a b l y t h e p l o t w a s part of a&#13;
conspiracy of w h i c h t h e a t t e m p t e d risi&#13;
n g a t J o h a n n e s b u r g w a s t h e first indication.&#13;
A d i s p a t c h from L o r d Roberts, dated&#13;
Aug. », « a y s : H u n t e r reports t h a t h e&#13;
m a d e 4,140 prisoners i n t h e Bethlehem-&#13;
H a r r i s m i t h district, a majority of&#13;
w h o m are n o w e n route for Cape T o w n .&#13;
T h r e e g u n s and 4,000 h o r s e s w e r e captured,&#13;
a n d 10 w a g o n l o a d s of ammunition&#13;
a n d 19"),000 rounds of a m m u n i t i o n&#13;
w e r e destroyed.&#13;
I t i s s t a t e d positively t h a t President&#13;
K r u g e r i s w i l l i n g a n d a n x i o u s t o sur •&#13;
render, provided a satisfactory promise&#13;
is g i v e n a s t o h i s u l t i m a t e destination.&#13;
A d i s p a t c h from Lord Roberts, dated&#13;
Pretoria, A u g . 11, says: T h e e n e m y is&#13;
fleeing in f r o n t of Kitchener's and&#13;
M e t h u e n ' s forces.&#13;
I t i s feared by Lord Roberts t h a t&#13;
E l a n d s river garrison h a s been captured&#13;
b y t h e Boers.&#13;
EXTRACT OF 8€NNE PLANT,&#13;
. It Is Stature's Own BeaMetf* ,&#13;
First used by the Mississippi river&#13;
Steamboat men In the "early forties,"&#13;
who drank their "Bonne Tedd" from the&#13;
hands of tho colored "aunties." They&#13;
steeped the leaves in hot water, and the&#13;
verdict of these steamboat men was that&#13;
it "did the business."&#13;
In 1841, James and Constance Maguire&#13;
sec0red some of these miraculous leaves,&#13;
and. upon investigation, discovered that&#13;
they are identical with tho Sesam. Ind.&#13;
fBenne-Leaves), and a s the same indicates,&#13;
native of India, containing a&#13;
mucilaginous substance of soothing and&#13;
healing properties. Mature here furnished&#13;
a remedy for diseases such as Colic,&#13;
Cholera Morbus. Diarrhoea, Dysentery&#13;
and kindred ailments. After experimenting-,&#13;
the Messrs. Maguire succeeded In ,&#13;
chemically combining the use- of the/&#13;
Benne-leaves with other vegetable sub- L&#13;
stances, and so furniyihed a rexfcedy that&#13;
has saved thousands of lives.&#13;
Prepared by T H E J. A G. MAGUIRE&#13;
MEDICINE CO., 8T. LOUIS, MO.&#13;
Money talks—but it doesn't always&#13;
speak when spoken to.&#13;
H a w s TbU?&#13;
We offer One Hundred Dollars reward for aay&#13;
ease of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Ball's&#13;
Catarrh Cure.&#13;
P. J. CHENEY A CO, Props.. Toledo. 0&#13;
We, the undersigned, have known F. J.&#13;
Cheney for the last 15 years and believe him&#13;
perfectly honorable in all business transactions&#13;
and financially able to carry out any obligations&#13;
made by their nnn. .&#13;
West A Truax. Wholesale Druggists, Toledo,&#13;
O.; Waldinjr, Kinaan A Marvin, Wholesale&#13;
DroggUts. Toledo. Ohio&#13;
Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken Internally, acting&#13;
directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces&#13;
of the system. Testimonials sent free. Price&#13;
TScper bottle. Sold by all druggists.&#13;
Hall's Family Pills are the best.&#13;
Cubans, but now when a war is in progress&#13;
in South Africa, which must result&#13;
in the extension of the monarchlal idea&#13;
Criticising the Administration.&#13;
For a / l i m e Republican leaders were inclined&#13;
to deny to opponents the right to&#13;
criticise the Philippine policy of the administration,&#13;
but upon investigation they&#13;
found that both Lincoln and Clay asserted&#13;
and exercised the right to criticise a&#13;
President during the progress of the Mexican&#13;
war.&#13;
Instead of meeting the issue boldly and&#13;
submitting a clear and positive plan for&#13;
dealing with the Philippine question, the&#13;
Republican convention adopted a platform,&#13;
the larger part of which was devoted&#13;
to boasting and self congratulation.&#13;
In attempting to press economic questions&#13;
upon the country to the exclusion&#13;
of those which involve the very structure&#13;
of our government, the Republican leaders&#13;
give new evidence of their abandon-&#13;
Trent of the earlier ideals of the party and&#13;
of their complete Hubserviency to pecur'.&#13;
ary considerations.&#13;
I was among, the number of those who&#13;
believed it better to ratify the treaty and&#13;
end the war, release the volunteers, remove&#13;
tho excuse for war expenditures,&#13;
and then give to the Filipinos' the independence&#13;
which ra!i;ht be forced from&#13;
Spain by a new treaty.&#13;
In view of the criticism which m y a c -&#13;
tion aroused In some Quarters I take this&#13;
occasion to restate the reasons given at&#13;
that time. I thought It safer to trust the&#13;
American people to give independence to&#13;
t h e Filipinos than to trust the accomplishrrent&#13;
of that purpose to diplomacy with&#13;
*n unfriendly nation. Lincoln embodied&#13;
a n argument in the question, when . he&#13;
asked. "Can aliens make treaties easier&#13;
than friends can make laws?" I believe&#13;
that we are now In a better position to&#13;
wage a successful contest against imperialism&#13;
than w e would have been had the&#13;
treaty been rajecto^, With .the treaty rat-,&#13;
ittetr. a clean cut lasrne is presented between&#13;
a government by consent and a government&#13;
by force, und imperialists must&#13;
bear the responsibility for all that happens&#13;
until the question Is settled. If tho&#13;
treaty had been rejected, the opponents&#13;
•of Imperialism would have been held r e -&#13;
sponsible for any international complications&#13;
which mifcbt*h*v» arisen before the&#13;
ratification of another treaty B u t whatdare&#13;
not&#13;
Boers. say a word in behalf of the&#13;
giving their support to doctrines antag&#13;
cnlstic tttftthe former teachings of their&#13;
own p a K . Republicans who used to ad- „ „ , . . • » . . . • ». # n wn .u A&#13;
_A-ocnteTiffin eta Ularo now try 4o—convince o r l n t n e t r J u mph of a Republic, the ad&#13;
themselves"~thut the gold s t a n d a r d i s T ^ f ^ 4 v s r ^ &gt; f Imperialism in thH countn&#13;
ttocd; Republicans who were formerly attached&#13;
to the greenback are now seeking&#13;
an excuse for giving national banks control&#13;
of the nation's paper money; Republicans&#13;
who used to boast that the Republican&#13;
party was paying off the national&#13;
debt are now looking for reasons to support&#13;
a perpetual and increasing debt; Re-&#13;
;.uhllcans who formerly abhorred a tnist&#13;
now beguile themselves with the delusion&#13;
that there are good trusts and bad&#13;
trusts, while, in.their minds, the line between&#13;
the two is becoming more and more&#13;
obscure; Republicans who, in times past,&#13;
congratulated tho enuntry upon the small&#13;
expense of our standing army are now&#13;
making light of the objections which are&#13;
urged against a large increase ln the&#13;
permanent military establishment: Republicans&#13;
who gloried in our independence&#13;
when the nation waa less powerful, now&#13;
leck with favor upon ~a foreign alliance;&#13;
Republicans who three years ago condemned&#13;
"forcible annexation" as immoral&#13;
and even criminal, are now sure that it&#13;
is both immoral and criminal to oppose&#13;
forcible annexation. That partisanship&#13;
has already blinded many to present dangers&#13;
is certain; how large u portion of&#13;
the Republican party can be drawn over&#13;
to the new policies remains to be seen.&#13;
Sympathy for the Koers does not arise&#13;
from any unfriendliness toward &lt;Kngland;&#13;
The American |&gt;eople are not unfriendly&#13;
toward tho people of any nation. This&#13;
sympathy Is due to the fact that, as stated&#13;
In our platform, we believe In the principle&#13;
of self-government and reject, as&#13;
did our forefathers, the claims of monarchy.&#13;
It this nation surrenders its belief&#13;
in the universal application of the principles&#13;
set forth in the Declaration of Independence.&#13;
It will lose the prestige and&#13;
.r.fluence which it has enjoyed among the&#13;
nations as an exponent of popular govtinment.&#13;
The F l a s In the Philippines.&#13;
Our opponents, conscious of the weakness&#13;
of their cause, seek to confuse impel&#13;
ialism with expansion, a/id have even&#13;
tiared to claim Jefferson as a supporter&#13;
of their policy. Jefferson spoke so freely&#13;
and used language with such precision&#13;
that no one er.n be ignorant of his views.&#13;
On one occasion he declared: "If there be&#13;
one principle more deeply rooted than&#13;
any other in the mind of every American,&#13;
it is that we should have nothing to do&#13;
;vith conquest." And again he said:&#13;
"Conquest is not in our'principles; it is&#13;
inconsistent with our government."&#13;
A colonial policy means that we shall&#13;
send to the Philippines ;i few traders, a&#13;
tew task masters and a few officeholders,&#13;
and an army large enough to support the&#13;
authority of a small fraction of the people&#13;
while they rule the natives. • • •&#13;
There Is an easy, honest, honorable solution&#13;
of the Philippine question. It is&#13;
set forth in the Democratic platform and&#13;
it is submitted with conscience to the&#13;
American people. This plan I unreservedly&#13;
irdorse. Jf elected, 1 shall convene&#13;
Congress in extraordinary session as soon&#13;
as I urn inaugurated and recommend an&#13;
immediate declaration of the nation's&#13;
puriHise, lirst. to establish a stable form&#13;
o( government In the Philippine Islands,&#13;
Just as w e are now establishing a stable&#13;
form of government in the island of Cuba;&#13;
second. «0 give independence to the&#13;
Filipino* Just as we have promised to&#13;
give independence to the Cubans; third,&#13;
to prut3ct the Filipinos from outside inter&#13;
1 ere nee while they work out their destiny.&#13;
Just a s we have protected the republics&#13;
of Central and South America, and&#13;
are, by the Monroe doctrine, pledged to&#13;
protect Cuba. An European protectorate&#13;
often results in the exploitation of the&#13;
ward by the guardian. An American protectorate&#13;
gives to the nation protected&#13;
the advantages of our strength, without&#13;
making it the victim of our greed. For&#13;
three-quarters of a century the Monroe&#13;
doctrine has been a shield to neighboring&#13;
republics and yet It has Imposed ne pecuniary&#13;
burden upon us. After the Filipinos&#13;
had nided us in the war against&#13;
Spain, we could not honorably turn them&#13;
over to their former masters: we could&#13;
not leave them to be the victims of the&#13;
ambttkHtM designs of the European nations,&#13;
and since w e do not desire to make&#13;
thtai a Dart of vs. « r to hoM them aa&#13;
KUbtect*. w# propose that the only alternative,&#13;
namely, to give them Independence&#13;
and guard t h o u against molestation&#13;
from without. __&gt; .&#13;
Ks-Vice-President Stevenson's speech&#13;
waa very brief, being mainly devoted&#13;
to endorsement of tha platform.&#13;
- Advices received from Bitlis, Asiatic&#13;
T u r k e y , s a y t h a t 200 m e n , w o m e n a n d&#13;
children have been massacred in t h e&#13;
A r m e n i a n v i l l a g e of S p a g h a n k , in t h e&#13;
district of .Sassun, b y troops a n d Kurds&#13;
u n d e r Ali Pasha, t h e c o m m a n d a n t of&#13;
BitHs. He is also said t o have ordered&#13;
t h e v i l l a g e t o be burned.&#13;
P o v e r t y i s n o t a crime morally, b u t&#13;
i t i s matrimonially.&#13;
Best for the Bowel*.&#13;
Ko matter what ails you, headache&#13;
to a cancer, you will never get well&#13;
until your bowels are put right&#13;
CASCARETS help nature, cure you&#13;
without a grippe or pain, produce easy&#13;
natural movements, cost you just 10&#13;
cents to start getting your health hack.&#13;
CASCARETS Candy Cathartic, the&#13;
genuine, put up in metal boxes, every&#13;
tablet has C. C. C. stamped on it. Beware&#13;
of. imitations.&#13;
Life is full of checks and many of&#13;
them are forgeries.&#13;
A bird in the hand is rulgar.&#13;
t h e k n i f e a n d fork.&#13;
Use&#13;
P U T N A M F A D E L E S S D Y E S produce&#13;
t h e fastest and b r i g h t e s t colors&#13;
of a n y k n o w n dye stuff.&#13;
N i n e p e r s o n s succumbed t o t h e h e a t A r e *m* u * , M a »"•»•* root-Ease?&#13;
i n C h i c a g o o u t h e 6th, w h i l e a score or x t J* t n e c n l v C U f e f o r Swollen,&#13;
more of p r o s t r a t i o n s w e r e reported S m a r t i n g , Burning, S w e a t i n g Feet,&#13;
T u „ v . , , . . . . •, Corns a n d Bunions. Ask for Allen's&#13;
T h e b u i l d i n g s p n n t i n g presses and ^ o o t - E a s e , a powder to be shaken into&#13;
all o t h e r apparatus, t o g e t h e r w i t h t h e / | h e shoes. A t all Druggists and Shoe&#13;
r i g h t s to p u b l i s h t h e Harper periodi- Stores, 25e. Sample sent F R E E . Adcals,&#13;
formerly conducted by Harper dress Allen S. Otmstpd. LeRoy, N . Y.&#13;
Bros., a t N e w York, w e r e sold on t h e&#13;
9th for $1,100,000.&#13;
S e v e n t e e n persons, t w o of w h o m&#13;
were u n k n o w n Americans, w e r e&#13;
d r o w n e d in the;department of Olancho,&#13;
d u r i n g t h e reccut floods i n Honduras.&#13;
T h e d e s t r u c t i o n of property i s said t o&#13;
have b e e n widespread.&#13;
A s a r e s u l t of a c o l l i s i o n b e t w e e n a&#13;
p a s s e n g e r and freight train o n t h e St.&#13;
L o u i s S o u t h w e s t e r n (Cotton Belt) railroad&#13;
a t Aurich. 40 m i l e s north of Pine&#13;
Bluff, Ark,, on t h e 0 t h , five m e n w e r e&#13;
killed a n d t w o seriously injured.&#13;
A dispatch from I n d i a dated t h e Ttb&#13;
s a y s a very decided i m p r o v e m e n t in&#13;
t h e c r o p prospects lias t a k e n place duri&#13;
n g t h e pr.st 10 days. A m p l e rain h a s&#13;
fallen t h r o u g h o u t t h e g r e a t e r part of&#13;
R a j p u t a n a a n d central India. There&#13;
are at p r e s e n t about 0,33&lt;i,000 persons&#13;
r e c e i v i n g relief.&#13;
It looks like tho plowholder sows that the&#13;
bondholder muy reap.&#13;
Sirs. Winslow*s Soothing Syrup.&#13;
For children teething, softeni the gum», reduces to&#13;
fUmmtloo, suay» paia.care»wiadcolic. 23caboto*&gt;&#13;
mm* "MYvWIipFpiRV&#13;
~ — * — » . II' 1 1 *&#13;
Mrs. Gates Wvtyea 4» Mr*. Vial&#13;
Follows Her Advles and J» Mads Well.&#13;
9&#13;
i&#13;
"DEAB MRS. PDntfUM ;-r-For nearly&#13;
two and one-half years I havo fce&amp;n ia&#13;
feeble health. After my Httte child cam#&#13;
it seemed, I con id not '&#13;
get my strength.&#13;
again. I have&#13;
chills «n»d «h#&#13;
severest paiaa in&#13;
my limbs and top&#13;
of head and am&#13;
almost fmmnsi?&#13;
bleattusssa. I&#13;
also htfve a pain&#13;
joat to the right of •&#13;
breast bone. Jt ia&#13;
to severe at times&#13;
that I cannot lie on&#13;
my right side. Please&#13;
write ma what you&#13;
think of my case."—&#13;
Mas. CL AHAG ATXS,&#13;
Johns P.O., Miss.,&#13;
April 23, 1898.&#13;
" D K A B M R S . P I N K H A M : —&#13;
I h a v e t a k e n L y d i a E„ Pinkham'a V e g e -&#13;
t a b l e Compound a s advised a n d n o w&#13;
s e n d y o u a l e t t e r f o r publication. F o r&#13;
several y e a r s I w a s i n sxtch w r e t c h e d&#13;
h e a l t h t h a t life w a s a l m o s t a burden.&#13;
I c o u l d h a r d l y w a l k across t h e floor,&#13;
w a s s o feeble. Several o f o u r b e s t&#13;
p h y s i c i a n s a t t e n d e d m e , b u t failed t o&#13;
h e l p . . I concluded t o w r i t e t o y o n f o r&#13;
advice. Jn a f e w d a y s I received s u c h&#13;
a kind, motherly l e t t e r . I followed y o u r&#13;
i n s t r u c t i o n s a n d a m my ' o l d self*&#13;
a g a i n . W a s g r e a t l y benefited before I&#13;
h a d u s e d o n e b o t t l e . M a y God blesa&#13;
y o u f o r w h a t y o u a r e d o i n g for sufferi&#13;
n g w o m e n . " — M R S . C L A R A G A T S * ,&#13;
J o h n s P . 0 . , Miss., Oct. 6, IS99.&#13;
U S E ' " T H E • G E N U I N E&#13;
MURRAY &amp; ;&lt;l&gt;&#13;
LANMANS *&#13;
TH£. U N I V E R S A L P E R F U M E -&#13;
F!&gt;PT.HE HANDKERCHIEF&#13;
TO I LET &amp; BATH.&#13;
R E F U S E A L L S U B S T I T U T E S&#13;
ff&#13;
The man who is ia love with himself has no&#13;
fear of be'ng jilted.&#13;
Arefd baldoew, gray hair, daatlroff tad thin tocki,&#13;
by o t l n i PARKEK'8 HAIR BALSAM.&#13;
HiKDZBoaiuoi, the best sure fur coma, ljcta.&#13;
The farther a man gets away from a dollar,&#13;
tho bigger it looks.&#13;
I am sure Piso's Cure for Consumption saved&#13;
my life three years ago.—Mas. THOS. BOBBINS,&#13;
•MtpU. BtrA»t Tinwtinh. X . V . , Feb- 17. 1900.&#13;
For a merciless critic-commend us to the unsuccessful&#13;
author.&#13;
B A S E B A L L .&#13;
Rciow we submit tho official standing of the&#13;
rlubsof trie Nation*! tini American lea^uca u?&#13;
toaad Including Sunday, August 12th:&#13;
Woi. I.')**. Perct&#13;
Brooklyn 55 3 •• - 6 3 3 •Pittsburjf 49 41 Mi&#13;
Philadelphia 47 4:) MO&#13;
Chicaso •....#.... 41 40 .404&#13;
Bostoa — 41 45 .««&#13;
S t Loui.H :« 47 .^7&#13;
Cincinnati ay ;o .433&#13;
New Yurk 3t 49 .410&#13;
AUKLllCAN LK.MiUi&#13;
Won. r&lt;,Tsi. p*r cfc&#13;
Chicago 'ui ;« .¾^&#13;
Milwaukee ,v, 4,5 ,¾.¾&#13;
Indianapolis rv» 41 ,;3.&gt;&#13;
Detroit »3 47 ^ 0 Cleveland 47 4* .495&#13;
KansosCity * 4« 54 .471&#13;
Buffalo 4a F8 .4i9&#13;
Minneapolis 4i ot» .4jj&#13;
When cycling, take a bar of White's Yucatan.&#13;
You can ride further and easier.&#13;
The memories of the long ago save many tender&#13;
recollections.&#13;
FARM MORTGAGE&#13;
LOANS&#13;
Jn amounts ranging from SHOO t o&#13;
$10,000 en choice improved farms&#13;
in the Western part ot North&#13;
Dakota.&#13;
Write us if you have money to invest&#13;
and we will be pleased to !*eod yen&#13;
description of loans, rates of interes&#13;
, etc. Personal examination of&#13;
all lasns. We have invested nearly&#13;
Ow Million Dollars in farm loans&#13;
is North Dakota since IWI without&#13;
the lotw of a dollar.&#13;
NORTH DAKOTA LAND a LOAM CO., Rusiy. N. S.&#13;
uufto Oar e»Mio«ro* irtrw just what h&amp;aie*»&#13;
are UM hl»tr«nr, 1 jtrt*lntprixewwufa&#13;
imr T^kle and g*r*n\ Sportinvwon*.&#13;
Late* (came l a w L*ri**t SpnrttnaT&#13;
g o o ^ he*** In Michigan. Mead a* for t«toi&lt;jgxt* u * l&#13;
prk« ttet. V. KiWULn. batrinaw. Mich.&#13;
IsfaoSreM eerleeda.w utt*J»i ITniaptiirg Eft Wafcr&#13;
W . N . U — D E T R O I T — N O . 3 3 - . . I g Q Q&#13;
Whan answering Ads^ploise aenUcs tals paper&#13;
) 0 0 DROPS&#13;
, . , ^ , 1 ^ . . 1 1 1 , , , . 1 , . 1 ^ , . v *.I,.U-^.I.,IUU,TT&#13;
^-.--- : ... . v&#13;
v. .-v. Xi • ,%- f '&#13;
~':'miiHn;iPT!'- J1 rttT&gt;**a^hW^P^RjWSff6rri&#13;
AVfetfdabte Preparationior Assimilating&#13;
tocFoodandBcgula-&#13;
UngtbeStosMs^aiilBc^Hof&#13;
] \ 1 \ X I S i HII 1&gt;K! N&#13;
OASTORU For Infanta and Children.&#13;
The Kind You Have&#13;
Always Bought&#13;
T H E M A R K E T S .&#13;
LITE STOCK.&#13;
New Y»rk— u»uic Sheep Lambs Hoes&#13;
lle*t Krudex . .14 "Afcia «0 H 7» ) 7 u i «J OJ&#13;
L o w e r a n u t o s . a 0&gt;&lt;*l OJ 3 Uj ft ju 5 &amp;j&#13;
Best tirades...3 4036 a&gt; 4 X) s &amp;&gt; 5 43&#13;
Lower grades..i Wni 6» J 76 4 &amp; 5^5&#13;
Detroit—&#13;
Best grade*....&amp; 7*94 25 400 5 25 540&#13;
Lower grades U&amp;jgfeJ ?.&gt; 3 OJ 4 »O 473&#13;
!Saff»l»—&#13;
Best craue*. .4 40»! r&gt; 470 S 00 »80&#13;
Lower grades .4 uas.4 &lt;o H I 5 .:. &amp; ou&#13;
Cloelanati—&#13;
Best grade*.. 4 86$» S3 4 .V) «15 550&#13;
Lower trades. 4 uua-4 ¢0 4 ou 5 «J b»&#13;
Pittsbarc—&#13;
Be»t RTttdes.. .5 1S0S 71 4 7J 5 73 5 70&#13;
Loucr yiudcs. 4 1&amp;?M W ,1 W 0 i \ £&gt;»&#13;
GRAtN, KTC.&#13;
New York&#13;
t S ) l e M « o&#13;
* 0 » t « M t&#13;
Viaekaaet;&#13;
PlttslMirs&#13;
Haft***&#13;
Wheat.&#13;
No. * r-1&#13;
******&#13;
**»&gt;?•&#13;
s^w»i&#13;
Corn.&#13;
No x* tnlx&#13;
&lt;!••»!*&#13;
4\4»4i&#13;
4«f&gt;il\&#13;
43019¼&#13;
No- S white&#13;
StsXisi&#13;
Promotes DifestionjCheerfuF'&#13;
fttssandrkst.Coabdns neilher&#13;
Ojpium^fofp^ine nor Mineral.&#13;
X O T X A R C O T I C .&#13;
•Detroil—Har. t&gt;a l Timothy. Sli 00 pertoa?&#13;
Pouines. *&lt; per bv Uve Poultry, ssriai&#13;
takkeas. «H« P*,r lb: lowls. se: tarkeyaTlsaduetts.&#13;
S 4 c Kajrs mrivu* Cress. 1%per d o W&#13;
Butter, toot tUiry, nto pjr &lt;i»; croaarcry, no.&#13;
Apofecl Rsmedy forCoastipa.&#13;
Hon, Sour Stoattch J)mtb5m&#13;
rVbrrosX^onvuhiCaisJ^rTisrrntMwAhOBBOWSiMMR&#13;
^•••SBBBBaVaVa^eweSBVBBBBBBBWaBSBBfe&#13;
SilTiRhtTf o f&#13;
WL 9 ^Rssf^PRBB^RW&#13;
N K W YORK.&#13;
aXACT topycr WRAPPCR.&#13;
For Over&#13;
Thirty Years&#13;
8AST0BIA&#13;
^,&#13;
.'v'''.*'"^ ,&#13;
&gt;m&#13;
. ;-wa&#13;
• ^&#13;
r&#13;
-.MM&#13;
•aM&#13;
'Mi&#13;
s&#13;
•&#13;
,.-. &lt;&#13;
' ' • • ^&#13;
l-J:&#13;
m&#13;
•7 • t',&#13;
• •. »&#13;
::1&#13;
%&#13;
: • • &gt;&#13;
w ^m&#13;
••••j*T&#13;
;&#13;
• " *&#13;
,•&#13;
.;&gt;?&#13;
•' •'•'Ss&#13;
1 if • '&amp;fo."j3M5 m&#13;
M&#13;
a&#13;
•mrvr" V-rfan-t n^3Wid»«|lRU*rtltWlir&amp; * « y /W^^!^ 'V*:&gt;r*V »1&#13;
ASK YOUR G ROCE R FOR&#13;
8?&#13;
,13¾.&#13;
I ' EMA1^&#13;
J&amp;"&#13;
SOLD BY ALL FIRST-CLASS DEALERS.&#13;
H SEALED PACKAaES ONLY-PURE AND FRABRMT.&#13;
I "IT QOSm NO MORE-TRY IT"&#13;
i? v&#13;
•X-.&#13;
fell&#13;
.1;&#13;
PARSHALLVILLE.&#13;
*&#13;
John Wolverton got his hand&#13;
hurt quite badly, ra the mill one&#13;
day this week.&#13;
\ Charles Cole and wife of Owospj:;&#13;
,so are visiting friends in Parshalc'&#13;
villetkis week.&#13;
Jennie Berkley and her sister&#13;
Julia from Howell are visiting at&#13;
Wtjk Wolverton's this week.&#13;
Maggie Walker come home&#13;
this week from her visit in the&#13;
Upper Peninsula—her sister. Bell&#13;
came with her.&#13;
Sunday night about miduight&#13;
Chas. Wakeman's house on the&#13;
oldWakeman farm burned with&#13;
most of its contents.&#13;
Albert Wakeman died last&#13;
Thursday night. The funeral was&#13;
held at the•o M . ETI.T c1h1u. rch atS. u' n4d.'a y aje visiting relatives in Anderson morning, Rev. Walker officiating^ . _ ,A&amp; " c&#13;
1 and Pinckney.&#13;
, Belle Birnie who has been workw&#13;
t&#13;
assisted by Rev. Davis of the&#13;
Baptist church and Rev. Benson&#13;
of the M. E. church of Hartland.&#13;
HAMBURG.&#13;
Munson of&#13;
h&#13;
Carrie Ithaca is&#13;
visiting relatives in tnis village.&#13;
Fred Lece was very ill last&#13;
week, but is slightly better at this&#13;
writing.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Win. Featherly&#13;
spent last week with relatives in&#13;
Toledo.&#13;
Nettle Coe of South Lyon visited&#13;
at the home of L. A. Saunders&#13;
over Sunday.&#13;
Margaret McGaffey is visiting&#13;
ANDERSON.&#13;
A. G. Wilson made a trip to the&#13;
County Seat Tuesday.&#13;
The Ladies Aid met at Mrs.&#13;
Geo. Black's Wednesday Aug. 15.&#13;
Caroline Kellogg of Detroit is&#13;
visiting hei sister Mrs. Edd Bullis.&#13;
The Campers returned home on&#13;
Wednesday and all report a good&#13;
time.&#13;
Mrs Geo. Greiner and daughter&#13;
Alary are visiting relatives in Mt.&#13;
Clemens.&#13;
Anna Black of Perry spent&#13;
Sunday with her brother George&#13;
in this place.&#13;
Edd Cranna and wife of Gregory&#13;
spent Sunday night at MrB. E.&#13;
J. Durkee's.&#13;
Nora Durkee visited Ralph&#13;
Cobb and w4fe in Stockbridge&#13;
over Sunday.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Crane of Oakley&#13;
Marion is&#13;
with his&#13;
J with relatives and friends in Holly&#13;
and Durand.&#13;
—Tireittacabees oil this place are&#13;
making all preparations to attend&#13;
the picnic at Island lake to-day.&#13;
Wm. Lester Com. of Schools in&#13;
Washtenaw Co. visited at the&#13;
the home of his cousin Chas.&#13;
Burnett last week.&#13;
Although the weather was not&#13;
of the most agreeable kind last&#13;
Sunday a large number from this&#13;
plftCfi took in t.hft »nr»flmpmpnt fit&#13;
ing for M r s . B a c k u s in M a r i o n&#13;
has r e t u r n e d home.&#13;
C. D. B e n n e t t a u d wife K i r k&#13;
Van W i n k l e a n d wife s p e n t S u n -&#13;
day at J a s . M a r b l e ' s .&#13;
N e a r l y e v e r y one from t h i s&#13;
place a t t e n d e d t h e picnic at V a n&#13;
Winkle's G r o v e S a t u r d a y .&#13;
. J o h n B i r n i e and wife visited&#13;
Mrs. B's b r o t h e r , E d d C r a n n a a n d&#13;
wife near G r e g o r y T u e s d a y .&#13;
Chas. H o l m e s , wife a n d son&#13;
Marble of L a n s i n g ate visiting&#13;
relatives in a n d near Anderson.&#13;
L. E . W i l s o n w h o h a s been&#13;
s p e n d i n g a couple of m o n t h s a t&#13;
home r e t u r n e d to the west t h e&#13;
first of t h e week.&#13;
Miss Fannie Laverock is quite&#13;
pick this writing.&#13;
George Siegrist made a business&#13;
trip to Leslie last Tuesday.&#13;
Edith Hill returned to her home&#13;
in Mansfield Ohio Tuesday.&#13;
A number of the Plainfield people&#13;
spent last Friday at Joslin&#13;
lake. *&#13;
The North Lake Grange cleared&#13;
about $80 at their picnic at that&#13;
place August 7.&#13;
Thos. Budd and wife from&#13;
Stockbridge visited her parents&#13;
here iast week.&#13;
J. D. Coulton and Wife from&#13;
Chelsea visited her son Albert&#13;
here last Thursday.&#13;
Gene Joslin from&#13;
spending a few days&#13;
Grandparents here.&#13;
Mrs. Ales. Pyper and Miss&#13;
Kate Barnum called on friends in&#13;
Chelsea Tuesday.&#13;
Mrs. Will Secor and family visited&#13;
relatives at North lake last&#13;
Tuesday ane Wednesday.&#13;
Mrs. Ruth Chapman from Gregory&#13;
is spending a few days with&#13;
her daughter at this place.&#13;
A. C. Watson and wife spent&#13;
Sunday and Monday with his&#13;
mother and brother in Chelsea.&#13;
Friday evening August 24 there&#13;
will be a lawn social at R. Hartstiff's.&#13;
The proceeds go for new&#13;
Singing books for the Sunday&#13;
Schooi.&#13;
The Hadley family held a reunion&#13;
at North lake iast Wednesday.&#13;
There was about 75 present.&#13;
A bounteous dinner was served&#13;
after which a good program was&#13;
rendered. Ice cream, cake and&#13;
lemonade was served in "the after-"&#13;
noon.&#13;
MORE LOCAL.&#13;
Island Lake.&#13;
Pit-&#13;
i—i&#13;
••v3&#13;
PETTYSVILLE.&#13;
A Miss Harrington of Dakota&#13;
•i^^-'-sIs visiting-4a££~friend Miss Bessie&#13;
I'Cordley.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Saleman of New&#13;
Jersey visited at John VauFleet's&#13;
the first of the week.&#13;
Ettie Shehan returned to Tpsilanti&#13;
Monday after a weeks visit&#13;
muje* the parental roof.&#13;
Rev. A. Crane and wife of Oakley&#13;
Saginaw Co. visited at J. W.&#13;
Placeway's one day this week.&#13;
? Mr. Wiegand is suffering with&#13;
* a badly bruised ankle the effects&#13;
^f a kick from a ferocious colt.&#13;
'$-; The social at Wm. Hookers last&#13;
Friday night was largely attended&#13;
and $9 was cleared by the society.&#13;
•Mrs. Ed. VanFleet and Miss&#13;
Jfargaret Van Fleet of Detroit are&#13;
theguestaof the VanFleet families&#13;
this week,&#13;
EIU King of White Oak left&#13;
for her home the first of the week&#13;
after a few days visit with friends&#13;
rand relatives in this vicinity.&#13;
Franklin Smith and wife of&#13;
v Brighton and W. Armstrong and&#13;
wife of Grand Bapids visited at&#13;
J. W. Placeway's Saturday last.&#13;
Harry Wagner who has been&#13;
working for his grandmother Mrs.&#13;
CM. Wood returned to his home&#13;
in Banrield Monday.&#13;
Roy Place way accompanied bythree&#13;
young men of Gregory made&#13;
a trip to Island lake Saturday on&#13;
wheels returning Sunday.&#13;
Hazel Griswold who has been&#13;
spending a couple of weeks visiting&#13;
her aunt Mrs. Samuel Placeway&#13;
returned home Friday.&#13;
Olive Smith has been entertaining&#13;
a cousin from Ann Arbor for&#13;
a few weeks. Olive returns home (&#13;
with him Wednesday for a weeks&#13;
visit.&#13;
Mrs. Wm, Moran is on thu sick list&#13;
this week.&#13;
Jas. Carrol of Detroit is spending&#13;
tbo week under the parental root. ~~&#13;
The M. E. society took in over $7&#13;
Saturday, evening last selling- ice&#13;
cream. -&#13;
Mary and Blanche Ruen entertained&#13;
friends from the village at the&#13;
home of their grand parents, just south&#13;
of the village, Wednesday.&#13;
Say, that little item of news you did&#13;
not see in th« paper was not handed&#13;
in so of course we could not print it.&#13;
WH are always glad to publish items&#13;
of interest'when we hear of them.&#13;
fC AN OPEN QUESTION.&#13;
To© Mu«h Ata0y I&gt;«»M|iide«« •* Homo From&#13;
Orowlng lloyr»n&lt;l VIM*&#13;
It t« an open question with many&#13;
thoughtful people whether there 1B not&#13;
a screw looae in the system which demands&#13;
and exacts so. much study at&#13;
home from growing hoys and girls.&#13;
At precisely the period when&#13;
the physical life is most tmperteu*&#13;
in itaclaima, when/the lad is&#13;
shooting up like a weed, when the&#13;
girl is all legs and arms, and both are&#13;
in the greatest need of play, of rest,&#13;
of sleep, of exercise, they must spend&#13;
five or six hours of daylight in school,&#13;
brain and nerves under high pressure,&#13;
stimulated to Intellectual activity at&#13;
every point. It is little wontfer if they&#13;
are correspondingly listless^nd languid&#13;
when the hours of recitation are over,&#13;
and not altogether ready to' give any&#13;
portion of the afternoon to the preparation&#13;
of the next day's studies.&#13;
I fear the expectant attitude of&#13;
American parents in general reinforces&#13;
that school boards and trustees, since&#13;
few fathers and mothers have patience&#13;
with a dull child, or sufficient common&#13;
sense not to be cruelly mortified if&#13;
their sons and daughters do not make&#13;
rapid progress.&#13;
The doctor interferes now and then,&#13;
lays an arresting hand on the home&#13;
work, cuts short the hours of school&#13;
attendance, or advises a cessation of&#13;
school for a while, but the doctor is&#13;
obeyed under protest. Most of us&#13;
would be deeply humiliated if our&#13;
children were not regularly promoted&#13;
every half year, or if our neighbor's:'&#13;
children took prizes, and not ours.&#13;
In the mean time, it we sit down to&#13;
render what assistance in the evening's&#13;
labor may be within our power,&#13;
we find our cheeks mantling with the&#13;
blush of shame. We still can spell,&#13;
but it is extremely doubtful whether&#13;
we can pronounce, both Latin and&#13;
English having suffered a change sinro&#13;
our day. Our attention is fcestowrl&#13;
elsewhere—on bread-winning, if we&#13;
are fathers; on sewing, mending, visiting&#13;
and housekeeping, if we are mothers.&#13;
Yet we expiate many a sin, since&#13;
here is an obligation which we cannot&#13;
shirk.&#13;
The probable reason for the situa.&#13;
tion is that we attempt too much in&#13;
primary, grammar and preparatory&#13;
schools. In the first fourteen years of&#13;
life the effort should be to u-ain a&#13;
child'so that he or she may know how&#13;
to pay close attention, how to learn.&#13;
A very few subjects thoroughly mastered&#13;
are of more-value ttew many mere-&#13;
' 8TBQNQ4AN0 ROl^ErV *•&#13;
i$ow Qaifc 1»AgWllliMle Which te WropH «•&#13;
W*11*J Tract U&lt;1.&#13;
Few things are more essential upon&#13;
the farm than a good land roller, Nevertheless,&#13;
many object to the use of tho&#13;
roller because it frequently tears up ,&#13;
the ground for a considerable space&#13;
when.it is turned around, or else taa&#13;
weight of the tongue and frame bear&#13;
to heavily upon the necks of the horses&#13;
as to make them sore. Again, soma&#13;
considerable cost and care of the implement&#13;
in excess of the net returns.&#13;
These objections can he avoided.&#13;
Select a good oak or maple log 20&#13;
or 26 inches through (if more the bet-.&#13;
ter), aa nearly cylindrical as possible. ,&#13;
Having peeled off the baric, sink it under&#13;
water and leave I t _theje__several&#13;
weeks, at the end of which remove aTST"""&#13;
let it dry under cover. Before it gets&#13;
too hard saw it up into the required&#13;
lengths for the rollers; that is, have&#13;
each of the three sections about two&#13;
feet in length. Then, having struck a&#13;
centre and worked them to a uniform&#13;
size, so all will turn alike, bore the&#13;
holes for the journal. Perhaps the&#13;
beet way to do this is to have a pumpmaker&#13;
(provided there be one in your&#13;
locality) bore with his auger an inchand-&#13;
three-quartera hole through the&#13;
entire pieces.&#13;
When the rollers are thoroughly seasoned,&#13;
"mount" them, as shqwn in the&#13;
accompanying illustration, on a rod of&#13;
iron or steel an inch and a half in diameter,&#13;
so it will work as a loose spindle.&#13;
Aboveithe rollers erect the frame,&#13;
ly glanced at and superficially discerned.—&#13;
Harper's Bazar. . / .&#13;
Tito » w Motoi num.&#13;
The new motorman was strong and&#13;
willing, but ho hadn't been in a ci,v&#13;
very much. He had done farm work&#13;
up in northern Aroostook. The o.her&#13;
motorman was instructing him.&#13;
"If a lire alarm rings in," said ;he&#13;
old hiind, "remember ihat the denarr-&#13;
Businc88 Locals.&#13;
Ellis saves you money at the Surprise.&#13;
m&#13;
UNADILLA.&#13;
Mary Richmond is on the sick&#13;
list.&#13;
Gertrude Mills was home from&#13;
Chelsea last week.&#13;
Holden DuBois spent part of&#13;
last week w^th his parents here.&#13;
Will Gallup from Jackson spent&#13;
last week with his parents here.&#13;
George Sullivan from Columbus&#13;
Ohio visited relatives here last&#13;
week.&#13;
Jennie Harris from Chelsea visited&#13;
her parentis here the last of&#13;
last week.&#13;
Nelson Bullis a,ud wife spent&#13;
Saturday and Sunday with friends&#13;
near Chelsea.&#13;
Josie Douglas fjjpm Ionia is&#13;
spending a few days with her&#13;
grand-parents here.&#13;
Cass Obert andfoife started for&#13;
their home in Durand last Friday&#13;
going by way of Ann Arbor and&#13;
Ypsilanti.&#13;
Teacher's Examination.&#13;
The regular examination of applicants&#13;
for First, Second and Third&#13;
grade certificates will be held at the&#13;
Central School building in Howell,&#13;
Thursday and Friday, August 16 and&#13;
17, 1900. JAMES H. WALLACE,&#13;
Co. Com.&#13;
Ann Arbor B . R» Annual Excursion to&#13;
Petoskey, Bay Yiew, Traverse City,&#13;
Frankfort and Crystal Lake&#13;
On Tuesday Sept. 4 the Ann Arbor&#13;
R. R. will give its annual cheap ex*&#13;
carsion to the above resorts. Special&#13;
train will run through without change&#13;
of cars leaving Hamburg at 12:56 p.&#13;
ra. Fare for round trip $5.00. Tickets&#13;
good for return until Saturday&#13;
Sept. 15 inclusive. September is the&#13;
nicest month in the year to trayel and&#13;
the Ann Arbor R. R. is the shortest&#13;
and quickest route to the point named&#13;
above.&#13;
Simple WpririlnR flofftio.&#13;
Wedding gowns are most elegant&#13;
when simple in style, although they&#13;
may be of the richest possible material—&#13;
indeed. That is considered desirable&#13;
even for a young bride—where&#13;
It can be afforded. Fortunately dead&#13;
white Is no longer inflexibly prescribed.&#13;
Cream, ivory and pearl white are&#13;
equally well worn by brides, so in is&#13;
possible to s'uit the individual complexion.&#13;
Wedding gowns are notoriously&#13;
unbecoming, and every resourse for&#13;
mitigating the unfavorable effect la&#13;
valuable.&#13;
«J, electric trad: tore the hose&#13;
en the fire engine, spouting&#13;
m&lt;rU&lt;. Ilk' fli^'cn^lMi' and rhe"rost ITJIve&#13;
the right of wny. Hold right un • and'&#13;
let 'em past. If you don't they'll pin&#13;
you down."&#13;
The second day an alarm of fire was&#13;
rung in. The car was near a cross&#13;
s triet where the department must&#13;
pass; " "&#13;
"Hold up," said tho instructor.&#13;
Over — — -*&#13;
teams',&#13;
name and smoke. The new hand'eewt&#13;
a look up the street and then spun his&#13;
controller lever. The c.ir ,-jtarted.&#13;
"You infernal fool what ore you doing&#13;
?" howled the old man. He jumped&#13;
and the new man jumped, and ihe&#13;
hook and ladder truck ;or? the front&#13;
platform off the car and disappeared&#13;
in a cloud of dust, and with its men&#13;
yelling like fiends.&#13;
"Why didn't you wait?" howled the&#13;
Homemade Land Roller.&#13;
to which attach the tongue. To make&#13;
the whole strong and rigid, connect&#13;
the frame to the iron spindle with&#13;
brace irons made of old wagon tire—&#13;
work which any good blacksmith can&#13;
do. Use eight braces, two at each end&#13;
and two between each of the rollers&#13;
in the-centrei—^rmly-welded to the&#13;
spindle in such a manner as to keen&#13;
the rollers in their respective places&#13;
and yet allow them to turn readily.&#13;
Attach an uld mowing-machine seat&#13;
to the frame, as it helps to counterbalance&#13;
the weight of the tongue and&#13;
so make it work easier* on the necks&#13;
of the horses. Having the roller in&#13;
three sections makes it easier to turn&#13;
around than if made solid or even in&#13;
Xv,-o pieces. This is a cheap, simple,&#13;
easi 1 y made and_yerjLJlLa£tig-ai land&#13;
roller." Tf kept under cover when net&#13;
in use it will last almost a lifetime.—&#13;
Fred O, Sibley, in Farm and'Fireside.&#13;
I'ractTcal P o u l t r y Point".&#13;
Onn- m"TP Ti"r f r &gt; n l t v &gt;nf we nue;ht t o&#13;
instructor'.&#13;
"Ra gar." replied his pupil, white&#13;
and gasping, "I no t'ink we had vo&#13;
bodder for dat scare dam gang o*&#13;
drunk house painters."&#13;
urge our readers not to s-1 ct the best&#13;
early chickens fpc broilers and fricasees,&#13;
or to send to market and keep iho&#13;
late culls to replenish and increase the&#13;
flock. This is the surest and quickest&#13;
way to run them down to inferior, uuder^&#13;
zed fowl, slow growing, and no4&#13;
ready to give any eggs until nex-&#13;
-spring. when they will be eight or ten&#13;
months old.&#13;
Select about twice as many. of the&#13;
best as it is intended to winter. Te.Vi&#13;
them well, and kepv&gt; them growing ns&#13;
fast as may be, and then next fall cu 1&#13;
out -ttiofee-that -aw-mrt- rrp-to th C" m fffkT&#13;
Subscribe for the Dispatch.&#13;
and ret?.in only the best. They will&#13;
j be worth twice as much as a flock of&#13;
\ culls from which all. the best ones&#13;
I have been taken, nnd they will prob- ! ably give more than twice as many&#13;
'• eggs next winter.&#13;
This store c l o s e s Friday afternoons at&#13;
12:30 until S e p t . 7th. L&gt;. H. FlEbD&#13;
Saturday Specials&#13;
98c Wrappers 67ca/&#13;
On Saturday, August 18, we shall sell you L'.gh$JPercale Wrappers,&#13;
the best 98c kinds, at 67c.&#13;
$1.25 Shirt Waists 59c.&#13;
We are selling all our $1.00, «1.25 and $1.50 Colored Shirt&#13;
Waists at 59c.&#13;
10c Gingnams 4-c.&#13;
Saturday we offer 600 yards XOc Ginghams, part 30 and part&#13;
inches wide, at the low price of 4c a yard to close out quick.&#13;
36&#13;
L. H. FIELD.&#13;
i Jaokaon, J|feh.&#13;
'k'"-'';''••''-:.i&#13;
.•/i&#13;
f&#13;
*&lt;&#13;
1&#13;
V '*&#13;
•I.*&#13;
j ^&#13;
&lt;.i&#13;
\&#13;
s~ ;*-r - ^ -</text>
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              <text>Use the Windows Snipping Tool to capture the area of the document you want to save. If you want multiple pages printed please see staff to print the pages you want. &lt;a href="https://howelllibrary.org/technology/#print" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View the library's printing information.&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch August 09, 1900</text>
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                <text>August 09, 1900 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>No Copyright - United States</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="6626">
                <text>1900-08-09</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="6627">
                <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. ZvUX. PINOKNEY, LIVINGSTON QO., MIOH., THURSDAY, AUGUST 23.1900.&#13;
VISof&#13;
Howell is&#13;
weeks among&#13;
Mrs. F. W. Reeve&#13;
visitng friends in&#13;
Ingham counties.&#13;
Miss Maggie Kane&#13;
spending a couple of&#13;
triends near here.&#13;
Root. C. Culhane began a course of&#13;
pharmacy at the Normal school in&#13;
Ada Ohio, last week.&#13;
Mrs. R. E. Finch and daughter Mrs.&#13;
E. R. Brown was in, Waterloo last&#13;
Friday to see Mr. Finch's mother who&#13;
4s-ver&#13;
Mrs. J. By craft and daughter, and&#13;
Mrs. M. Veil and daughter, of Ypsilanti&#13;
were guests of Mrs. Thos. Clark&#13;
the past week.&#13;
Will Dunbar visited relatives in&#13;
Howell over Sunday. Also took in&#13;
the excursion to the Agricultural&#13;
College on Saturday last.&#13;
I E. Normtnton Bilbie and wife were&#13;
in town Tuesday.&#13;
Itiss Mary Lyman of Jackson is&#13;
visiting frieods\h«re.&#13;
Mi88 Lucy Swarthout is camping&#13;
with friends at Beslett Park.&#13;
Miss Ella McClear of Detroit&#13;
ited triends here the past week.&#13;
Chas. Jewett of Howell called on&#13;
Pinckney friends the first of the week.&#13;
Forence Andrews was a guest of&#13;
Miss Iva Place way the last of last&#13;
wee*.&#13;
Stephen Durfee and family are visiting&#13;
relatives in Webbervilie and&#13;
Fowlerville.&#13;
Chas. Pool of this place won second&#13;
prize in the bicycle race at the matinee&#13;
at Howell last Friday.&#13;
If the DISPATCH is not quite up to&#13;
its standard this week remember the&#13;
head push took a week off.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. J as. White, and son&#13;
Jimmieof Saginaw, visited relatives&#13;
at this place the past week.&#13;
The Misses Rose and Ella Winters&#13;
of Bunkerhiil, were guests of Mrs. M.&#13;
Lavey the last of last week.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. W. fl. Cobb, of Toledo&#13;
0., spent Sunday with her parents&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Mortenson.&#13;
Mr3. Geo. Bowman was called to&#13;
Reading the last of last week by the&#13;
sjvereillness of her brother.&#13;
Oscar SchoenbaU and wife of&#13;
Brighton, were guests of his cousin&#13;
Herbet Schoenhals over Sunday.&#13;
—&amp;-E*Travis- *ad- Jamily__hay_e _re?&#13;
tnrned to St. Johns from Portage&#13;
where t ley have spent the summer.&#13;
A farmer in Salem warns his fellow&#13;
beings to keep shy of peddler&#13;
horse traders as he got left $5 worth.&#13;
jdrs. Rath Grimes returned home&#13;
last Friday from an extended visit&#13;
with friends at Munith and Waterloo.&#13;
—Mi«g Ethfll rWlrflr nt .lanirann ynd&#13;
During the wind storm Monday&#13;
p. m. a little excitement was caused in&#13;
the west part of town by a chimney&#13;
burning out in the rooms occupied by&#13;
Mrs. Gating.&#13;
The following County- Prohibition&#13;
ticket ws8 nominated last week:&#13;
Representative—H. L. Doane.&#13;
Judge of Probate—A. M. Well.&#13;
Sheriff—E. M. Field.&#13;
Clerk—R. C. Reed.&#13;
Treas.—Geo. A. Houghtaling.&#13;
Register of Deeds—H. A. Cornell.&#13;
Coroners—F. C. Wright, Peter&#13;
Swits.&#13;
Prosecuting attorney and circit&#13;
court commissioner were left vacant.&#13;
The following county committee&#13;
was elected: Chairman, A. M. Wells:&#13;
secretary, R. C. Reed; treasurer, S. A.&#13;
Man well. Other members of committee&#13;
are Joteph Lee, Peter Swits, Ernest&#13;
Burdick, A. W. Lanning and Hiram&#13;
Daniels.&#13;
We win deliver Hour&#13;
direct to tin people&#13;
at&#13;
50 cents for a 25-pound sack&#13;
95 cents for a 50-pound sack&#13;
$3.80 for a barrel.&#13;
10 pounds Graham 15 cents.&#13;
10 lbs. granulated meal lOcts&#13;
Terms, Cash.&#13;
It. H. ERWIN.&#13;
Take&#13;
npe Time&#13;
By&#13;
w&#13;
The&#13;
Fore&#13;
i*nd get those Letter-heads,&#13;
BfIl-heads, Statements* Envelopes,&#13;
and Business-cards&#13;
printed now* Don't wait until&#13;
the last o n e Is gone before&#13;
ordering.&#13;
Everyone, whether h e b e&#13;
Business man, Mechanic, or&#13;
Farmer, IT he w i s h e s t o b e up&#13;
foliate, should&#13;
turn add&#13;
Envelopes.&#13;
have their reprinted&#13;
on their&#13;
TEEPLE &amp; CADWELL&#13;
General Hardware,&#13;
Have as complete an assortment of heavy and shelt hardware&#13;
as can be found in the county, and 1900 finds us&#13;
more thoroughly equipped than ever before.&#13;
Miss Hattie Harrington of Waubay S.&#13;
Dakota spent the past week with&#13;
their consin at Lakeside Farm.&#13;
On complaint of Danil Fisher, 0. E.&#13;
Carr, of Fowlerville, paid a fine of ten&#13;
dollars last week.-^ac-flllowing Canada&#13;
thistles to go to seed on his farm.&#13;
Builders Hardware a" Specialty.&#13;
Doors and Common Sash always in stock.&#13;
Complete line of Buggies, Wagons and&#13;
Heating Stoves, Ranges, Wood Stoves&#13;
Wood and Coal.&#13;
Do not let those&#13;
Magazines go to&#13;
waste*&#13;
t Get'em bound at the Dispatch Bindery&#13;
8 ood Work.&#13;
i ! « * Pinckney*&#13;
: r&#13;
Miss Beth Swarthout spent the past&#13;
week in Brighton the guest of Miss&#13;
Florence Cook. Florence returned&#13;
with her for a two weeks visit in this&#13;
vicinity. '__n&#13;
Saturday Aug. 25 tbe Annual Pioneer&#13;
Picnic will be held at tbe Court&#13;
House, Howell. A very interesting&#13;
program has bean arranged, and every&#13;
one both old and young are urged to&#13;
be present. ~ ~&#13;
Mrs W. Thatcher and son who have&#13;
been spending the summer at Bay&#13;
View are visiting a few weeks w.th&#13;
friends and relatives here and Unadilla,&#13;
before returning to their home&#13;
at Dallas Texas.&#13;
Tbe wheat crop is not a failure in&#13;
some places, say the Bixhy Bros., of&#13;
.Byron, who have just harvested and&#13;
threshed 1485 bushels of fine wheat&#13;
from sixty acres, twenty-five acres&#13;
yielding thirty bushels per acre.—Republican.&#13;
One is slow to appreciate any thing&#13;
until they are about to loose it, proved&#13;
true in this case:—The business men&#13;
of Linden came to rbe front and stopped&#13;
tbe sale of the Linden Leader, by&#13;
way of inducements, after the bargain&#13;
had boon mad©.&#13;
Lock&#13;
us for prices&#13;
DISPATCH OFFICE,&#13;
Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
- H^Surprisin^&#13;
•&#13;
September 6 and 7 the Sanitary&#13;
Convention, under the auspices of the&#13;
State Board of Health will be held at&#13;
Durand, begining at 2:90 p. m. Thursday.&#13;
The objects of tbe Convention&#13;
are the presentation of facts, the comparison&#13;
of views, and the discussion&#13;
of practical methods relating to the&#13;
prevention of sickness and deaths and&#13;
the improvement of the conditions bf&#13;
living. This is not a medical Convention,&#13;
but it it for tbe people gen-&#13;
J erally.&#13;
How cheaply we sell our proprietary&#13;
medicines. Any of&#13;
the standard remedies that&#13;
4&#13;
you may want you will find&#13;
can be bought cheaper than&#13;
of any other druggist.&#13;
Our Patent Medicines&#13;
are always fresh. We never&#13;
allow stock to stand around&#13;
for years. We sell the best,&#13;
and for the least money.&#13;
F. A. SIGLER.&#13;
Driiflfgiat.&#13;
•I&#13;
•m&#13;
,: ft&#13;
I4&#13;
•Mi-&#13;
•''Hi&#13;
•*M&#13;
-.••tt*&#13;
•**ji&#13;
m -» '.V&#13;
:,-*fe&gt;. V&#13;
* » * • •&#13;
Mfe infH&#13;
•tfltttft'.Wf-&#13;
,•&gt;*:;••&#13;
[4»J %f V'V V&#13;
f . ' . . . - ••&#13;
• &lt; * • • • ? ' • •&#13;
I J ;V '&#13;
I&#13;
J*&#13;
",&#13;
v&#13;
«• ' M'l i. '&#13;
:\-y&gt;V.&#13;
. - • / . ' - • • : •,&#13;
, V- *;. '.. . V • *&gt;; . ; . ' . V "&#13;
V. '' \ . /&#13;
. 'fv " t . ' . .'.•J*k' ./ '&#13;
4 4 I " . . . '&#13;
4 «&#13;
• &gt; ( • ' •&#13;
4 »';;&#13;
4&#13;
' « •*"W WW'*!" • M&#13;
Happwitogs of a Week Sttwed&#13;
A W H ^&#13;
'*y- Tfre •eetaUry of State'* Beperi far July&#13;
Sfeewe That Tnere Were •*••* Dcatae&#13;
la Michigan Durfof thf Month, *&#13;
Death B«t« ot l i l pir 1,000. *&#13;
f^Ot peatee !• Mkfatftn Jn July.&#13;
— There were 3 , 8 » deaths reported to&#13;
the secretary of state .for the month of&#13;
J vdy, corresponding t o a death rate oi&#13;
12¾ per 1,000 estimated population.&#13;
This number is 216 more than the num*&#13;
ber o t deaths for the preceding month,&#13;
and 110 more than the number registered!&#13;
for July, 18U0. There were 561&#13;
deaths of infants under I year of age,&#13;
141 of children agedTtc^l years, 611 6T&#13;
persons aged 65 and oyer. Important&#13;
causes of death were reported as follows:&#13;
Consumption, 134; other forms&#13;
&lt;xf tuberculosis, 42; typhoid fever, 36;&#13;
diphtheria and croup, 10; scarlet fever,&#13;
18; measles, 14; whooping cough, 38;&#13;
pneumonia, 84; diarrheal diseases of&#13;
children under 5 years of age, 278; cerebra-&#13;
spinal meningitis, 24; cancer, 108;&#13;
accidents and violence, 197. A considerable&#13;
increase was shown in the proportion&#13;
of deaths of infants under 1&#13;
year of age, -corresponding to an Increase&#13;
in the number of deaths from&#13;
diarrheal diseases,. All the other causes&#13;
of death were nearly stationary, or&#13;
showed slight amounts of decrease, except&#13;
pneumonia, which was only about&#13;
50 per cent of the preceding month.&#13;
State Still O w n Quite a Farm.&#13;
The forthcoming report of the commissioner&#13;
of the state land office will&#13;
show that th number of acres of land&#13;
held by the state at the close of the&#13;
fiscal year, June 30, is over 100,000&#13;
acres less than was held one year ago.&#13;
The total number of acres of land held&#13;
one year ago was 643,319.53. There&#13;
were 897.05 acres of part paid land forfeited&#13;
to the state during the year;&#13;
1,087.40 acres of swamp land were forfeited;&#13;
9,713.58 acres of tax homestead&#13;
land reverted to the state by the general&#13;
government, making a total of&#13;
655,137.57 acres. The state sold 44,-&#13;
S03.11 acres of land during the year,&#13;
licensed »,731.20 acres of swamp land,&#13;
parted with 43,359.42 acres to homesteaders,&#13;
and deeded back to the audi&#13;
_jtQr=genexal_^8»lfl9Jn -acres--of-&#13;
- against which certificates of error had&#13;
been issued. These transactions leave&#13;
the state the possessor of 537,045.77&#13;
acres of land at the end of the fiscal&#13;
year. The total amount of money received&#13;
from the sale of lands during&#13;
the year was $144,595.07, and the total&#13;
receipts from all sources was $309,762.81.&#13;
Weekly Crop Bulletin.&#13;
The weekly crop bulletin issued on&#13;
the 14 th says that in the upper peninsula&#13;
all vegetation nas made good progress;&#13;
spring wheat and oats are rippenkig&#13;
fast and their harvest has begun.&#13;
In the lower peninsula the&#13;
weather has been favorable for the oat&#13;
harvest, erhich has made rapid progress&#13;
and most of the crop is now fully se-&#13;
• «»ttTrt, The hot dry weather in the&#13;
southern counties has been hard on&#13;
corn, beans, buckwheat, potatoes and&#13;
pastures; corn has rolled considerably,&#13;
pastures have dried up very fast, and&#13;
beans show a deteriorated condition,&#13;
while potato vines have wilted. Generally,&#13;
however, corn and potatoes remain&#13;
in a promising coudition and&#13;
sugar beets are so far advanced that&#13;
i h e y are almost beyond much damage&#13;
except from extraordinary conditions.&#13;
A careful estimate from all the principal&#13;
corn counties indicates that corn&#13;
will h e safe from frost about September&#13;
11 In the southern and central&#13;
counties. Plowing for fall seeding has&#13;
been generally in progress in all parts&#13;
of the lower peninsula; in the southern&#13;
counties it is well advanced and&#13;
nearing completion.&#13;
Boo Blver Blocked.&#13;
Another blockade occurred in the&#13;
"United States ship canal opposite Sailors'&#13;
Encampment, Soo river, on the&#13;
14th, and coming during the hight of&#13;
the season, it is likely to prove as disastrous,&#13;
if not more so, than the delay&#13;
•caused by the sinking of the Douglass&#13;
Houghton at the same place last fall.&#13;
•The blockade this time is caused by&#13;
-the schooner Maida, of the Minnesota&#13;
•Steamship Co. The Maida was bound&#13;
•down in tow of the steamer Matoa,&#13;
both ore laden. Just after they had&#13;
•entered the Encampment cut the&#13;
Maida's steering chains broke, causing&#13;
•her to sheer and ran her nose on to the&#13;
bank She then swung across the&#13;
•channel and partly sunk. As she is&#13;
375 feet long* she extends clear across&#13;
the channel, which i s only 300 feet&#13;
wide. ~~~&#13;
MICHIGAN N E W S IT S M S .&#13;
One case of smallpox is reported at&#13;
Lake .Linden.&#13;
Marine City will have a new $30,000&#13;
school building.&#13;
Plain well will hold no fair this year.&#13;
Lack of interest&#13;
Homer will bond for $10,000 for water&#13;
works purposes.&#13;
Lightning caused a $4,000 fixe near&#13;
Cherry Hill.on the 14th.&#13;
Six cases of smallpox were discovered&#13;
at Champion on the 15th.&#13;
A big Indian camp meeting will be&#13;
held early this fall near Pinoonning.&#13;
The contract has been abjned and&#13;
Galesburg is assured of electric street&#13;
lights.&#13;
The question of new school build*&#13;
ings for Pontiac is being agitated vig»&#13;
orou&amp;ly.&#13;
The Riverside Coal company is sinking&#13;
another shaft for coal south /of&#13;
Saginaw,&#13;
The" resbrters" a t Mackinac Island&#13;
suffered a $35,000 fire loss on the night&#13;
af the 16th.&#13;
Safe blowers received $40 in cash for&#13;
their trouble at Oxford on the niyht&#13;
of the 15th.&#13;
A postoffice has been established at&#13;
Tonquish, Wayne county, Wm. Elliott,&#13;
postmaster.&#13;
Work on the new Lansing, S t Johns&#13;
&amp; St. Louie Electric railroad has been&#13;
commenced,&#13;
Gov. Roosevelt will make his first&#13;
campaign speech in Michigan at Detroit,&#13;
Sept 7.&#13;
Daring the bombardment of Pekin&#13;
it is estimated that the^Chmese loss&#13;
was about 400.&#13;
. The Catholic churches at Plainwell.&#13;
Watson and Otsego will be consolidated&#13;
into one parish.&#13;
Fifty-eight weddings,'32 of' which&#13;
are suppressed, were solemnized at St.&#13;
Joseph on the l'Jth.&#13;
The state board of health has arranged&#13;
to hold a sanitary convention&#13;
at Durand, Sept. 0-7.&#13;
Allegan claims the distinction of&#13;
having more old maids than any other&#13;
town in three states. ,&#13;
The business men of Laingsburg&#13;
have decided to hold a three-days carnival&#13;
Sept. 18, 19 and 20.&#13;
A new postoffice hasbedh established&#13;
at Hard Grove, Crawford county, with&#13;
Esther Kent as postmaster.&#13;
The proposition to bond Mayville for&#13;
$5,000 for a municipal lighting plant&#13;
was voted down on the 14th. __&#13;
About 10,000 people attended the&#13;
pioneer picnic at Fairfield on the 15th.&#13;
The affair was a great success.&#13;
Milkmen at the Soo have formed a&#13;
judicious combination and boosted the&#13;
price of their staple 25 per cent.&#13;
The Detroit Steel &amp; Spring works at&#13;
Detroit, was destroyed by fir©, on the&#13;
night of the 1«.»H&gt;. Loss, $100,000.&#13;
Twining wns v|.sited by a severe hail&#13;
storm on the 1 "7Hi. Some of the hailstones&#13;
measured lour inches In diame-&#13;
•»in ml!««.»; 9&#13;
ter. *&#13;
The German day f^tival at Menominee&#13;
on the ll&gt;th was a grand success.&#13;
It is estimatetl that :'..&gt;,000 people were&#13;
present.&#13;
A violent wind slorm on the 14th&#13;
blew down trees and leveled corn with&#13;
The Calumet £ . JUcla Mining Co.&#13;
will soon take w a new Icaae of. life aa&#13;
a result of the* stockholders' annual&#13;
meeting at Boatou on the 15th.&#13;
The assessed valuation of real and&#13;
personal property at Sault Ste, Marie&#13;
hae been increased $1,170,000 over last&#13;
year, by the t a « commission.&#13;
The Marshall wilier mills, whicfe&#13;
were recently shut down because of&#13;
difficulty in securing wheat from outside&#13;
points at fair freight rates, will&#13;
start up again about Sept 1. '&#13;
Berrien county reports that prospect*&#13;
are bright for a record-breaking crop&#13;
of apples. The orchard* have been&#13;
more generally sprayed than ever before,&#13;
and the fruit is of a fine quality&#13;
in consequence.&#13;
The buildings recently* burned at&#13;
Plainwell -are all being repaired and&#13;
rebuilt, and several hew ones are in •&#13;
contemplation, so that the conflagration&#13;
may turn out to be quite a bless*,&#13;
ing to the village.&#13;
GTadwin will soon~T»ave telephonic&#13;
communication with the outside world,&#13;
arrangements having been made for&#13;
the extension o f - t h e Michigan Tele*&#13;
phone company's long distance service&#13;
to the village, via Beaverton.&#13;
It is stated that a district school near&#13;
Dexter voted to hold no school the&#13;
coming year, but pay transportation of&#13;
children to other schools; but a family&#13;
with seven children has moved into the&#13;
district, and the school will be held.&#13;
There is every prospect that many&#13;
of the Gogebic Range mines will close&#13;
down or reduce their working force by&#13;
one-half, as they have plenty of ore on&#13;
the docks which can hardly be moved&#13;
before the season of navigation closes.&#13;
A rural mail route has been established&#13;
through Flushing and Clayton&#13;
townships, starting from Flushing.&#13;
The first delivery was made on the 15th.&#13;
The new route is 34 miles long through&#13;
a prosperous and thickly settled country.&#13;
Kalamazoo is passing through a pest&#13;
of grasshoppers and crickets, such as&#13;
it has never before known, and even&#13;
the oldest inhabitant is at a loss to account&#13;
for it. The pest began about a&#13;
week ago, and has been getting worse&#13;
every day.&#13;
Of the 78 incorporated cities of Michigan&#13;
only 44 have paid lire departments&#13;
that employ full time men. There are&#13;
also 305 incorporated villages in the&#13;
state, but only 158. of them have organized&#13;
fire departments, and 151 of these&#13;
is simply a volunteer service.&#13;
_ A rural free delivery route has been&#13;
ordered for Clarkston. Oakland county,&#13;
to go into effect Sept. 1. The length&#13;
of the route will be 28¾ miles; area&#13;
covered, 40 square miles; population&#13;
served, 732; number houses on route,&#13;
103; carrier, Jasper Linsbury.&#13;
The good roads department, Washington,&#13;
D. C, has issued notification&#13;
circulars of a Michigan state good&#13;
roads congress to be held at Saginaw,&#13;
Aug. 31 to promote a more general interest&#13;
in the improvement of roads and&#13;
MUST HAVE LAB0B&#13;
S O S A Y&#13;
t&#13;
T H E R B e i p B N T e&#13;
P U E R T O RtCQ.&#13;
OP&#13;
Civil Governor Hue! Will $t*»t Tfcel*&#13;
Bequest by Setting Tto«B» at 4ftftta*&#13;
JlelMlas * Keed from C»sn*#&#13;
8aa Lorea so—Other It ewe.&#13;
* * • • « •*—** •»*"&#13;
•&#13;
QHlrfA WAR fiBWO.&#13;
Puerto Biotas Waat Work.&#13;
More than 10$ laborers, with their&#13;
wipe* and children, reached £an Juan*&#13;
P. E., on the 13th, after t w o days of&#13;
weary marching, without food, from&#13;
San Lorenzo, a distance of 37 miles.&#13;
The prooHsakm. made up" 6t all shades&#13;
and conditions, led by a colored woman&#13;
with an American flag, and carrying'banners&#13;
on which were inscribed&#13;
tbo words, "Give us work," marched&#13;
quietly through the city t o the executive&#13;
mansion, where a halt w a s made.&#13;
The spokesman then called upon Civil&#13;
Governor Hunt, and explained t h a t the&#13;
to devi.se *vays to raise the necessary&#13;
funds.&#13;
A bantam rooster on the farm of&#13;
Albert Lord, in Marengo, is attaining&#13;
notoriety. A few weeks ago he_gave_&#13;
every evidence of wanting to "set."&#13;
Mr. Lord therefore procurred a number&#13;
Trapped.&#13;
Morgan Guiick, of M t Vernon, was&#13;
•arrested near OxfornVon the 14th, while&#13;
•attempting to dispose of $1,000 worth&#13;
•of "greon goods** to Egbert Burdick, a&#13;
well-known farmer, for $200. Guiick&#13;
met Burdick in the woods to make the&#13;
•deal. Under Sheriff Green had been&#13;
'pravkraaly notified, and arrested the&#13;
man. A package of paper covered by&#13;
two $5 bills was found on Guiick. Hck&#13;
SVM taken to Fsotiac. '&#13;
the ground in the vicinity of Hand&#13;
Station.&#13;
The nnnu.nl reunion of'the Lenawee&#13;
County Soldiers' -and Sailors' association&#13;
will he held on Tuesday, Sept. 4,&#13;
at Adrian.&#13;
Nine TTint milkmen are charged with&#13;
using an embalming lluid by State&#13;
Food and Dairy Commissioner K. O.&#13;
Grosvenor.&#13;
A swarm of bees took possession of a&#13;
U. S. mail box near I'nion City recently.&#13;
The quo!ion arises, to whom&#13;
do the bees belong-'&#13;
A severe wind storm passed over a&#13;
portion of Livingston county on the&#13;
night of the 14th. blowing off the roof&#13;
of several barns and doing other damage.&#13;
The only remedy to prevent "yel- j&#13;
lows" in peach orchnrd.s, according to I&#13;
IVof. L. IS. Taft, of the Agricultural j&#13;
college, is to dig out the trees and burn j&#13;
them. j&#13;
Midland .papers say that wheat in j&#13;
that county is a much better crop than |&#13;
last year. If thnt is so, it is the only \&#13;
county in the state to report such a !&#13;
condition.&#13;
John G. Hnwley, of Detroit, a prominent&#13;
member of the Michigan bar, and&#13;
a well-known authority on criminal&#13;
law and extradition, died on the night&#13;
of the 17 th.&#13;
Secretary of State Stearns has caused&#13;
to be complied an up-to-date compilation&#13;
of the election laws which arc now&#13;
being distributed. Copies may be had&#13;
On application.&#13;
Forest fires caused much damage in&#13;
Alcona county. The rain of the n t h&#13;
and 12th put an end to the hottest and&#13;
driest siege that was ever experienced&#13;
in that section.&#13;
With the aid of skeleton keys burglars&#13;
entered the postoffice at Lakeside&#13;
on the 13th and stole the cash drawer&#13;
containing $70 worth of stamps and 5-0&#13;
in coin. No clue.&#13;
A death certificate was received at&#13;
the secretary of state's oflice at Lansing&#13;
the other day in which the sex of&#13;
the deceased was given by the registrar&#13;
as •,'Conffre&lt;njtional.'1&#13;
of eggs upon which the bantam per&#13;
severingly operated, with the result&#13;
that he is now proudly "mothering" a&#13;
fine brood of chicks.&#13;
Although there i-s a state law making&#13;
it the duty of the highway commissioner&#13;
to sec that Canada thistles&#13;
arc not allowed ,to go to seed, yet an&#13;
instance of the enforcement of the law&#13;
is rare. A case occurred the other day&#13;
near Fowlciville, however, and it cost&#13;
the offending farmer $15.&#13;
Reports to the state board of health&#13;
show that diarrhea, rheumatism, cholera&#13;
morbus, neuralgia and tonsilitis in&#13;
the order named caused the most sickness&#13;
in Michigan during the week ending&#13;
August 11. Smallpox was reported&#13;
at 3 places, cerebro-spinal meningitis&#13;
4, diphtheria IS, whooping cough 22,&#13;
measles 38, scarlet fever 44, typhoid&#13;
fever 0.'&gt; and consumption at 182.&#13;
Alpena people who own bicycles&#13;
might just as well sell their machines&#13;
now, or else give them away, unless&#13;
they want to go outside the city limits&#13;
to ride. The council has ordained that&#13;
six miles per hour shall be t h e maximum&#13;
speed at which bicycles may be&#13;
ridden on the city streets, and it is beyond&#13;
the ability of the average rider&#13;
to go at such a. slow pace as that.&#13;
II. T. Nash, of Adrian, is not sure&#13;
but what he is still a soldier in the U.&#13;
5. volunteer army of the civil war.&#13;
Near the close of the rebellion be was&#13;
given an extended furlough, which&#13;
bore the date of May 10, 186S. Shortly&#13;
afterward hostilities ceased, and hash's&#13;
regiment was mustered out without&#13;
his being recalled from his furlough,&#13;
nor has he ever received a discharge&#13;
from the service.&#13;
The Detroit &amp; Toledo Shore line is&#13;
having all kinds of trouble in getting&#13;
its road completed. The latest report&#13;
is that a portion Of the -track was laid&#13;
across property belonging to a city&#13;
park on the banks of the Maumee river,&#13;
at Toledo, and the park commission&#13;
yanked the track up and has an able&#13;
bodied policeman roosting on the site&#13;
of the invasion until the road shall&#13;
have obtained the proper permission to&#13;
lay its tracks over city property.&#13;
object of the visit was to ask the- government&#13;
to open a road between Caguaa&#13;
and San Lorenzo, thus enabling t h e&#13;
laboring classes of the district t o g e t a&#13;
livelihood. He pointed o u t that at&#13;
present there was no work of any kind&#13;
in that district and that the people.,&#13;
who were wholly dependent upon their&#13;
daily earnings, were without bread&#13;
and were suffering. Mr. Hunt replied)&#13;
sympathetically and promised that the&#13;
government would do all i n its power&#13;
to relieve the situation. The delegation&#13;
immediately retired, w e l l pleased&#13;
with the interview; and t h e procession&#13;
left the city an hour~~after irtiad entered,&#13;
and began the return journey.&#13;
Orders were promptly issued for work&#13;
to bo begun on the road.&#13;
Had Wreok on the t * k e Shore.&#13;
A fast limited passenger train on1 the&#13;
L. S. &amp; M. S. Ry. jumped t h e track on&#13;
the bridge near Marblehead Junction*&#13;
O., on the 17th. The e n g i n e got across&#13;
in safety, but two cars are i n t h e lake.&#13;
No one was killed, but many are re*&#13;
ported injured. The sleepers kept the&#13;
track and beyond a jolting their occupants&#13;
were uninjured. Those who&#13;
were hurt were in the day coach innmediately&#13;
behind the baggage car.&#13;
The exprese messengers, got out of the&#13;
car by breaking the windows. They&#13;
were not injured. There were 14. passengers&#13;
in the combination car,- and&#13;
they were rescued through windows.&#13;
Riot In New York City.&#13;
The riot against the Negroes,, which,&#13;
broke out in New York on t h * -night&#13;
of the 15th, as a result of the death of&#13;
Policeman Thorpe, from injuries inflicted&#13;
by a Negro named Arthur Harris,&#13;
was uot quelled until after daylight&#13;
the following morning. Whenever a&#13;
black man was seen he w a s immediately&#13;
attacked and beaten until, rescued&#13;
by police. In spite of the hard&#13;
work of the police and the fact that&#13;
extra forces were called out, many assaults&#13;
occurred. It is estimated that&#13;
over 50 persons we,-o injured -and-40-arrests&#13;
made. Not many of those injured&#13;
or arrested were whites either.&#13;
World's Wheat Crop Below the Average.&#13;
The official statistics of the wheat&#13;
crop of the world for 1899-1000 have&#13;
just been compiled by the department&#13;
of agriculture.—They show that in the&#13;
countries of the southern hemisphere,&#13;
whose wheat crops are commonly included&#13;
in statements of the world's&#13;
at crops, the production will hardly&#13;
^ s s than 160,543,000 bushels. This&#13;
000.000 bushels short of last year's&#13;
production. Australia and Chile are&#13;
the only countries showing any material&#13;
reductions.&#13;
Wind and Hall In Nebraska.&#13;
Wind and hail storms of unusual&#13;
severity visited Nebraska on-the 16th.&#13;
Crops were ruined by t h e - h a i l , and in"&#13;
some cases small buildings were blown&#13;
down and wrecked. The hail brpke&#13;
balf the window glasses i n several&#13;
towns. The ar&lt;» covered is-of considerable&#13;
extent and the damage to crops&#13;
will amount to more than $100,000, A&#13;
great number of houses were struck by&#13;
ligntning, but no fatalities are reported.&#13;
T H E N E W S C O N D E N S E D&#13;
The admissions to t h e Paris exposition&#13;
on the 12th reached half a million.&#13;
The German inventor, Herr Krupp,&#13;
is practicing with a cannon which&#13;
shoots 14 miles.&#13;
The thermometer registered 99 in the&#13;
shade at St. Louis on the 17th, the&#13;
hottest day o f the year. Fourteen in&#13;
rants died as a result.&#13;
A plot to kill King Albert, of Saxony,&#13;
was made known on the 15th, and a&#13;
youth 20 years old was arrested at&#13;
Leipsic on the charge.&#13;
Several minor engagements occurred&#13;
he Luzon recently. The rebels used&#13;
smokeless powder, which they must&#13;
necessarily have obtained by filibustering.&#13;
Aguinaldo fears to avail himself of&#13;
Uncle Sam's amnesty proclamation, because&#13;
he authorized guerrilla bands,&#13;
and these outlaws are outside of amnesty.&#13;
Imports of merchandise i n t o the U.&#13;
S. for July were $63,536,2*3, a n excess&#13;
of $3,000,000 over July, 1800; exports&#13;
totaled $100,413,501 la&gt;t month, an n*&#13;
crease of I.VMX).000. Uold imports aggregated&#13;
f 1,944.764&#13;
A high government official a t Wash*&#13;
ingten on the M t h said that the indemnity&#13;
which the United States would&#13;
demand for every American citizen&#13;
killed or maimed by the- Chinese during&#13;
the present trouble would be sufficient&#13;
to comfortably support their families&#13;
fo* the remainder of their lives.&#13;
"This government does not w a n t a&#13;
province, a town*, village' or a single&#13;
square foot of Chinese territory as in-j&#13;
demnity," said the official, who i s close&#13;
to the President "There is b u t one&#13;
indemnity, to the families of their&#13;
American victims. For every one of&#13;
these China must pay a sufficient sum&#13;
to keep their families from want during&#13;
their lives. This government will&#13;
exact assurances of a satisfactory character&#13;
that such a state of affairs as&#13;
now exists In China shall not again occur.&#13;
The nature of these assurances&#13;
will be determined later.&#13;
A cablegram to Vienna from Hong&#13;
Kong announces the capture of Pekin,&#13;
but the Austrian government, like,&#13;
ether European powers, is still without&#13;
confirmation of this report An official&#13;
telegram dated Taku, August 14, has&#13;
been received at Rome., which asserts&#13;
that the attack on Pekin began on t h e&#13;
13th, that Sir Claude MacDonald, the&#13;
British minister, had opened communication&#13;
with the relieving force, and&#13;
that the allies have established their&#13;
headquarters at Tung Chow. Chinese&#13;
officials in Shanghai are reported as&#13;
admitting that the allies inflicted a&#13;
heavy defeat on the Chinese imperial&#13;
troops around Tung Chow, on the 12th,&#13;
and then marched direct on Pekin.&#13;
This, if true, carries the Japanese official&#13;
advices announcing the capture of&#13;
Tung Chow one step further.&#13;
Now that tbo primary object for&#13;
which the allied armies marched upon&#13;
Pekin, viz., the rescue of the besieged&#13;
legationers,, has been accomplished,&#13;
the drift of discussion in official and&#13;
diplomatic circles reverts to t h e n e x t&#13;
step to be talvm. Necessarily many of&#13;
the predictions as to what this will be&#13;
are purely conjectural, as it is realized&#13;
that complete and definite information&#13;
regarding the conditions of affairs in&#13;
Pekin must be awaited before any positive&#13;
action can be taken by the governments&#13;
whose interests have suttered&#13;
as a result of the Chinese troubles,&#13;
y h e allied a r mW ha.™ ^apt^rort ami&#13;
entered Pekin in the face of obstinate&#13;
resistance and the members of the&#13;
foreign legations are safe. Official&#13;
confirmation of the fall of the Chinese&#13;
capital came to the United States government&#13;
oh the night of the 17th in&#13;
the shape of two cablegrams, one from&#13;
Admiral Remey and the other from&#13;
Consul Fowler at Che Foo.&#13;
"Pekin was relieved on the n i g h t of&#13;
the 15th." This message was received&#13;
on the night of the 17th at the imperial&#13;
customs office in London from the&#13;
iaommissionor of customs in-€herFoo.~&#13;
I t is the only official message that has&#13;
reached England in confirmation of&#13;
the earlier reports.&#13;
The navy department at Washington&#13;
received a dispatch from Admiral&#13;
Remey on t h e l'&gt;th announcing that&#13;
Gen. Chaffee had arrived at Ma tow,&#13;
the next town of importance after Ho-&#13;
Si-Wtu&#13;
Empress-Dowager, of China, i s being&#13;
held by Prince Tung in the inner city,&#13;
which at last reports was being bombarded!&#13;
b y the allies.&#13;
Dnr.ng the fighting prior to the fall&#13;
of Pekin. the Americans had eight&#13;
wounded.&#13;
BRIEF N E W S P A R A G R A P H S .&#13;
« n e « e w »&#13;
Gov.-Gen. Wood and party are mak* '&#13;
ing a boat trip, around the island o f&#13;
Cuba.&#13;
A s a result of a row between t w o&#13;
families at Monroe Prairie, Miss., o n&#13;
the 13Uw three seen were tiUnd. '&#13;
Mwstcnmy the steel work&#13;
Pueblo, Cokx, was s w e p t by a&#13;
trous fire on the night of t h e 15th.&#13;
Loss, $100,000,&#13;
By tbo explosion of nitroglycerin,&#13;
used in shooting gas and oil wethv&#13;
the Gaithwait nitroglycerin factory&#13;
at Montpelier, In*., wan demolished&#13;
and two men and a team'&#13;
nearby were injured.&#13;
At a meeting of the window giasa&#13;
manufacturers and plate glass jobbers&#13;
of the United States, held at Niagara&#13;
Falls, N. Y., on the 15th, H w i s decided&#13;
to advance the price cf window&#13;
glass and plate glass 10 per cent to&#13;
take immediate'effect.&#13;
. \ , • •&#13;
• f . * , • , • . . * • • ' .&#13;
At the close of a day of Intense anal*&#13;
ety the department of sta^e on t h e&#13;
night of the loth made public the l a *&#13;
est,aormpondenoe between t h e United&#13;
S U t e * government and China, constituting&#13;
not only a remarkable *erie*of&#13;
«tat* papers, hnt a t the name time diato-]&#13;
pelting all doubt and uncertainty as to&#13;
t h t American policy itt &amp;* present critical&#13;
juncture. T h e nrgent, almost&#13;
pathetic appeal of LI Hong Ching,&#13;
submitted early in the- day, thftfthe&#13;
victorious march of the allies atop a*&#13;
Tung Chow and that the military e o n *&#13;
mandejra o n the field be i u s t r u 4 e d t o&#13;
arrange a n armistice at t h a t p o i n V w a s&#13;
met with a rnsnonsu I n * * Gen. Chnffee&#13;
already bad been given complete instruction*&#13;
empowering him t o carry&#13;
out an arrangement in concert w i t h&#13;
other commanders tqr t h e delivery o f&#13;
the ministers and persons under their&#13;
protection t o the- vaitef eaiumn* not a t&#13;
Tung Chowr a s had been sugg«ete4ir&#13;
but at the imperial city of Pekin.&#13;
J&#13;
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A Fasclnatwg&#13;
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Alan Adak,&#13;
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CILiPTBB VIU.-(C&lt;mtinu64.)&#13;
Alan looked at her and her pretty&#13;
aUmnens of which he had been so&#13;
proud, at the beautiful, refined face, wt&#13;
the ayea through which her beautiful&#13;
son! seemed to shine, and when he&#13;
looked at it and realised what he was&#13;
abont to lose a *reat numbness came&#13;
over aim. He could not speak, he&#13;
eoold scarcely think. It seemed as if a&#13;
topi chasm yawned before then,&#13;
which they were both to be flung. And&#13;
so this awful evening went its way.&#13;
They hardly spoke. They sat hand in&#13;
hand in the darkness. Life seemed a&#13;
blank. They had come to a standstill.&#13;
It was as if death had caught them&#13;
with their young blood surging in&#13;
their pulses. '&#13;
At last Alan roused himself. "I must&#13;
go to your father, my darlings" he&#13;
said. "Joyce, you will let me do everything&#13;
for you? Darling, you are my&#13;
wife, you know, although, four years&#13;
ago I belonged to another woman. I&#13;
will go away from you, and never see&#13;
you again whilst Veronica lives; but&#13;
you will live in this house, and let me&#13;
work for you. I must have something&#13;
in my life, Joyce. Let me think that&#13;
there is still something I can do for&#13;
you!"&#13;
Joyce was quiet; then she said:&#13;
"There's Veronica's child, Alan. You&#13;
should try and be a father to it. Poor&#13;
little thing, it would comfort you."&#13;
"If Veronica were dead," said Alan,&#13;
"I could care for it and cheriBh it, and&#13;
love it; but neither the child will want&#13;
for anything nor its mother. But I&#13;
could not take it away from Veronica,&#13;
and I do not want to come into contact&#13;
with her. I do not hate her, peor&#13;
girl; but I might get to hate her when&#13;
I thought of you, Joyce—my Joyce,&#13;
and yet not mine."&#13;
He rose slowly and painfully. A&#13;
great terror came over Joyce. "You&#13;
will see me again, Alan? This is not&#13;
good-by. I could not bear it—oh, 1&#13;
could not! Tell me you will come to&#13;
me again and kiss me good-by! Oh,&#13;
I am your wife, Alan!"&#13;
He put his arms round her. She&#13;
was half fainting, and her white lips&#13;
could hardly articulate the words. "I&#13;
will come again," he said; "but tonight&#13;
I must see your father. Joyce,&#13;
if you are not brave it will kill me.&#13;
You must help me, my own sweet wife.&#13;
We must pray God to give us strength.&#13;
It ic the only way. I will bring your&#13;
father to you, and then we will try&#13;
and say good-by. I will write to you&#13;
tonight; but after that there must be&#13;
no more letters, sweetheart. If I continue&#13;
to write to you I shall go mad.&#13;
Most probably I shall go abroad again&#13;
when I have got your, life into order.&#13;
Darling. I scarcely think of thn rnihand&#13;
the publicity—that cannot hurt ua.&#13;
Vcu have many friends who" love you,&#13;
and who will be good to you, for you&#13;
are the sweetest woman God ever&#13;
made. I was right to be afraid of my&#13;
great happiness. Good-by, darling."&#13;
And Alan went.&#13;
CHAPTER VIII.&#13;
Joyce gave way altogether after her&#13;
final interview with Alan. She had a&#13;
long litness, which almost terminated&#13;
fatally; but she was young. andLhatL&#13;
always been strong. In the end her&#13;
youth triumphed, although she made&#13;
no efforts to get better. Life was terribly&#13;
hard. She loved Alan with every&#13;
fibre of her being. She bad known the&#13;
joy of being his wife, and now he was&#13;
an outcast from home, miserable,&#13;
wretched, dragging on a joyless existence;&#13;
and she had not even the privilege&#13;
of consoling htm. She knew him&#13;
to be as unhappy as she was, and she&#13;
wss suffering all the Test of their lives,&#13;
and Joyce had to learn patience from&#13;
that hardest of taskmasters—sorrow.&#13;
Her father took her abroad. Of&#13;
course her story was a nine days' talk;&#13;
but she was much beloved, and was&#13;
generally pitied and condoled with.&#13;
Alan and she had been so happy, and&#13;
had borne themselves so well and&#13;
modestly, that there was no one wno&#13;
&lt;tid not feel for the young couple&#13;
whose happiness had been so suddenly&#13;
destroyed.&#13;
But poor Veronica, she went back to&#13;
her lodgings, .that fight broken-heart*&#13;
cd. It was not only that she had lost&#13;
the hope of life with Alan, but she&#13;
conM see that she had given him his&#13;
death-blow.. And he loved another&#13;
woman! She was intensely human,&#13;
was poor Veronica,.mad the knowledge&#13;
'that another woman had all hw heart&#13;
hurt her immeasurably. He old not&#13;
lore her! He bad never loved her!&#13;
Why, hto voice .was different when he&#13;
talked of his present wife!&#13;
But she had the boy.. It was some-&#13;
.hmg that she eetild press his curly&#13;
head against her aching heart, and&#13;
drop nor tears upon . i t Poor little&#13;
soul! The only bitter resentment she&#13;
had felt against Alan was that be bad&#13;
tailed to notice the boy. Bat still she&#13;
wmmmmmmm*mmmmmimm+mmm&#13;
had bimr-he .was her own. She waited&#13;
patiently until she should hear&#13;
from Alan. She had waited so long&#13;
that a little more or leas waiting did&#13;
not matter. And he had said he would&#13;
write—he was certainly a man to. be&#13;
trusted.&#13;
And on the third day a letter came.&#13;
Veronica could not guess what it had&#13;
cost Alan to write it. He did not want&#13;
harsh and cruet tDTrards^th^ af^&#13;
fectionate creature, whose only fault&#13;
had been that she had not been drowned&#13;
in the shipwreck, and yet he felt it&#13;
difficult to be kind to her who had&#13;
spoilt his life. He wrote that henceforth&#13;
she and the boy would be his&#13;
care, that he wished to allow her and&#13;
her boy enough to live in comfort; but&#13;
that he could not bring himself to&#13;
come and see her. He told her that&#13;
he was parted from Joyce, who was&#13;
now havering between life and death,&#13;
and that he would not burden her with&#13;
'the sight of his unhapplness. He&#13;
would always be glad if she wrote to&#13;
him in any time of trouble or difficulty,&#13;
to give his advice and help; but&#13;
that most probably he should leave&#13;
England. He told her that if she followed&#13;
his advice she would remain in&#13;
England, which was a safe place for&#13;
her to live in. Besides, he would&#13;
rather that the boy was brought up as&#13;
an Englishman. There was a lot of&#13;
tiresome law business to be gone&#13;
through. His marriage with Joyce hnd&#13;
to be annulled, and the old general&#13;
would not allow him to provide at all&#13;
for his daughter. They were going to&#13;
winter in Birrritz.&#13;
Joyce felt keenly the difficulties of&#13;
her position, but most of all she felt&#13;
the separation from Alan.&#13;
Alan was seated in his office one day&#13;
.when he heard a heavy step on the&#13;
stair. It was his old enemy Hutchinson.&#13;
He was half drunk, but sober&#13;
enough to want to pick a quarrel. His&#13;
schemes had been baffled by the idiotic&#13;
straightforwardness of a man who preferred&#13;
honor to love. Naturally&#13;
enough Hutchinson could impose no&#13;
hush-money on a man who would consent&#13;
to hush up nothing, but who put&#13;
away the woman who was dearer to&#13;
him than life rather than fail in doing&#13;
what was right. But Hutchinson,&#13;
baffled at every Jtura, still had his revenge.&#13;
He meant in the end to be&#13;
even with Alan, let it cost him what it&#13;
might. He came today to gloat over&#13;
his enemy's misery. Some one had toid&#13;
him that Alan's hair had turned grey,&#13;
and he wanted to see for himself.&#13;
But Alan was just in a fit mood. He&#13;
remembered as soon as he saw tno&#13;
man that he might have saved Joyce&#13;
the crowning misery of marriage with&#13;
oae^fjQm_whom she had been obliged&#13;
to be separated, that be had deliberately&#13;
done his best to ruin her, and&#13;
Alan's wrath burned hot within him.&#13;
He sprang up from his desk as soon&#13;
as he ::aw Hutchinson, and caught&#13;
hold of him. He gave him a little&#13;
shake, and, looking him straight in&#13;
the fac*e, said: "'You dog! why did you&#13;
not tell me that Veronica was alive&#13;
when I told you I was about to marry&#13;
another woman? Why did you let me&#13;
do an innocent girl an injury?"&#13;
Hutchinson looked at him. He was&#13;
going to prevaricate, but his hairea&#13;
was too much for hhn. "Because 1&#13;
hated you!" he cried. "Yes, and I hate&#13;
you now! I shall never be content till&#13;
I see you dead at my ieet, you villain,&#13;
who deprived me of everything I possessed!&#13;
And yon dream that I should&#13;
forego my revenge! Yon fool, to forget&#13;
that you had me to deal with!"&#13;
"Yes," said Alan slowly, "I forgot&#13;
that I was dealing with a devil, and&#13;
not a man. A man might have had&#13;
pity."&#13;
"Pity" Hutchinson sneered. "Pity&#13;
towards a man who ruined me? Not&#13;
I! But I have not done with you yet,&#13;
you may be very sure of that!**&#13;
Alan sprang at him. "You get out&#13;
of my office this moment," he exclaimed,&#13;
"or I will throw you downstairs."&#13;
He looked so fierce that&#13;
Hutchinson went at once.&#13;
Six months had elapsed since he had&#13;
said good-by to Joyce—six months of&#13;
such utter hopelessness that Alan resolved&#13;
that he would leave England.&#13;
The firm of Dempster was going to begin&#13;
operations in Australia. Anything,&#13;
thought Alan, would be better&#13;
than this life^-He would work hard&#13;
and live hard. He settled five hundred&#13;
a year on Veronica and the boy,&#13;
and made a will leaving all else he&#13;
had to Joyce. She would not let him&#13;
do anything, else for hor whilst he was&#13;
alive, but she could not refuse a benefit&#13;
by his death. He knew that the&#13;
general only bad his pension. He had&#13;
learned that . he had brought his&#13;
daughter back to'London. It was too&#13;
much to be near Joyce and yet not&#13;
tee her. Every time he went oat he&#13;
was letting his eyes stray everywhere,&#13;
hoping, fearing that he -might see the&#13;
SS m T "&#13;
one woman in the world lor him.' Bat I&#13;
chance never favored him, and his arrangements&#13;
were, made to go away.&#13;
After much deliberation he resolved&#13;
to write to both women who loved&#13;
him* He wrote to Veronica a letter&#13;
which, poor soui, hurt her* although&#13;
he had no intention of being otherwise&#13;
than kind:&#13;
Pear, Veronica: I am going to Australia.&#13;
I do not think I shall see you&#13;
again, but I have- arranged everything&#13;
for yon with Truscott, the lawyer. You&#13;
will* have five hundred a year whether&#13;
I live or die. I hope you will bring&#13;
the boy up well.&#13;
ALAN MACKENZIE.&#13;
Poor Veronica cried bitterly when&#13;
she received this letter. It seemed to&#13;
her that Alan thought he had finished"&#13;
all his obligations to her by paying&#13;
hor five hundred a year, and Veronica,&#13;
who was yearning for a little love, and&#13;
who had made a pilgrimage across the&#13;
dark waters to a land where there was&#13;
but little sun, for love's sweet sake!&#13;
Alan had a fight over his letter to&#13;
Joyce. He had said he would not&#13;
write to her; but surely he could not&#13;
leave the country without a word of&#13;
farewell to the sweet woman whom he&#13;
bad wooed and vwon openly, who for&#13;
six perfect weeks had been his wife,&#13;
and whom he loved more than anything&#13;
on earth.&#13;
(To be continued.)&#13;
SHE TORE THE NAT.&#13;
AN E A R L / ^ D A U G H T E R .&#13;
l a Spits of- Proad Parental Dbtpleaatire&#13;
She Succeed*.&#13;
*The daughter of an English earl,&#13;
after a neglected childhood passed&#13;
among servants, was brought out in society.&#13;
She was shy and sensitive, and&#13;
took no interest in fashionable life.&#13;
Her conduct excited so much displeasure&#13;
that she became most unhappy and&#13;
despondent. Neglected and despised at&#13;
home, she ran away to London, and&#13;
refused to return to her father's house:&#13;
As her father cut her off without a&#13;
shilling she had to support herself, and&#13;
live on starvation wages. She began&#13;
with lace-making and sewing, and had&#13;
a room in a tenement house. She was&#13;
a fearless rider, and at one time made&#13;
a living by breaking unruly horses in&#13;
Scotland. A friend, after selling some&#13;
of the daughter's lace to the mother,&#13;
contrived to secured the payment of a&#13;
small allowance from the father. With&#13;
this money she was able to perfect her&#13;
education in music, and to carry off&#13;
pnz3s at a college oa the continent&#13;
About this time she was impressed&#13;
with stories vhich she heard of the&#13;
sufferings of native women in India&#13;
and the far East She dropped her&#13;
music, and for six years devoted herself&#13;
to the study of medicine and surgery.&#13;
She won a medical degree in&#13;
England,ma8tered the French language&#13;
in order to obtain a higher degree in&#13;
Brussels, took a hospital and nursing&#13;
course in London, and h?d special&#13;
practice in the slums of, Dublin. Meanwhile&#13;
she was receiving a pittance&#13;
from her father barely large enough to&#13;
enable her to keen soul and body together.&#13;
She was wholly estranged from&#13;
her family, who were ashamed of the&#13;
poor relation. Finally she received the&#13;
reward for her many years of solitary&#13;
study and persistent effort. An appointment&#13;
as court physician in Korea&#13;
was offered to her, and she accepted it&#13;
as an opening for what she considered&#13;
her mission,in the world—work among&#13;
native women in the far East. Her&#13;
father then agreed to give her a thousand&#13;
dollars a year. This is not the&#13;
ordinary romance of the peerage. It&#13;
is a true story, and shows what a woman&#13;
of real grit can do, when she has&#13;
courage, patience and a noble ambition.&#13;
The shy girl with a plain face&#13;
has made her way in the world, although&#13;
she was a failure in the drawing&#13;
room as the earls daughter.—&#13;
Youths' Companion.&#13;
Mak»r Believe Rivals.&#13;
Three large millinery shops in this&#13;
city, each run under a different firm&#13;
name, are owned by one man, and his&#13;
example Is being followed by otner&#13;
men interested in the same business.&#13;
It Is a mystery to the outsider why a&#13;
man should assume different names&#13;
for his different stores. In other kinds&#13;
of business, if a man is successful,&#13;
his name is a trade-mark. Our successful&#13;
man milliner began business&#13;
under his own name on a side street&#13;
a^few years ago. He succeeded, and&#13;
he has since invested his surplus, every&#13;
two or three years, in establishing&#13;
a new millinery shop In a fashionable&#13;
neighborhood. Not one of these&#13;
new shops bears this man's name.&#13;
Possibly one object for such a variety&#13;
of names is to lead the buyer who&#13;
goes from shop to uhop to think that&#13;
she is learning the prices of rivals.—&#13;
New York Son.&#13;
Oliver Gramwairs Tawta-Ftok.&#13;
In the window of an old curiosity&#13;
shop not far from the British museum&#13;
MIZd-Ta^npered Woma* Ddrea to Heap** [&#13;
rate K«MV«&lt; I&#13;
The third time it was sent back&#13;
hone and was still too small she be*&#13;
gan to feel discouraged, A tight hat&#13;
U even more uncomfortable than tight&#13;
boots and too many headaches were&#13;
already due to this mistaken millinery&#13;
purchase. When she had first&#13;
put the thing on she had realized it&#13;
was too-small, but the milliner, had&#13;
of course, told her it was because&#13;
she waa suffering from swelled head&#13;
or that she wore her hair the wrong&#13;
way, or anything but that there&#13;
could be something the matter with&#13;
the hat The woman insisted on expansion,&#13;
however, so the hat, according&#13;
to the milliner, was duly expanded.&#13;
The woman wore it once, to re-'&#13;
tire with such a headache as she had&#13;
never known before. If there is more&#13;
exquisite torture than a heavy hat&#13;
pressing upon the head in the wrong&#13;
spot it was known only to the Spanish long not alone to tfcetoidding maiden.&#13;
The trippmg feet—the sparkling&#13;
eye—-the graceful movement—bc«&#13;
inquisition. The woman went to the&#13;
milliner and insisted upon further expansion,&#13;
and then, as the headache experience&#13;
was repeated, she went a&#13;
third time. Each time no change in&#13;
the hat beyond a slight alteration in&#13;
the trimming was noticeable, and.&#13;
when the third attempt was followed&#13;
by a third headache the woman just&#13;
These graces are the right—&lt;aye&#13;
duty of every woman nntil the hair&#13;
whitens—and regal dignity replaces&#13;
them.&#13;
The mother who guards h^r&#13;
strength has so much more to devote&#13;
to the care and education of&#13;
her dear ones. She should be a&#13;
sat*down and wrote the milliner a note , comfort—a cheer—always.&#13;
saying it was no use—the hat must be !. Yet how many feel that they&#13;
made yet larger at any cost and what-1 nave the strength to properly balever&#13;
the trouble. A few days later ! ance the home ? The world is listthe&#13;
hat came back. Such a looking&#13;
piece of millinery as it was. There&#13;
may or m&amp;f not have been some spite&#13;
about it, but every vestige of beauty&#13;
and smoothness had been removed,&#13;
while the sole attempt toward rectifying&#13;
the real wrong was a kind of bay&#13;
window in black velvet built out under&#13;
the brim over the face, and adding to&#13;
both the weight and the warmth of&#13;
the article. Being notoriously amiable&#13;
in disposition the woman viewed the&#13;
wreck of her once pretty but never&#13;
comfortable hat philosophically. She&#13;
even put it on and wore it. She returned&#13;
home, every nerve in her head&#13;
throbbing and temper to match. It&#13;
only needed a glance at the glass to&#13;
remind her how utterly without style&#13;
and unbecoming the thing was. The&#13;
woman tok that hat and tore it up—&#13;
thoroughly, completely. She broke a&#13;
fingernail doing it, but no puppy with&#13;
his teeth could have accomplished&#13;
more in so .short a space of time, men&#13;
she had a good cry, felt better, went&#13;
downtown, and ordered another hat.&#13;
at another milliner's. The next day&#13;
she gathered together every scattereo.&#13;
thread of the one-time hat, and&#13;
carefully tissue-papering and boxing&#13;
them, rang for a messenger boy&#13;
and sent the whole off to the milliner.&#13;
"Yes, it's paid," she said, in recounting&#13;
the experience to another woman. "Of&#13;
course, I can't afford to go off on such&#13;
an expensive tear as that very often&#13;
but once in a while it does you a lot&#13;
of good." The remarkable thing was&#13;
that the other woman, who is all that&#13;
is lamb-like, was not a bit shocked,&#13;
as you might have expected. "Do yoi;&#13;
know," she said, thoughtfully, "I've&#13;
often wanted to tear things up that&#13;
way, hut I never quite had the courage&#13;
Now that you've confessed what&#13;
you've done I mean to try It for myself&#13;
some time, so I do."—New York&#13;
Sun.&#13;
less, weary and morbid. Its blood&#13;
moves sluggishly and is full of impurities.&#13;
It needs a kindling, invigorating&#13;
tonic to set it afire—it&#13;
needs Pe-ru-na,&#13;
THE ONE MEDICINE&#13;
in the world which women may&#13;
rely upon positively. Pe-ru-na is&#13;
good for everyone, but particularly&#13;
for women. The various weaknesses&#13;
which afflict their delicate organism&#13;
spring from inflammation or&#13;
catarrh of the mucous lining,and Pe-ru-na&#13;
is a specific for catarrh in any organ of&#13;
the body. Any congestion of a mucous&#13;
membrane simply means catarrh of the&#13;
organ affected. This is why Pe-ru-na&#13;
cures all sorts of troubles where other&#13;
remedies fall. ' If there is a catarrhal&#13;
affection the matter with you anywhere&#13;
Pe-ru-na will cure you.&#13;
The man who is "taken In" is generally&#13;
much "put out"&#13;
Babylonian Exploration*.&#13;
Prof. Herman V. Hilprecht; the&#13;
Babylonian explorer, who in the spring&#13;
of this year went to the east to superintend&#13;
the excavations in Assyria and&#13;
Babylon in the name of the university&#13;
of Pennsylvania, describes in a letter&#13;
just received the important results of&#13;
his journey. He says: "The results of&#13;
our researches exceed everything that&#13;
has so far been known about Babylon.&#13;
We found the great temple library and&#13;
priest school of Nippur.which had been&#13;
destroyed by the Elamites 228 B. C.&#13;
Ths library consists of 16,000 volumes,&#13;
written on ttone, and covers the entire&#13;
theological, astronomical, linguistic&#13;
and mathematical knowledge of&#13;
those days. We also unearthed a collection&#13;
of letters and biographies, deciphered&#13;
the inscriptions of many newly&#13;
discovered^ tombstones and monuments,&#13;
and espied, finally, best of all,&#13;
3.000 official documents of inestimable&#13;
value to the student of ancient history.&#13;
The net result of our journey&#13;
consists so far of 23,000 stone writiwga."&#13;
THE BOXERS OP CHINA&#13;
are attempting to solve a gigantic&#13;
problem, but they are going about it&#13;
in the wrong way and will never succeed.&#13;
Some people, in this country,&#13;
seem to think that they have as great&#13;
a puzzle on their hands in selecting a&#13;
location for a home. They will certainly&#13;
go about it in the wrong way&#13;
unless they inspect the beautiful farming&#13;
country on the line of the Chicago.&#13;
Milwaukee ic St Paul Railway in Marinette&#13;
county, Wisconsin, where the&#13;
crops are of the best, work plenty,&#13;
fine markets, excellent climate, pure,&#13;
soft water; land sold cheap-and -onlong&#13;
time. Why rent a farm when&#13;
you can buy one for less than you pay&#13;
for rent? Address C. E. Rollins, Land&#13;
Agent,' 161 La Salle St, Chicago, I1L&#13;
In Portugal, married women retain&#13;
their maiden names.&#13;
Atm Too l&gt;i»r AUwM*» r&lt;*ot-K*aaf&#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 to be shaken into&#13;
the shoes. At all Druggists and Shoe&#13;
Stores, 25c. Sample sent FREE. Address&#13;
Allen S. Olmsted. LeRoy, N. T.&#13;
It's often the ante&#13;
a visit to the uncle.&#13;
that necessitates&#13;
We refund 10c for every package of .&#13;
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES that fails&#13;
to give satisfaction. Monroe Drug Co..&#13;
Unionville, Mo.&#13;
A Sparrow'* 4M4&#13;
/*n escape of a sparrow at the hon**&#13;
if Mrs. Susan Fox of East 2d street on&#13;
Thursday is remarkable enough to be&#13;
worth recording, says the Oil City&#13;
Derrick. The bird in some manner&#13;
fell into-the chimney and from there&#13;
made its way through two elbows and&#13;
Cold feet are no ground for divorce&#13;
in July.&#13;
- Every Boy and Olrl&#13;
eaonld lean to write with Carter'* Ink. beeanso&#13;
ft to UM best In the world. "Inkling*TtoTliu^&#13;
free, Carter** Ink Co., Boatoo.&#13;
The&#13;
clotes.&#13;
crow-bar opens but it never&#13;
CHEAP FARMS&#13;
DO YOU WIIT1101E?&#13;
160,000 MIES a i J S V S - ^ — JCTS&#13;
MOsi STATm BASK,&#13;
Taati&#13;
baawjSeeaaa** aaTwearyw aHwtajr. wTtBawKtaT&gt;MaSiU;;»*.&#13;
Sen* 2* for a j Uatof suns m spoRTim GOODS&#13;
la London may be seen an elaborately f ^ ^ ^ ^ oveniaCj the ashpan&#13;
carved ivory toothpick, with the fol- • *** asnpan,&#13;
several points of stovepipe into the %ftf% feU J | f c « ^ 5 5 » - ^ ^&#13;
back of the stove, through the damper Kaiaw. tor drewlowing&#13;
intimation attached: 'Toothpick&#13;
formerly the property of Oliver&#13;
Cromwell; supposed to have been the&#13;
one he picked his teeth with before&#13;
be signed fM aeath warrant of&#13;
Charles I."&#13;
where its fluttering attracted the attention&#13;
of Mrs. Fox and she rescued&#13;
it. There was a hot fire in the stove&#13;
at the time, but the little bird seemed&#13;
to be none the worse for its peculiar&#13;
Journey.&#13;
LADIES! SSrl? _ . &gt;Swl M i r 'tt-e-v'e r*a.073aru.Kr. M.R—.ilt a«rerfans,&#13;
V '&#13;
tto&#13;
#.&#13;
* • ' . • •&#13;
.¾&#13;
4 .&#13;
®&#13;
1 ym.&#13;
-A&#13;
&gt; 1&#13;
• O * W ^ . J&#13;
K**rv.&#13;
#3¾&#13;
• •• v&#13;
&amp;**P,&#13;
3 $&#13;
B'&#13;
f!&#13;
!&amp;&#13;
. : ' ' . ( •&#13;
! • &gt; • •&#13;
f t» gfttfittug ffejratdi.&#13;
•y f. j . . ANDREWS EDITOR.&#13;
THURSDAY, AUGUST 23, 1900.&#13;
Here's the latest swindle to&#13;
catc&amp;'ibe farmer with:- A land&#13;
speculator comes along and offers&#13;
a farmer a big price for part of&#13;
his farm. The farmer accepts and&#13;
$50 is paid down to bind the bargain,&#13;
and the papers to be made&#13;
out at the end of a .couple of&#13;
weeks. Before the time is up alofjg&#13;
comes speculator No. 2 and&#13;
wants to buy the whole farm at a&#13;
big price. Farmer bitws and&#13;
writes No. 1 offering Jiim say $400&#13;
to let him off. No. 1 relutant y&#13;
consents to this. No. 2 never&#13;
shows up, and he is out 1350.&#13;
T h e laws of health require thaf the&#13;
bowels move once each dav and one ot&#13;
the penalties tor violating this law is&#13;
piles. Keep your 'bowels regular !«y&#13;
t a k i n g a dose of Chamberlain's Sloinach&#13;
a n d Liver Tablet.-, when necessary&#13;
and you will never have that severe&#13;
punishment inflicted upon you.&#13;
P r i c e , 25 cents. F o r sale by F . A.&#13;
Siizler, Pinckney.&#13;
t 7 w. c- r. u-?&#13;
0 FdJted by the W. C. T l\n' .rtnefea!jjj$ J&#13;
• " ' _ * ^&#13;
T h e f o l l o w i n g i t e m s w e r e c l i p -&#13;
p e d from t h e B r i g h t o n C o r . t o t h e&#13;
D e m o c r a t , i W e d o n ' t w o n d e r&#13;
t h a t t h e r e i s n e e d of a s t a n d i n g&#13;
a r m y t o k e e p t h e h o p d l u m s a t&#13;
I s l a n d L a k e ' s t r a i g h t . M i c h i g a n&#13;
is p r o u d ( ? ) of h e r s t a t e t r o o p s ,&#13;
y e a , m o r e p r o u d ( ? ) of t h o s e w h o&#13;
h a v e i t iu t h e i r p o w e r t o m a k e o r&#13;
m a r r t h e m a n h o o d of o u n b Q y s ,&#13;
Q u i t e a n u m b e r of c l a i m s h a v e&#13;
b e e n filed w i t h t h e ' q u a r t e r m a s t e r&#13;
g e n e r a l f o r d a m a g e s d o n e b y t h e&#13;
s t a t e t r o o p s t o c r o p s a n d f e n c e s .&#13;
A n d , t h e b e e r s h i p p e d i n c a r -&#13;
l o a d s t o t h e e n c a m p m e n t l a s t w e e k&#13;
w a s of t h e v e r y ' b e s t q u a l i t y .&#13;
N e v e r b e f o r e w a s m o r e b e e r d r a n k&#13;
on t h e c a m p g r o u n d s t h a n t h i s&#13;
y e a r .&#13;
O u r m e r c h a n t s c l a i m t h e s t a t e&#13;
e n c a m p m e n t of s t a t e t r o o p s w a s&#13;
of b u t v e r y l i t t l e v a l u e t o t h e i r&#13;
b u s i n e s s t h i s y e a &amp; P o s s i b l y t h i s&#13;
w a s owiujLC'to t t e f a c t t h a t b e e r&#13;
wit.* i n a b u n d a n c e " o n t h e c a m p&#13;
g r o u n d s t h i s y e a r .&#13;
T h e r e i s t a l k of O h i o s t a t e&#13;
t r o o p s c o m i n g t o I s l a n d L a k e t o&#13;
t h i s m o n t h . I f t h e y s h o u l d a u d&#13;
W h a t most, people w a n t is some-j h a v e t h e b e e r s h i p p e d t o t h e m&#13;
t h i n g mild and gentle, when in need \ f r o m D e t r o i t i n c a r l o a d s , l i k e t h e&#13;
of a physic. Chami erlain's Stomach | t h e . B U f e b i g a n ' b o y s , i t w o u l d b e a&#13;
and Liver Tablets fill t h e bill to a dot a i s - m c e , t o t h e b u c k e y e s t a t e .&#13;
T h e y a r e easv to take and pleasant in m .&#13;
! ,1 h e s t a t e e n c a m p m e n t &lt;-ame t o&#13;
I a c l o s e S u n d a y . T h a n k G o d ! I t&#13;
! w a s a ' w e t c a m p too, s o t o s p e a k ,&#13;
A m i n i s t e r i n a t o w n n o t a j f r o m s t a r t t o finish, a n d n o l i c e n s e&#13;
t h o u s a n d m i l e s a w a y , o n a r e c e n t ! p a i d e i t h e r f o r d e a l i n g o u t t h e&#13;
S u n d a y , s u r p r i s e d h i s a u d i a n c e b y j b u d g e . B u t o u r t w o s a l o o n k e e p -&#13;
r e a d i n g t h e f o l l o w i n g a n n o u n c e - 1 e r s i n t h i s v i l l a g e h a v e t o p u t u p&#13;
m e n t f r o m t h e p u l p i t : " T h e D o n - i § 5 0 0 e a c h t o d o b u s i n e s s . I s ' i t&#13;
k e y c l u b will b e h e l d a s u s u a l a t ! f a i r &gt; g e n t l e m e n of t h e j u r y ?&#13;
t h e c l o s e of t h i s s e r m o n . M e m - . '_&#13;
b e r s w i l l l i n e u p j u s t o u t s i d e t h e . A n e u t e r ' * Cieci w o r k .&#13;
c h u r c h d o o r , m a k e r e m a r k s a n d ! " I had a severe attack of bilious&#13;
s t a r e a t t h e l a d i e s w h o p a s s a s i s colic, got a bottle of Chamberlain's&#13;
t h e c u s t o m . A n y m e m b e r k n o w n [Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy,&#13;
t o e s c o r t a y o u n g l a d y t o c h u r c h t took two doses and was entirely curl&#13;
i k e a m a n a n d s i t w i t h h e r l i k e a ied," says Rev. A. A. Power, of Empor-&#13;
T h e G r a n d T r u n k e x h i b i t a t&#13;
P a r i s h a s b e e n a w a r d e d a G o l d&#13;
M e d a l b y t h e i n t e r n a t i o n a l j u r y .&#13;
^ effect, For&#13;
Pinckney.&#13;
sale by F . A. S i l l e r&#13;
VENE.T1AN.RED c.emutIIK ami 4,«M»kluB,4:«iir«»* Vo«l«N»r.&#13;
I B Seeding cornataHta, dairy cows:&#13;
show, t h a t tb«y reUsh them much bet-^&#13;
tor cooked i n a n when ted dry and&#13;
r t h a r d i There is n o Improvement iti&#13;
. „ M , , „ , , • ithfi actual nourishing qualities or, the&#13;
tatlve of or remedy for roup in fowls is .. ; cooking them, for the pronieans&#13;
uncommon. There la,how-.j « g g ^ nQt a d d anything to them.&#13;
is m : d «&#13;
V»e&amp; »* » f»rev«Mtntl*e -for' It««i» i» Fowla&#13;
With. Great HuwseM.&#13;
The use 6f Venetian red as a preven&#13;
tiv€&#13;
by no&#13;
ever, a misconception'of t h e character t f a f a c t t h a t the fodder is m ? d c j&#13;
Of . the... chenjlCal compound, which &gt;» ngUtaWe to t h e animals is fuf-t]&#13;
should be corrected In the public mind. flclent%xcuge for one adopting this&#13;
In a recent issue of Poultry Monthly ;; c o u r a e j)Ty; hard cornstalhs are not&#13;
Henryo Jialeg says; . • • • • ;really pleasant food to &lt;ows, and-nviwy&#13;
"There h a s been a misunderstanding w i l l ' J a t t n e m on\y w n e n forced to ir -m&#13;
of the nature of Venetian red, through , n u n g e r s „ t if the statea are tak n&#13;
confouuding i t with oxide of iron n d . 1 a n d c u i U p i n t o email length and then&#13;
Having used and handled both articles, c o o k e d o r gteamed aud fed to the anl-&#13;
Venetian red for t h e last fifty-five m a J g w a r m &gt; they have a n odor that is&#13;
years, and oxide of iron for many&#13;
years, I will describe t h e qualities of&#13;
each. Venetian red was named from&#13;
its extensive use by t h e Venetians; it&#13;
Is sometimes c n t t e d t t g t i r red: T h i s fir&#13;
yellow ochre calcined, which makes a&#13;
fine light red. Numerous other reds are&#13;
now mthed in numberless places, a.rd&#13;
are often sold for Veneiian red, and i.f •&#13;
ten used, even by painters t h a t do n t&#13;
.know the difference. Venetian red&#13;
proper contains little, if any iron,&#13;
probably a very small proportion,&#13;
while the other mentioned reds are&#13;
or less&#13;
refreshing. Cows will e a t t h e mush&#13;
thus made greedily* If one has steam&#13;
on. t h e farm the ,fodder stalks can he&#13;
cooked, with t h e stje&amp;m much quicker&#13;
t h a n by a n y other method, ff we add&#13;
a little grain t o this cooked mush the&#13;
cows will e a t far more than when fed&#13;
any other w^y. In feeding the stalks&#13;
In this way t h e grain food should not&#13;
be cut down, as some are inclined, to&#13;
ylnx li We* Ke%&gt; *rqngr bj t a t f a *&#13;
i | W p « j « T a b l e d ' P " * ^Hjfwt&#13;
yoyitld ill kinds of food. Make-p$re,&#13;
street ttonuichs and breath*. Try. theni.&#13;
6nly2fiott box. - ' - \ t&#13;
Plo«Mttnt» 8t»fe mi4t Sure .'&#13;
arcKulll'a Bluck Diwrhoek Pills. .(Bittck&#13;
berry Compound) cure Summer cotnplttints&#13;
Diarrhoea, Dyientcry»Chohtrn Horon^MMad&#13;
UJI'pains of the ston^ach aud bowels; 25c a&#13;
box.&#13;
.Or««lireM4a»&lt;lWci|4«&gt;!''&#13;
Knill'sOrrtuge Headache Pills, I0do**jl(»c&#13;
Cure in 10 minutes, axe the beat a.ndcheap&#13;
ejst. Never fail or leaye any1)kd'afttoif?if&#13;
feet; Qua^nteedbj1 your ^ 0 ^ ¾ ^ . ;*&#13;
' Our •ketch f eaen rdet udrensecdri pItfi.o wn eojafl ia. nAy jjiyn voennotifoena;dWiieifK:&#13;
;promptly receive our opinion free concerning&#13;
the patentability of same. "How to Obtain a&#13;
&lt;Patent" Peat upon request. Patents necured&#13;
through «» advertised for tm\e at bur expenfce.'&#13;
, Parents taken out through u» receive apeaial&#13;
do, for as said before, nothing Is add- !;*o««e»withoiitcharge, h^TuEpATUNT RECORD,&#13;
an illustrated aud widely, circulated jouyraal,&#13;
consuited by Manufacturers and Investors. ( 'Senator purple copy FREE. Addtew, &lt;{•&#13;
e d i o the stalks by cooking them./&#13;
I believe that all good dairv cows&#13;
-1 » » - " - " » - ; »•;;•&gt; ",;;;! r e s p o n d quickly to good feeding and&#13;
more or less composed of oxide i | £ P m&#13;
q&#13;
r o v e J e l l t s i n t n e m e t h o d oi (more correctly) peroxide of iron; ' i l l l i ° " " "&#13;
some contaiu over severity per cent, of&#13;
iron, and are known in the trade as&#13;
oxide of iron paints. This is the article&#13;
that has t h e tonic property, and is&#13;
w h a t I give my fowls. Any one can&#13;
test by tasting t h e water, which' 'Is&#13;
quite harmless, and iinll whether he U&#13;
using Venetian red, which is useless&#13;
or the oxide of iron red, which is very&#13;
beneficial. I trust that I may benefit&#13;
your readers by helping them to use&#13;
the right article."&#13;
&gt;Ir. Hales is probably aware that t h e&#13;
so-called Veneiian red is, properly&#13;
speaking, prepared from sulphate . o '&#13;
iron. It is a chemical treatment wit'ii&#13;
sulphuric acid, but is nevertheless an&#13;
iron base. As is well known,v the oldtime&#13;
tonic, Douglass" mixture, wns&#13;
made _by dissolving sulphate of iron&#13;
(copperas) in Water and addin% a pmail&#13;
quantity of sulphuric acid thereto.&#13;
This harsh compound was again diluted&#13;
by being put in drinking wa.ter.&#13;
While modern ideas have relegated&#13;
Douglass' mixture to the rear, still&#13;
the fact remain? that iron tinctures are&#13;
beneficial in some cases.&#13;
The oxide or peroxide (meaning high&#13;
in oxygen) of iron is better than the&#13;
sulphate for this purpose. Mr. Hales&#13;
is correct in that statement.&#13;
The use of okide of iron is unqnesimp&#13;
preparing their food. In cold weather&#13;
they show t h e effect of warm feeding'&#13;
immediately. It stands to reason th%t&#13;
they feel hetter when they h a w warm&#13;
food to take into their stomachs just&#13;
as much as a man. By templing them&#13;
in this way wo undoubtedly increase&#13;
the flow of m*lk: Anything that&#13;
freshens the appetite and makes t h e ,&#13;
food more palatable is very apt .to affect,&#13;
the milk flow favorably. T h e&#13;
work vt steaming or i-^e.king the f o l -&#13;
der adds quite materially to the dairyman's&#13;
labors, but if it car. he ^cne&#13;
once or twice a week it wi'-l h.&lt; lp o&#13;
improve the milk supply. Poultry&#13;
raisers see to it that their birds l:rve&#13;
warm food or. e a day ihroug I t h e ,&#13;
cold w e t h e r . ; :1 ir may tic that d nrymen&#13;
can find in it a les?on lor :h m. •&#13;
They ell'agree thav warm food agrees&#13;
witli Ihe liens laying eggs and erectly&#13;
helps in increasing the supply of t i I s&#13;
product.—E. P. Smith&#13;
I VICTOR 4 . EVANS &amp; CO.&#13;
(Patent Attorneys,)&#13;
g»an» BuMdlng, WA»HINQTQN. D. C&#13;
I QTATEofMlClIiGAN. Couuty of LivingBton,&#13;
At &amp; Mssion of the Probate Court for eald Coun-&#13;
[ty, held at the Probate Office in the Village of&#13;
Hdwell, on Saturday tue 4th day of Aupueu in&#13;
the year one thousand uine hundred.&#13;
Present, ALBIKU M. DAVIS; Judge of Probate.&#13;
In the Matter of the Estate of&#13;
DAN JACKSON, Deceased.&#13;
On reading and flliriK the petition d nly verified ot'&#13;
(tOria £. J ackcon, pra&gt;4t»K tlv»t a certain iDStrunient&#13;
now on tile in this court, jmrporticg to he the last&#13;
Will and Test a mem of *nld deceased, may be ailaitted&#13;
to prol&gt;ate.&#13;
Thereupon it is onleredthat Thursday, the 86th&#13;
day of Aug. next, at 1 o'cluck in the after noon,'at&#13;
% aid Probate OHice, be assiyued for the hearing of&#13;
B»id petition.&#13;
It is further ordered that a copy of ibis order be&#13;
pnbliehed in th« PINCKNRV DISPATCH, a newspaper&#13;
printed and circulating i i salu conaty, three&#13;
euccet-eive weeks ])iovions to said day of hearing.&#13;
ALBIUD M. DAVIS,&#13;
t-3G . « J udge of Probate.&#13;
The Hen'" Own &lt;;rim in ; il:i&lt; !i:ni'.&#13;
The hen is furnisl^d with ;&gt; grlndi-ng&#13;
apparatus and she will not keep in a'&#13;
vigorous state of htasih un e*s i: is&#13;
'put to use. Amateuis are apt to fcrm&#13;
the opinion that they are doing their&#13;
hens a kindness by m i k i n g their ford&#13;
*~ "V ,\ l^onsist in laree nart of softened and&#13;
tlonably of advantage in cases of ^ U ^ ^ A n ^ o ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^&#13;
g e n t l e m a n , will b e p r o m p l y&#13;
p e l l e d f r o m m e m b e r s h i p .&#13;
ex- the&#13;
roup or kindred ailments. To administer&#13;
this in water, however, is not so&#13;
convenient as to make a compound&#13;
with a perfectly dry vehicle. Take&#13;
while sand and dry it thoroughly. To&#13;
five pounds of dry cornmcal, add four&#13;
pounds of dry sand and one pound of .' . J " 1!1C " " , . . - , . - , ,&#13;
oxide of iron (dry paint) or V c . n o t l a u ?3f the hen wonld r o n ^ t ot whole.* ed&#13;
red. We know that the latter, as sold&#13;
by druggists, is excellent, bu* the oxide&#13;
has more tonic propcrt'-es. / An&#13;
ounce of pulverized capsicum may be&#13;
mixrd with this powder. Tlr? dose is&#13;
of grinding it. and it seems al ogether&#13;
reasonable that it would be more dlgrs&#13;
jble and more readily t i s i n i l a ' e d&#13;
i n . t h a t form than such a tough a n d&#13;
unyielding substance as whole rrain.&#13;
in the n.itiual state the grain ford&#13;
and they were fitted f.T s u i s i s i n g&#13;
upon this kind of food. Jionvsti ;;tina&#13;
has modified, but has&#13;
ia.'K'an. "My .n'eifrlil'or acros&gt; m e | n n P j,pin f f tablespoonful to each twelv .&#13;
afreet was sick for over a week, iiad fowls, given in the morning mash&#13;
, , , , * J- - r ~ ' thfpp rinv?- then everv other tlay for a&#13;
p two or three lotflos of m e d t n n e from , three ^ ^ ^ ] n c ^ e ^ p r 0 ( l u c ,&#13;
" T h r o u g h the months of J u n e and the doctor. He used them for three U o n a m 1 a v r r t i l l n P S S i a s weir as cure.&#13;
J n l v t m r baby was tccthinfr and t . c k ! or tour days' without r e l i e f th.en j r0l«is and incipient roup.&#13;
a r u n n i n g o f f l i n e bowel- and ^ e k - called in another doctor who treated We do not advise the dosing of&#13;
, . . , , i • . i fowls, but the reined;- h^re described&#13;
n e s s o f t h e . Stomach," Mys 0 . P . M. i him tor some days and jrave Lmu no | m a y 8 a v e a s m a l l floch. Tsper.ally if&#13;
flolliday of Demin^ Ind. " H i s bow-'relief, so discharged h i m . I went I ] : r p t i n a confined spa r. during the&#13;
els would move from five to e i p b t ^ v e r t o see him. the next morning. , winter. This compound i&lt; po*d for&#13;
no. wholl.r&#13;
clmn^g'd. their na'ure. The grinding&#13;
apparatus \iust be kep' in active operation.&#13;
. No cock will or,:-,' remain healthy&#13;
on s u ' » n &lt; d end mushy food.&#13;
fThuu&lt;. ii the'o!'\nents &lt;).' the n n i s '.r.e.y&#13;
be wholly nnoujexTTornbl'-^ i f-rt"L-.ff&#13;
iuimly the mecha;:i al ' O i u i ^ o , ! ;&#13;
"wLi( h wi:i stimulate to heal:!;/ ac i'ou&#13;
the ;r:i. (iiD MI uhinery. ^ _&#13;
times a day. I had a bottle of Cl*amberlain's&#13;
tolic, Cholera and Diarrhoea&#13;
Remedy in the house and pave him&#13;
four drops in a teaspoonful of watec&#13;
and he croL belter ait once." Sold by&#13;
F . A. Sipler, Pinckney.&#13;
S u l p h u r i c Acid and T u r p e n t i n e is&#13;
sa^d will kill Canada thistle-;. "This&#13;
soluticn is a dangerous one to mix&#13;
and should be p r e p a r e d only by a&#13;
skillful chemist,1' T h e solution has p o t&#13;
been tboroupfhly tested as yet, but it&#13;
fie said his bowels were i n * a 'terrible&#13;
fix, that they had been r u n n i n g off&#13;
so long that, it wa&lt; almost bloodv flux,&#13;
l a s h e d him if he had t.ied (chamberlain's&#13;
Colic, Cholera a n d&#13;
Remedy and he said. *Xo.' I went&#13;
home and brought him my bottle and&#13;
irave him one dose: told him to take&#13;
another dose in fifteen or t w e n t y minutes&#13;
if lie did not find relief, but he&#13;
took no more a n d was entirely cured."&#13;
For sale by F . A. Staler, Pinckjfey.&#13;
chicks when given in smaller do.se;&#13;
The majoriiy of sticee^sful poult.rymiii&#13;
approve the practice of reeding a&#13;
small &lt;;u:;ntity of geourd grr.in daily.&#13;
mi.', d with sufheie'it. wa'.er to ^nalile&#13;
it to i.e worked up into a- crumbly&#13;
to;&#13;
Hut a s;;oo.iful of the mixture.&#13;
each hen i- the aMowance. This&#13;
t h o u g h t it will prove to be more | Look out for t h e fake book a*ent&#13;
practical than the plan of allowing the \ w h o r e c e i v a s b i d s } o r a s e t 0 f books, if&#13;
weed to grow and c u t t i n g it down aa | he feelift y o a b Q 0 k s y o u w i I | find y o a&#13;
it grows again. \ a r e D a d ; y s o [c j&gt;&#13;
It is no more unreasonable to exp-ct |&#13;
r blood from a turnip than a'.utiu-nt j&#13;
Diarrhoea ; crops of good fruit from poor s^il. j&#13;
Fruit trees and plants of all kinds rue '&#13;
like animals—they must he f, d if. they&#13;
are expected to-tae~~rm&gt;ruahi.-. It is I&#13;
rare that either of them fails to make j&#13;
ample returns if they are g;ven wise j&#13;
and faithful attention.&#13;
There is a plenty and more than a }&#13;
plenty of wormy, knotty, scabby, bruis- j&#13;
ed and decaying fruit grown and s e n t !&#13;
to market. This whole thing should&#13;
be- reformed or dise.ourag.-d. There |&#13;
is plenty of demand for t-ho best of j&#13;
fruit, honestly and caref tlly packed; '&#13;
and f,:ir prices will r v - r await the&#13;
man* who rn'.ets this demand.&#13;
i&#13;
Subscribe for Dispatch.&#13;
TO C u r e a Cold I n One D a y&#13;
T a k e Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets.&#13;
All druggists refund the money&#13;
if it fails to cure. E W. Grove's sig-&#13;
"natnre is on each box. 25c.&#13;
i Stop t b e C o u g h a n d w o r k s off Ibe&#13;
Cold.&#13;
' L s x a t i r e Bromo-Quinine Tablets cure&#13;
a cold in one day. Xo t ure, no&#13;
i Price 25 cenfs.&#13;
pay.&#13;
According to t h e d^iiy papers of&#13;
A u g . 1G, there is i.eed of President&#13;
•McKinley calljntr home all t h e U, S.&#13;
troop-. In N . V. city last week many&#13;
a respectable and inocent negro 'Aras&#13;
mobed by so called respectable white&#13;
people a n d policeman to satisfy a r e -&#13;
venge Jof the m u r d e r of policeman&#13;
T b r o p by a negro. It looks a? though&#13;
we bad a few ''Boxer*'1 a t home. 4&#13;
EXCURSIONS&#13;
VIA THE&#13;
PERE MARQUETTE&#13;
Annnal low rates to Petoskey, Traverse&#13;
C i t j f Charlevoix, Ltulincrton, Mack*&#13;
Inac Island, September 4«&#13;
T r a i n will l e a v e S o u t h L y o n a t&#13;
7:20 a n d 0 : 4 5 a. m . R a t e .*5.00&#13;
t o P e t o s k e y a n d T r a v e r s e C i t y v i a&#13;
" M y baby was terribly sick with the p e r e M a r q u e t t e t h r o u g h o r v i a&#13;
gr-ater p:;r; of those who rre.eortmi:-&#13;
-.tr; ;o !;.•• usr. would r r e f : r to disjien"1-'&#13;
w;-h it en iiv-ly re^her thr.n give more&#13;
U -v. th.:.•••. While cor.f ssirg the ad-&#13;
\T.::L: g''.-• of a resr.v.c e,l i a t i r n ;f ih.s&#13;
drs rieii1 :'. \\vy al! know t h a : it can&#13;
bL- o i u i . e d and paying returns be obtaiued&#13;
\j\ feeding all the grain whole.&#13;
rmitlr.v CiT ik vj.viitl liivcvtiir.&#13;
Had there been jio money in. t h e&#13;
.multiy business peoph? would long ago&#13;
have a'cei r"o;.''i'.. the und^rtakii.g ; n l&#13;
aave 'A\::&gt; a t :.e-:r attention to s o r e -&#13;
SOME FACTS! READ THEMi&#13;
EUREKA SURE STOP TOOTHACHE POWDERS&#13;
Gives quick and sure reiief.&#13;
EUREKA COMPLEXION OINTMENT&#13;
, .Removes Black-heads and Pimples.&#13;
EUREKA CORN CURE&#13;
Cures all Corns, Bunions, a n d Callous&#13;
places.&#13;
EUREKA 0. K. WART REMOVER&#13;
Is certain in its results.&#13;
Each 10c, Coin or Stamps&#13;
By Return Mail. .&#13;
Agents waiited-^-write today.&#13;
Address, EUKSKA SUPPLY HOCSE,&#13;
Pinckney, Mrch.&#13;
Railroad Guide.&#13;
H?A-!-LR-OA&gt;D). V^"«U&#13;
•*»v - &gt;&#13;
*;. r* sruAMSWP U\E$.&#13;
Popular route for A n n Arbf&gt;r, T o -&#13;
ledo and points East, Soutb, a n d for&#13;
Howell, Owosso, A l m a , Mt P l e a s a n t&#13;
Cadillac, Manistee, Traverse City a n d&#13;
points in N o r t h w e s t e r n Michigan*&#13;
W. H . BENNETT ,&#13;
G. P . A. Toledo&#13;
Srcret of Hefty iirpru's Siicri'**.&#13;
Hetty Green was ree-:nfly induced&#13;
to talk to a writer fo.- the- L:;d:cs'&#13;
Home Journal of h r v bu.-ines:'- methods&#13;
t h a t have won her sixty millions of&#13;
dollars or niore. T h e , secret of her&#13;
success is worth knowing: "I don't&#13;
believe in specula"ion as a rule," t h e&#13;
says, " a n d I don't speculate a\s much&#13;
as people think. Wh n offered so&#13;
many shares of stock at so mv'-h I&#13;
buy one share aud then send o;rr to&#13;
see what it. will bring. If i.'s a good \1^&#13;
thing e/!&gt;". As i: is, hundreds i:re&#13;
ce.rly r.;:.Vd to the list of those who&#13;
aavf gene b:toro them on the poultry&#13;
i'cad to success. And the end is not&#13;
ret. Our hoys and girls are waking up&#13;
to the ri.;:~::b:Htio.s of ."a few hen:-'.1*.&#13;
and women are so astir and deter-'&#13;
mined that radical changes are everywhere&#13;
iu i,rogrr?3ion and under deep •&#13;
;onsidoration, And it is going to r e -&#13;
j suit in better poultry and better money&#13;
returns, hr.piiier hearts and prettier&#13;
j acmes, more cf content and 'ess of&#13;
| fretting over imaginary "unenviable&#13;
| environments." and a greater love&#13;
for rural homes and rural pursuits,&#13;
| uid a lesser I c e for the city life that.&#13;
. ifar.off, has appeared to them a l l&#13;
'c.-es, nectr.r ar.u dew,—Poultry Her- *&#13;
C'-&#13;
diarrhoea," say^ J . H. Uosk, of Williams,&#13;
Oregon. " W e were unable to&#13;
c u r e bim with the doctor's assistance,&#13;
a n d as a last resort we tried Cbambel&#13;
a m ' s Colic, Cholera a n d Diarrhoea&#13;
R e m e d y . . I am happy to say it gave&#13;
i m m e d i a t e relief a n d a complete cure."&#13;
F o r sale by F . A. Sigler, Pinckney.&#13;
Grand Rapids, Howard City and&#13;
G. R. &amp; I. Ry/' Rate to Mackinac&#13;
Island *1.00 more than. Petoskey.&#13;
Rate to Ludington 5.00. All&#13;
tickets good4o return until Sept.&#13;
12 inclusive. See bills or ask a-&#13;
^ealws. t-34&#13;
advance T buy t h e rest. If not, I r r .&#13;
This was my plan w i u n I use 1 o&#13;
deal in horses. Iflwould get a' ili.v's&#13;
'option • on a horse, and see what- it&#13;
would bring before buying i \ J ;•;-&#13;
tribute m;.' success fhhfly to i]v ".••.;'=»&#13;
of always buying when r very &lt;.no&#13;
wants to-sell, and selling wlr:n '•,:.:;_&gt;'&#13;
one wants to buy. There's a p i k • on&#13;
everything 1 have. When that '],•:•:en&#13;
Is ottered I sell. I never buy anyiiiing&#13;
just to hold on to it. Not much: And&#13;
I *try to steer clear of Wall s'rect.&#13;
Any one who hasn't a whole fortune&#13;
to back his deals had better do the&#13;
same. 1 do everything with all niy&#13;
mind. If there is a lawsuit on hand&#13;
I go into, every detail of ir with ;,iv&#13;
•lawyer, it's t h e same with everytbin£&#13;
else." • .&#13;
Subscribe for the DISPATCH&#13;
Werner's Dictionary or; juonyms £ Antonyms,&#13;
Myiticiojy and familial Phiases.&#13;
A book that should be in the vest&#13;
pocket of every person, teeanse it&#13;
tells you the right word to u*c.&#13;
No Two Words In the English&#13;
Language Have Exactly the&#13;
Same Significance. To express&#13;
the precue meaning tha one intends&#13;
to convey a dictionary '*&gt;*&#13;
Synonyms Is needed to avoid rer«-&#13;
tition. The strongest figure &lt;&gt;;&#13;
speech la antlthegl.*. In this diedotuuy&#13;
the appended Antonytns&#13;
wiU, therefore, be foand extrer.jelv^&#13;
•aJuatole. Containa many other&#13;
feature* such as Mythology,&#13;
Familiar Allaiionu and Foreign&#13;
Phrases, Prof. LoiMttt's Memory&#13;
| y t u r n , 'Tha Art of Kerer Forgetting, "etc.&#13;
tie. Thli wonderral little book boundli n a ne';a !&#13;
cloth bindlnf and teni postpaid for $0.^5. Pull&#13;
leather, gilt edge, 10.40, poetpaid. Order at&#13;
once; Sena fct^rar Urge book catelogQ3, free.&#13;
Address all orden to&#13;
T H E WERNER COMPANY,&#13;
HUWMra aM Mi—fcrt AKaO», OHOPERE&#13;
MARQUETTB&#13;
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noiKG WEST— Detroit....&#13;
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FRANK BAY,&#13;
Agent, South Lyon.&#13;
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Grand Rapida.&#13;
CO YEARS&#13;
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DcsiGNa&#13;
Anyone tending a nkef chC OanPdV dRetsOcrHipTtaio nA! c iOnnvlecnkltyio nas cineprtraoitni nMonyr fr&gt;&gt;-tet*lnr&gt;k&gt;fAnM fer.e e Cwohmenn-taienrt eann* tMenotn tftrterel*c.t lOyMroensftl dnesnenUcsyl . foHra nnedcbnoroinkp o nim Ptcon' »a. ijxTcaiatel nntoat ictaek, ewnl tnfhonu&gt;t nci?iih» rvW«,n ninn tl»Xo i\&gt;. vqpstrw Scktttific American. cAu Uhatnlodna oomf eatny yD alantnetnrtaktfolod lwoaerenkalyX. LTnwriune*s,t t«t i^* year t frmr jaowtha, $L. SoVj toy an ne»rJ«a»eff. S?iV£^feIP&#13;
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rS K K a K K ^ OF SIN&#13;
A Book for Youaf and Old.&#13;
OUR&#13;
RECOUft&#13;
UUI07O&#13;
«0,000&#13;
!MSEASC»!&#13;
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NCRVQUS|&#13;
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ZSCOOOCURED&#13;
when ItTWrtoTo? fee terrible«&#13;
• youreyes opened to&#13;
h ^ o o n t ^ w i y P E l ^ T B o r B L S o l )&#13;
disease? W*reyc«eurcdt Doyoanow&#13;
end than sec coins alarming symptoms?&#13;
*&lt;&gt; a on account of any weak"-&#13;
stantly]&#13;
failure with you _ _ .___&#13;
nasi e u m by early abuse or later ex-1&#13;
•CBBCST J t e * . reOjcen dragged with,&#13;
mercury? Thla bookletwillpuintoatto I&#13;
you the resultsof tbesecrime* and Mint&#13;
outhowoQr NEW METHOD TREAT-!&#13;
MENT .wilt positively cure you. I t !&#13;
^wfJSMlthSScwwla have bean aavcl by&#13;
our NEW TREATMENT. I t proves hoJWr«-fl,u! 5 U A R A O T E E TO CUBE&#13;
ANT CURABLE CASE OR NO PAY.&#13;
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A $4.00 BOOK FOR T5cts.&#13;
TleFtraers'Bicyclopedla, •.&#13;
t£S5fh&gt;Wa* fairs ex the ftrau&#13;
h e a a e h o l d t u&#13;
stack rsJalag. Env&#13;
braoea artidea on&#13;
the hone, the colt,&#13;
hone habits, die*&#13;
ease* of the bona,&#13;
the farm, grasses,&#13;
frutt culture, dairy*&#13;
Ing.oookery.bealtn,&#13;
cattle, sheep^wine,&#13;
poultry, bees, the&#13;
dot, toilet, social&#13;
Ure,eto* etc. One&#13;
of the most comp&#13;
l e t e E n c y c l o -&#13;
pedias In exls&#13;
A large book,&#13;
x l t f inches.&#13;
tratou. Donna in&#13;
green cloth bind*&#13;
tag and equal to&#13;
other booka coating&#13;
ti.00. Ifyoa desire this book send us oar special&#13;
offer price, $0.75, and ta20 extra Ibr postage and&#13;
we will forward the book to you. If it is not i&#13;
factory return it and we will exchange it or refund&#13;
your money. Bend for cor special Illustrated cat*-&#13;
fcfue. quodng the lowest prion on hooka, n i t&#13;
we can saTe yon money. Address an orders fr&#13;
• TH£ WfcftNER COMPANY, •&#13;
HMUUn eadBtaaatMtsrers. Akron, ObleX&#13;
tTh. Winer Co*ptn.v h tbocoocUr feH*t&gt;le.l—Editor&#13;
A few ioggeition* to tibo fcroer&#13;
in regtvrd to sowing fa}l wheat, by&#13;
Clinton O. 8mitb. Me says "The&#13;
HessUn fly promises to get a tsir&#13;
start this fall, altbough tbe parasites&#13;
are reported by ProL Petit&#13;
as becoming common. We aie&#13;
not prepared to make any prophecy&#13;
aa tobow greatly they will&#13;
hold enemy in check next season.&#13;
Witb^ednJbelUgentaid of wheat&#13;
growers, though, they will be able&#13;
to make a good crop possible next&#13;
year.&#13;
1. Flow the ground as early as&#13;
possible, keeping down vounteer&#13;
wheat and getting ready a good&#13;
seedbed.&#13;
2. Sow a narrow strip of wheat&#13;
early to allow the insects laying&#13;
eggs in it Plow this strip under&#13;
when about ready to sow, doing&#13;
the job thoroughly.&#13;
3. Sow a little later than common,&#13;
say not far from Sept 20 in&#13;
this latitude, depending somewhat&#13;
upon the weather conditions.&#13;
4. Use a little fertilizer of the&#13;
comercial class to give the wheat a&#13;
good strong start&#13;
5. Get all the farmers iu a&#13;
given community to adopt this&#13;
method, as no matter how successful&#13;
a given farmer may be in getjtiog&#13;
rid of them in the fall, if his&#13;
neighbors do not aid in the work,&#13;
he will have the fly in his wheat&#13;
in the spring.&#13;
A resident of Clark County,&#13;
Mo. Mr. S. O. Boskirk, has shed&#13;
his skin annually since his birth,&#13;
which occured in 1850. He is&#13;
well-built, robust and agile, and&#13;
was never ill. He takes very&#13;
little medicine for the annual attacks&#13;
when his epidermis is shed.&#13;
Physicians have tried to prevent&#13;
this exfoliation, but they have&#13;
been unsucessful, and Mr. Buskirk,&#13;
notwithstanding the fact&#13;
that the operation is disagreeable&#13;
and debilitating, has decided that&#13;
he will not make any more attempts&#13;
to prevent it by means of&#13;
medicine. The operation requires&#13;
several days, and for the&#13;
last five years has begun exactly&#13;
on June 27. Prior that time it&#13;
came either in July or August&#13;
About a month is consumed in&#13;
FEAT50F A NEGRO 8A*fSO*&#13;
r* JOIftS HE PAYS THE FREIGHT*&#13;
««,P ERFECT"&#13;
WACO* SCALES&#13;
United States Al lSt a s . AllKmda&#13;
Not made by »trust or controlled by a com&#13;
Mutton. Fornwa Book and Price LU^addrt^&#13;
40NKS OP •INGHAMTON,&#13;
BINQMAMTON. N. V&#13;
• E ¥ T A N T K l &gt; — * K V h u ^ L flRIGdl&#13;
represent&#13;
M as Managers in this and slnre by coos*&#13;
lie*. SeTerr ISOS a f « u and&#13;
Strait. noao-Me, m sesew, no leea. f o s »&#13;
Koo permanent. Oar lone suuea, a c s&#13;
a aor town. U Is sseinly nAia&#13;
Kia.&#13;
|&gt;r|M«nryrVk n « , t « &gt;&#13;
THS&#13;
discarding the old cuticle and the&#13;
appearance of the new. During&#13;
this time the finger and toe nails&#13;
become loose and are discarded,&#13;
new nails come in, and more time&#13;
is required in growing the nails&#13;
to maturity than is ordinary needed.&#13;
After the old skin has been&#13;
shed he says that he fells like a&#13;
boy of 18. The discarded cuticle&#13;
looks like thin, white rubber&#13;
gloves.—Scientific American.&#13;
Brighton school board has added 2&#13;
more grades, 11 and 12, to their school&#13;
this will require another teacher with&#13;
the five which they now have. The&#13;
OAR Hall has been rented to accommodate&#13;
the pnpils.&#13;
I s A f r a M e T&#13;
Wtfa.&#13;
Lew* Yett, * Jet-black African,&#13;
about 80 years of ace, frequently astoaisbes&#13;
tfee people of tha frontier of&#13;
Texas by exblblttoas of his wonderful&#13;
feats of physical power accredited 10&#13;
tins colored giant have really been&#13;
performed, be is without a 4oubt one&#13;
of the strongest men in the world-&#13;
Lew&amp; spent most of the years of bis&#13;
boyhood in a cattle camp on the frontier&#13;
and Ion* before be .was fully&#13;
grown he bad heeome famous as aa expert&#13;
roper, a daring rider and the very&#13;
best all-around vaquero in the southwest&#13;
He never boasted of his accomplishments&#13;
as an equestrian, but&#13;
up to the time he was 20 years of age&#13;
he'had never been thrown from the&#13;
back of a mustang. He won a gold&#13;
medal and prise of $200 at Eagle Pass&#13;
when he wag about 16 yfts*s PW&gt; by&#13;
sticking to the back of a famous broncho&#13;
Diablo. This celebrated horse had&#13;
thrown the best riders in Old Mexico&#13;
and many of the most fearless Texas&#13;
cowboys. Lewis stayed on his back&#13;
for more than an hour, though the enraged&#13;
animal bucked and bellowed&#13;
until he was covered with foam and&#13;
ready to fall from exhaustion.&#13;
Some ten years ago there was a band&#13;
of mustangs in the Llano Mountains,&#13;
led by a proud, splendid-looking black&#13;
stallion, with a bald face. Many a&#13;
cowboy had dreamed of possessing this&#13;
magnificent horse, but every effort&#13;
made to capture him bad ended in fail"&#13;
ure. Lewis determined to "walk" this&#13;
line animal "down." Setting out early&#13;
one morning, mounted upon the best&#13;
pony on the ranch, and leading an extra&#13;
one, the ambitious negro soon&#13;
struck the trail of the king of the&#13;
plains and his harem. For two whole&#13;
days and nights Lewis stuck close to&#13;
the heels of the thoroughly .puzzled&#13;
mustangs, never giving them time to&#13;
•nip a hunch of grass, drink a drop of&#13;
water or pause for &amp; moment to rest&#13;
their wearied limbs.&#13;
On the morning of the thirdvday the&#13;
mustangs began to fall and flounder&#13;
upon the hot sands in a dying condition.&#13;
The bald stallion still staggered&#13;
forward as if determined to die upon&#13;
his feet After some hours, when the&#13;
sun was nearing the zenith and the&#13;
heat of the desert was scorching the&#13;
backs of the snakes and lizards and&#13;
driving them to seek the shade of the&#13;
cactus, Lewis's own horse&#13;
We carry a&#13;
stock oi goods&#13;
valued at&#13;
$1^00,000.00&#13;
W« receive&#13;
from 10,000 to&#13;
25,000 letters&#13;
every day&#13;
0.&#13;
fSwSflSa and occupy the tallest mercantile boJldtaf la tae world. We have&#13;
ewer S^SMISM easterners. Sixteen hundred clerks ere constantly&#13;
engaged SlUng oat-cf-towa orders.&#13;
OUR O B N B K A 1 , C A T A L O O U X la' the book of the p e e p l e - l t quotes&#13;
Wholesale Prices to Everybody, has over x,oee pagee, rt.ooo illustrations, and&#13;
60,000 descriptions of artidea with price*. It eosts ya cents to print and malt&#13;
each copy. We want you to have one. SEND PIFTBBN CENTS to sbow&#13;
your good fctth, and we'll send you a copy FREE, with all charges prepaid.&#13;
,S0HT60MERY WARD &amp; &amp;,»*+».-•—•- OHIOASO&#13;
,^VJ&gt;*^&#13;
uwn&#13;
and fell to rise no more. The gritty&#13;
little mustang had expended the last&#13;
spark of his vitality in the long chase.&#13;
The bald stallion Was now alone. The&#13;
last member of his band had succumbed&#13;
to thirst, hunger and exhaustion.&#13;
The prize was almost within the negro's&#13;
grasp, for it was evident that the&#13;
proud spirit of the stallion was broken,&#13;
and that he could not summon sufficient&#13;
strength to strike a trot&#13;
Lewis was determined not to be&#13;
cheated of the valuable prize now so&#13;
nearly in his possession, and quickly&#13;
lossening his lariat from the saddle he&#13;
threw It across hi shoulder and set out&#13;
after the stallion on foot He had been&#13;
in the saddle for more than fifty hours,&#13;
with wide-open eyes, appeastng his&#13;
hunger by chewing jerked beef and&#13;
satiating his thirst with an occasional&#13;
swallow of hot water from his canteen.&#13;
Another man would have fallen&#13;
long before, but this wonderful negro,&#13;
who possessed—powers—of endurance&#13;
even superior to his giant strength,&#13;
"shook the Btiffness out-of his joints,"&#13;
as he says, and, striking a trt&gt;t, h©&#13;
soon discovered that he was gaining&#13;
on the tired stallion. Lewis was perfectly&#13;
familiar with the geography of&#13;
the country, and as soon as it became&#13;
evident that the wild horse was aiming&#13;
to strike a certain crossing on the&#13;
Llano River, he took a short cut acro?e&#13;
the hills and got ahead of his prize.&#13;
He barely had time to conceal himself&#13;
by the'side of the trail near the water&#13;
before the tired horse staggered in&#13;
sight The proud old king of the&#13;
plains was nearly exhausted, but the&#13;
scent and sight of the cool waters of&#13;
the Llano quickened his steps, and,&#13;
with an eager whinny, he was about&#13;
to plunge down the bank when a rope&#13;
hissed through the air and a noose&#13;
dropped over his neck. "T jes* had to&#13;
laugh," says Lewis, "for I never saw&#13;
anything look so' surprised like that&#13;
horse. 'Peared like he wanted to say,&#13;
'Well, you are jes* about the gamest&#13;
and slickest nigger I ever saw.'"&#13;
Lewis had captured the famous wild&#13;
bald stallion which had for years defled&#13;
all pursuers. The negro easily&#13;
tamed the fine animal and he was long&#13;
known as one of the fastest long-distance&#13;
racehorses in western Texas.&#13;
Old-time cattle men—the boys who&#13;
rode the plains before the days of locomotives&#13;
and barbed wire—never tire&#13;
of telling stories of this giant negro's&#13;
powers. No long-horn ever grew to&#13;
big for Lewis. Whenever he got hjs&#13;
rope on a »*eer that animal had to go&#13;
his way. He could catch a big Mexican&#13;
steer by the horns and drag him&#13;
about in the corral as another man&#13;
would handle a calf. Upon one occasion&#13;
Lewis was riding an unruly mustang&#13;
and upon approaching a bridg&#13;
the animal "snlked." end though tho&#13;
cowboys applied quirts and ropes to&#13;
his hide with Rreat violence he refused&#13;
to move out of his tracks. Lewis was&#13;
In a hurry to catch up with the herl&#13;
and to the amazement of his comrades&#13;
he dismounted, and coolly picking up&#13;
the surprised mustang in his giant&#13;
arms he threw him across his shoulder&#13;
and carried him over the bridge.&#13;
An excursion boat with a party of&#13;
•?V.Ti8*« on boyd ran ^grou&amp;d at the&#13;
WANTED—The Subscription&#13;
due on the DISPATCH.&#13;
T — &lt; •&#13;
• •*.« . *. *,.»«.« •&#13;
" • * * • 11 ' I ' M ' &lt;mmmm»-j,.&#13;
and while the crew was preparing to&#13;
throw out soars Lawto sprang overboard&#13;
and putting bis shoulder against&#13;
the bow of the boat pushed her afloat&#13;
and then sprang aboard, seemingly&#13;
unconscious of the fact that bo bad&#13;
done something that amazed the boat's&#13;
crew and passengers.&#13;
Lewis Is hardly six feet high, but&#13;
he weighs 304 pounds, tnd his muscles&#13;
are as firm and unyielding as a piece&#13;
of wood. He sr /s that he, has always&#13;
been able to lift more than any live or&#13;
six men who were working with him.&#13;
that he is stouter than any horse or&#13;
steer that be ever handled, and that&#13;
be is not afraid of anything on earth&#13;
but bis wife, and she only w*teh«&#13;
ninety pounds.—St. Louis Globe Democrat&#13;
THEHORSE.&#13;
A Few Pointers en the Feeding end Tzeat-&#13;
Thto Talnabla Anisiai.&#13;
I have a horse, ordinary weight 950&#13;
jwunds, goes barefoot the year round;&#13;
seldom has any grain, very ordinary&#13;
in his build; is not groomed every day&#13;
like many other farm horses. He seldom&#13;
gets curried and yet he proves&#13;
himself more than a match for ironshod,&#13;
daily-groomed, grained horses.&#13;
He has the privilege of taking a roll&#13;
occasionally and also is out to grass&#13;
some. His strength appears to be more&#13;
than equal to grain-fed horses of his&#13;
weight; also his powers of endurance,&#13;
as I frequently go some twenty miles&#13;
or more with him and he goes the last&#13;
part of the journey best. The waring&#13;
of shoes serves as S draft upon the&#13;
native powers of the system and so it&#13;
is with the feeding of grain. Generally&#13;
speaking, a horse is much better off&#13;
to go barefoot and to go without grain&#13;
and also without a blanket Let him&#13;
have hay and grass and not so very&#13;
abundantly of tnat; better to have&#13;
short feed where he will have to feed&#13;
all day to get enough. Scant feeding&#13;
is much better for a horse than&#13;
abundant feeding, as scant feeding&#13;
calls into action the native powers of&#13;
the system, while abundant feeding&#13;
necessarily restricts the action of the&#13;
native powers of the system. The&#13;
same principle dominates or underlies&#13;
the growing to perfection of fruit as&#13;
the perfection of the horse does not lie&#13;
merely in a frame well covered with&#13;
flesh and his coat sleek and shining,&#13;
but he must possess powers of great&#13;
stumbled Iendurance, but abundant feeding serves&#13;
We the unoarsigW, do asrsbf&#13;
acrros to rwftmd the m,(mej on a fit)&#13;
ssnt bottls of POWR&gt; BUxir if it d W&#13;
not ears any oongb, cold, whooping?&#13;
cough, or throat trouble. We also&#13;
guarantee Down's Elixir to euro* corn*&#13;
tornption, when used aosordine to,diV&#13;
rectiont, or money bast. A feM tag*&#13;
on going to bed and small doses dor*&#13;
in?; the day will cure the most savers&#13;
ool4, and stop the most distressing&#13;
« o n g | j .&#13;
P. \. ttigler,&#13;
W. B. Darrow,&#13;
• ~ i - •«;.,&#13;
( • &gt; ' , '•••:; u-&#13;
1&#13;
to deprive him of those natural*powers&#13;
of endurance. The same is true in&#13;
regard to vegetation. Trees and shrubs&#13;
that grow on very rich land are consequently&#13;
the shortest lived and the least&#13;
hardy. May bear luscious fruit, but&#13;
are inclined to rapid decay. What's&#13;
the matter with potatoes? Why the&#13;
native power of the potato Is overtopped&#13;
by artificiality or in other;&#13;
words the potato is in an enfeebled&#13;
state of being, caused by a depart&#13;
from the natural coarse of things. The&#13;
potato, in its enfeebled state, is subject&#13;
to its enemies and It is even so&#13;
with fruit and it is even so with do*&#13;
mestic animals and with man in a&#13;
so-called civilizedlstate of being. Were&#13;
mankind truly civilized tney would&#13;
not be subject to disease, but masters&#13;
of it. Even masters of the universe.&#13;
The natural outcome of living according&#13;
to the nature of things would be a&#13;
vastly superior race of people and the&#13;
feeding and treatment of domestic •anl&#13;
Sat finrfciKH ffcaaUk.&#13;
rcauaxxp avsax nroasna? xoaxxxa BT&#13;
FRANK L. ANDREWS&#13;
ZdiHr mm* *&gt;r*prUi*r.&#13;
Snbcertpttaa Price $1 la Advance.&#13;
Catered at the Poetofttee atPiackaey, *"**»«#M.&#13;
Maeronrt rlaea waiter&#13;
Advetttainf rates aude knewa ea applicetten.&#13;
Boslaase Carta, S400 per year.&#13;
Pacta and marriage notices pabllahed tree.&#13;
Annoancesaenta ol eolertalaaieaifl stay be paid&#13;
for, ii dealxed, by preventing the oStoe with tieketeofadmleaioa.&#13;
In case tickets are not broagat&#13;
to ttooSke, regular tateewm be charged,&#13;
AU nutter la local notice eelaau will be caaraed&#13;
at 5 casta per line or fraction thereof, for each&#13;
ineertioa. Whereno time la epedaed, an notices&#13;
will be inserted until orcWreo* discontinued, and •&#13;
wttlbec^gedforaeeoffdiaglf, s ^ Ail changes&#13;
el advertisements MCHT reach talsofflee as early&#13;
aaTixasoAT morning to insure an ineertioa the&#13;
same week.&#13;
JO'S mMUJfQt&#13;
In aU its branches, a spadalty. Wehaveallklnan&#13;
and the latest styles ofType, ate., which enable!&#13;
as to execute all kinds of work, suck aa Books.&#13;
Peaplett, Posters, Programmes, BUI Heads, Nota&#13;
Heads, Statements, Oarde. Auction BUIa, s t ^ l n&#13;
aaperier styles, upon the shortest notice. Prices ea&#13;
ow as good work can be done.&#13;
«LL BILLS PATASLff f l a S T O f B V S B r KOBTTBT.&#13;
•:'&lt;1f\&#13;
THE VILLAGE DIRECTORY.&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICERS.&#13;
Pmaan&gt;BirT.»nMM...mm,.M... alex. Melntyre&#13;
Teoarasa £. L. Thompson, Alfred Monica,&#13;
Daniel Richards, oeo. Bowman, Samnei&#13;
Sykea, P. II. Johnson.&#13;
CLXBK ~~~...~m~.~~~m.......*..&amp;. HVTeeplo&#13;
TaBAsoBBUi ....., w. £. .Murphy&#13;
Aaaaason..........................,,....-...iy. A . CBCP&#13;
STBBBT COKJUSSIOHBB J. Mooka.&#13;
MIBBUHT, _ ^ L XrBrowa.&#13;
HXALTH urnoaa Dr. H. P. Slater&#13;
ATToawsT...MM....MM....MH....MMW.M...W. A. Oarr&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
male according to the nature of things&#13;
would permit them to become masters,&#13;
not subjects of disease. What is&#13;
termed civilization stands directly in&#13;
the way of all true advancement both&#13;
as regards mankind and domestic animals.&#13;
To seek the kingdom of God&#13;
and His righteousness means to live&#13;
according to the nature of things and&#13;
not according to an idea imbued with&#13;
something called civilization.-—R. A.&#13;
Tripp, in Green's Fruit Grower.&#13;
MSTHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH,&#13;
iter. Chas. Simpson, pastor. Services erery&#13;
Sunday morning at lU.Su, and ovary Sunday&#13;
evening at 7:00 o'clock. Prayer meeting Thuradajevenlnga.&#13;
Sunday aehool at cloaa of morning&#13;
service, LBALSIOLM, Snpt.&#13;
CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH.&#13;
Rev. C. W. Rice pastor. .Service every&#13;
Sunday morning at 10:80 and every Sunday&#13;
evening at 7:0C o'clock. Prayer meeting_Thura&#13;
K&gt;11&#13;
inKaarvive.&#13;
boat Sec&#13;
Sunday aehool at sdoea ox mora-&#13;
R. II. Xeeple, 8 apt* Maoel Swart.&#13;
ST. MARY'S CATHOLIC CHURCH.&#13;
Rev. M. J. Commerford, Paator. Servicea&#13;
every Sunday. Low maae at7:80o'clock&#13;
high m sea with sermon at 9:80 a. m. Catechism&#13;
at3:00p. m., veepersandbenedictionat7:80p.a.&#13;
SOCIETIES;&#13;
A. O. H. Society of thla place, meets every&#13;
rd Sunday intne Fr. Matthew Hall.&#13;
Tuomoy and M. T. Kelly. County Delegates&#13;
Worth Trying:.&#13;
An exchange says: Do you or any&#13;
of your readers know that some plants&#13;
grown in close proximity to some varieties&#13;
of fruits will impart their flavor&#13;
to the fruit? -asks a contributor to&#13;
Rural New Yorker. I had a me!:vn&#13;
vine run in a small patch of_peppermint,&#13;
and the melons had a decided&#13;
peppermint flavor. My neighbor had&#13;
a gourd vine which ran on a peach&#13;
tree, and the peaches had a disagreeable,&#13;
gourd-like taste. I have noticad&#13;
while gathering wild black-berrit*s,&#13;
that those which grew close to the&#13;
French mulberry (a species of CalJlcarpa.—&#13;
eds.&gt; had a peculiar fragrance&#13;
which was quite an Improvement ov«r&#13;
the others. I tok the hint, have planted&#13;
this shrub among my patch of&#13;
blackberries, and produced berries&#13;
which are superior to any blackberry&#13;
I have tasted.&#13;
EP WORTH LEAGUE. Meets every Sunday&#13;
evening at 6e00 oclock in the M. E. Cnureu, A&#13;
cordial Invitation is extended to everyone, especially&#13;
young people. Mrs. 8tella Graham Pree.&#13;
nSRISTIAN ENDEAVOR SOCIETY:-Meet.&#13;
Viag? every Sunday evening at 6:*J. President,&#13;
Miss Etta Carpenter; Secretary, Mrs. C. W. Rice.&#13;
rpHB W. C. T. U. meets the first Friday of each&#13;
I month at 9:&amp; p. m. at the home of Dr. H. P.&#13;
Sigler. Everyone interested in temperance is&#13;
coadlaily invited. Mrs. Leal Sigler, Pree; Mra.&#13;
Ktta Durfee, Secretary.&#13;
Tie C.T. A. and B. society of thla&#13;
evvee*r.y t"h"ir d Saturday evening&#13;
thewHall. " ' ~ ' *&#13;
hie place, n*eet&#13;
in the Fr. Mat-&#13;
John Donohne, President.&#13;
Origin or «S+tttn. the Hirer on *'!reM&#13;
In old English times, when each&#13;
family was obliged to sift its own&#13;
flour, it sometimes happened that an&#13;
energetic man would turn his sieve&#13;
so rapidly as to cause it to catch fire.&#13;
The style of sieve used in those days&#13;
was called a "temse." and it became a&#13;
customary saying that a lazy man&#13;
would never set the temse on fire.&#13;
Now it happens that the name of the&#13;
river Thames is pronounced like the&#13;
name of this old flour sieve, and after&#13;
many years, when the r Id-fashioned&#13;
temse was forgotten, it was thought&#13;
that setting the temse on fire meant&#13;
setting the river on fire, and that la&#13;
why to-day we say that a stupid person&#13;
will never set the river On fire.—&#13;
Ladles'Home Journal.&#13;
Bring yonr Job Work to ibis office&#13;
KNIGHTS OF MACCABEES.&#13;
Meet every Friday evening on or before fall&#13;
of the moon at their hall In the Swarthout bide.&#13;
Visiting brotheis are cordially invited.&#13;
CHAS. OtKPBSu* 8ir Knight Commander&#13;
Livingston Lodge, No. 7% P A A. M. Regaler&#13;
Communication Tuesday evening, on or before&#13;
the full of the mooi%. H. P. Sigler, W. M.&#13;
ORDER OF EASTERN STAR moota each month&#13;
the Friday evening following the regular F.&#13;
4A.M. meeting, Maa. MAST Rain, W. M.&#13;
ORDER OF MODERN WOODMEN&#13;
evening of eeoa M&#13;
C. L. Grimes V. C.&#13;
. first Thursday evenln&#13;
MaecabeehaU ~ ' '&#13;
Meet the&#13;
eaoa Month In the&#13;
f ABIES OF THE MACCABEES. Meet every 1st&#13;
J j and 3rd Saturday of eachaaonthatStSOp m.at&#13;
ETo.T. M. halt Visiting sisters cordially&#13;
Tited. LILA COBTWAT Lady Coat. in.&#13;
^ J&#13;
KNIGHTS ov Tan LOYAL GUARD&#13;
meat every second Wednesday&#13;
evening oi every moathia the K. O.&#13;
T. MTHaU at 7:80o'clock* AU visiting&#13;
Gaarda welcome.&#13;
C. L. Grimes. Cap*. Gen.&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
H. P. S1QLSR *U D&gt; C, L, SIQLCR M, 0&#13;
DRS. SIGLER &amp; SIGLERr PhyaicUaa and Surgeons. AU calls prompt!&#13;
attended today or night. Ontee da Mala str&#13;
Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
DR. A, B. GREEN.&#13;
DENTiST-Every Friday; and on Thura&gt;&#13;
day when having appointments. OStoe over&#13;
Sigler'a l&gt;rug Store.&#13;
VETERINARY 3URQE&lt;&#13;
Graduate of Ontario Veterinary Oollc&#13;
the Veterinary Dentistry Col&#13;
Toronto Canada. &gt;&#13;
Will promptly attend to all disaeiss of the d o&#13;
maotlaated animal at a reasonabjgprjco.&#13;
Horses teeth examined Free.,&#13;
orrice at/&lt;iLu PINCKNCY.&#13;
- :&lt;v, •&#13;
•tl&#13;
••#§&#13;
fe^- T. -&#13;
' • • • • • - f t * -&#13;
r^"&#13;
^5&#13;
m&#13;
*&gt;0&#13;
. • ( • •&#13;
• ; .&#13;
ft-.'*&#13;
av:.r&#13;
A'*:&#13;
'V'&#13;
s'^**-&#13;
••\i&gt;';&#13;
'•v'&#13;
.*7' •y&#13;
f BA»K L. AWDKTWft, PfttaHshSft&#13;
PINCKNEY, . * . MICHIGAN*&#13;
CfBS^SS* 'Bi'iir lily, i T7m'^~~mTQf[tiWMBHR&#13;
Tu« war l* booth Africa has dooaoea&#13;
the Highland kilt as a flghtinr dregs.&#13;
and It will now survive as a parade&#13;
uniform soar.&#13;
»»-*•&#13;
Duriac the yea* J,M&amp; «2,061 vessels,&#13;
of S4.2S8.680 tons, entered and cleared&#13;
CfaUvaoe porta. O/these vessels, 74*. of&#13;
23s\152 tons, were American.&#13;
m ^•VXffMOTMIf&#13;
• Piper Findktter of Dargsi fame has&#13;
mow secured a farm in his native county&#13;
of Aberdeen, where he intends tilling&#13;
the soil for the remainder of his&#13;
days.&#13;
. Jumping the rope is said to be a&#13;
remedy for derangement of the liver.&#13;
Many middle-aged persons in England&#13;
' now regularly engage in this exercise,&#13;
and declare they derive great benefit&#13;
from it.&#13;
A pious gentleman in Oreeley, Pa,,&#13;
insisted upon having prayers just before&#13;
dinner. His wife and daughter&#13;
objected so strenuously that the pious&#13;
gentleman attacked them with a fork,&#13;
and seriously wounded the wife.&#13;
The Americans introduced the first&#13;
sewing machines into China after&#13;
great difficulties and taught the Chinese&#13;
their use, and today, in the flourishing&#13;
cities of Shanghai, Hong Kong&#13;
and even In Pektng, the tailoring establishments&#13;
are benefited by them.&#13;
Movable targets of a new sort have&#13;
been invented for the use of the German&#13;
army. These targets are propelled&#13;
toward the marksmen at full&#13;
speed to represent a cavalry charge&#13;
being run on rollers, the motive power&#13;
supplied by horses, which are&#13;
started at 8 gallop after being attached&#13;
to the target ropes. The soldieri&#13;
thus lent to gauge distance and it3&#13;
variations with great accuracy.&#13;
A mountain of alum rock is a natural&#13;
curiosity wnich exists in China,&#13;
about twelve miles from the village of&#13;
Lion Obefc. The mountain is about ten&#13;
miles in circumference at the base and&#13;
its height is 1,940 feet. The stones are&#13;
quarried in targe blocks, and after being&#13;
heated in furnaces are thrown into&#13;
vats of boiling water. At the bottom&#13;
of the vats the alum crystalizes in layers&#13;
about six inches in thickness.&#13;
Prince Ferdinand of Bulgaria, is &amp;&#13;
very clever mechanical engineer, and&#13;
jVery interested in machinery. The&#13;
other day he left his compartment in&#13;
the train, put on a workman's blouse,&#13;
and drove an-eagiaeH!rom &amp;airbourgr&#13;
to Munich. It will be remembered&#13;
that the unfortunate King of Bavaria&#13;
before hts mind gave way, often traveled&#13;
in this Way on the engines, and&#13;
the legitimate drivers always received&#13;
a princely pourboire at the end of the&#13;
journey.&#13;
As England continues to send re-enforcements&#13;
to South Africa, in spito&#13;
of the declaration that the war is prae-y&#13;
tically over, the suspicious Frenchm;&#13;
declares that the English government&#13;
is preparing for a descent on/Madagascar.&#13;
Oa the other hand, it is conjectured&#13;
that provisions is being matie&#13;
against the possibility that the Suez&#13;
canal may be closed in/the event oC a&#13;
war in Asia. Neither supposition is&#13;
tenable, says the/Army and Navy&#13;
Whatever success the Eii£-&#13;
Ihad against the Boers,&#13;
war is so great as to re-&#13;
Stant re-enforcement of c".i&#13;
the field.&#13;
The wagon road from Tientsin to&#13;
Pekin crosses the S-shaped loops of&#13;
the Pel Ho (river) at several points&#13;
between the two cities. The country&#13;
is very level and devoid of picturesque&#13;
features.&#13;
The river is shallow and very broad&#13;
in places. The channel is only suited&#13;
for light draught vessels and is hard&#13;
to follow. The Chinese boats are&#13;
poled up the river and sail or drift&#13;
down. The Chinese have now blocked&#13;
the channel. A large part of the country&#13;
can be flooded by means of the&#13;
Grand Canal. This rises high above&#13;
the surrounding country.&#13;
The land is given up almost entirely&#13;
to the cultivation of millet, the principal&#13;
Chinese grain, and to truck gardening.&#13;
The truck gardens are the&#13;
most Interesting. The cabbages, asparagus,&#13;
peas, tomatoes, pumpkins and&#13;
other vegetables they grow are&#13;
the finest in the world. The Chinese&#13;
cultivators are-independent of nature&#13;
and the elements. They depend neither,&#13;
on rain nor sunshine to raise their&#13;
vegetables. The work goes on uninterruptedly&#13;
all the year round.&#13;
There are hardly any woods here,&#13;
but from time to time there are little,&#13;
thick clumps of trees, which give shade&#13;
and have a peculiarly Chinese appearance.&#13;
Small hamlets are scattered&#13;
everywhere. The landscape develops&#13;
many strange features as one approaches&#13;
the larger towns. Chief&#13;
among these are high poles with decapitated&#13;
human heads stuck on top&#13;
of them. This is the commonest form&#13;
of punishment in China, and the mandarin&#13;
puts the heads outside the city&#13;
to remind travelers without delay of&#13;
the fate that awaits evildoers. Telegraph&#13;
poles diversify the scenery with&#13;
head T&gt;oles, Another curieus- feature&#13;
consists of rows of huge, grotesque&#13;
elephants, tigers and other animals&#13;
carved in soapstone. They form a&#13;
sort of artificial menagerie. There are&#13;
aveuues of these things leading to the&#13;
entrances to several cities. They are&#13;
put there as objects of art, and not for&#13;
any religious pu/pqse.&#13;
In many places in the country there&#13;
are also colossal Btatues of gods and&#13;
warriors.&#13;
After Peit-Sang is Yang-Taun, eighteen&#13;
miles from Tientsin. The houses&#13;
are built of mud brick, made with&#13;
straw. They are /tuite comfortable&#13;
inside, and very pretty in appearance&#13;
on account of the vogetation around&#13;
them, as at so many other'towns,&#13;
there is a canal, crossed by a boat&#13;
bridge.&#13;
Lufa, about thirty miles from Tientsin,&#13;
is a more important place than&#13;
most of the others mentioned. The&#13;
country is somewhat rolling here.&#13;
This place is the seat of an important&#13;
mandarin. His headquarters, or yamen,&#13;
is a big building of blue brick,&#13;
ornamented with dragons and queer&#13;
Chinese beasts. The entrance Is appropriately&#13;
decorated with the heads&#13;
of decapitated criminals. In a pound&#13;
alongside it other criminals may be&#13;
seen undergoing various form of torture.&#13;
A common punishment that is&#13;
inflicted for the most trivial offences&#13;
is the cangue, a huge collar of wood,&#13;
almost to heavy to be borne, but so&#13;
arranged that it prevents prisoner&#13;
from lying down* _ --&gt;&#13;
Forty miles from Tientsin^ the important&#13;
walled city of Lang Fang,&#13;
which is near the army's route. This&#13;
place is about four thousand years old.&#13;
I had a' peculiar experieioe here in&#13;
what is described aa a first-class Chinese&#13;
hotel.&#13;
There i3 a famous joss house in&#13;
Lang Fang which contains twenty&#13;
idols, or gods, including tne God of&#13;
War, the God of Strength,, the God of&#13;
blT"Ey1&#13;
herK&#13;
Death, the GocT&#13;
Fertility, and othe&#13;
res, the God-&#13;
Followers of&#13;
Buddha and Confucius use these jos3&#13;
houses impartially.&#13;
There is also a Temple of Tortures.&#13;
Thin is filled with figures made of clay&#13;
•and papier mache, illustrating in an&#13;
extremely realistic manner all the&#13;
tortures inflicted by Chinese law. It&#13;
is far more horrible than the Chamber-&#13;
of Horrors at Mme. Tuasaud's.&#13;
Here you see a representation of a&#13;
man being sawed in half and another&#13;
being slowly ground to pieces on a&#13;
grindstone, and so on:&#13;
Ho-Sl-Wu is a town of considerable&#13;
sise about fifty miles from Pekin.&#13;
Anting is a small place on the railroad&#13;
some fifty-four miles from Tientsin,&#13;
which may figure 'n the march&#13;
of the allies.&#13;
At this point the natural route of&#13;
the army turns westward. Feng-Tai,&#13;
seventy-four miles. from Tientsin, is&#13;
situated on top of a ridge, from which&#13;
Pekin comes suddenly into view. The&#13;
sight of this great and mysterious city,&#13;
with its wails aud quaintly roofed&#13;
temples, is one that cannot fail to&#13;
create a deep impression upon the&#13;
traveler. It makes one think of a traveler&#13;
in ancient days coming in sight&#13;
of the sacred city of Jerusalem.&#13;
Here is the Grand canal which is a&#13;
great artificial waterway connecting&#13;
Pekin with Nankin. It is carried between&#13;
embankments which rise high&#13;
above the surrounding country. In&#13;
times of peace the canal is covered&#13;
with a vast fleet of junks, some of&#13;
which are bigger than a large ocean&#13;
steamer. They draw as much as ten&#13;
feet of water, and have an immense&#13;
length and beam. The famous west&#13;
gate of Pekin is the one through which&#13;
the ordinary traveler from Tientsin&#13;
makes his entrance. The gate has&#13;
the thickness of a New York city&#13;
block, and in the passage through it&#13;
there are a dozen gate3 of different&#13;
patterns, some opening in the middle,&#13;
some working- on lilnges, and others&#13;
falling like porticullises. The walls&#13;
rise to a height of eighty feet, and&#13;
over the gate there is a temple a hundred&#13;
feet high, with trees growing&#13;
around_it on top of the wall.&#13;
Journal,&#13;
lish may hav$&#13;
the waste&#13;
quire cor&#13;
army ii&#13;
Africa losses in action by the&#13;
ritish during the present war have&#13;
''exceeded 1,000 at Colenso, Dec. 15, 1590,&#13;
when there were 1,054 killed, wounded&#13;
and missing; Farquhar's farm and&#13;
Nicholson's nek, Oct. 30, 1809, when&#13;
they numbered 1,226; in the battles&#13;
about Ladysmltlh, 1,782, Feb. 19 to 27,&#13;
1900; at Paardeberg, Feb. 16-27, 1,436,&#13;
and at Spion kop, 1,646.. Jan. 17 to&#13;
24. At Strom berg the loss was 702; at&#13;
Bfagersfonteis, 902; at Sanna's post,&#13;
541. In each of the other engagements&#13;
the losses amounted to less than 600&#13;
the total being 1,364 officers and IS,-&#13;
128 men.&#13;
TRANSVAAL WAH ITBMeV&#13;
Tho escape of Zte\VfetRafter the elaborate&#13;
dispositions ncuvde' to ^surround&#13;
him If humiliating*to the English&#13;
generals and has W4» some damag* to&#13;
another great reputation* that,of Lord&#13;
Kitchener. Lord Roberts sent Kitchener&#13;
to take complete control of t o *&#13;
operations which were to end in cornering&#13;
Da Wet Generals Metbuen, Ian&#13;
Hamilton axftft Sroith-Dorriea were cooperating&#13;
with him, as well as Broadwood's&#13;
cavalry brigade, so that there&#13;
must have eaeu some 30,000 troops endeavoring&#13;
to intercept' the 7,000&#13;
mounted men who,form DeWet'sfollowing*&#13;
, After being bouyed up for&#13;
weeks with the hopes that this superbly&#13;
led flying solum* would be environed,&#13;
the British public are. not a t&#13;
all pleased to bear that LeWet has&#13;
got clear away again aud has outmarched&#13;
both Metbuen and Kitchener&#13;
and is heading north to join Commandant&#13;
Delarey, who has taken* possession&#13;
of Hustenberg and seems to be practically&#13;
master of the country almost up&#13;
to Mafeking. As to the future, it&#13;
seems that the operations.may now be&#13;
chiefly confined to two distinct quartera&#13;
DeWet and Delarey have wide&#13;
spaces of western Transvaal and the&#13;
Bechuanaland frontier to roam over,&#13;
and the British hold on these districts,&#13;
which were supposed to be hiibjuguted,&#13;
is extremely precarious, as the Boers&#13;
are probably gaining recruits as they&#13;
go along. "&#13;
Lord Roberts's proclamation, after&#13;
reciting the fact that many have&#13;
broken the oath to maintain neutrality,&#13;
and thut the leniency extended to&#13;
the burghers is not appreciated, warns&#13;
all who breuk their oaths in the future&#13;
that they will be puni&amp;hed by death,&#13;
imprisonment or fine. He declares&#13;
that all burghers in districts occupied&#13;
by the British, except those who take&#13;
the oatb, will be regarded as prisoners&#13;
of war and transported, and that&#13;
buildings on farms where the enemy&#13;
or his scouts are harbored will be liable&#13;
•to be raited.&#13;
Gen. Dewet has managed to elude&#13;
Gen. Kitchener, in spite of the fact&#13;
that all the British wagons had double&#13;
teams of picked animals. The Boers&#13;
evaded the British by marching at&#13;
night over grounds_known to them,&#13;
"WhlteTheiF pursuers were obliged to&#13;
march in the daytime.&#13;
.It is reported that former President&#13;
Steyn, of the Transvaal, is dead. He&#13;
was suffering a severe wound and was&#13;
endeavoring to reach President Kruger&#13;
when he died.&#13;
A special cable dispatch from Del agoa&#13;
bay says that uccording to Boer&#13;
reports there, Gen. DeWet has turned&#13;
on the British, defeated them and captured&#13;
4,000 men.&#13;
It is reported upon British authority&#13;
that President Kruger wants peace,&#13;
but that his fighting commandants insist&#13;
upon continuing tho war, $&#13;
A considerable portion of Commandant-&#13;
General Louis Botha's camp and&#13;
stores at Dalmanthua was destroyed&#13;
by fire on the 12th.&#13;
Lord Koberts is to be. given the&#13;
position of general-in-ebief to replace&#13;
Gen. Lord Wolseley, who retires in&#13;
October. ——&#13;
According to the 1900 census New&#13;
York has a population of 2,050,000, a&#13;
gain of 535,299 in 10 years.&#13;
Lord Kitchener, after a forced march,&#13;
has relieved Col. Iloare aud the British&#13;
garrison at Elands river.&#13;
The Transvaal capital is now located&#13;
at Barberton.&#13;
B A S E B A L L .&#13;
Indoor gymnastics of the "upside&#13;
down and violent type,"' when Indulged&#13;
in to excess, are said to induce&#13;
various physical ills in after life. In&#13;
the endeavor to develop one specialised&#13;
set of muscles, the harmonious&#13;
balance of the physical forces of the&#13;
body » destroyed. The athlete, with&#13;
the anna, shoulders and chest of a&#13;
Hercules, may have puny legs, an irregular&#13;
heart, or some other form of&#13;
weakness f'What the man of today&#13;
needs most," says a recognised authority&#13;
in the science of physical development,&#13;
"is not athletics, bat plenty&#13;
ef fresh air in his lungs. Instead&#13;
of violent esreroise thai weakens him&#13;
for houss afterward, he needs to learn'&#13;
t o w to breathe right, sand right and :,&#13;
«tt nghv* 7 *&#13;
MAP OF THE COUNTRY BETWEEN TIENTSIN AND PEKIN.&#13;
The Grand HootjacK&#13;
Q&#13;
Brooklyn....&#13;
Pittsburg....&#13;
Philadelphia&#13;
Chicago&#13;
Boston&#13;
Cincinnati.,.&#13;
St. Louis.. .&#13;
New York...&#13;
Chicago&#13;
tadlanapoHs.&#13;
Detroit&#13;
Milwaukee...&#13;
Kansas City.,&#13;
Cleveland....&#13;
Buffalo.&#13;
Minneapolis..&#13;
to the Queen.&#13;
EARL OF ROTHES.&#13;
The Grand Bootjack to the Queen"&#13;
will soon be a guest of fashionable&#13;
society at eastern watering places. In&#13;
spite of his somewhat suggestive title,&#13;
the "grand bootjack" is by no means&#13;
a menial. He is indeed an earl and&#13;
one of the proudest in the peerage of&#13;
Scotland. His own title is Earl of&#13;
Rothes, and his court title is one&#13;
which comes to him by inheritance&#13;
from an ancestor of five centuries ago,&#13;
who was made "bootjack" to his majesty&#13;
of Scotland. The earl is only&#13;
twenty years old. Until he married&#13;
the countess he was very poor, but his&#13;
father-in-law, the famous "Plush Edward,"&#13;
manufacturer of plush, gave&#13;
him enough money to restore the state&#13;
of his ancient house and enable him to&#13;
support his title in style. Earl Rothes&#13;
and the countess are now making a&#13;
tour around the world. »&#13;
CricKf*'* Wane in England.&#13;
Cricket is said to be losing its popularity&#13;
in England. In several of the&#13;
British newspapers this Is discussed&#13;
as an established fact, and it is said to&#13;
be due to somewhat the same reasons&#13;
that have led to the decadence of&#13;
baseball in the United States. Just&#13;
as here professionalism has ruined the&#13;
national game, so the same evil seems&#13;
to have arisen in England. It seems&#13;
that the best cricket clubs are made up&#13;
of professionals and alleged amateurs&#13;
who are really professionals and do&#13;
little else than play the'game and reap&#13;
financial benefit thereby more or less&#13;
surreptitiously.&#13;
Lord Roberts is afraid of about only&#13;
one thing in the world, and that is a&#13;
cat He cannot bear one of these&#13;
animals to come near him.&#13;
TJelow we^ubmit tho official standing of tha&#13;
clubsot the National and American leu^usji up&#13;
to aud including Sunday, August lOtn:&#13;
Won. iiint. P e r o t&#13;
57&#13;
51&#13;
47&#13;
48&#13;
47&#13;
44&#13;
4i&#13;
38&#13;
85&#13;
4a&#13;
46&#13;
48&#13;
48&#13;
51&#13;
50&#13;
51&#13;
.»20&#13;
.5R7&#13;
.505&#13;
.500&#13;
.495&#13;
.46?&#13;
.457&#13;
.40^&#13;
AMEUICAN LKAGU&amp;&#13;
Won. Lost. Por ot.&#13;
6)&#13;
*4&#13;
67&#13;
57&#13;
53&#13;
4B&#13;
45&#13;
43&#13;
41&#13;
4t)&#13;
49&#13;
50&#13;
55&#13;
53&#13;
6i&#13;
CI&#13;
.COO&#13;
.510&#13;
.P3S&#13;
.533&#13;
.4ffT~&#13;
.48*&#13;
.421&#13;
.402&#13;
T H E M A R K E T S .&#13;
LITE 8TOUK.&#13;
New fork— Cattle Sheep Lambs H o n&#13;
Best grades.. .»4 40®5 60 »4 5) w 4 /&#13;
Lower grades. .2 9003 60&#13;
»4 00&#13;
2 50&#13;
.5 sum 00&#13;
.3 eo£-i 75&#13;
«3&#13;
7J&#13;
Chicago—&#13;
Best grades...&#13;
Lower grades.&#13;
D e t r o i t -&#13;
Best grades...&#13;
Lower grades.&#13;
Baffato—&#13;
Best grades....4 40$4 75&#13;
Lower grades..4 WW 40&#13;
Cincinnati—&#13;
Best grades....4 MOB 60&#13;
Lower grades..8 fl0$4 50&#13;
Pittsburgh-&#13;
Beat grades....5 ifiQS 79&#13;
Lower grades..4 I5jg4 90&#13;
4 %&#13;
3 63&#13;
850&#13;
3 0J&#13;
•41ST*&#13;
l *&#13;
4 15&#13;
470&#13;
41» .&#13;
4 6 0&#13;
5 9 0&#13;
4 J6&#13;
ia&#13;
»75&#13;
8 60&#13;
6 50&#13;
»86&#13;
6 «&#13;
( 5 0&#13;
Hogs&#13;
86 e&gt;&#13;
550&#13;
6 40&#13;
5 05&#13;
ft 80&#13;
4 5V&#13;
4 &amp;K&#13;
64V&#13;
6 1 *&#13;
565&#13;
6«0&#13;
New York&#13;
Cliioaftn&#13;
' D e t r o i t •&#13;
Toledo&#13;
Cincinnati&#13;
Pittsburg&#13;
Buffalo&#13;
GRAIN, KTC.&#13;
Wheat, Com,&#13;
No, 2 red No.* mix&#13;
72*73&#13;
7907 %&#13;
75075¾&#13;
7507&amp;&#13;
78078«&#13;
7TOHM&#13;
" O l *&#13;
480&lt;*»&#13;
4204*K&#13;
4 * 3 « *&#13;
No. 2 whit*&#13;
' SOS**&#13;
t a t i y&#13;
84034¼&#13;
*JO*2&#13;
tS®8»|f&#13;
•Detroit—Hay, No. I TlmothyJUJ 09 per tea.&#13;
Potatoes, 400 per bu. Life Poultry, aprlas*&#13;
chickens, 8He per lb; fowto, Set turkeys, 100T&#13;
ducks, 9*&amp; Eggs strictly fresh, )So per do*s»&#13;
Butter, beet dairy. I8e psff lbs oreamery .*to&#13;
f&#13;
•HI;&#13;
-r'''.;'&#13;
&lt; *&#13;
. . v ^ i - * ' - i . . ^ w V ^ * i i&#13;
.'«".&#13;
, mi i '!•'',&#13;
C O M P A R E * EARTKVV V A I - U S 8&#13;
WITH HEAVENLY RICHES.&#13;
heart of tbe world i« o»e great living&#13;
coal; that it is Jutt ilke a snip on Are&#13;
at *$a, the fiajne* not bursting out because&#13;
the hatches are kept down. And&#13;
yet you propose to palm off oit me, In&#13;
return for my soul, ^ world for Which&#13;
misb»r Appretfetloa ot Things BeIS*&gt;&#13;
kN&gt;« U»«t4~*Viie inestlsnnble Vain* of&#13;
» Uunfcta Pool — Christ's Vicarious&#13;
, SesrlAee.&#13;
*&gt;&#13;
.(Copyright, 1300, by l^oula Klopach.)&#13;
From Berlia, where he preached in&#13;
tf&amp;e American church to a great con-&#13;
-gregaiion, comprising many of his&#13;
•country iaso who are traveling through&#13;
Earepej. Dr. TaJmage sends this discourse.&#13;
In which, by original methods,&#13;
he calculate* spiritual values and&#13;
urges high** appreciation ot things religious.&#13;
The text is Mark viil.. 36,&#13;
"What shall It profit a man if he shall&#13;
gain tbo whole world and lose Uts own&#13;
soul?"&#13;
First, I have t o say that the world&#13;
J s a very grand property. Its flowers&#13;
are God's thought in bloom; its rocks&#13;
are God's thoughts in stone; its dewdrops&#13;
are God's thoughts in pearl.&#13;
This world is God's child—« wayward&#13;
child, indeed. It has wandered off&#13;
through the heavens. But about 1,900&#13;
years ago, one Christmas night, God&#13;
3ent out a sister world to call that&#13;
wanderer back, and It hung over Bethlehem&#13;
only long enough to get the&#13;
promise cf t h e wanderer's return, and&#13;
now that l o s t wprld, with soft feet of&#13;
light, comes treading back through the&#13;
heavens. The hills—how beautiful&#13;
they billow up the edge of the wave&#13;
white with the foam of crocuses t How&#13;
beautiful the rainbow, the arched&#13;
bridge on whicl^ heaven and earth&#13;
come and talk to each other in tgrfrs&#13;
after the storm is over! How nimble&#13;
the feet of the lamp-lighters that in a&#13;
few minutes set all the dome of the&#13;
night ablaze with brackets of fire!&#13;
How bright the oar of the saffron&#13;
cloud that rows across the deep sea of&#13;
heaven! How beautiful the spring,&#13;
with bridal blossoms in her hair! I&#13;
wonder who it is that beats time on a&#13;
Juno morning for the bird orchestra?&#13;
How gently the harebell tolls its fragrance&#13;
on the air! There may be grander&#13;
worlds than this, but I think that&#13;
this Is a most exquisite world, a mignonette&#13;
on the bosom of immensity,&#13;
"Oh," you cay, "tako my soul!—Give&#13;
In the first place, you give no title* and crush it;, no waflt can Impede it; w&gt;&#13;
In the second'place, fox which you can [ t i m e can exhaust i t r I t wants' no&#13;
me that world' I am willing to take&#13;
it In exchange. I am ready now for&#13;
the bargain. It is so beautiful a world,&#13;
so sweet a world, so grand a world!"&#13;
The Valete ot the World.&#13;
But let us look more minutely into&#13;
the value of this world. You will not&#13;
buy property unless you can get a good&#13;
title to it. After you have looked at&#13;
the property and found out that it&#13;
suits you, you send an attorney to the&#13;
public office, and he examines the book&#13;
of deeds and book of mortgages and&#13;
the book of judgments and the book&#13;
of liens, and he decides whether the&#13;
title is good before you will have anything&#13;
to do with it. There might be a&#13;
splendid property, and in every way&#13;
exactly suited to your want, but if you&#13;
cannot get a good . title you will not&#13;
take It Now, I am here to say that it is&#13;
impossible to get a good title to this&#13;
world.—if I settle down upon it, in&#13;
the very year I so settle down upon it&#13;
as a permanent possession, I may be&#13;
driven away from it. Aye, in five minutes&#13;
after I give up my soul for the&#13;
world, I may have to part with the&#13;
world, and what kind of a title do you&#13;
call that? There is only one way in&#13;
which I can hold an earthly possession,&#13;
and that is through the senses.&#13;
All beautiful eights through the eye,&#13;
but the eye may be blotted out; all&#13;
captivating sounds through the ear.but&#13;
my ear may be deafened; all lusclousness&#13;
of fruits and viands through my&#13;
taste, but my taste may be destroyed;&#13;
all appreciation of culture and of art&#13;
. through my mind, but I may lose my&#13;
mind. What a frail hold, then, I have&#13;
upon any earthly possession!&#13;
In courts of law, if you want to get a&#13;
man off a property, you must serve&#13;
upon- him a writ of ejectment, giving&#13;
him a certain time to vacate the premises,&#13;
but when death comes to us and&#13;
serves a w r i t of ejectment he does not&#13;
give us one second of forewarning.&#13;
He says: "Off of this place! You have&#13;
nc fight any longer to the possession."&#13;
We might cry out, "I gave you a hundred&#13;
thousand dollars for that property;"&#13;
the plea would be of no avail.&#13;
We might say, "We have a warrantee&#13;
deed for that property," the pica&#13;
would be*of no avail. We might s« r,&#13;
"We have a lien on that storehouse;"&#13;
that would do u s n o good. Death is&#13;
blind, and he cannot see a seal and&#13;
cannot read am Indenture. 8 o that,&#13;
first and l a s t 1 want to tell you that&#13;
when you propose that I give up my&#13;
soul for the world you cannot give me&#13;
the first item of title.&#13;
Question of l u n n a c * ,&#13;
Having examined the title of a property,&#13;
your next question is about insurance.&#13;
You would not be silly&#13;
enough to buy a large warehouse that&#13;
could not possibly be insured. You&#13;
would not have anything to do with&#13;
euch a property. Now, I ask you what&#13;
assurance can you give me that this&#13;
world is not going to be burned up?&#13;
Absolutely none. Geologists tell us&#13;
that it is already on fire; that the&#13;
give no insurance. "Oh," you say,&#13;
"the water of the oceans will wash&#13;
over all the land and put out the fire."&#13;
Oh, no. There are inflammable element*}&#13;
in the water, hydrogen and oxygen.&#13;
Call off the hydrogen, and then&#13;
the Atlantic and Pacific oceans would&#13;
blaze like heap* o f , s h a v i n g s . You&#13;
want me to take this world, for which&#13;
you can £i ve no possible insurance.&#13;
Gaining the World,&#13;
Oh, yes, ho had trouble with it, and&#13;
ao did Napoleon. After conquering nations&#13;
by force o f t h e sword the victor&#13;
lies down to die, his entire possession&#13;
the military boots that he insisted on&#13;
having upon his feet while he was dying.&#13;
So it has been with men who had&#13;
better ambition. Thackeray, one of&#13;
the most genial and lovable souls.after&#13;
he had WQU the applause of all intelligent&#13;
lands through bis wonderful&#13;
genius, sits down in a restaurant in&#13;
Paris, lcoks to the other end of the&#13;
room and wonders whose is that forlorn&#13;
and wretched face. Rising up&#13;
after awhile, he finds that it Is Thackeray&#13;
in the mirror. Oh, yes, this world&#13;
is a cheat. Talk about a man gaining&#13;
the world! Who ever sained half of&#13;
the-world? Who ever owned a hemisphere?&#13;
Who ever gained a continent?&#13;
Who ever owned Asia? Who ever&#13;
gained a city? Talk about gaining the&#13;
world! No man ever gained it, or the&#13;
thousandth part of it. You are demanding&#13;
that I sell my soul, not for&#13;
the world, but for a fragment of it.&#13;
Here is a man who had had a large&#13;
estate for 40 or 50 years. He lies down&#13;
to die. You say, "That man is worth&#13;
millions and millions of dollars:" Is&#13;
he? You call up a surveyor, with his&#13;
compass and chains, and you say,&#13;
"There is a property extending three&#13;
miles in ono direction and three miles&#13;
in another direction." Is that the way&#13;
to measure that man's property? No!&#13;
You &lt;?-&gt; not w a n v a n y surveyor, with&#13;
compass and chains. That is not the&#13;
way to measure that man's property&#13;
now. It is an undertaker you need,&#13;
who will—come and put hio flnger-&#13;
•tand around the- dying couch. With&#13;
one Uap it springs beyond star and&#13;
moon end sun and cha#m* of lrnmea*&#13;
•tty. Jt is superior to all material&#13;
things! No fire can consume it; no&#13;
floods can drown itr no rocks ' can&#13;
his vest pocket and take qut a tapeline,&#13;
and he will measure five feet nine&#13;
inches one way and two and a half&#13;
feet the other way. That is the man's&#13;
property. Oh, no; I forgot; not so&#13;
much as that, for he does not own&#13;
even the place In which he lies in the&#13;
cemetery. The deed to that belongs&#13;
to the executors and heirs. Oh, what&#13;
a property you propose to give me for&#13;
my soul! If you sell a bill of goods,&#13;
you go into the counting room and say&#13;
to your partner: "Do you think that&#13;
man is good for this bill? Can he give&#13;
proper security? Will he meet this&#13;
payment? Now, when you are-offered&#13;
this world as a possession I want you&#13;
to test the matter. I do not want you&#13;
to go into this bargain blindly. I want&#13;
you* to ask about the title, about the&#13;
insurance, about whether men have&#13;
ever had any trouble with it, about&#13;
whether yon ^ n kAf»p it^hour w h H ^ r -&#13;
you can get all or_the ten-thousandth&#13;
or one hundred thousandth part of it.&#13;
There Is the world now. I shall say&#13;
no more about it. Make up your mind&#13;
for yourself, as I shall before God have&#13;
to make up my mind for myself about&#13;
the vali!e of this world. I cannot afford&#13;
to make a mistake for my soul,&#13;
and you cannot afford to make a mistake&#13;
for your soul.&#13;
The Soul Beyond Virtue.&#13;
Now let us look at the other property—&#13;
the soul. We cannot make a&#13;
bargain without seeing the comparative&#13;
value. The soul! How shall I estimate&#13;
the value of it? Well, by its* exquisite&#13;
organization. It is the most&#13;
wonderful piece of mechanism ever&#13;
put together. Machinery is of value in&#13;
proportion as it is mighty and silent&#13;
at the same time. You look at the&#13;
engine and the machinery in the&#13;
Philadelphia mint, a i d as you see it&#13;
performing its wonderful work you&#13;
will be surprised to find how silently&#13;
i t goes. Machinery that roars and&#13;
tears soon destroys itself; but silent&#13;
-machinery is often most effective.&#13;
Now, so it is with the soul of man,&#13;
with all its tremendous faculties, it&#13;
moves in silence. Judgment, without&#13;
any racket, lifting its scales; memory,&#13;
without any noise, bringing down all&#13;
its treasures; .conscience taking its&#13;
judgment seat without any excitement;&#13;
the understanding and the will&#13;
all doing-their work-^veloclty, majesty,&#13;
might, but silence, silence. You&#13;
listen at the door of your heart. You&#13;
can hear no sound. The soul is quiet.&#13;
It is so delicate an instrument that&#13;
no human hand can touch it. You&#13;
break a bone,- and with splinters and&#13;
bands the surgeon sets it; the eye becomes&#13;
Inflamed, the apothecary's wash&#13;
cooTs it; but a soul oft the track, unbalanced,&#13;
no human power can readjust&#13;
it. With one sweep of its wings&#13;
it circles the universe and overvaults&#13;
the throne of God. Why, in&#13;
the. hour of death the soul Is so&#13;
mighty it throws aside the body as&#13;
though i t were a toy. It drives back&#13;
medical skill as impotent. It breaks&#13;
through the circle of loved ones who&#13;
bridge on which to cross * chasm. It&#13;
wants no plummet with which to&#13;
sound a depth'. A soul so mighty, so&#13;
swift, so silent, must be a priceless&#13;
soul.&#13;
I calculate the value of the soul alto&#13;
by kg capacity for happiness. How&#13;
much joy it can get in tWs world out&#13;
of friendship** out of hooka, out of&#13;
clouds, out of the sea, out ot flowers,&#13;
out of ten thousand things, and yet all&#13;
the joy it haa here does not teat its&#13;
capacity. You are in a concert before&#13;
the curtain hoists, and you bear the&#13;
instrument* preparing—the sharp&#13;
snap of the broken string, the scrap*&#13;
.ing of the bow across the viol. "There&#13;
is no music in that," you say. It .is&#13;
only getting ready for the music. And&#13;
aU the enjoyment of the soul in this&#13;
worldMfce enjoyment we.think is real&#13;
enjoyment, is ouly preparative; it is&#13;
only anticipates; it is only the first&#13;
stages of the thing; it is only the entrance,&#13;
the beginning of that which&#13;
shall be the orchestral harmonies and&#13;
splendors of the redeemed.&#13;
Power of the Soul.&#13;
You cannot test the full power ot the&#13;
soul for happiness in this world. How&#13;
much power the soul has here to find&#13;
enjoyment in friendships; but, oh, t&#13;
grander friendships for t£e soul in the&#13;
skies! How sweet the flowers here,&#13;
but how much sweeter they will be&#13;
there! I do not think that when&#13;
flowers die on earth they die forever.&#13;
In the sunny valleys of heaven shall&#13;
not the marigold creep? On the hills&#13;
of heaven will not the amaranth&#13;
bloom? On the amethystine walls of&#13;
heaven will not the jessamine climb?&#13;
"My beloved is come down into his&#13;
garden to gather lilies." No flowers&#13;
in heaven? Where, then, do they gzt&#13;
their garlands for the brows of the&#13;
righteous?&#13;
ChriBt is glorious to our souls now,&#13;
but how much grander our appreciation&#13;
after awhile! A conqueror comes&#13;
back after the battle. He has been&#13;
fighting for us. He comes upon the&#13;
platrorm. He has one arm in a sling,&#13;
and the other arm holds a crutch. As&#13;
he mounts the platform, oh, the enthusiasm&#13;
of the audience! They say,&#13;
"That man fought for us and imperiled&#13;
his life for us," and how wild the&#13;
huzza that follows huzza! When the&#13;
Lord Jesus Christ shall at last stand&#13;
out before the multitudes of the redeemed&#13;
of heaven and we meet him&#13;
face to face and feel that he was&#13;
wounded in the head and wounded in&#13;
the hands and wounded in the feet&#13;
and wounded in the side for us, methinks&#13;
we will be overwhelmed. We&#13;
will sit some time gazing in silence&#13;
until some leader amid the white robed&#13;
choir shall lift the baton of light&#13;
and give the signal that it is time to&#13;
Wake the soig of the jubilee, and all&#13;
hoaven then Will break forth into&#13;
"riosanna, hosanna! Worthy is the&#13;
Lamb that was jrtain."&#13;
- I calculate further t'ue value of the&#13;
soul by the price that has been paid&#13;
for it. In St. Petersburg there is a&#13;
diamond that the government paid&#13;
$200,000 for. "Well," you say, "it&#13;
must have been very valuable or the&#13;
government would not have paid S2C0,-&#13;
000 for it." I want to see what my&#13;
soul is worth and what your soul is&#13;
worth by seeing what has been paid&#13;
for it. For that immortal soul the&#13;
richest blood that was ever shed, the&#13;
deepest groan that was ever uttered,&#13;
all the griefs of earth compressed into&#13;
one tear, all the sufferings of earth&#13;
gathered into one rapier of pain and&#13;
struck through his holy heart. Doe3&#13;
it not imply tremendous value?&#13;
* * * •&#13;
God help you rightly to cipher out"&#13;
this sum in gospel arithmetic: "What&#13;
shall it profit s. man If he shall gain&#13;
the whole world and lose his own&#13;
soul?"&#13;
Ths readers of tbia paper win be pleased ..&#13;
learn thai there U at least one dreaded dlaoaee,&#13;
that eeiedoe has been able to core in all lta&#13;
stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh&#13;
Cure is the only positive cure now known to the&#13;
nWUeal fraternity. Catarrh being a eoustltutloaal&#13;
disease, requires a constitutions} treatment.&#13;
Hall's Catarrh Cure in taken internally,&#13;
acting directly upon she Wood and sftueeua surteees&#13;
of „ the system thereby destroying the&#13;
foundation eQheslseatn. and giving the patient&#13;
strength a ^ holloing up the eonetttatiou and,&#13;
assisting nature In doing Ha worhv The proprietors&#13;
have ao much faith 4n Its curative&#13;
powers that they offer One Bondred Dollars for&#13;
any caso that it fails to cure. Send for list or&#13;
Testimonial* ^. . '. - ^&#13;
Addi^FyjCttBNBY * CO., Toledo, O.&#13;
8oM1» druggists Tto.&#13;
Hall's Family Puis are the heat&#13;
A Volu miaous B1U.&#13;
The most voluminous bill ever before&#13;
congress i3 undoubtedly that providing&#13;
o civil government for the territory&#13;
of Alaska. As filed in the state&#13;
department, it makes 284 pages ef&#13;
printed parchment. For convenience&#13;
in handling the sheets were net fastened&#13;
together in * r m , as is the custom,&#13;
but were divided into six parts&#13;
and each of the six parts was placed&#13;
in a thin wooden box. Five of these&#13;
coverings wire each fastened with the&#13;
traditional red tape, while the sixth,&#13;
Which contained the concluding pages&#13;
of the bin, to which the president affixes&#13;
his signature, was provided with&#13;
a sliding top- so that its contents could&#13;
be easily removed.&#13;
Misery is like a marriageable young&#13;
lady r i t lores company.&#13;
Bast for taw Bowel*&#13;
MO matter what alia you, headache&#13;
t o y s cancer, you will never get well&#13;
until your bowels are put right&#13;
CASCABETS help nature, cure you&#13;
without a gripe or pain, produce easy&#13;
natural movements, cost you just 10&#13;
cents to start getting your health hack.&#13;
CASCARETS Candy Cathartic, the&#13;
genuine, put up In metal boxes, every&#13;
tablet has C. C. C. stamped o a i t B e -&#13;
ware of imitations.&#13;
Weak mmm WW onion&#13;
The beauty of a woman who paints&#13;
isn't even skin deep.&#13;
Ladles Can Wear Shoes.&#13;
One sine smaller after using Allen's Foot-&#13;
Ease, a powder. It makes tight or new&#13;
shoes easy. Cures swo Ion. hot,sweating,&#13;
aching feet, ingrowing nails, corns and&#13;
bunions. All diu rgists and shoo stores,&#13;
25c Trial package FREE by mail. Address&#13;
Allen S. Olmsted, Le Boy, N. Y.&#13;
The man who lives only to amuse himself has&#13;
tbe hardest kind of a task to perform.&#13;
fFlIrTrtS dPaeyr'ma aun»een tolfy CDr.u rKedt.t oVe'»o tHGr*e aotr nNeernrroeu sHMeaMto iawfrte. r BDean.d H t.o Kr . FKRuEsaE, LtSd.,2 .»0310 Atirlcahl 8b1, otrtlheJ laanddel ptrbeiaat,i aPea. .&#13;
Carriage Painters' Putty.&#13;
A hard putty and suitable for carriage&#13;
painters' use is made as follows:&#13;
Boil four pounds of brown umber and&#13;
several pounds of linseed oil for two&#13;
hours; stir in two ounces of beeswax;&#13;
take from the fire and mix in five and&#13;
a half pounds of chalk and eleven&#13;
pounds of white lead. The mixLts&#13;
must be dona very thoroughly.&#13;
Wise men may acquire much knowledge from&#13;
those who have none themselves.&#13;
Wlnslow's Sootfelag Syrup.&#13;
For children teething, softens the ganfc, reduces 1»&#13;
nsmmstlon. silage aattuenrcs wind colic 33cabottle.&#13;
The landlord has an easier joh raising the&#13;
rent than the tennant has.&#13;
Vegtect your hslr and you loee It. PABJCSB** HAIU&#13;
BAULSuArMnu rceonieuwt*s, tthoee gbreoawt tchu arned focro lcoorr.n s, laets.&#13;
If tfcere were no tools in the world wisdom&#13;
tould he at a discount.&#13;
Piso's Cure for Consumption is an infallible&#13;
.^ArUHnfl for rnngha and cold* —K. W. SAVPET.,&#13;
Dcean Grove, N. J., Feb. 17.1900.&#13;
When lucli furnishes the music the dancers&#13;
ire always numerous.&#13;
Some men's nautical experience is confined&#13;
,o hard-ships.&#13;
Baseball players: Golf Players; all players&#13;
chew White's Yueatau whilst playinjf.&#13;
The smaller a man's mind Is the less he seems&#13;
to know it. •&#13;
The regulation price of liberty is $10 for 10&#13;
days.&#13;
ABSOLUTE&#13;
SECURITY,&#13;
Genuine&#13;
Carter's&#13;
Little liver Pills.&#13;
Must Bear Signature ef&#13;
FOR HEADACHE.&#13;
FOR 01ZZ1NESS.&#13;
I0R RIUOOSKS*.&#13;
nm TORPID LIVER.&#13;
FOR CORSTlPATIOi.&#13;
iFMSAUOWtUi,&#13;
FCRTstECOMFUJUW&#13;
CURB SICK HEADACHE.&#13;
U S E THE GENUINE&#13;
^IRRAY&amp;LANMAN^l&#13;
- WATE*&#13;
HANDKERCHIEF&#13;
TOILET a BATH&#13;
ucrusc ALU suesmruTQ&#13;
for sUmmtly mad mm &lt;ta*»&#13;
bmmi gifts fmOm mwmy.&#13;
j Lydsi E. HnkhrVt Ve$dabk Cosspc—i |&#13;
helps women&#13;
roundness of form&#13;
freshness of fmom&#13;
omusm H mmkm them*&#13;
tire fommim organism&#13;
healthy. H carries women&#13;
safely through the&#13;
various natural crises&#13;
and is the safeguard of&#13;
woman's hmmithm&#13;
The truth about thlm&#13;
great medicine is told In&#13;
the letters from women&#13;
being published to this&#13;
paper constantlym&#13;
MONEY FOR&#13;
SOLDIERS' HEIRS lHeae!sr ath oafn U 16n0 iosncr Seeo lbdeiefro*re w hJou nme a2d3.e1 8h7o4m (nesote madaatt oerf twt aasb naontd osnoledd )o, rif nteheed ,a sdhdoituioldn aald hdormesese, tweaidth rfiagth] t psrttculare, HENRY N. COPP. «&lt;&#13;
T H E STANDARD&#13;
SEWIN8&#13;
MACHIRE CO.&#13;
nr\ke CS styles, Indodlnc&#13;
the only two-ln-oneTocar&#13;
and chain stitch machine.&#13;
A so best low priced machines.&#13;
For prices address&#13;
J. B. AlDftlCH, State • * * %&#13;
I&gt;ZTBOIT, MZCH*&#13;
NEBRASKA&#13;
THE LAND&#13;
OF PLENTY&#13;
I wonder why it is that BO many&#13;
men spend their days working hard&#13;
on rented farms, barely making&#13;
enough to get along, with no great&#13;
prospect ahead of owning their&#13;
own homes, when within a few&#13;
hours' journey is a land of pleity&#13;
—Nebraska—where all kjmbol&#13;
grain and fruit can be rai3ed with&#13;
the least amount of labor; where&#13;
cattle and hogs fed on corn bring a&#13;
handsome profit; where the climate&#13;
is healthful and churches and&#13;
schools abound; where land is&#13;
cheap and can be bought on very&#13;
easy terms.&#13;
Think of this, and if you wast&#13;
information about the country send&#13;
to me for "The Cora Belt,* a&#13;
beautifully illustrated monthly&#13;
paper that tells all about Nebraska,&#13;
. d also for "The West Nebraska&#13;
u.azing Country/1 an interesting&#13;
illustrated booklet containing a&#13;
large sectional map of Nebraska.&#13;
On the first and third Tuesdays&#13;
of each month during the balance&#13;
of this year cheap excursion&#13;
tickets will be sold over our road&#13;
to Nebraska, so that people may go&#13;
and see for themselves. • Ask your&#13;
ticket agent about this.&#13;
P. sVttWTftt,&#13;
Stan rasa*aat.&amp;•.*&gt;•&gt;•.*&#13;
W . N . U - - DETROIT—NO.34—1900&#13;
EDUCATIONAL.&#13;
SL MARY'S ACAMMY&#13;
NOTRE DAME, INDIANA&#13;
Conducted by the Sisters ot too Holy&#13;
Cross. Chartered 1855, Thorough English&#13;
and ClassicaJ education. Regular&#13;
Collefiats Degree*.&#13;
In Preparatory Department atadaeta&#13;
carefully prepared for Collegiate oourm&#13;
Physical and Chemical Laboratories -wait&#13;
equipped. Conaerratory of Masts and&#13;
School of Art. Gymnasium, aader direction&#13;
of graduate of Beaton Hormai School&#13;
ot Gymnaetice. Catalogue free. The 46A*&#13;
year opens Sept. 4,-4900.. Address,&#13;
DIRECTRESS OP TIE ACADEMY.&#13;
S t Msryg Acadtsiy. • Notra&#13;
B O O K L E T S F R E E ,&#13;
i -St C MAMlRfc S : X BENNE P L l T&#13;
r . i '• • :{ i* » \ i&#13;
( . • &lt; &gt; [ &gt; . . 1 i • : M • .»&#13;
A . MA'UI.&#13;
*$$£;•&#13;
# ( ¾ •'&#13;
'',k''&#13;
? . • &gt; . * ' . • • •&#13;
*a?:-&#13;
m&#13;
^-&#13;
m-&#13;
I&#13;
»v,&#13;
&amp;&#13;
*"&#13;
••*!' V " * . ' • . . ' * , • • ' . ' ' • &lt; • - : . - . • ' • • • &gt; ? , • s ' ' ' , ' ' • • " ( , : ' • • • . " ^ • , , , - . • • i - '. • : - . , • « • • * • i ; ' i t • ' . tv. •,&#13;
v . . , ^ ••'*••• i- • • ' " • r&#13;
** * ^ TS2&#13;
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'f'^'i '.'•&#13;
TEA' PURE AND FRAGRANT&#13;
SOLO IN SEALED PACKAGES ONLY&#13;
"IT OOSTS HO BORE-TRY iT"&#13;
HAMBURG.&#13;
Mrs. Roy Crossman is visiting&#13;
relatives in Chicago.&#13;
Jessie Featheriy i s spending&#13;
the week with relatives in Toledo.&#13;
Carl Geiresbrook of the MAC&#13;
is visiting with his sister Mrs. A.&#13;
B. Greer of this village.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Jas. Hayner are&#13;
visiting this week with friends and&#13;
relatives in Howell and Webberville.&#13;
News is a scarce article this&#13;
week everybody seems to be staying&#13;
quietly at home with nothing&#13;
to do.&#13;
Fred Leece an old and well&#13;
known resident of this place passed&#13;
t o the world beyond at his&#13;
home near this village on Tuesday&#13;
of last week. The funeral services&#13;
were conducted by Rev. Stone at&#13;
the deceased home on Friday&#13;
morning. He leaves three daughters&#13;
two sou3 and a widow t o&#13;
mourn his loss.&#13;
PETTYSVILLE.&#13;
John Bennet and Robt. Mercer&#13;
were in Dexter Monday.&#13;
Mrs. Wm. Hooker visited her&#13;
daughter near Dexter Monday,&#13;
Will Chubb and family of Marion&#13;
visited at M. Melvin's Sunday.&#13;
Florence Cook of Brighton is&#13;
visiting her friend Beth Swarthout&#13;
Miss Ella Mercer is entertaining&#13;
her friend Miss Benjaman of&#13;
Toledo this week.&#13;
Steve VanHorn and wife B.&#13;
McCluskey went on the excursion&#13;
to the MAC last Saturday.&#13;
Miss Hattie Harrington of Dakota&#13;
and Ethel Decker of Jackson&#13;
spent the past two weeks at H. H.&#13;
Swarthout's.&#13;
A small cyclone visited this vicinity&#13;
Sunday morning doing a&#13;
considerable damage to trees,&#13;
fences and corn fields.&#13;
PARSHALLVILLE.&#13;
B. F. Andrews has erected a&#13;
windmill on his farm west of town.&#13;
Ed. Dean and wife of Owosso&#13;
are guests of relatives and old&#13;
friends here.&#13;
F. L. Andrews of Pinokney&#13;
spent part of the past week with&#13;
his parents here.&#13;
Miss Hattie Smith of Cleveland&#13;
is visiting her mother, Mrs. 0 . M&#13;
Smith of this place.&#13;
M. G. Andrews and wife of&#13;
Owosso are spending a week or&#13;
twp with their parents here.&#13;
Grandma Hetchler died at her&#13;
home west of town Thursday last&#13;
funeral Saturday from the residence.&#13;
Ed. Cornell is selling off his&#13;
farm property preparing to go the&#13;
first of Sept. co Reed City where&#13;
he will work on a farm by the&#13;
year. The citizens will miss E d .&#13;
and his' wife.&#13;
Another heavy rain storm visited&#13;
this place Sunday afternoon the&#13;
fell in torrents. Considerable&#13;
damage was done to crops, etc.&#13;
and the dam at the Peter Canier&#13;
, Mike Roche visited "friends"&#13;
west of Gregory Sunday,&#13;
Mise Olive Brearly of Gregory&#13;
visited at Birnie's one night last&#13;
week. ;&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. D . B. Smith enter&#13;
saw mill broke away. The dam&#13;
will never be re-built.&#13;
On Tuesday evening of last&#13;
week this place was visited by one&#13;
of the most disasterous rain, hail,&#13;
and wind storms that has been&#13;
known for years. Corn and beans&#13;
are almost ruined in many places&#13;
being beaten to the ground and&#13;
shredded by the large hail stones&#13;
which were as large as hen's eggs.&#13;
In many houses west of the village&#13;
nearly every window on the&#13;
noith side of the building were&#13;
broken and a large barn belonging&#13;
to Geo. Payne was utterly destroyed&#13;
as was his windmill and&#13;
another barn unroofed.. The rain&#13;
fell in torrents almost amounting&#13;
to a cloud-burst. The damaSe t o&#13;
farms and farm property will amount&#13;
to thousands of dollars.&#13;
one day last week.&#13;
Several from this place took in&#13;
the excursion to Lansing, Saturday,&#13;
from Howell.&#13;
Mrs. Frank Smith spent a few&#13;
days last week visiting her brother&#13;
Geo. White at Hamburg.&#13;
Mrs. Hattie Stephenson has&#13;
been spending a couple of weeks&#13;
at Chelsea and North Lake.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Darius Fangborn,&#13;
of Chilson, spent Sunday with his&#13;
brother Isaac in this place.&#13;
The Misses Lela Coleman and&#13;
Mary Chapman, of Lansing, are&#13;
visiting relatives in this vioinity.&#13;
The Sprout cemetery looks a&#13;
great deal better having undergone&#13;
a general cleaning out this&#13;
week.&#13;
E. M. Jeffrey i s building an&#13;
awning over the driveway at the&#13;
elevator, which is a great improvement.&#13;
Sanford Reason of Pinckney&#13;
was in this place in the interest&#13;
of the Monroe Nursery the first&#13;
of the week.&#13;
D. B. Smith is entertaining his&#13;
sister Mary from Tuscola County.&#13;
Sne brought her little daughter to&#13;
be treated by Dr. Sigler.&#13;
Mrs. E. J. Durkee and son,&#13;
Thany visited R o y Teeple and&#13;
family and Mrs. E. W. Martin a t&#13;
Maggie Thatoher and son Craig&#13;
from Dallas Texas are spending a&#13;
few days with her sister Mrs.&#13;
Horace Palmer.&#13;
Louis Barnes and Miss Anna&#13;
Gibney from Detroit spent the&#13;
tained friends from Newark N. J . j f i w t o f t h e week with her mother&#13;
EAST PUTNAM.&#13;
Fred Fish and Mayme were in&#13;
Howell last Friday.&#13;
Born to Chas. Brown and wife,&#13;
Monday Aug. 20, another son.&#13;
Mrs. G. W. Brown and daughter&#13;
Kate visited in Chelsea over&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Mrs G. W. Nichols and family&#13;
of Stockbridge spent Sunday in&#13;
East Putnam.&#13;
Frank Hall and mother attended&#13;
the funeral of Geo. Leece at&#13;
Hamburg Friday last.&#13;
Mrs. Harriet Brown who has&#13;
been visiting relatives i n Stockbridge&#13;
for a couple of weeks returned&#13;
home Saturday.&#13;
Misses Nettie Hall and Clella&#13;
Fish who have been in Howell the&#13;
past two weeks attending the&#13;
teachers institute returned home&#13;
Friday. ' ' ' . ' '&#13;
The C. E . society of this place&#13;
will hold a lawn social at the home&#13;
of Mrs. J. B. Hall Friday evening&#13;
Aug. 2 4 A literary program J»a*&#13;
been prepared and ice cwmo. yrill&#13;
be served and all l o r ten cents.&#13;
Everybody invited&#13;
ml&#13;
ANDERSON.&#13;
The social at V. G. Dinkle's last&#13;
week was well attended.&#13;
Miss Elva Wellman is a guest&#13;
of her eister Bertha at Lansing.&#13;
Willie Holmes, of Lansing, is a&#13;
guest of his cousin Robbie Hoff.&#13;
Nearly everybody took in the&#13;
picnic at Jackson's grove Thursday.&#13;
Fred and Ethel Durkee visited&#13;
heir brother Floyd in Iosco Sunday.&#13;
Rev. Whitfield and wife, of&#13;
Unadilla, visited at John Birnie's&#13;
Friday.&#13;
Fred Merril and son Alger, of&#13;
Iosco, were in this place the first&#13;
of the week.&#13;
E. M. Jeffrey and family, Frank&#13;
Haynes and family are camping&#13;
at Cook's lake.&#13;
Frank Marshall, of Stockbridge&#13;
is working at the elevator in Alton&#13;
Jefireys place.&#13;
Mrs. Emma Hartsuff, of Waterloo,&#13;
spent Sunday with her parents&#13;
in this place.&#13;
A. J. May, of Lyndon, spent&#13;
Saturday night at the h ome of his&#13;
aunt, Mrs. J. E. Durkee.&#13;
W. H. PJnewway, wife and son&#13;
J&amp;very Wednesday until October%ji B ray" t*on«,' *—»o l Ea. s.t * , P. ,u tnam,&#13;
Stark tajiei ltenv, Button and first}***0* Satttrday with his brother&#13;
oka ft****M fcttckBey. He alwlSam* Brayton remained for a&#13;
jmjfc*^1n»w*V photos for $1. ]twTday's yisit&#13;
Portage Lake Wednesday.&#13;
Eugene Smith and family visited&#13;
Mrs. Smith's sister, Mrs. Sam&#13;
Williams, near WilliamBton the&#13;
last of last week. While there&#13;
they took in the excursion to&#13;
Lansing.&#13;
The remains of a two year and&#13;
eight months old child of Mrs.&#13;
Albert Plummer who was visiting&#13;
in Detroit, was brought to this&#13;
place Thursday. Services were&#13;
held at the home of Mrs. Linford&#13;
Whited, Rov. Simpson officiating.&#13;
Cause of death, spinal meningitis.&#13;
UNADILLA.&#13;
Holdon DuBois has moved&#13;
from Leslie here.&#13;
Josie Douglas returned to her&#13;
home in Ionia Monday.&#13;
Gertrude Mills is home from&#13;
Chelsea for a few days.&#13;
Homer Ives from Chelsea visited&#13;
his old place here Friday.&#13;
Gertrude Webb of Gregory visited&#13;
her parents here Tuesday.&#13;
Emmet Barton from Chelsea&#13;
visited nis parents her Sunday.&#13;
Will Clark from Stockbridge&#13;
visited at R. Barnam's Tuesday.&#13;
Wirt Ives from Chelsea spent&#13;
last week on his farm near here.&#13;
Eleanor Bird from Stockbridge&#13;
called on friends in this place last&#13;
Friday.&#13;
Gertrude Mills spent the first&#13;
of the week with friends in Jackson.&#13;
&lt;•'&#13;
A. C. Watson was i n Detroit on&#13;
business last Wednesday and&#13;
Thursday.&#13;
L. M. Harris attended the farmers&#13;
picnic at Pleasant Lake last&#13;
Thursday.&#13;
Lightning struck Will Seles's&#13;
barn last Sunday but did not d o&#13;
much damage. -&#13;
Quite a number fron this place&#13;
attended the Catholic picnic at&#13;
Pinokney last Thursday.&#13;
Louis Barnes Miss Anna and&#13;
Jtilia Gibney visited James Gibney&#13;
of Williamsville Sunday.&#13;
Remember the ice cream social&#13;
at £ . .A. HartsufTs Friday evening&#13;
for t h e benefit of t h e Sunday&#13;
School.&#13;
and brother here,&#13;
A. ¢ , Watson and wife accompanied&#13;
by J. I). Coulton andVife&#13;
and John Watson and wife of&#13;
Chelsea are spending a few days&#13;
at Bay View they went by water&#13;
from Detroit.&#13;
r Old Mrs. Anderson died at her&#13;
home in this place Friday Aug. 17.&#13;
Tlie funeral services were held at&#13;
the house Sunday afternoon Rev.&#13;
Palmer officiating. S h e was born&#13;
in Canac]a in 1796 and probably&#13;
was the oldest woman i n the&#13;
state. S h e was the mother of 13&#13;
children 8 of whom are living, six&#13;
in Mich, and two in Canada.&#13;
Subscribe for the Dispatch.&#13;
MORE LOCAL.&#13;
Miss Minnie Monks is on tbe sick&#13;
list this week.&#13;
Mrs. L. Kennedy is somewhat better&#13;
from her late illness',&#13;
•John Sigler of Leslie visited relatives&#13;
in town tbe past week.&#13;
Miss Ethel and Ross Head are visiting&#13;
relatives in Grand ftaplds.&#13;
F. A. Sigler was in Detroit this&#13;
week looking after holiday goods.&#13;
Lawerance Copeland, of Fowlerville&#13;
called on friends here the first of the&#13;
week,&#13;
Tbe Ladies of Pinckney are enjoying&#13;
a day at Zakey lake to day(Thurs-&#13;
"day^ — - -&#13;
Mrs. Wolfer is staying &amp; few weeks&#13;
at tbe home of her daughter, Mrs. J.&#13;
A. Gad well.&#13;
Mrs. Bert Pierce, of Cbesaning, is&#13;
visiting her parents and other relatives&#13;
at this place.&#13;
H. 6 . Briggs and wife were in&#13;
Brighton Monday to visit a brotherin-&#13;
law who is very ill.&#13;
Mr. Ort and wife returned to this&#13;
place Tuesday, after several week's&#13;
visit in Stockbridge an vicinity.&#13;
The several young ladies who sold&#13;
tickets en the picture, picnic day were&#13;
entertained by a days outing at Silver&#13;
Lake by Rev. Fr. Coraerford, Tuesday.&#13;
The Prohibition State Convention&#13;
will jaeet at Lansing in tbe Central&#13;
M. £ . church, August 28 and 29.&#13;
"The railroads grant an open excursion&#13;
rate of one fare for round trip&#13;
from all points in Michigan, Entertainment&#13;
is furnished in private j&#13;
homes at 50c for lodging and breakfast&#13;
Dinners and suppers at the church&#13;
at 25c each, furnished by the ladies of&#13;
the M. E. church. No one need patro-j&#13;
niz« a whiskey hotel at this convention."&#13;
2E5&#13;
Evet^an* it sighing for t i e oaoler&#13;
days or Autumn; tfcete hot August&#13;
days ift not enpreciatea' vary much.&#13;
Earl and Etfred Cobb who bate&#13;
fceen spending tb« summer with their&#13;
grandparents Mr. and Mrs. John&#13;
Mortenson returned home Monday.&#13;
Tbe MAL mail from tbe West was&#13;
delayed a short time Monday evening&#13;
owing to Mveral trees having been&#13;
blown across the track at Booths crossing.&#13;
A. Yonker moved hit family to Ypsilanti,&#13;
last week where he has secured'&#13;
a position. Mr.,Nixon and wife' will&#13;
occupy the house which they vacated&#13;
at Portage.&#13;
Sunday at 2 p. m., while the sun&#13;
was shinmog brightly the people of&#13;
this place were stratied by a severe&#13;
clap of thunder, and on investigation&#13;
it was found, that the large oak tree in&#13;
front of M. Dolan's residence had&#13;
been struck by lightning.&#13;
Several severe storms passed*&#13;
through this connty and vicinity Sanday,&#13;
early in the morning the wind&#13;
blew at such a rate as to damage&#13;
trees, corn, outbuildings chimneys, etc&#13;
in the vicinity of Petty*ville and Cordley&#13;
lake. In the afternoon a storm&#13;
strnck Howell unroofing several busi&#13;
ness places on Grand River street, uprooting&#13;
large shade trees thereby doing&#13;
several thousand dollars worth of&#13;
damage.&#13;
Over in Washtenaw connty only 14&#13;
teachers out of 45 passed. Outsiders&#13;
thought it strange that old teachers&#13;
failed but a reporter inquired into the&#13;
matter found the questions in civil&#13;
government, U. S. history and geography&#13;
were more ot the nature of newspaper&#13;
politics, and that tbe answer to&#13;
many of them could .not be found in&#13;
any history or text-book ever publisbedfor&#13;
school—ose.—Hew did Livingston&#13;
connty teachers fare? As the&#13;
questions are the same all over tbe&#13;
state. The only way out of this difficulty&#13;
is that the right of franchise must&#13;
be given to the ''School Marm," then&#13;
she must enter the polioital race so&#13;
as to be posted on politics. She will&#13;
then be all right providing she knows&#13;
when to change her politics so as t o&#13;
have tbe right pull at headquarters.&#13;
Business Louie.&#13;
Ellis saves fou money&#13;
prise. t'f-iat&#13;
the SUFAnn&#13;
Arfcur B* R. Inuial Excursion t e&#13;
Petoakey, Bay TIew, Traverse City,&#13;
, Frankfort anal Crystal Lake&#13;
On Tuesday Sept. 4 the Ann Arbor&#13;
R. R. will give its annual cheap excursion&#13;
to tbe above resorts. Special&#13;
train will run through without change&#13;
of cars leaving Hamburg at 12:56 p.&#13;
m. Fare for ronnd trip $5.00. Tickets&#13;
good for return, until Saturday&#13;
Sept 15 inclusive. September is tbe&#13;
nicest month in tbe year to trayel and&#13;
the Ann Arbor R. R. is the shortest&#13;
and quickest route to the point named&#13;
above.&#13;
This store closes Friday afternoons&#13;
12:30 until S e p t . 7th. b- H. FIELD&#13;
POP Next F e w Days.&#13;
A lot of Remnants, 2 to 3 yard lengths, of 72-inch Half-&#13;
Bleached Damask Table Linens at 4 0 c .&#13;
The new things in B L A C K D R E S S G O O D S&#13;
are now in and open. Ail these we bought of M a n u f a c t u r e s&#13;
and I m p o r t e r * when prices were 10 to 15 per cent lower than we&#13;
could buy today. O u r B e n e f i t on this S h a l l b e Yourft, asTinT&#13;
this way only do we keep the Bee Hive busy.&#13;
10,000 yards choice styles 12)c Seersucker Ginghams now on&#13;
sale at 8c.&#13;
81x90 inch Dwight Anchor Bleached Sheets for a few days&#13;
at 6 9 c * A good hint to housekeepers.&#13;
Here's a bit of news&#13;
for you: Elks'Day and,&#13;
Labor Day come together,&#13;
this year—Sept 8rd&#13;
They tell us there's going&#13;
to be a big time in the city.&#13;
L. H. FIELD. Jackson, Mich.&#13;
• VV&#13;
.-. i ••','•&#13;
•'•?--".'ir&#13;
•:'. .••'.• J 'iV,.&#13;
&gt; •&#13;
rC *•'. :" *..&#13;
•*t»r^f*."it*«p*l. • V * * ! . ^ * ' " ' v r T T l W f " e f t f / " * ! •*'</text>
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              <text>Use the Windows Snipping Tool to capture the area of the document you want to save. If you want multiple pages printed please see staff to print the pages you want. &lt;a href="https://howelllibrary.org/technology/#print" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View the library's printing information.&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch August 23, 1900</text>
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                <text>August 23, 1900 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>1900-08-23</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="6634">
                <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, XVIII. PINOKNBY, LIVINGSTON 00,, MIOH., THURSDAY, AUGUST 3?. 1900. No. 86&#13;
LOCAL N E W S .&#13;
. . . . . . •«.'&#13;
LoTeaxo Far nam of Detroit is visiting&#13;
bit mother bars.&#13;
' A l l Boa ds lead to Pinckney tomor&#13;
»0 w Whitney's show.&#13;
Orla Glenn spent the put week&#13;
with relatives in Chelsea and Waterloo.&#13;
Several from this vicinity attsnded&#13;
the pioneer picnic at Howell Saturday&#13;
kst.&#13;
pan Schiller and family of Jackson&#13;
are visiting his brother A. J. Schnler,&#13;
near hero.&#13;
Franeis MeKeever of Sheldon Iowa,&#13;
is the guest of bis grandmother, Mrs.&#13;
John Kearney.&#13;
Miss Mae Maloy of Jackson spent&#13;
the past week with Miss Ma me Sigler&#13;
and other friends here.&#13;
. Daring the heavy rains of the past&#13;
two weeks many acres oi land changed&#13;
hands—washed from one farm to an-,&#13;
other.&#13;
An evening's walk about town will&#13;
convince yon that while all men are&#13;
not homeless some men are home less&#13;
than others. '&#13;
S. T. "Grimes of Howell spent the&#13;
past week with bis parents here. He&#13;
is having his annual vacation also&#13;
the hay fever.&#13;
Ghas. L. Grimes of t*u9 place and&#13;
Mrs. Emma Peden of Richmond, lad.,&#13;
were married recently and are now at&#13;
home in this village.&#13;
»&#13;
Coming Events.&#13;
Whitney's show Friday, Aug. 31.&#13;
Labor Day, Sept 3.&#13;
Howell street Fair, Sept. 25-28.&#13;
Milford-Fair Sept. 25-28.&#13;
Stock bridge Fair, Oct 9-11.&#13;
General election November 6.&#13;
State Sanitary Convention, Durand,&#13;
Sept. 6, 7.&#13;
Misi Lizzie Fitzsimons of Jackson,)&#13;
who has been spending a couple of&#13;
weeks with her mother here, returned&#13;
home Saturday.&#13;
A card from Rev. C. W. Bice, locates&#13;
him at Yellow Springs where he&#13;
is spending bis vacation. We will&#13;
give notice of his-return.&#13;
The small boy (and some larger&#13;
ones) have been saving their pennies&#13;
the past week to take in the Whitney&#13;
show Friday afternoon and evening,&#13;
Aug. 31. Admission 25 and 15 cents.&#13;
On Thursday last the transfer was&#13;
mads which gave Harvey Harrington&#13;
the right and title to the "Isham&#13;
liouse" in this village. Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. H. will soon become residents of&#13;
this pretty village and we welcome&#13;
them.&#13;
The ball games at the Fowlerville&#13;
fair will be a big attraction this year.&#13;
Webberviile and Stockbridge play on&#13;
Wednesday, Brighton and Iosco on&#13;
Thursday and the winniag teams on&#13;
Friday. A purse of $200 is to be&#13;
divided among the four teams.&#13;
A number of boys are making a&#13;
habit of jumping on ncoving trains at&#13;
the depot. The parents of :be boys&#13;
need not be astonished when they receive&#13;
tie news that their Johnny or&#13;
Edward have bad a leg or arm cut off&#13;
or entirely cut in in two. The railroad&#13;
company will not be to blame for&#13;
these accidents.&#13;
The Brighton team have evidently&#13;
taken a drop. They were defeated in&#13;
the game with ioscn at Pinckney last&#13;
Thursday by a score of 16 to 4. The&#13;
only reason we can give for their being&#13;
defeated is that they were outplayed&#13;
by those farmers. The features&#13;
of the game and the star plays&#13;
were not done by the Brigbtons that&#13;
day. In another game the order&#13;
might be reversed.—Brighton Argus.&#13;
Last week of vacation.&#13;
Monday next is Labor Day.&#13;
School begins next Tuesday.&#13;
Edward Bowers has gone to Petoskey&#13;
for a week or two.&#13;
S. Wallace of Howell was in town&#13;
on business the first of the week.&#13;
Leah Thompson, who has been&#13;
spending a couple* of weeks visiting&#13;
in Jackson returned home Monday.&#13;
Mrs. Mont Nolan and Florence&#13;
Dolan of Saginaw, are visiting their&#13;
parents M. Dolan and wife of this&#13;
place.&#13;
A Successful Operation.&#13;
TEEPLE &amp; CADWELL&#13;
General Hardware,&#13;
Have as complete an assortment of heavy and shelt hardware&#13;
as can be found in the countyv and 1900 finds us&#13;
more thoroughly equipped than ever before.&#13;
Builders Hardware a Specialty.&#13;
Doors and Common Sash always in stock.&#13;
Complete line of Buggies, Wagons and&#13;
Heatmg Stoves- Ranges,&#13;
Wood and Coal.&#13;
Wood Stoves&#13;
o Do not let those&#13;
Magazines So to&#13;
w a s t e ,&#13;
| G e t ' e m bound at the Dispatch Bindery.&#13;
: ! •&#13;
oo* Work.&#13;
««»oaabl« |t«U«* Pinckney • •&#13;
Mrs. Wm. Cruzon of west Millbrook,&#13;
Tuscola Co, brought her little&#13;
daughter to Dr. Sigler's one day last&#13;
week for treatment for inflamation of&#13;
the toot. An examination was made&#13;
with the X ray machine and a foreign&#13;
body was discovered buried deeply in&#13;
the foot; an operation was performed&#13;
and a piece of glass £ inch long removed.&#13;
This bad been in the foot for&#13;
two years and of late her general&#13;
health had suffered from absorption of&#13;
the poison caused by this irritation.&#13;
She if* making rapid improvement&#13;
now. %&#13;
- . • • • . -&#13;
Pinckney Union School.&#13;
The Pinckney Union School will be&#13;
opened Tuesday Sept 4, tnder the&#13;
most favorable conditions for a successful!&#13;
School year. The Board have&#13;
been to considerable expense to make&#13;
the school building equal to any found&#13;
in the state. A competent corps of&#13;
teachers has been secured which h a&#13;
guarantee that the well earned reputation&#13;
of the Pinckney Public&#13;
Sebools will be fully maintained and&#13;
that the advantage offered to local and&#13;
foreign pupils are equal to those of&#13;
any of the schools of the State.&#13;
Foreign pupils are cordially invited&#13;
to take advantage of the favorable&#13;
conditions which our school affords&#13;
for obtaining an education.&#13;
Our school is on tbe accepted list of&#13;
the State Normal which is qnite an&#13;
advantage to those who wish to receive&#13;
a higher education. By finishing&#13;
the course here and taking two&#13;
years work at the Normal, one may&#13;
secure a life certificate.&#13;
The following corps ot teachers has&#13;
been secured for the ensuing year: '•&#13;
Principle—Prof. Stephen Durfee.&#13;
Grammer—Chas. Js» Grimes.&#13;
Intermediate—Mrs. Edith Green.&#13;
Primary—Miss Jessie Green.&#13;
D. W. jjurta, Director.&#13;
OBITUABY.&#13;
Bernard Glenn is visiting relatives&#13;
in Detroit. ,&#13;
The W bltney's show are advertised&#13;
(or this place for tomorrow (Friday)&#13;
afternoon and evening. This show&#13;
has become so popnlor that it is hardly&#13;
necessary to morr than announce&#13;
it to secure a crowd. They are advertising&#13;
several new and special features&#13;
which will be worth seeing.&#13;
Free entertainment and band concert&#13;
at 1:30 and 7:30.&#13;
"Can you tell me what kind of weather&#13;
we may expect next month?''&#13;
wrote a subscriber to the editor, says&#13;
an echange, and the editor replied as&#13;
follows: "It is my belief that the weather&#13;
next month will be very much&#13;
tike your subscription." The inquirer&#13;
wondered for an hour what the&#13;
editor was driving at, when be happened&#13;
to think of the word "unsettled."&#13;
He sent in the required amount&#13;
next day. Do you see tbe&#13;
point?&#13;
We will deliver Hour&#13;
direct to ths people&#13;
at&#13;
•&#13;
50 cents for a 25-pound sack&#13;
95 cents for a 50-pound sack&#13;
$3.80 for a barrel.&#13;
10 pounds Graham 15 cents.&#13;
10 lbs. granulated meal lOcts&#13;
' • -&#13;
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Take&#13;
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A n d g e t t h o s e L e t t e r - h e a d s ,&#13;
B i l l - h e a d s , S t a t e m e n t s , E n v e -&#13;
l o p e s , a n d B u s i n e s s - c a r d s&#13;
p r i n t e d n o w . D o n ' t w a i t u n t i l&#13;
t h e l a s t o n e is gone b e f o r e&#13;
o r d e r i n g .&#13;
E v e r y o n e , w h e t h e r h e b e&#13;
B u s i n e s s m a n , M e c h a n i c , or&#13;
F a r m e r , i f h e w i s h e s t o b e up&#13;
t o d a t e , s h o u l d h a v e t h e i r r e -&#13;
t u r n a d d r e s s p r i n t e d on t h e i r&#13;
E n y e l o p e s r&#13;
Sec us for prices&#13;
$&#13;
D I S P A T C H O F F I C E ,&#13;
Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
It's Surprising&#13;
• • • • • • • • • « • • • • # • • • • » • » • •&#13;
•it&#13;
N. N. Whitcomb was born in Vernon&#13;
Shiawassee Co. Mich., April 21,&#13;
1839 and died in East Putnam Aug.&#13;
24,1900, aged 61 years 4 months and&#13;
3 days. He came with his parents to&#13;
this place when a young man where&#13;
be- grew to manhcod, loved and&#13;
respected by all. He was married to&#13;
Miss Martha Nye, March 12, 1863,&#13;
having lived together 39 years which&#13;
were years of happiness. One child&#13;
was W n to them which died in&#13;
childhood. He now leaves the beloved&#13;
companion to walk alone in her&#13;
journey of life with many relatives,&#13;
friends and neighbors who mourn&#13;
their loss.&#13;
Mr. Whitcomb was a member of&#13;
the Masons alao the Maccabees in&#13;
which order he carried a $2,000 policy.&#13;
The funeral services were held from&#13;
tbe home on Sunday afternoon and&#13;
the large crowd present spoke of tbe&#13;
respect they had for (heir departed&#13;
neighbor.&#13;
Cartetjftftfbt.&#13;
* 1 desire tbrougi;itfc« columns of tbe&#13;
1)ISFITCH to tht4ji&gt;;i*e many friends,&#13;
who so kino% aejft&amp;L in th* last skanets&#13;
and luriai ^ f my ntob**&amp;&#13;
thsir kindne#*wil^never be lorgot^&#13;
ten. . ; Mr* &amp; &amp; WbU&lt;J!*%&#13;
• _ ! \ "» - v &gt; ,*• -'' - -.'it'' •"-&#13;
• » , - ^ - ^ - - - • • * •&#13;
How cheaply we sell our proprietary&#13;
medicines. Any of&#13;
the standard remedies thai&#13;
you may want you will &amp;l4&#13;
can be bought cheaper than&#13;
of any other druggist.&#13;
•M-i fit&#13;
- ss&#13;
; -'&lt;*&#13;
&amp;.'&#13;
O u r Patent Medicines&#13;
«&#13;
are always fresh. We never&#13;
allow stock to stand around&#13;
for years. We sell the best,&#13;
and for the least money.&#13;
F. A. SIGLER.&#13;
• .Y9&#13;
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Txiv* L. ANDREW*, f^blUhetw&#13;
PWCKHEY,&#13;
'gsaqgatga&amp;ai : HIM, ' i ., i m&#13;
Nonunion painters painted the j u t e&#13;
fair buildings a t Syracuse. The unions&#13;
threaten to boycott the fair, and'offer&#13;
a t t h e * only plan of settlement that&#13;
the painting be dpne over again by&#13;
unto* painters.&#13;
rALMAGE'S SEBMON.&#13;
6PBAK8 ON GLORIOUS HERITAGE&#13;
OF C O D ' S CHILDREN.&#13;
rhoagbta 8ocf««tod by His Coata«t&#13;
With the Imperial Splendor* of £«mtftma&#13;
Cayltato—ChrUtiiuui Jfcemben&#13;
«t th* Royal Jlouae of deio*&#13;
A new spelling book will be used in&#13;
Cincinnati in" which there are some&#13;
change* in the spelling of words.&#13;
Among them are "thru" for through,&#13;
"altho" for although, and "catalog" for&#13;
catalogue,&#13;
walk be around this earth. All these&#13;
valleys, the harvests that wave in&#13;
them and the cattle that pasture them&#13;
—all these mountains and the precious&#13;
things hidden beneath them and the&#13;
'crown, of glacier they cast at the feet&#13;
of the Alpine hurricane—all these&#13;
lakes, these islands, these continents,&#13;
a r t oars. In the second walk go&#13;
among the street lamps of heaven and&#13;
see stretching off on every side a wilderness&#13;
of worlds. For us they shine.&#13;
For us they aang at a Savior's nativity.&#13;
For us they will wheel into line&#13;
and with their flaming torches add to&#13;
(Copyright, 1W0. by Lout* Klop»ch.)&#13;
In thia discourse Dr. Talmage, who&#13;
luring his Journey homeward has seen&#13;
orach of royal and Imperial apleadors the splendor of our triumph on the&#13;
Competent authorities assert that&#13;
South America has greater undeveloped&#13;
resources than any other portion&#13;
of. the world. Any crop grown elsewhere&#13;
can be duplicated there, and the&#13;
country abounds in mines of coal, silver&#13;
and gold, most of which have been&#13;
only slightly developed.&#13;
Some Idea of the magnitude of the&#13;
electric lighting machinery in this&#13;
country may be obtained from the&#13;
statement that the public lighting stations&#13;
of New York city alone supply&#13;
incandescent lamps each year to the&#13;
number of 2,125,000. This is independent&#13;
of those furnished by private&#13;
plants.&#13;
Literary Paris is greatly agitated&#13;
over the difficulty of deciding which is&#13;
the genuin6 copy of "L'Ami du Peup&#13;
W which was stained with the blcod&#13;
of Marat when the revolutionist met&#13;
his death at the hands of Charlotte&#13;
Cord ay. So far seven copies have&#13;
turned up, all solemnly accredited and&#13;
all bearing &lt;\IQ blood slain.&#13;
The will of M. Alphouse Milne Edwards&#13;
bequeaths his valuable scientific&#13;
library to the Jardin des P l a n t s , In&#13;
Paris, the proceeds of the sale to increase&#13;
the stipend of tha chair of&#13;
zoology, which was filled by him. He&#13;
gives. 20,009 francs to the Geographical&#13;
Society for an annual prize to explorers,&#13;
and 10,000 francs to the Society of&#13;
the Friends of Science.&#13;
In passing through the capitals of Eu&#13;
rope, shows that there is no higher&#13;
dignity nor more illustrious station&#13;
than those which the Christian'has as&#13;
t child of Qod; text, Judges vlii., 18,&#13;
''Each one resembled the children of a&#13;
kins."&#13;
Zebah and Zalmunna had been off to&#13;
battle, and when they came back they&#13;
were ask*d what kind of people they&#13;
had seen. They answered that the people&#13;
had a royal appearance. "Each&#13;
one resembled the children of a king."&#13;
That description of people is not extinct.&#13;
. There are still many who have&#13;
this appearance. Indeed, they are the&#13;
sons and daughters of the Lord Almighty.&#13;
Though now in exile, they&#13;
i shall yet come to their thrones. There-j-^ath —prepared lor&#13;
I are family names that stand for wealth&#13;
or patriotism or intelligence. The&#13;
name of Washington among us will&#13;
always represent patriotism. The family&#13;
of the Medici stood as the representative&#13;
of letters. The family of the*&#13;
Rothschilds is significant of wealth,&#13;
the less of $40,000,000 in 1848 putting&#13;
them to no inconvenience, and within afew&#13;
years they have loaned Russia $12.-&#13;
•000,000, Naples $25,000,000, Austria $40,-.&#13;
000.OG0. and England $200,000,000, and&#13;
the stroke cf their pen on the counting&#13;
room desk shakes everything from&#13;
the Irish s?a to the Danube. They&#13;
open their hand and-there is war, they&#13;
shut it and there is peace. The Romanoffs&#13;
of Russia, the Hohenzollerns of&#13;
Germany, the Bourbons of France, the&#13;
Stuarts and Guelphs cf Great Britain,&#13;
are houses whose names are intertwined&#13;
with the history of their respective&#13;
nations symbolic cf imperial author-&#13;
Dr. Henry J. Costello, a Philailclp'.ih&#13;
physiciau .committed suicide while&#13;
of unsound-mind. Knowing that he \va,&#13;
becoming insane. Dr. Costello kept &amp;&#13;
journal, in which are to be found most&#13;
minute details as to the progress of hi^&#13;
mental derangement. He was an enthusiast&#13;
in his nrofession and worked&#13;
himself into a condition of mental aa.l&#13;
physical decrepituii?.&#13;
Margaret- Vateiine. a little girl of&#13;
Geneva, N. Y., has been frightened&#13;
nearly to death -by--a--fet-Or-ba-tt*. -The&#13;
room was nearly full of them an* they&#13;
were &gt;#ery large. Twenty-seven were&#13;
killed and a nest containing nineteen&#13;
had just moved into the house, which&#13;
had been unoccupied for two years.&#13;
The doctors think the child may lose&#13;
her reason. There have been many&#13;
&lt;bats killed in the oust this year and&#13;
the reason for their visitation is net&#13;
known.&#13;
* •&#13;
I 1 * * ! * " "»»*•*«&#13;
day for which all other days were&#13;
made. In the third walk go around&#13;
the eternal city. As we come near it,&#13;
hark to t h e rush of its chariots and&#13;
the wedding peal of Its great towers.&#13;
The bell of heaven has struck 12. It Is&#13;
high noon. We look off upon the chaplets&#13;
which never fade, the eyes that&#13;
never weep, the temples that never&#13;
close, the loved ones that never part,&#13;
the procession that never halts, the&#13;
trees that never wither, the walls that&#13;
never can be captured, the sun that&#13;
never set3, until we can no longer&#13;
gaze, and we hide our eyes and exclaim:&#13;
"Bye hath not seen nor ear&#13;
heard, neither have entered into the&#13;
heart of man the things which God&#13;
them that love&#13;
hira!" As the tides of glory rise&#13;
we have to retreat and hold f?.st leet&#13;
we be swept off and drowned in the&#13;
emotions "of srladne33 and thanksgiving&#13;
and triumph.&#13;
What think you of the family property?&#13;
It is considered an honor to&#13;
marry into a family where there is&#13;
Treat weaUh. The Lord, the bridegroom&#13;
of earth and heaven, offers you&#13;
his heart and his-hand, saying in the&#13;
words of the Canticles.. "Rise un my&#13;
love, my fair one, and come away."&#13;
And once having pet on thy hand the&#13;
signet ringof-hrs love, yc.i will be endowed&#13;
v-jth :-II the wcoltU of earth&#13;
and all the honors of heaven.&#13;
we get at the .reoniQA in the pld family&#13;
mansion in heaven? It is a good while&#13;
since you parted &amp;t the door a/ the&#13;
grave. There will be Grace and Mary&#13;
and Martha and Charlie and UaHe&#13;
and all the darlings of your household,&#13;
not pale and sick and gasping for&#13;
breath, as when you saw, them list,&#13;
but their eye bright with the luster&#13;
of heaven and their cheek roseate with&#13;
the flush of celestial summer:&#13;
What clasping of hands! What em*&#13;
bracings! What coming together of&#13;
lip tonip! lyhaV tears of joy! few&#13;
say, 1 thought there were*no tears la&#13;
heaven.' There must be, for the Bibh&#13;
says that "God shall wipe them away,"&#13;
and if there were no tears there bow&#13;
could he wipe them away? They cannot&#13;
be tears of grief or disappointm&#13;
e n t They must be tears of gladnc83,&#13;
Christ will come and say, "What, child&#13;
of heaven, is it too much for toes?&#13;
Dost thou break down under the glad&#13;
ness of this reunion? Then I wil!&#13;
help thee." And with his one a m&#13;
around us and the other arm arounc&#13;
our ioved ones be shall hold us up In&#13;
the eternnl jubilee.&#13;
" While 1 speak some of you . with&#13;
broken hearts can hardly hold your&#13;
peace. You feel as if you would speak&#13;
out and say: "Oh, bleseed day, speed&#13;
on! Toward thee I press with blistered&#13;
feet over the desert wayr My eyei&#13;
fall for their weeping. 1 faint from listening&#13;
fOTv feet that will not come and&#13;
the sound^ of voices that will not&#13;
speak. Speed on. oh O.&amp;y of reunion!&#13;
And then. Lord Jesus, be not angry.&#13;
The Chamber of Commerce of San&#13;
Diego, Cal., is making an effort to establish&#13;
the production of raw silk in&#13;
the agricultural districts about that&#13;
city, fiteps baye been taken to secure&#13;
a large number of silk worms, and&#13;
five thousand mulberry trees will soon&#13;
be planted. The climate of southern&#13;
California is deemed even preferable&#13;
for this industry to that of Prance, the&#13;
home o* silk culture. The consumption&#13;
of raw silk in this country is enormous,&#13;
and the entire supply comes&#13;
from foreign countries, principally&#13;
from Japan, China and Italy. In 1899&#13;
the total imports of this raw material&#13;
were va&amp;eed at $43,546,872.&#13;
At Boulder, Col., a curious accident&#13;
occurred. The brake on a tank car&#13;
loaded with sulphuric acid refused to&#13;
work, and the car wenfdown a grade.&#13;
Whlsdee were /"blown and the switchman&#13;
saw the train in time to shunt it&#13;
onto a sidetrack. The tank car struck&#13;
a box car loaded with household&#13;
goods; the tank car, which contained&#13;
about 4vSeD gallons of the acid, slid off&#13;
the* platform car and was telescoped&#13;
into the box car. The acid began to&#13;
, escape and ruined the furniture, and&#13;
made a ^reat pool in the yard, temporarily&#13;
preventing the passing of&#13;
'.earns to obtain freight. The loss&#13;
amounted to-several thousand dollars.&#13;
&lt;JV&#13;
The naphtha launch of L. A. Scott&#13;
of Philadelphia came suddenly to a&#13;
etop recently in a swarm of myriads&#13;
of green files along the- lower Jersey&#13;
coast The engine refused to run. The&#13;
force was turned off and an investigation&#13;
instituted forthwith, which resulted&#13;
Is the nnding of about two gall&#13;
o n at "green headers" tightly packed&#13;
into one of their air chambers which&#13;
fed the flume with oxygen. The flies&#13;
&gt;had been drawn in by the suction until&#13;
tbey were a* selidly packed as powder,&#13;
and shot In a gun barren. It required&#13;
a a hour of patient work to remove&#13;
tfce mass of dead flies from the&#13;
hot cylinder and get the boat in worki&#13;
n g oitftr agaia.&#13;
ity.&#13;
But I preach of n family more potential,&#13;
more rich and more extensive—&#13;
the royal horse of Jesus, of whom&#13;
the whole family in heaven and on&#13;
earth i.3 named. Wo are blood relations&#13;
by the relationship cf the cross:&#13;
ail of us are the children of the&#13;
K i r s . 4&#13;
-First, I speak of our family name.&#13;
When we see a descendant of flora" one&#13;
greatly celebrated in the last century,&#13;
we look at him with profound interest.&#13;
To have had conquerors, kings or&#13;
princes in the ;&lt;ncosti'al line gives bis- &gt;&#13;
ter to the family name. In oar line '&#13;
was a King and a Conqueror. The&#13;
•&amp;4av--ui t-Ue- Efifrt--w4th—liatou of IigiU-1&#13;
woke UJJ the eternal orchestra that&#13;
made music at his birth. From thence&#13;
lie starter! forth to -conquer all nation^,&#13;
not by tramping them down, but l&gt;y&#13;
lifting them up. St. John saw him on&#13;
a white horse. * When he returns he&#13;
will not bring the nations chained to&#13;
his wheel or in iron cages, but I hear&#13;
the strike of the hoofs of the snowwhite&#13;
cavalcade that brings them to&#13;
the gates in triumph.&#13;
Luster F r o m Star i»»cl Spear.&#13;
Our family name takes luster from&#13;
the star that heralded him and the&#13;
spear'that pierced him and the crown&#13;
"that was given him. lc gathers fragrance&#13;
from the frankincense brought&#13;
to his cradle and the lilies that flung&#13;
their sweetness .into his sermons and&#13;
the box of alabaster that broke at his&#13;
feet. The Comforter^at Bethany. The&#13;
Resurrector at Naln. The supernatural&#13;
Oculist at Bethsalda. The Savior of&#13;
one worltl and the chief joy of another.&#13;
The storm.his frown. The sunlight his&#13;
smiie. The spring morning his breath.&#13;
The earthquake the stamp of bis feet.&#13;
The thunder the whisper of his voice.&#13;
The ocean a drop on the tip of his&#13;
finger. Heaven a sparkle on the bosom&#13;
of bis love. Eternity the Jwinkling of&#13;
his eye. The universe the flying dust&#13;
of his chariot wheels. AbJe to heal a&#13;
heartbreak or hush a tempest or drown&#13;
-a world or flood immensity with his&#13;
glory. What other family name could&#13;
ever boast of such an illustrious personage?&#13;
Henceforth swing otrt~the coat of&#13;
arms. Great families wear their coat&#13;
of arms on the dress, or on the door of&#13;
the coach, or on the helmet when they&#13;
go out to battle.*or on flags and ensigns.&#13;
The heraldic sign is sometimes&#13;
a lion or a dragon or an eagle. Our&#13;
coat of arms,worn right over the heart,&#13;
hereafter shall be a cross, a lamb&#13;
'standing against it and a dove flying&#13;
over it. Grandest of all escutcheons!&#13;
In every battle I must have it blazing&#13;
on my flag—the dove, the croas, the&#13;
Iamb, alfff-wnelFT Tall wrap me in&#13;
that good old Christian flag, so that the&#13;
family coat of'arms shall be rignTorer&#13;
my breast, that all the world may see&#13;
that I looked to the Dove of the Spirit&#13;
and clung try the Cross add depended&#13;
upon the Lamb of God/ which taketh&#13;
away the sin of the world. • * *&#13;
The Aojral ROOM of JMVS.&#13;
You cannot see a large estate in one&#13;
morning. You must take several&#13;
walks around it. The family property&#13;
of this royal house of Jesus is so great&#13;
that we must take several walks to&#13;
set any idea of its extent. Let the first&#13;
T h o I"ui&gt;:l;y I!r.im»l&lt; r.&lt;!. ,&#13;
Almost every family looks back to a&#13;
homestead—some country pb.ee vvhei?&#13;
you grew up. Yor s.it cm the dooralll,&#13;
You hoard th-e footstep of the rain on&#13;
the garret rcof. Yon swur:^ on the&#13;
gate. Yon ransacked th* barn. • You&#13;
waded into the brook. Yon thrashed&#13;
the orchard for r.^plci and the neighboring&#13;
woods for nuts, and everything&#13;
around the c'd homestead is of interest&#13;
to ycu. 1 tell, you cf th.: o!J[ homestead&#13;
of et'Mn.'t/. "In my lather's&#13;
house are many mansion:." When W3&#13;
talk cf man'ion-j we think of Chatsworth&#13;
and its park nine-'miles in circumference&#13;
and its conservatory th:it&#13;
astonish/s the world, it' tf.iileries oi'&#13;
.art that contain tiie triumphs of Chratrey,&#13;
Cauc.va aiul Thorwaldscn. of the&#13;
kings nnd qt'ocuo who 1M &gt;e walked its&#13;
stately halls, or. flying ever the heather.&#13;
have hun'.ed t.b^ ^ro^se. But all th?&#13;
lly mansion tnat i.s&#13;
our errlval. The hand of the Lord&#13;
Jesus lifted the pillarJ and. ;.wung the&#13;
doo_is_jm.d planted the purks. Angels&#13;
walk there and the good of all ages.&#13;
The poorest man in that house is a millionaire&#13;
and the lowest a'king, and the&#13;
tamc-t word he r,:r:ak3 is an anthem&#13;
and the shortest Hie an eternity.&#13;
It took a Pp.xton to build for Chatsworth&#13;
a covering for the wonderful&#13;
flower, Viciorfa Regia, five feet in diameter.&#13;
But oar Lily of the. Valley&#13;
shall need uo shelter from the blast&#13;
and in the open gardens of God shall&#13;
put forth its full bloom, and all heaven&#13;
shall come to look at it, and its aroma&#13;
shall be as though the cherubim had&#13;
swung before the throne a thousand&#13;
censers. I have not seen- it yet. 1 am&#13;
in a foreign land. But my. Father is&#13;
waiting for me to come home. I have&#13;
brothers r.r.d sisters there. In th«&#13;
Bible.I have letters from there, telling&#13;
me what a fine place it i3. It matters&#13;
not much to me whether I am rich or&#13;
poor, or whether "the world hates mc or&#13;
loves me, or whether I go by land or&#13;
by sea, if only I.may lift my eyes at&#13;
last on the family mansion. It is not&#13;
a frail house, built in a month, scon&#13;
to crumble, but an old mansion, which&#13;
is as firm as the day it was built. Its&#13;
with mo if after I have kissed thy blessed&#13;
feet I turn around to gather up the&#13;
long lost .treasures of ray heart. Oh,&#13;
be not angry villi me. One look at thee&#13;
were heaven. But all these reunions&#13;
are heaven encircling heaven, heaven&#13;
overtopping hcawn, heaven commingling&#13;
with heaven!"&#13;
I was at ;&gt;:ount Vernon and went&#13;
into the dlnirc room in which cur&#13;
first president entertained the prominent&#13;
r"?n of this ; ^ d other lands. It&#13;
was a very interesting .ypot. But oh,&#13;
the banqueting hall of the familyy&#13;
mansion of which I. speak! Spread&#13;
the table, spread it wide, for a greit&#13;
multitude are t"» f-dt at it. • From the&#13;
Tree by the river gather the twelve&#13;
uamrj r of fruits tor that table. Take&#13;
the clusters from the heavenly vineyards&#13;
and press them into-the golden&#13;
tankards for that table. On baskets&#13;
carry iv. the bread of which if a man&#13;
eat he shall never hunger. Take ali&#13;
the shot torn flag:? of earthly conquest&#13;
and intwine them among the arches.&#13;
Let David come with his. harp and Gabriel&#13;
with hi* trumpet and Miriam&#13;
with the tiinbid. for the prodigals ar.^&#13;
at home, and the captives are free, and&#13;
the father hath invited the mighty of&#13;
heaven end the redeemed of e^.vth. to&#13;
come and 'din?.&#13;
«*• •»"W" ST&#13;
' , Owesene Bmauie* far B*m'»fc..,&#13;
California climate, i t a little bard On&#13;
h t r a e e r unleae it ft well taken cart o t&#13;
G, W. Tlrleton, pioneer' orchnrditt «1&#13;
San Jose, teveral years ago ditcover«d&#13;
by acoWint &gt; very fine way of.'elm*,&#13;
log up a n d putting harness in order.&#13;
He had been spraying with kerosene&#13;
emulsion, and by chance dropped tome&#13;
old straps Into hit spray barrel,-where*&#13;
they remained for soma time, and on&#13;
removing them was pleased to tea how&#13;
easily the dirt and grease came off,&#13;
leaving the leather clean and pliable.&#13;
While in thia condition h t applied&#13;
tome Earnest oil and: the pUtbliity b«*&#13;
came permanent. He gives the de«&#13;
tills of hit method which ht bad followed&#13;
ever since:&#13;
Take one bar of good strong wash*&#13;
ing soap, dissolve in a quart of water&#13;
and bring to boijing. To this add os?&#13;
pint of kerotene oil, and stir, boat ami&#13;
churn the whole until it combines into&#13;
a creamy emufcion. Have a tub of&#13;
warm water, into which mix the emu!,&#13;
sion, and Into this placei the haraost&#13;
and let it soak for some5time; then&#13;
with a stiff brush rub and brush the&#13;
straps thoroughly and they will come&#13;
clean vesy easily. . Let it dry a little,&#13;
untiLit seems dry on the outside, and&#13;
then apply the harness oil. I use&#13;
either neatsfoot of fish ell, and I think&#13;
the fish cil is just as sped. I mi::&#13;
about one-fifth kerosene into the oil&#13;
and then give (ho leather a good oil*&#13;
ing. To make it black, mix a little&#13;
lamp black up with .tha kerosene r.ni&#13;
mix it with the ell. la fixing leather&#13;
carriage tops I find it necessary tc&#13;
with th i&#13;
dwelling places of dukes mid princes SANDGLAS SES&#13;
and oueens ::re a:; nothing to the f.t'mat;&#13;
cvly awi'iting i ftt*:i iftfe&lt;* io ^U'HSHI*. V. !»•.•&gt; im&lt;—y«&gt;riu4a.:-ui.&#13;
walls are&#13;
of many ages, and tthe&#13;
at the gateway are abloom&#13;
urns&#13;
with&#13;
the century plants of eternity, The&#13;
queen of Sheba hath walked in its&#13;
halls, and Esther and Marie Antoinette&#13;
and Lady Huntington and Cecil and&#13;
Jeremy Taylor and Samuel Rutherford&#13;
and John Milton and the »widow ^vho&#13;
gave two mites and the poor men from&#13;
the hospital—these last two perhap3&#13;
outshining al Ithe kings and queens of&#13;
eternity.&#13;
The Family Reunion.&#13;
A family mansion means reunion.&#13;
Some of your families are very much&#13;
scattered. The children married and&#13;
went off to St. Louis or Chicago or&#13;
Charleston. But perhaps once a year&#13;
you come together at the old place.&#13;
How you wake up the old piano that&#13;
has been silent for years! Father and&#13;
mother do not play oh it. How you&#13;
bring out the old relics and rummage&#13;
the garret and open oldscrapbooks and&#13;
shout and laugh and cry and talk over&#13;
old times and, though you may be&#13;
forty-five years of age* act as though&#13;
you were sixteen. Yefsoon it is goojby&#13;
ft the ear window and goodby at&#13;
the steamboat wharf. But/how* will&#13;
' /&#13;
Time.&#13;
Strange.to-«ay, the sandgkiUn.is still&#13;
used to measure varying periods ci&#13;
time. The size depends upon the purposes&#13;
t o which they are to be put&#13;
The hour glass is still in use in the&#13;
sick room and in the music room, in&#13;
both places affording a sure and si&#13;
lent indication of the progress of time.&#13;
Half-hour glasses'are. used in schools;&#13;
and fifteen-minute g l a r e s aie used fot&#13;
medical purposes, and the sandglass&#13;
also goes into the kitchen as an aid&#13;
to exact cooking. There are also (tem&#13;
minute glasses, five-minute and threeminute&#13;
glasses, the two latter being&#13;
used to time the boiling period of eggs.&#13;
The three-minute sandglass is called&#13;
an "ess boiler." Sand-glasses are also&#13;
used for scientific purposes and on&#13;
shipboard. The sand is carefully prepared&#13;
by a thorough cleaning, including&#13;
boiling. It is then baked dry, and&#13;
then ground into the requisite fineness&#13;
and uniformity, as sharp sand would&#13;
be likely to become wedged in the&#13;
opening between the two sections* oi&#13;
the glass. The sand is then introduced&#13;
Into the glass through an opening&#13;
left for that purpose in the end oi&#13;
one dnilb, the opening -then beina&#13;
"wash-over several times&#13;
emulsion to get it damp enough to oil;&#13;
then apply the oil as in the harne33.&#13;
I find old straps which had become&#13;
so brittle as to crack seriuusly whsn&#13;
bent are rente red to their ordinal softness&#13;
and pliability by the treatment.&#13;
If a new harness is treated twice a&#13;
year in this way it will always keep&#13;
soft and in good order. I have some&#13;
edd harness which 1 thought almost&#13;
iuined restored t:.» sood looks and&#13;
fcrvico in this v.v.y, and it ought to 0 3&#13;
generally known.&#13;
D i i l r y ?^^»te^.&#13;
At the •Pan-American Exposition to&#13;
be held at ruf.a o no::*, year it was prupo-&#13;
ed to have competitive tests of all&#13;
the dairy breed?:. Reports now indicate&#13;
that all the breeds except th?&#13;
HOiStcin-Friei.iati will decline to participate.&#13;
The llolfcicih-Frlcsian men&#13;
claim that the owner.- of other breeds&#13;
cf cows arc afraid to meet them in&#13;
competition.&#13;
* * *&#13;
American dairymen are well acquainted&#13;
with the methods of enriching&#13;
skim milk fpr caivec by the audi'&#13;
lion of oil meal and the like. But according&#13;
to recent reports the New&#13;
Zcalandcrs are actually using in their&#13;
milk cod livtr oil at the rate of two&#13;
.ounces per calf per cir.y. The report&#13;
covered "with—tne~Tvyj~wa1efli, the Tight quantity in each sand&#13;
glass is gauged by actually -timing the&#13;
flow from one part of the glass to the&#13;
other, and every glass is individual^&#13;
treated like a good thermometer. Thr&#13;
glasses are usually mounted in cylin*&#13;
drical frames or holders, so that th*&#13;
twin bulbs can be seen ai all times.&#13;
Why We Are IJke the Crow.&#13;
ABide from the special question of&#13;
profit and loss, wo have a warm side&#13;
toward the crow, he is ,!J much like&#13;
ourselves, said the late Henry Ward&#13;
Beecher. H e is lazy, and that is human;&#13;
he is cunning.and that is human.&#13;
He thinks his own color is best, and&#13;
loves to hear his own voice, which are&#13;
eminent traits of humanity. He will&#13;
never work when he can get another&#13;
to work for him—a genuine human&#13;
trait. He eats whatever he can get his&#13;
claws upon, and is less mischievous&#13;
with a belly full than when hungry,&#13;
and this is like man. Take off their&#13;
wings and put them in breeches, and&#13;
crows would make fair average men.&#13;
Give men wings and reduce their&#13;
smartness a little, and many of them&#13;
would be almost good enough to be&#13;
crows.&#13;
tay.i tl at where i-cparator skim milk is&#13;
used the farmer:, have found it necessary&#13;
to .add_£omcthing.especially when&#13;
the calves aie to be grown into beeves.&#13;
Crude cod liver oil can bo bought in&#13;
that country for about 75 cents per gallon,&#13;
and each ' gallon contains 160&#13;
ounces of oil. This permits them to&#13;
feed two ounces per day for a period of&#13;
eighty days, aTer which the use rjf the&#13;
oil is discontinued;&#13;
Whether or not a dairyman should&#13;
have. hi3 cows come In fresh in the&#13;
fail must depend to a very large extent&#13;
en the disposition he is making of his&#13;
milk. If he is supplying a creamery cr&#13;
cheese factory that runs only during&#13;
the summer months it is manifestly to&#13;
his advantage to have his coys come&#13;
in fresh in the spring, so the milk will&#13;
be available for use durir.g tha summer&#13;
season. But In most cases, especially&#13;
if the dairyman be well fixed for&#13;
his business, a good number of the&#13;
cows should drop their calves in the&#13;
fall months. This is to the advan-.&#13;
tage of the man.that sells milk and&#13;
cream in the city, as well as of the&#13;
man that makes butter. In both cases&#13;
the-winter is the time when a good&#13;
flow of milk means most money.&#13;
• • »&#13;
They are trying to settle the question&#13;
of good milk in Denmark by grading&#13;
it when it come3 to the cheese factories&#13;
and creameries. Che standards&#13;
for grading are: Ten points are given&#13;
for all mjlk without any faults. The&#13;
most points given are 12, but only for&#13;
milk, which, beside being clean, well&#13;
nerated and cooled, must_have a good&#13;
fresh aroma. Milk with 9 points is not&#13;
less fresh. Eight points milk'has not&#13;
been treated so clean as could bo&#13;
wlshelPfor, or is beginning to turn&#13;
sour. By 7 points the fault is so pronounced&#13;
that the supplier is made acquainted&#13;
with and requested to correct&#13;
it as soon a t possible. Six points milk&#13;
is returned. In tome of t h * factories&#13;
the milk has been paid for not only in&#13;
proportion to the quantity of' butterfat&#13;
but alto by tho Quality according t o&#13;
the grading, go the tupplier who takes&#13;
some eatra trouble to br^ng bJfcmllk to&#13;
tho factory in a flrtt-c&amp;ss condition,&#13;
got* folly repaid tot it. In other factories&#13;
thD grrndbit t j s t t m has no inflnenee&#13;
on t h e payment U&gt;e grading itself&#13;
canalas a tort of race between the&#13;
suppliers, as a matter of honor not to&#13;
gat l e u thaa 10 points. The milk it&#13;
examined every day t a d the grading&#13;
done once a w w i by the maaagar.&#13;
. « &lt;&#13;
•1&#13;
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y '&#13;
; A&#13;
r ^&#13;
s -.«,.&#13;
| H p | | | | ^ MJ *mm&#13;
•t&#13;
3f:v&#13;
•iLl.&#13;
H •&gt;?&#13;
A&#13;
tF***mww^.&#13;
' &gt; - • &amp; • , • • '&#13;
^V^'.JfWf^S&#13;
: - ^ . &gt; - K - : ; - . r ^ : £ - ^ - / / , . . v v / &amp; ? ^ ; ^^^^ •"""•':;'•'&#13;
• • » • ' • ' . - • - • - ' ' • • • ' - ' - • ! . - - . • ' * • • " ' ' ' " . ' • " • * . &gt; • • ' ' " ; &gt; • • • " ' " ' ' ' : - ; x : • '•• ' • : ' - " • ' * &gt; ' " " . ' . 1 ' • : . . . " ^ . : • * - • • ' • ' * ' , • " ... ' • ' • » • • . ' • ' ' " • , . . ' " ' • ' &gt; . j ' * - • - ! . - ' " r v •••*• . * • . : . • ' • • . ' • v i - ' • . " ••'•' ' . , . ' ' • - . , ' . ' ' ' ' . ' " • " ' • ' , • ' ' . • ' • • ' . • . • • • • ,&#13;
'*!&gt;.• '.Si&#13;
BBS X A M a&#13;
Current Topics |&#13;
WttMmtna to Wed. , Wi7/ 2 * J/cr TAiW War.&#13;
TJrtr Lokai Anzolgor announces the&#13;
engagement of Qu«ea WUhelmtna to&#13;
f»r!n6fe TFredertck -Adolf of Mwklenburg-&#13;
Schwerln. At frequent intervals&#13;
since Wiinelmlna ascended the throne&#13;
tumor has had it that she was to wed&#13;
this or that prince of a noble house.&#13;
Among the princes named as aspirants&#13;
have been the eldest son of the prince&#13;
regent of Brunswick, Prince Friedrlch-&#13;
Helnrich of Prussia, born on July 15,&#13;
1874, and whose grandmother was a&#13;
Dutch princess, the Princess Marianne&#13;
of the Netherlands, and Prince Bernhard&#13;
of Saxe-Welmar, who \&amp; etili&#13;
more nearly related to Queen Wiinelmlna,&#13;
as his grandmother, who was&#13;
Q U E E N WILHT3LMINA.&#13;
•also a Dutch princess, w a s the sister&#13;
of K i n g W i l l i a m II. Prince Harold&#13;
of Denmark, whose maternal grandmother,&#13;
the late Queen Louise of&#13;
Sweden and Norway, w a s a daughter&#13;
of Prince Friedrlch of the N e t h e r l a n d s&#13;
by his marriage w i t h the Princess&#13;
Louise of Prussia, a daughter of Friedrich&#13;
"Wilhelm IJJ, w a s a l s o thought to&#13;
have a fair chance of success, and in&#13;
fact m o s t of th&amp; y o u n g Protestant&#13;
princes of suitable age have been in&#13;
turn spoken of as \ h e future prince.&#13;
Great *Railroad Tlan.&#13;
A groat scheme i s V o w being serio&#13;
u s l y discussed by a company of F r a n -&#13;
co-American capitalistsX It is n o t h i n g&#13;
l e s s V h a n m a k ' n g&#13;
| ) o s s i b i e _ a trip&#13;
from Vparis v i a&#13;
Berlin, Moscow and&#13;
St. Petersburg to&#13;
N e w York city by&#13;
rail. T o do this&#13;
B e r i n g strait will&#13;
(be bridged, which&#13;
J at its narrowest&#13;
/ point is about&#13;
t w e n t y miles wide,&#13;
•De Wlndt. T n e preliminary&#13;
investigation for&#13;
the route will soon be commenced by&#13;
Harry dc Wiudt, rhe great traveler and&#13;
Siberian explorer. H e w i l l be accompanied&#13;
b y a n engineer a n d upon their&#13;
report will depend t h e future action of&#13;
•the adventurous capitalists. T h e journey&#13;
is likely to have good results, even&#13;
though the railroad s c h e m e should not&#13;
be found feasible, for Mr. De W i n d t&#13;
will endeavor to ascertain if a p a y i n g&#13;
trade between Siberia and A l a s k a&#13;
could n o t be established a c r o s s Bering&#13;
.strait if a good seaport were located&#13;
on the Siberian coast.&#13;
Was a Great Sculptor.&#13;
Carl R o h l - S m i t h , the sculptor of&#13;
W a s h i n g t o n , died at Copenhagen last&#13;
week of Bright's disease.&#13;
&lt; Mr. R o h l - S m i t h w a s born in Denmark&#13;
and cp.me t o America in the&#13;
early 80's. A notable piece of art&#13;
executed under t n e direction of the&#13;
sculptor s t a n d s in a city park at De3&#13;
Moines, l a .&#13;
T o ' Carl R o h l - S m i t h had also been&#13;
•*&#13;
CARL ROHLrSMITH.&#13;
given the honor mad distinction of&#13;
erecting the granite and bronse statue&#13;
of General Willfcuft Teeunueh Sherman,"&#13;
now in cnarw of construction&#13;
at the sooth freat. of tfea fratsury.&#13;
Miss Chunlci&#13;
A rich y o u n g American girl h a s g o n e&#13;
to China to a s s i s t *ifi caring for the&#13;
s o l d i e r s of I'nele S a m a m i t h e other&#13;
countries w h o are b a t t l i n g w i t h the&#13;
Chinese hordes. She h M i s s Margaret&#13;
L i v i n g s t o n Chanler, sister of W i l l i a m&#13;
Astor Chanler,congressnjan,&#13;
explorer&#13;
and soldier, aud a&#13;
lineal descendant&#13;
of t h e original&#13;
J o h n Jacob Astor.&#13;
T h r e e years ago&#13;
Miss Chanler relinquished&#13;
t h e&#13;
pleasures of society&#13;
to become a m e m -&#13;
ber of the Red&#13;
Cross society. S h i&#13;
learned to be a&#13;
trained nurse in N e w Ycrlt, and v/hen&#13;
the Spanish war broke out ahc went&#13;
to S a n t i a g o a s one of Clara Barton's&#13;
co-workors. Later, s h e w a s sgnt to&#13;
Porto Hico, whero s h e established a&#13;
private hospital for soldiers, For her&#13;
heroic services in Cuba and Porto Rico&#13;
Miss Chanler was voted a gold medal&#13;
by c o n g r e s s and a. vote of t h a n k s by&#13;
the N e w York stato legislature-. Miss&#13;
Clianler w e n t to the P h i l i p p i n e s not&#13;
l o n g ago. She I A now on the United&#13;
States hospital chip Relief, which is&#13;
cruising w i t h the American warship olf&#13;
Taku,' w i t h i n easy reach of the allied&#13;
forces now in P f k i n city. H e r zealous&#13;
s y m p a t h y fcr the soldiers h a s ir.ade&#13;
licr deeply beloved by our b o y s in blue.&#13;
Misa Chanler enjoys a privato income&#13;
of $35,000 a year and is -said to devote&#13;
all of t h U sum-to philanthropic work.'&#13;
To ^Recoup Fortune.&#13;
W h e n Miss Dorothy Studebaker.&#13;
granddaughter of the South Bend (Ind.)&#13;
w a g o n manufacturer, married Scott&#13;
McKeowu, several years ago, lie w a s&#13;
worth a million dollars, which he had&#13;
inherited from his father, a P e n n s y l -&#13;
vania oil magnate. N o w . through t h e&#13;
husband's prodigality, his patrimony&#13;
MRS. SCOTT M c K E O W N .&#13;
has disappeared. His wife will attempt&#13;
to recoup her fortunes by g o i n g on the&#13;
staxe.&#13;
Mrs. MaybricK. I* Hopeful.&#13;
F o r the first time s i n c e her life s e n -&#13;
tence w a s imposed e l e v e n years ago&#13;
Mr3. Florence Maybrick had a private&#13;
interview w i t h her- counsel, Dr. Clark&#13;
BeH of N e w York, at the Aylesbury&#13;
prison in England&#13;
the e t h e r day.&#13;
Mrs. Maybrick is&#13;
indignant at the attacks&#13;
made by the&#13;
Liverpool Post on&#13;
the l a t e chi?f justice&#13;
of E n g l a n d ,&#13;
Lord Russell . of .&#13;
K i l l o w e n , former&#13;
counsel for the&#13;
prisoner. 4 T h e only&#13;
person up to the&#13;
present w h o ever _&#13;
saw m e alone," she* Mrs. Maybrick&#13;
said, " w a s the chief justice. W h e n&#13;
the assizes came h e r e last F e b -&#13;
ruary Lord Russell c a m e to t h *&#13;
prison and asked to s?e me. W h e n&#13;
he w a s starting t o g o he said: 'Mrs.&#13;
Maybrick, I am doing all in m y power&#13;
for your release. W h a t e v e r happens,&#13;
remember this—that if there is o n e&#13;
m a n in E n g l a n d w h o b e l i e v e s i n your&#13;
innocence, I am that m a n . ' It w a s o n -&#13;
ly by accident that I beard o f Lord&#13;
R u s a e l l s death, for ( h a v e n o t seen a&#13;
newspaper for a decade, but I could&#13;
not h e l p but feel that i n h i s death I&#13;
had lost m y best f r i e n d / '&#13;
F o e the last few d a y s Mrs. Maybrick&#13;
has been i n a hospital ward, o w i n g t o&#13;
a s l i g h t Illness, but s h e s a y s her health&#13;
is g e n e r a l l y good. T h e recent United&#13;
State* m e m o r i a l Is still in t h e h a n d s&#13;
of t h e h o m e secretarjr, S i r M a t t h e w&#13;
W h i t e Ridley, a n 4 Mrs. MaybrUk't&#13;
f r i e n d s a r e h o p e f s l t h a t w b e a t h e a n -&#13;
swer c o m e s it wJH he a » a x $ t s .&#13;
T H B F I N E S T I N L A N D W A T E R&#13;
T R I P W T H § W O R L D .&#13;
T o a l l lover* o f t h e w a t e r a t r i p d o w n&#13;
t h e SL Lawrono© Is m o r e s a t i s f a c t o r y&#13;
to a t i r e d m i n d a n d g i v e s more r e s t t o&#13;
the b o d y t h a n a n y e x c u r s i o n o n e can&#13;
i n d u l g e i n f o r . a s u m m e r vacation. t T h e&#13;
River a b o u n d s in m a n y e x c i t i n g t o e n e s&#13;
and s o m e o f t h e m o s t b e a u t i f u l panoramic&#13;
v i e w s e v e r p r e s e n t e d t o t h e eye.&#13;
If yoxx w a n t t o e n j o y t h o t r i p g o b y the.&#13;
m a g n i f i c e n t s t e a m e r s of t h e R i c h e l i e u&#13;
&amp; Ontario N a v i g a t i o n Co., s t a r t i n g a t&#13;
Toronto, Canada, and t o u c h i n g a t moat&#13;
of t h e i m p o r t a n t cities, p a s s i n g i n t o t h e&#13;
great S t . L a w r e n c e River at K i n g s t o n ,&#13;
a m v i n g t h e r e q u i t e early i n t h e morning.&#13;
T h o air i s s o i n v i g o r a t i n g h e r e i t&#13;
braces u p t h e tired body a n d m a k e s JL&#13;
n e w b e i n g of o n e a t once, e n a b l i n g t h e&#13;
tourist to on joy tho magnificent scenery&#13;
of t h e T H O U S A N D I S L A N D S ,&#13;
w h i c h are arrived ox a n d passed d u r i n g&#13;
the early h o u r s of t h e m o r n i n g .&#13;
T h e s e I s l a n d s h a v e been celebrated&#13;
for t h e i r b e a u t i f u l scenery a n d g r e a t&#13;
fishing g r o u n d s . N u m e r o u s h o t e l s of&#13;
magnificent appearance are located on&#13;
many, of t h e m , also e l e g a n t s u m m e r&#13;
residences. A s oho w i n d s i n a n d o u t&#13;
amid t h e s e c h a r m i n g i s l a n d s t h e rapidly&#13;
c h a n g i n g scenes a l m o s t b e w i l d e r s&#13;
one; t h e p i c t u r e is b e y o n d description.&#13;
Their devious w a t e r courses open i n t o&#13;
s w e l l i n g l a k e s or close into narrow&#13;
goi-ges. Here aud t h e r e t h e course&#13;
s e e m s c o m p l e t e l y closed and one t h i n k s&#13;
the b o a t m u s t back out, w h e n nearer&#13;
approach t o the shores discloses a hidden&#13;
o u t l e t b y a s u d d e n turn.&#13;
Scarcely h a v e y o u e m e r g e d from t h e&#13;
bcaiitiful island s c e n e r y when^ y o u arrive&#13;
at Brockville; y o u t h e n pass on to&#13;
P r e s c o t t and as the, city fades i n t h e&#13;
distance y o u pass t h r o u g h t h e e x c i t i n p&#13;
s c e n e s of s h o o t i n g of the L o n g Sault&#13;
Rapids, w h i c h e x t e n d some nine m i l e s&#13;
d o w n s t r e a m . O w i n g h o w e v e r t o t h e&#13;
p r e c a u t i o n t a k e n i n s t e e r i n g , accidents&#13;
arc u n k n o w n . After a sail of an hour&#13;
or so, t h e s t e a m e r arrives at, and passes&#13;
under t h e m a g n i f i c e n t Iron Bridge of&#13;
the C'anadu A t l a n t i c R a i l w a y ; s h o r t l y&#13;
b e l o w the bridge t h e Coteixu Rapids&#13;
are e n t e r e d , a b o u t t w o m i l e s in l e n g t h&#13;
of e x c e e d i n g l y s w i f t current. A b o u t&#13;
seven m i l e s further d o w n round a&#13;
sharp curve i t passes i n t o the Cedar&#13;
R a p i d s w h i c h is most e x c i t i n g : hardly&#13;
after l e a v i n g t h e m i t p a s s e s the Split&#13;
Rock Kapids. T h e grandeur of t h i s&#13;
picture fills o n e w i t h a w e , b u t the&#13;
skill of t h e h e l m s m e n at once a l l a y s all&#13;
fear. T h e Cascade i s t h e last of this&#13;
sex-ies of R a p i d s w h i c h is conspicuous&#13;
by i t s choppy and w h i t e crested waves.&#13;
T h i s g r o u p of Rapids h a s a descent of&#13;
eight3'-two feet in a d i s t a n c e of about&#13;
e l e v e n miles. Y o u pass on as t h e river&#13;
e x p a n d s and find yourself e n t e r i n g t h e&#13;
L a k e Si. Louis, the scenery of w h i c h is&#13;
very fine. —&#13;
A f t e r l e a v i n g the l a k e y o u arrive at&#13;
the t o w n of Lachine. n i n e m i l e s from&#13;
M o n h p i l : here c o m m e n c e s t h e _ g r e a t&#13;
Lachine Rapids; to o v e r c o m e t h e s e t h e y&#13;
have built a g r a n d canal around them.&#13;
A n y o n e w i s h i n g can d e s c e n d the rapids&#13;
in a c a n o e guided b y Indians. You&#13;
soon'pass under the magnificent Iron&#13;
Bridge of t h e Canadian Pacific Railw&#13;
a y , also t h e Victoria J u b i l e e Bridge;&#13;
on p a s s i n g t h o Victoria you come into&#13;
full v i e w of the city of Montreal arriving&#13;
there at 6 o'clock p. m.&#13;
B y c h a n g i n g boats a t 7 o'clock p. il.&#13;
y o u a r e on y o u r w a y t o t h a t g r e a t historic&#13;
city, Qv^bec, a r r i v i n g t h e r e at&#13;
6:30 a, m. A t 8 o'clock a. m. y o u c h a n g e&#13;
a g a i n a n d are on y o u r w a y to Chicoutimi,&#13;
near t h e ihead of the S a g u e n a y&#13;
River. T h e sail from Quebec m u s t be&#13;
t a k e n to be appreciated. T h e tourist&#13;
w i l l finf" h i m s e l f in t h e m i d s t of ano&#13;
t h e r land. T h e q u a i n t old b u i l d i n g s ,&#13;
t h e p r i m i t i v e carts, t h e wooden-shod&#13;
w o m e n , t h e pleasant m a n n e r s of *,he&#13;
n a t i v e s , t h e simple primitive c o s t u m e s ,&#13;
the r e l i g i o u s seriousness of every person,&#13;
w i l l create t h e desire to live and&#13;
d w e l l amonjT them. T o see a'otl enjoy&#13;
this e x c u r s i o n t h o r o u g h l y t h e tourist&#13;
m u s t t a k e one of the magnificent steamers&#13;
of t h e R i c h e l i e u it Ontario N a v i g a -&#13;
tion Co., w h i c h h a v e e l e g a n t passenger&#13;
accomodations, b o t h , f o r s l e e p i n g and&#13;
e a t i n g . T h i s c o u l d n o t be o t h e r w i s e&#13;
w i t h such men a s the Hon. L. J, Forg&#13;
e t , P r e s i d e n t of the line, and Thos.&#13;
Henry, Traffic M a n a g e r , aided by their&#13;
able a s s i s t a n t s .&#13;
T H l D O U O L A a S H O E .&#13;
The heat advertised and consequently&#13;
the beat known shoe in the -world&#13;
today is undoubtedly made by the W.&#13;
L. Dauglas Shoe Co., of Brockton,&#13;
Mass. The one idea of this company&#13;
has always been to sell a shoe for&#13;
12.50 which equals in every way the $5&#13;
shoes of any other concern. They are&#13;
able to do this on account of there being&#13;
no middle man's profit, as the&#13;
goods are sold direct from the factory&#13;
to the wearer. In 60 ef the principal&#13;
cities of the country they have their&#13;
own retail stores. The goods are made&#13;
in all alzea and widths, and few shoes&#13;
equal them for style and durability.&#13;
The factory at Brockton employs&#13;
over 1,100 hands, and all labor trouhipa&#13;
qr* settled by the state board of&#13;
arbitration. Kothlng but union- labor&#13;
^T^TTi^jv'"^?^^^&#13;
is employed, and pay about the best&#13;
average w a g e s of a n y s h o e workers i n&#13;
t h e United States. The factory pay&#13;
roll a m o u n t s t o $17,435 per week. Thi3&#13;
c o m p a n y m a k e s s h o e s for m e n only,&#13;
and it is their proud boast that over&#13;
o n e million m e n wear- thorn,—Denvej&#13;
(Colo.) Post.&#13;
Color of W»(U ami (etliacs.&#13;
T h e color and character of the walla&#13;
h a v e much to do w i t h tho lighting of&#13;
a room, and experiments have s h o w n&#13;
t h e s e percentages of reflection by different&#13;
wall materials: Black velvet,&#13;
0.4; black c'.oth, 1.3; black paper, 4,5;&#13;
dark blue, 6.5; dark green, 10.1; pale&#13;
red, 16.2; d a i k yellow, 20; pale blue,&#13;
30; pale yellow, 10; pale grcenf 46.5;&#13;
pale orange, 5}.S; pale white, 70; mirror&#13;
covering, 32. Dull or varnished&#13;
paint also has effect. Aside from mirrored&#13;
w a l l s , w h i t e varnish ensures the&#13;
beet lighted rcom.&#13;
A B O S T O N I N S T I T U T I O N .&#13;
Among the un que institutions of .Boston&#13;
is the Peii'uody Medical Institu e, 2vo. 4 BulfiueU&#13;
St. established nine years before tho&#13;
death of tho gjreat. philaiKhrepist, the late&#13;
Mr. George Pen bo ;y, fiom whom it takes&#13;
its name. Luring "the pest 20 years ithes&#13;
achieved a wide and last:nsr distinction.&#13;
The medical publications of this institute&#13;
have millions of readers, and areas standard&#13;
as go'd Their Inst pamphlet for meu&#13;
only, (.)4 pa?es, entitled -Know Thyself," is&#13;
eeut free by mail, saale.1, en receipt of. 0&#13;
cents for postage.&#13;
Years&#13;
Pain " I am a school te&amp;obor*&#13;
havo aufferod agony&#13;
monthly for ion yean*&#13;
"My nervous Bystmm&#13;
was awreok* I suffarad&#13;
with palm In my ski? and&#13;
had almost ovary III&#13;
* * • . - . • • :&#13;
• • ' . " . J ' " ! - V ' '&#13;
. . ' ~ • • &gt;&#13;
.'.'&#13;
y&#13;
•• ' / *&#13;
..&#13;
,,,' ;&#13;
' * »' •&#13;
". ' - - \ ; ' • • ^h"i&#13;
• * - . • * • J&#13;
; *&gt; '• ;v&gt;sa ''"•'• •• '"'•"'Sm&#13;
"•^'."^M&#13;
••• --.:3:-¾¾&#13;
• ' "• ''^8B!&#13;
-'jfi'iif&#13;
*M •'igS :-;li •• 'j'^'flp&#13;
- r ^ $&#13;
known* IhadiakontroaU&#13;
mont from a numhor of&#13;
physicians who gave ma&#13;
norollafm&#13;
" Ono specialist said no&#13;
modiolne could holp mam I must suesmSt to an&#13;
operation,&#13;
"I wrote to Mrs* Pmkham,&#13;
stating my case, and&#13;
received a prompt reply*&#13;
I took lydsa e.Pfakham's&#13;
Vegetable Compound and&#13;
fotiowed tho advice given&#13;
me and now I suffer no&#13;
mar cm If any one cares&#13;
to know more about my&#13;
oase9 I wlli' choortally&#13;
answer all letters*'*—&#13;
MISS EDNA ELLIS, Hlgginspori,&#13;
Ohio*&#13;
IRP;;ARUS -"SPORTING GOODS&#13;
•;i.SH!Ni.G f A G K L ' E ^ . •&#13;
• A l L VCIU95.-. . L O W ^ T P3!Cf5 :'* U . S .&#13;
• V-'KIWO'UERYSACJMAVV* TS MfCM&#13;
A U«ernl C e m e n t . j&#13;
B e s t isinglass % oz.; strong acetic j&#13;
acid (vinegar) 1 ½ oz3. Cut the ising&#13;
l a s s fins with scissors and dissolve by&#13;
p u t t i n g the tin or battle in hot water.&#13;
T h i s c e m e n t will stand water but not&#13;
strong beat.&#13;
Q E N N E P L A N T F O R C H I L D R E N .&#13;
A Sperlflo fcr Surrmrr Complaint.&#13;
During these warm Hays of midsummer,&#13;
parents cannot »&gt;e too watchful. It i*&#13;
the yat'e thing to huve this well known&#13;
family sr&gt;t:citie always in the nous* to&#13;
check the first appearand a of afty bowel&#13;
trouble In the children. Get a bottle ot&#13;
EXTRACT OF BENNK PLANT today.&#13;
H may save the life of your tiiild.&#13;
Prepared hy THE J. &amp; G. MAGWHL- \&#13;
-AlKRHmjUfl CQ„ ST.. LOU 13. MO. _&#13;
A true man would as soon be k n o c k e d&#13;
.3 Erfa 3 S3&#13;
Them mwo dwe rnn, eaa sy*&#13;
f i t t i n g , economical&#13;
Bhoca for progressives&#13;
men aro tho W. h.&#13;
D ju^laa S3 and $3.50&#13;
BIJOCS. Perfect shoes&#13;
that hold their shapo&#13;
and fit until worn out.&#13;
Over 1,000,009 satisfied&#13;
V7earere.&#13;
&amp;*%*$£* ja&#13;
d o w n a s pitied.&#13;
M a r r y i n g an h e i r e s s is o n e kind of a&#13;
s a f e t v juatch&#13;
vWhj do yon pay $4 to-&#13;
$5 fcr siioes when y&lt;m&#13;
DbuyW.L«DOGgIas .shoes for $3 and&#13;
$3.50 which&#13;
are jest as&#13;
gooti.&#13;
A 8 5 SHOE FOR 8 3 . 5 0 ,&#13;
A 8 4 SHOE FOR 8 3 .&#13;
Best for the Uovreti.&#13;
N o matter w h a t a i l s y o u , h e a d a c h e&#13;
t o a cancer, y o u w i l l n e v e r g e t w e l l&#13;
u n t i l your b o w e l s are put right,&#13;
CASCARLTS h e l p nature, eure y o u&#13;
w i t h o u t a gripe or pain, produce e a s y&#13;
n a t u r a l m o v e m e n t s , cost y o u j u s t 10&#13;
c e n t s to start g e t t i n g your h e a l t h back.&#13;
CASCARBTS Candy Cathartic, t h e&#13;
g e n u i n e , put up in m e t a l boxes, every&#13;
t a b l e t h a s C. C. C. s t a m p e d on it. l&amp;ew&#13;
a r e of imitations.&#13;
sinterv&#13;
S o m e b u s i n e s s men o n l y w i n financial&#13;
s u c c e s s . t h r o n g h failures.&#13;
Ladles Can Wear Shoes.&#13;
One s i t e s m a l l e r after u s i n g A l l e n ' s Foot-&#13;
E a s e , a p o w d e r . It m a k e s t i g h t or n e w&#13;
• h o e s easy.( Cures s w o l l e n , hot,sweating-,&#13;
aching-feet, ingrowing- n a i l s , corns and&#13;
bunions. A l l d i u j g - i s t s and s h c e stores,&#13;
» 5 c T r i a l package F R E E by mail. Add&#13;
r e s s A l l e n S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y.&#13;
If yoti w a n t advice c o n s u l t disi&#13;
e s t e d parties. ^&#13;
Ara.Ton Culag Allen'* FOOI-FAM«T&#13;
It is the o n l y cure for Swollen,&#13;
Smarting, Burning, Sweating Feet,&#13;
Corns and Bunions. Ask for Allen's&#13;
F o o t - E a s e , a powder to be shaken I n t o&#13;
the shoes. At all D r u g g i s t s an&lt;T Shoe&#13;
Stores, 25c, S a m p l e sent F R E E . Address&#13;
Allen S. Olmsted. LeRoy, N. Y.&#13;
Some neoplc put on airs IKV.UK? that is about&#13;
all they nave to put oa.&#13;
S T O M A C H O U T OF O R D E R ?&#13;
Lomou Bitters will nx yon v.p. Soiui IU* to&#13;
pay postoae on froo l&gt;otUe&#13;
Med. Co.. St Johus, Mich.&#13;
IAIHUU lliitcrs&#13;
An old bachelor says that tinu' is the only&#13;
cure for lovesickae**.&#13;
X n . Wlnslow's Soothing Hrrnp.&#13;
For ehlldrea twthlns. ftofteas the gom», reduce* ivr&#13;
fismtasUofi, slUft pftlii,caret wind colic 35c » bottle-&#13;
Tt ml?ht be R pood thinj; to »cml peneral hvimld)&#13;
iy ottt to China.&#13;
PARKER'* TIAR !UI.«AH kvem tin- tMir :«&gt;ft »nii )&gt;:rt-.ti-&#13;
Oil and restore* th« color when trm?.&#13;
HtNDKittxiSts. tt&gt;e U"st cun.1 for com* r&gt;&gt;t».&#13;
T h e more g r a s s a m a n h a s on h i s&#13;
l a w n t h e m o w e r lie w a n t s .&#13;
Important to Mothors.&#13;
Stantoe carefully svsry bottle of CASTOTUA.&#13;
a safe and sore remedy for infaats and children,&#13;
and tec tbat U&#13;
Bean the&#13;
Signature of ^ ^ ^ „ _ _ _&#13;
la Use For Over SO Years.&#13;
Taa Kind Yet Bavs'Alway» Bought&#13;
A m a n I s c o m p e U e d - t o k e e p h i s w o r d&#13;
w h e n n o o n e w i l l t a k e it.&#13;
B a c h p a c k a g e of P U T N A M F A D E -&#13;
L B 8 8 D Y E c o l o r s more g o o d s t h a n a n y&#13;
otiejr d v c a &gt; * ¥Ol«r» t V e w better, too.&#13;
It N better to be takeu by surpiibe than to be&#13;
taken by the police.&#13;
Plso's Cure is the best medlctbc we ever used&#13;
for al) affections or the throat aul lungs.—Wat.&#13;
O. E 9 D U . I T , Vanburen, Ind., Feb. iu, 1900.&#13;
The mosquito is olwajs read&gt; to present a&#13;
biU foi Oaxnase^.&#13;
Some article* must be described. Waite's&#13;
Yucatan needs uo description; It's the real&#13;
taint.&#13;
'• v&#13;
You ean easily fill the public eye it you have&#13;
sufficient dust.&#13;
T h e r e a l w o r t h o f e v « 3 a s * 8 S . A O&#13;
•boc* compared w i t h o t h e r aukk.e&lt;i I* Sat&#13;
o 9 3 . We «r« tha Urzctt mahcrt «nd ntftnert ef ,&#13;
fx-n'i*i and • 1.50 »hoc« fn th« world. We totk« ami&#13;
»'ll more $a«n&lt;l SVO kh&lt;&gt;*« thio an* ether two aaau&gt;&#13;
tart unrein the United State*.&#13;
Ifvriaff the lame* $3 and »1:0 ahoe baehteae in tha&#13;
world, and a perfect rjatcm of mejw'actonn*. ntabka&#13;
»i*toore&lt;hiee\i-bcrpado S3 and SUO ahoea tbaa can&#13;
be lud ebewfljere.&#13;
T H B K E A S q f f n m W.T..Doofhe|9e«d fSJS&gt;&#13;
aho« are eoU t k u c R elherm«ke Ubccenee'rilKY&#13;
A R E T H E B E S T . Your dealer ahoold kctp&#13;
thorn i w« give one dealer exelauve eaie in each town.&#13;
T a k e no MthetlU&gt;t&lt;*t Irwirt Ci» heTiec W. I..&#13;
Iwa^las tSan with name and prico tteznptd on Dcttcm.&#13;
Iivoardeak-T will not jret them for yon,acnd direct t&gt;&#13;
factorr, enolnainf pri&lt;-« and 2.¾. txtn lor euriajre.&#13;
State kind of leather, aize, and wuUi, plain or cap toe.&#13;
Our ahoea will men you anywhere. Cufatnpae Free.&#13;
N. L D0U6LAS SHOE GO., BmbM,&#13;
USE THE GENUINE . . . MURRAY &amp;&#13;
UNMANS Fioriaa wateil "THE UNIVERSAL PERFUME" )J&#13;
Forthe Handkerchief. /i&#13;
Toilet and Bath. \1&#13;
. . . REFUSE ALL SUB8TITUTCSijl&#13;
THE STANDARO&#13;
HtltlE&#13;
m%ke SS styles, tnalodins&#13;
tbe only two-ln-©oe hxk&#13;
and cbain stitch macbtae.&#13;
A so best low priced machines.&#13;
For prices adtiruss&#13;
J. B. ALDncH, Slate »*#«..&#13;
DKTBOIT, M : C 8 .&#13;
GHtAP FARMS&#13;
DO YOU WART II0IIE?&#13;
100,000 MIES tSSS&amp;SfJSFgSZi&#13;
and Mid on roag tuna aad easy p a y o u t s , a Utirs&#13;
each year. Come sad tea as or wrttt.TRXTttVUASS&#13;
MOS8 STATR BANK, Baatlse Center. M»cK&gt; ur&#13;
Th T*0s»n- Moss E ^16.0^-^^-^ Sflnrta- f!". Math.&#13;
© H i t m&#13;
W a a M n g t O a H D « € .&#13;
eWssvattv&#13;
BABY'S BATH TUB -^.- Nit mo.&#13;
lar. C1UNE BKoa. Liaaaaid Mtra,&#13;
&gt;t«MMd ta Whtte Bamr*)&#13;
Twiawol&#13;
W . N . U — D B T R O t T — N O . S C ^ - I 0 O O&#13;
M&#13;
mw&#13;
v M&#13;
:*n&#13;
\&lt;:&#13;
.•Y&gt;&#13;
;m&#13;
-:¾&#13;
Wat! fta»«ftfitt&#13;
Utatiat IWa rafW.&#13;
^&#13;
'« —&#13;
•m&#13;
•rWi' V \. * "&gt;&#13;
M m •&lt;•*•-'# :.,|&#13;
•v;- H% &amp; ¥ $*&#13;
• , • &gt; / &gt;fc^&#13;
R^y-if.&#13;
: , ' , r . • . , ' . ' . ' . « ' • •'&lt;•.'• • ' , " -&amp;&#13;
...,-....^- i^ .^:^-^. v"u;7^/ « • ( - • » •&#13;
« 1&#13;
'n't.'V&#13;
*? :¾&#13;
-V*1"&#13;
&gt; *&#13;
;w&#13;
•&amp;$fr . V« !$fc,&#13;
i2*&#13;
!&gt;(&gt;', »^Krl *&lt;-i&#13;
. . ¾ . ^&#13;
'»*»«• . - « '&#13;
. 1 ' I.'/tf ,wS k'&#13;
• &lt; . &gt; , -&#13;
•V.&#13;
'•^t^A*-: ::tf$-&#13;
"*"V &gt; • * • .&#13;
$#7fr#^*&#13;
:»#c &gt;*. .. • &gt; * &lt; •&#13;
'* * -V&#13;
«... .. r v r .. -. ~ -&#13;
, : - . 3 ^ . : . , . ^ , : ^&#13;
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'&gt;?';&#13;
• ' &gt; ' * M&#13;
-^:..&#13;
4-1)&#13;
^ •V'.*,'..'.; .* *'&#13;
•AT-W&#13;
"•&lt;&amp;£*»&#13;
•A*&#13;
-w..&#13;
iS.:,'v.t;v'.'-.;&#13;
* a * ^ * W * "&#13;
*"*"" ®He ^hufency: fisipti*.&#13;
BS'*-;"^V' Hf'^'-v- '."^ ^1&#13;
Rr^v/&#13;
»S&amp;'^£''&#13;
E3&gt;vrV&lt;:-/'&#13;
g K ? ^&#13;
|;^47;.&#13;
R&amp;^V^-*'' '.&#13;
lK^^.7^ ' . » -&#13;
pt£v*; IEijvV^^17- 77'*~ r i.-jj^1; §1S'' fJ'.jt'^V:&#13;
5? V-.*-'.;''-' *';&#13;
s1 ^ ;,sV.'\.;.&#13;
1 3 ^ ^ - - - - - fc... ,. ;&#13;
.^• :% W^$B , &gt; t v ^&#13;
# • • * - • ;'-•&#13;
•' : ' X&#13;
\ • '•-&#13;
•'• \ ...&#13;
-\ " •&#13;
i / ••&gt; " .\ , S*'&#13;
*7 "&#13;
'.* ' •&#13;
•&#13;
• -&#13;
.&#13;
f. L. ANDREWS E D I T O R .&#13;
THURSDAY, AUGUST 30, 1900.&#13;
• v&#13;
Here They: Are Tajse Tour Clioicr,&#13;
j «4» »#'&#13;
*;*"'&#13;
t w&#13;
• • * . « - • • -.&#13;
';,''''r&#13;
:^.&#13;
iSt?*&#13;
3S&#13;
M::.&#13;
r"*Tv:'i&#13;
• ^ ; - &gt; '&#13;
;?*?:••'&#13;
- Vt.s.^ii&#13;
/ » * &lt; • • •&#13;
Below we give the candidates&#13;
of all ticketa, both national and&#13;
state.&#13;
REPUBLICAN NATIONAL.&#13;
P w M i m t ^ W l l l t a m MeKitilcy. Ohio.&#13;
Vice»Prefi,—Tlieodore • Roosevelt, New&#13;
York.&#13;
Congress, Sixth District—Samuel "\V.&#13;
Smith,. Oakland.&#13;
^ ' " • ; ' " . s -&#13;
JV...H*&#13;
Ji':;'7-: V&#13;
STATK TICKET.&#13;
Governor—Aaron T. Bliss, Saginaw.&#13;
•Lieut. Governor-O. W. Robinson, ITouhgton.&#13;
S e c — F r e d W. Warner, Odlclaud.&#13;
Treas.—Daniel McCoy, K e n t . -&#13;
Auditor General-^Perrv F . Powers, Wexford.&#13;
, •&#13;
Commisioner of State Land Ofliee—E. A.&#13;
^\'ildey•, VauBuren,&#13;
Attorney General—Horace M. Orcn,&#13;
Chippewa.&#13;
Superintendent of Public Instruction—&#13;
'Delos Fall, Calhoun.&#13;
J l e m b e r of State B;mrd of Education—&#13;
J a m e s If. Thompson, Osceola.&#13;
DEMOCRAT NATIONAL.&#13;
President—William J . Bryan, Nebraska, j&#13;
Viee-Pres.—Adlai E . Stevenson, Illinois.&#13;
STATE TICKET.&#13;
Governor—Wm. C. May bury, W a y n e .&#13;
Lieut.-Governors-Jonathan G. Eamsdell,&#13;
Grand Traverse.&#13;
Sec.—John W. Kwiug, Eaton.&#13;
-Treas,—Clias. Sundstrom, Marquette,&#13;
Auditor-General—Hiratn B . H u d s o n , Antrim.&#13;
Attorney-General—James O ' H a r a , S t .&#13;
J o s e p h .&#13;
Land Com.—Geo, G, Winans, Livingston.&#13;
Supt. of Public Instruction—Stephen P .&#13;
Langdon, Monroe.&#13;
Member State Board of Education, J a m e s&#13;
McEutree, Isabella.&#13;
Importance ol good See4 Wheat,&#13;
"ri?he great trouble with most of&#13;
the farmers of this county, and I&#13;
suppose with the majority of farmers&#13;
elsewhere, is that they do&#13;
not pay enongh attention to thei.r&#13;
seed wheat. A farmer ought to&#13;
take the same pains in bringing1&#13;
up his seed wheat as in breeding&#13;
cattle. If the same .wheat is&#13;
grown year after year on the&#13;
same laud it is bound to deteriorate&#13;
in quality and become mixed&#13;
with rve, and theu thy—farmer&#13;
complains because his- crop is&#13;
diminishing year after year, when,&#13;
as a matter of fact, all that is&#13;
needed is careful attention in the&#13;
selection of seed. Seed that is&#13;
pure may be sowed this year and&#13;
there will be only a few spears of&#13;
rye in it. But Jhe rye ripeus before&#13;
the wheat and shells out on&#13;
ground and comes up the next&#13;
yenr as volunteer rye. The consequence&#13;
is that he is "docked" for&#13;
that reason when he takes his&#13;
wheat to mill.&#13;
"Every farmer who grows&#13;
wheat should set aside a small&#13;
field in which to «j;row his seed&#13;
wheat for the next year. He&#13;
should see that it is kept clear of&#13;
lye and weeds, and he ought to&#13;
winnow the wheat carefully, se-*&#13;
lecting the largest grains for seed,&#13;
and occasionalfy he should get a&#13;
fresh supply of imported seed.&#13;
The farmer who does this will&#13;
make money by it,, and his wheat&#13;
yield will be a third larger than&#13;
his neighbor's' who does not observe&#13;
these precautions."— Exchange-&#13;
An exchange SHJB that vertical"; ^ . • ^ • • ^ • • ^ t&#13;
hand writing is to be abandoned, J \ir (%&#13;
in the public scnools of KewYork \t *V . V '&#13;
and d return made to the slanting [J E(Htcd by tU9 w , c. T TV» rtnemey&#13;
rp&#13;
X •&#13;
Spenceriaa system. The reason&#13;
for the retutn is that the vertical&#13;
system is now regarded as a fad&#13;
and that the style is not liked by&#13;
the lousiness houses, so tlfat scholars&#13;
from the public schools had&#13;
the slanting system to learn it&#13;
they entered commercial life.&#13;
The safe side fur Alcohol.&#13;
"Through the months of June and&#13;
July our baby was teething and t.ok&#13;
a running off of the bowel-; and sickness&#13;
of the Stomach,''says 0. -P. M.&#13;
Holliday, of Deming ind. "His bowels&#13;
would .move from five to eight&#13;
times a day. I had a bottle of Chamberlain's&#13;
Lolic, Cholera and Diarrhoea&#13;
-Rcmcdy-m the hmree-arrd—trare hrrrr&#13;
four drops in a teaspoonful. of water&#13;
and ho got belter at once." Sold by&#13;
F. A. Sigler, Pinckney.&#13;
~ A MHiingr* uooa w o r k . — —&#13;
"I had a severe attack of bilious&#13;
colic, got a bottle oC Chamberlain's&#13;
Colie, Choleta and Diarrhoea Remedy,&#13;
took two doses aud was entirely cured,"&#13;
says Rev. A. A. Power, of Emporia,&#13;
Kan. "My neighbor across the&#13;
street was sick for over a week, had&#13;
two or three bottles of medicine from&#13;
the doctor. He used them for three&#13;
or four days without relief, then&#13;
called in another doctor who treated&#13;
him for some days an&lt;t gave him no&#13;
relief, so • discharged him. i went&#13;
over to see him .the next morning.&#13;
He said his bowels were in a terrible&#13;
fix, that they had been " running oft'&#13;
so long that it was a'most-bloody flux.&#13;
I asked him if lie had Lied Chamberlain's&#13;
Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea&#13;
Remedv and be said. 'No.' I went&#13;
home and l.rought him my bottlo and&#13;
gave him one dose; told him to takn&#13;
another dose in fifteen or twenty minutes&#13;
if he did not find relief, but he&#13;
took no more and was entirely cured."&#13;
For sale bv F. A. Sicler. Pincknev.&#13;
BY FRANCES BENK£*CGALLAWAY.&#13;
On© of our leading journals,&#13;
upon being asked whether or not&#13;
alcohol is a food, replied briefly&#13;
but forcibly; "Alcohol is not a&#13;
7 « » t wJ»4t * • * Hfc^ ' 7 : : v .&#13;
Eat g» y«u Ufa K**p atrpnigr; Uy^tttkiug&#13;
KtiOl'u Dj8u$p*ia T*Wet*. The; digest&#13;
any ami «jl kin^e of food. Make pure,'&#13;
sweet etomachs and breaths. Try tHera.&#13;
Only 23c a box. - , ... ^&#13;
rteasuut* 8&amp;$9 and nure&#13;
are Kull^s Bluck Dia;;Hipea Pills. (Black&#13;
berry Compound) cur^ Summer complatai*&#13;
Diarrhoea, Dysentery, Cholera Morbus and&#13;
all pains of the stomacli un^bowels; "25c"a"&#13;
box. • ,&#13;
Orange Headache.&#13;
Koiil'sOrange Headao^e PUIH, JO dose 10c&#13;
Cure in 10 minutes, are the best uud cheap&#13;
»i '"y* ,',r m*'*' mmmmmmmm *«r ' - • • • - • • • - • ^ : / i .&#13;
•v •.&#13;
'• • . , . , t&#13;
, i V ; . •••&#13;
!.''' , -&#13;
food for au athlete, a n d if not for eti*. Never fail or leave aoy bad, afjer ef&#13;
— 'fecT uuaranteed by yourvaruggtBt. ~~"&#13;
EXCURSIONS&#13;
VIA THE PERE MARQUETTE&#13;
The laws of health require that the&#13;
bowels move once each day and oneot&#13;
the penalties lor violating this law is&#13;
piles. Keep your bowels regular by&#13;
taking a dose of Chamberlain's Stomach&#13;
and Liver Tablet., when necessary&#13;
and you will never have-ihat severepunishment&#13;
inflicted upon you.&#13;
Price, 25 cent*. For sale by F. A.&#13;
Sigler, Pincknev.&#13;
— T h e latest work of t h e a u t h o r of&#13;
" W h e n K n i g h t h o o d was in Flowe&#13;
r " h a s been s e c u r e d by T h e&#13;
L a d i e s ' H o m e J o u r n a l . As would&#13;
be expected, it has to do with adventure—&#13;
the expierances of some&#13;
frontier children. There is a&#13;
childish romance woven into the&#13;
stories, and they will have a keen&#13;
interest for boys AS well as for&#13;
-itheir elders. Under the heading&#13;
of "Blue River Bear Stories" Mr.&#13;
the&#13;
Octobor Journal.&#13;
Milwaukee, Sept. 11 low rate across&#13;
the Lake by Daylight.&#13;
an athlete then not for anyone.&#13;
It hardens the tissues of the body&#13;
and that is not desirable; besides&#13;
it- hardens the liver at the same&#13;
time. When the question arises&#13;
between you and alcohol, the safe&#13;
side for alcohol is—the outside."&#13;
A commercial traveler has&#13;
come to the same conclusion&#13;
about beer, after hearing the following&#13;
conversation on a hotel&#13;
piazza between two brewers.&#13;
"I Use brass faucets," said one&#13;
brewer.&#13;
"Oh, I have given them up. I&#13;
use wood faucets," returned the&#13;
other brewer. "The fact is I cannot&#13;
afford to use brass faucets,&#13;
they are eaten up so fast."&#13;
"Eaten up!" exclaimed the com:&#13;
mercial traveler in astonishment,&#13;
"By what?" .&#13;
"Theijeer, my friend," returned&#13;
! the brewer, good-naturedly.&#13;
I "If your beer eats up brass&#13;
| faucets." commented the coturnerj&#13;
cinl traveler, "how do you suppose&#13;
jit effects a mans stomach? It&#13;
I must eat that up!"&#13;
j. "That's right," returned the&#13;
brewer and he and his companion&#13;
laughed at the little pleasantry.&#13;
There is oue commercial traveler&#13;
now who refuses beer for his&#13;
Our fee returned if wc fail. Any one seudinjj&#13;
aketch and description; of .auy invenUoa will&#13;
through us advertised lor sale nt cnir^xpeuae;&#13;
Patents taken out t!uou;;!i us -receive special&#13;
toUc?, w it hunt d'.r\:g&lt;-, in T U B 1'ATKNT SKCORJB,&#13;
an illustrated and wMtly circulated journal,&#13;
consulted by &gt;rntui^;ct,.ivevsoiul Investors. -&#13;
Seud iur .-"jia^k-copy fRi'.Z. Address,&#13;
VICTOR v). EVANS St CO.&#13;
(Patent Attorneys,)&#13;
S t a n s Building, WASHINGTON, O. &amp;&#13;
A LETTER.&#13;
OXATE of MICHIGAN, County of Llvlngetoa,&#13;
At a Mission of the Probate Coart-for said County,&#13;
held at the Probate OlHce in tlio Village of&#13;
Howell, OQ Saturclay the -Itii day of Amnist. iu&#13;
the year one thousand nine hundred. *&#13;
Present, ALiiUtD M. DAVIS; Judyo of Probate,&#13;
lu thq MiUter uf the Estate of&#13;
DAN JACKSON, rcceaeec!.&#13;
•* On reading and lilins tliepetliiouinTy verified ot&#13;
Orln M. Jackson, praying that a certain instrument&#13;
now on file in tti B court, \n\\ )&gt;ortu g lv be the last&#13;
Will and Testament of i-aid deceased, may be admitted&#13;
to probate.&#13;
Thereupon it is orderedthat Thursday, the 30tb&#13;
day of -Aug. next, at 1 o'clock fu the afternoon.'at&#13;
said Uiohate Olfico, be assigned for the hearing of&#13;
enld petition.&#13;
It is further ordered that a copy of this order be&#13;
published in the PiscKNiiY DISPATCH, a newspaper&#13;
printed and circulating iu eaiu county, three&#13;
successive weeks previous to said day of .hearing.&#13;
Ai.flutn M. DAVIS,&#13;
t-8G _ Judge of Probate.&#13;
Now, brethern, listen to reason.&#13;
Don't make the penalty of losing&#13;
your wager on the election this&#13;
fall such foolishness as pushing&#13;
the winner around in a wheelbarrow&#13;
or other like nonsonse.&#13;
Make it something useful, such as j&#13;
a week's work on the street o r , . r . , . , .,, ,&#13;
,. . v , ,, , V • i LMaior s serial will begin in&#13;
something like that. Your neigh- &gt;_ , ,&#13;
bors will be pleased, and you will&#13;
be saved from making fools of! ._ , , ~~ . , . , ..&#13;
I "My baby ^as terribly sick with the&#13;
! diarrhoea," says J. H. Dosk, of Willj&#13;
iams, Oregon&#13;
TO Cure ti ( o l d in One D a y&#13;
T a k e Laxative liromo Quinine Tail-&#13;
\c-t-i. All d r u g p i i t s refund the nionej&#13;
if it faiU to cure. E. W. (irove's&#13;
n a t u r e i^ on each box-. 25e.&#13;
^ -&#13;
T h e production of iron ore in&#13;
Michigan for the year 1800 amount.&#13;
s to 9,146,157 tons. Michigan&#13;
leads all the other states.&#13;
yourselves.—Laingsburg News.&#13;
S t o p Hie C o i u t h a n l w o r i c « o n t u e&#13;
C o l d .&#13;
Laxative Bromo-Quinine Tablet's cure&#13;
a coW in one day. No &lt; ure, no. pay.&#13;
Price 25 cenls.&#13;
We were unable to&#13;
Frank Leslie'b Popular Monthly&#13;
for September iliustrates4;he possibilities&#13;
of a Magizine which aims&#13;
to keep in touch with t h e serious&#13;
interests of the more intelligent&#13;
men and women of to-day ,as well&#13;
as to amuse every reader by cleverness&#13;
and variety. T h e leading&#13;
article is a personal record of almost&#13;
unparalled adventure, written&#13;
by W. Walton, -chief quartermaster&#13;
of our navy, who shared&#13;
cure him w4tb the doctor's assistance,&#13;
and as a last resort we tried Chambelain's&#13;
Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea&#13;
Remedy. I am happy to say it gave&#13;
immediate relief and a complete cure."&#13;
For sale by F. A. Siller, Pinckney.&#13;
Gommander-in-Chief A. D.&#13;
Shaw, of the Grand A r m y of the&#13;
Republic, says at tlie coming encampment&#13;
in Chicago a resolution&#13;
will probably ba passed to&#13;
change the date of Memorial day&#13;
to the last Sunday in May. H e&#13;
says that the members feel that as&#13;
it now is the day largely devoted&#13;
to sports and., amusements, and&#13;
with Lieut. Gillmore a captivity of I,, , , , m . . .a - , ,&#13;
of, mo. re than ei.g h. t month. rs amJo ng ithat the real significance of the&#13;
the Filipinos. Thrilling as a&#13;
story, the narrative gives oue a&#13;
new insight into the character of&#13;
the Filipino people. The much&#13;
talked of Wn Tingfang, Chinese&#13;
Minister at Washington, contributes&#13;
an intelligent paper upon his&#13;
own people, and this is reinforced&#13;
•by an article tolling just the facts&#13;
about the Boxers wlirch few peopleknow,&#13;
and everybody wants to&#13;
know. ''^&#13;
occasion is in a great measure&#13;
overlooked. It is thought that&#13;
the change would result in a more&#13;
faithful and proper observance''of&#13;
the day.&#13;
What ,most people want is some&#13;
tbing mild and crentln, when in need&#13;
of a physic.- Chaint erlain's Stomach&#13;
and Liver Tablets fill the bill to a dot&#13;
They are easy ty take fcnd pleasant in&#13;
effect, For sale, by F. A. Sigler&#13;
Einckuey.&#13;
An excellent opportunity to visit&#13;
Milwaukee and the Northwest,&#13;
will be afforded by this excursion j stomach's sake.&#13;
as tickets will be good to return&#13;
until Sept. ~2. Train will leave&#13;
South Lyon at 8:33 a. m. and pr- The past week we received an&#13;
rive at Ottawa Beach at ~ p. m., interesting letter from Bert Lyon&#13;
where a Pere Marquette steamer, j fprmerlly of this place, he enwill&#13;
be waiting to complete a de- j listed at Grand Rapids last June,&#13;
lightfnl trip by daylight across ; and was placed in the recruiting&#13;
Lake Michigan, arriving-in Mil- [detatchment of the 8th Cavalry,&#13;
waukee at 10 p. m. Bound trip TJ. S. A. He is now second cook&#13;
rate from South Lyou,$5.00. Be-i \a the mess .kitchen. Bert says&#13;
turning steamers leave Milwaukee{umt when he'}qineJ the array ne&#13;
at 9:30 p. m. every day. t-BG had to give his fu]l name, so he&#13;
\ will be known as George A. Lyon&#13;
• and at present his tropp is sta-&#13;
I iioned at Fort Riley, Ran. Bert&#13;
'says, "I like the army all H^rht so&#13;
I far, I do not have to drilKnow&#13;
I that I am cook. There are tWro&#13;
: troops of the 8th Cavalry besides,&#13;
[the Recruiting detatchment, and&#13;
j two Batterys of Artillery here at&#13;
the post at present.&#13;
Since I came here there has&#13;
been three troops of Cavalry and&#13;
one Battery of Artiilary sent&#13;
away; A. and C. troops of the 8th&#13;
went to fort Reno and Sills, Oklahoma.&#13;
A troop of the 6th, and&#13;
O. Battery of the 7th Artillery to&#13;
China. The Cavalry expect to.be&#13;
called out any time now.&#13;
Fort Riley is a very pretty&#13;
place all the buildings except a&#13;
few of the old one's -are' built of&#13;
stofce. v There is a church, a store,,&#13;
a postoffice, and a saloon here the&#13;
last three are in different parts of&#13;
the same building. A short distance&#13;
from the postoffice upon a&#13;
a n bill there is a moument, it stands&#13;
net I&#13;
as near the center of the United&#13;
States as they could get it.&#13;
Ann Arbor R. R. Annual Excursion to&#13;
Potosjicy, Bay View, Traverse City,&#13;
Frankfort and Crystal Lake&#13;
On Tuesday Sept. 4 the Ann Arbor&#13;
R. R. will give its annual cheap excursion&#13;
to the above resorts. Special&#13;
train will run through without change&#13;
of car* leaving Hamburg at 12:56 p.-&#13;
m. Fare for round trip $5:00. Tickets&#13;
good for return until Saturday&#13;
Sept.15 inclusive. September is the&#13;
nicest month in the year to travel and&#13;
the Ann Arbor R. R. is tlje shortest&#13;
and quickest route to the-point named&#13;
above. .,.:',.&#13;
SOME FACTS! READ THEM!&#13;
EUREKA SURE STOP TOOTHACHE POWDERS&#13;
Gives quick and sure relief.&#13;
EUREKA COMPLEXION OINTMENT&#13;
Removes I51itck-heads and Pimples..&#13;
EUREKA CORN CURE&#13;
Cures all (dome, Bunions, and Callous&#13;
places. ~~~&#13;
EUREKA 0. K. WART REMOVER&#13;
Is certain in its results.&#13;
E a c h 1 0 c , C o i n O P S t a m p s&#13;
By R e t u r n Mail.&#13;
Agents wanted—write today.&#13;
Address, EUUEKA SUPPLY HOUSE,&#13;
Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
The heart which can carry the tri;'-&#13;
dens and sorrows of f-ven the n:o = t&#13;
forsaken, which can male room Tor&#13;
the griefs and tolls and cares of the&#13;
hapless multitude, is filled without&#13;
measure with the life and love of&#13;
God.—Charles F. B. Miel..&#13;
Religion has not primarily come to&#13;
man by deliberate ratiocination, but&#13;
by spontaneous experience. I t is the&#13;
whole of man responding to the whole&#13;
of God. Human • nature has not&#13;
thought out. it has experienced religion.—&#13;
John- White ChadwicU.&#13;
Try to realize^ God's presence; the&#13;
Railroad Guide.&#13;
m&#13;
; ' A:»-D STEAMSHIP LINES*&#13;
Popular route tor Ann Arbor,. Toledo&#13;
and points East, South, and for&#13;
tiowell, Qsvossp, A!ma, Mt Pleasant&#13;
Cadillac, Slanistee, Traverse City and&#13;
points in Northwestern iMchigan.&#13;
W. H . BENNETT,&#13;
G. P . A. Toledo&#13;
PERE MARQUETTE&#13;
S i a i l x o o A , M a y 3 . 3 , 1 9 $ 0 .&#13;
realizing it ever so little has a wo^de'rfullv&#13;
soothine and calmins: inflncrce&#13;
on the heart. Kay seemly: ' The Lrrd&#13;
la in his ho1:*' ter.rlc (his: teniae ;f&#13;
the inner man); &gt; ep s'.!rr.:e, O my&#13;
heart, before him." The mind wants&#13;
steadying- many timet; a day.—E. 21.&#13;
Gouihurn . , -&#13;
.Scept'chm in moral mature is&#13;
active ally of immorality. Who i:&#13;
for is agair.Rt. The univ rse v:"il&#13;
have no neutrals in th^se ciu"''oi^.&#13;
In tlu-ory as in practice, dodg : or&#13;
hedge, or talk as we like, about a wis";&#13;
rcFv/icirm;, we ere really dcl::g vc.lunteer&#13;
military Ke:vice for one s^id : or&#13;
ih- rrh:v.—-William .lame?.&#13;
'ih? «80111 is such all lUbU un.ent ihul&#13;
no ireiiiw is it set in p(a;:e&gt; w.th ;.:„e'.i'&#13;
th."!-1 it l;eeomr:&lt; an in&lt;-tiv,ment i:» Lu ,e.&#13;
a living" insnruinr lu.-dipc'ourslng h. aver*;."&#13;
'-.'.U'-ie in i^ thoughts and c'.a'.iti-&#13;
r.g ;i.fe!cd:es ,^f hlt&amp;s-(.ven in its dreams.&#13;
\Y;.'! " • o-,'1 is in this harmony no&#13;
five:; o: calamity, r.b pains of outward&#13;
lorii-erl i'T.n' for a moment break the&#13;
sov^'ei^n ?pell of its Joy,—Horace&#13;
n:-.;.".)' ' . •&#13;
Lv&#13;
Ar&#13;
Lv&#13;
Ar&#13;
OOINO KA9T&#13;
l O U l d l l » f l l » . » 4 » l « » » « &gt; | g » | |&#13;
Lanfeiog , , .&#13;
n O n c i l » * « i M i i i t i i i t M M t&#13;
South Lyon 1&#13;
S ftlCTll ^ , . , , , , , , , , 1 , . , . . . , ,&#13;
OOTNO WKUT&#13;
Detroit....&#13;
Plymonth&#13;
salom.,&#13;
South Lyon ^.,.&#13;
El 0 W 6 l i H I i M H i i l » I M M I&#13;
Lansing&#13;
&lt;'r^nd Ritflds&#13;
^&#13;
«1 m10&#13;
7 40&#13;
9 CM&#13;
10 05&#13;
10 %&#13;
10 46&#13;
11 00&#13;
11 40&#13;
am"&#13;
8-^&#13;
0 ¾&#13;
0 :£&#13;
0 4»&#13;
10 88&#13;
H 89&#13;
12 50&#13;
1 30&#13;
p ra&#13;
Id 05&#13;
12 20&#13;
] 45&#13;
2 8ft&#13;
8 04&#13;
s ?x&#13;
405&#13;
P m&#13;
-1 10&#13;
1 48&#13;
208&#13;
2 8&amp;&#13;
3 30&#13;
4 •]&amp;&#13;
!S 10&#13;
])m&#13;
5 30&#13;
600&#13;
78T&#13;
9 2V&#13;
868&#13;
908&#13;
9 9()&#13;
10 0»&#13;
P m&#13;
5 15&#13;
5S8&#13;
"6 10&#13;
ft'JO&#13;
6 58&#13;
7Ba&#13;
9 30&#13;
10 00&#13;
FfUNK BAY,&#13;
Agent, South Lyon.&#13;
H. F. MOELCEU,&#13;
Actinu G. P. A.,&#13;
Grand ftapidt,&#13;
Bring your Job Work to this oflfice.&#13;
Subscribe for the DISPATCH .&#13;
CO VEARfl&#13;
EXPERIENCE&#13;
TRADE M W R I *&#13;
Ocaiomr&#13;
G0PVRI0HT« Ac.&#13;
Anyone wndltig a n*»toh and dewr^pil^n may&#13;
cralokly ascertain onr arlnton free whethef a s&#13;
mventlrm uprohnhljr jmtmitaMo. ComtnunlOK»&#13;
ttonaatrictlyoonnrtentiul: TTRnrthortk on.Patentf&#13;
•ontfreo. oldist naonry fur Returni/ tijitoiua. .&#13;
Patent* takon thro;&gt;iih Munn A Co. recelft&#13;
tpfttnlnotice, without ohr.rije, tn tho Scientific ftmnm.&#13;
febandlomel7 ilfnnerated weakrf. Lavdent &lt;*s&#13;
latton of anyaoiaouflo Jourrou. Tertui, u •&#13;
S w t tour tnontbi, IL BOM brail nawadaaierj.&#13;
o o&gt;,&#13;
m - . . ' : . ' • • . , '•'•••••;'; " • ' • . . ••'•: : ~ . • . ; ' . . ' ^ - - ^ - ' • ' • " • : ,&#13;
I" '^"(""'If' *!T&#13;
x . C , . , / ^ '&#13;
^ T :&#13;
•. ; ' • • • , ' . ' • ' , ' • • [ ' • . . . : ' . ' • • . • , • ' . ' » ' • ' , : • • : ' . . • " ' . t- . ' , ^ , ' ' &lt; ! • « •"•'jr..'"' ( &lt; • ' . " J • • . W i , . * ! * v ' • ' : . . . ; , ,' v ' ' ' • . . ' ! / ? , ' " , &amp;. &gt; ' " : • : w . i l . . i « i d " ' A'.,. . ; . » , • . ' ' • • • ' • - ' ' ' • &gt; « ' • : ; : • : » . • . * ' • . • : • . ' • . &lt; ; : . &lt; « ^ . . ( ^ . • « . &gt; • " . ' , ' * ••v.'&#13;
';•'-&lt; -r*&gt;*.. . ^ ^ ^ r ' t ? ^ • ' • , . '- -i**^&lt;te'-ti$v,'-6 : ,*^r••••*S'*^!^^••:••&gt;"iT^^^•'': •¾^.•.&gt; : ^i•'^•,^, ' l £ - •&gt;*•&gt;.•;•.* £ f e ^ 2 : ' ~ •*•.«$:.•**• . . ^ / :..J'-&lt;- ^/--.:^i '^• &gt;*• \ •"• •'•&lt; ; •„• * • * • ; ^ * V v ^ v * ^ ^VVV"' '••*•/!:*• - \ # 7&lt;tfrt J£^ yU'iy&#13;
/&#13;
.:. :ci... • • - • v ..*.'.&#13;
— - .i.&#13;
. - v ^ , *». , ^&#13;
; - * ' • * • .&#13;
, • ' .&#13;
- •:• • £&#13;
.»&#13;
•; v ;&#13;
s'..&#13;
"&gt;.&#13;
•M*&#13;
•'. ; . r &lt; ^ '&#13;
•.'-..•A.&#13;
^ : - - ' :• J-J-.'- . T&#13;
•»i,'-^vl&gt;.&#13;
-• cf.&#13;
: • • &gt; *&#13;
t .&#13;
1/&#13;
• t&#13;
4&#13;
•v&#13;
V&#13;
•!*•»••»&#13;
3cK K &amp; K K &amp; K K &amp;&#13;
DISEASE! MEN.&#13;
NO CURE* NO PAY&#13;
S m MSTHQP TR1ATM35NT,&#13;
tgtnat with Drs. K. &amp; K., will po«i-&#13;
?Sy^ «weforwrwiy ftnn 'of' Blood' or&#13;
IBMUU dSewe. It i 8 &gt; e result of 80 Seftta' experknc* in the treatment of&#13;
)6M diieaaes.&#13;
WE CURE SYPHILIS&#13;
Ibis terrible Blood Poison* the terror&#13;
Potash, etc. They may ruin yonv »r»tem. I&#13;
If you have lores in the mouth or tonga**!&#13;
pains in the joints, sore throat, hair or]&#13;
eyebrows falling out, pimples or blotches,&#13;
'stomach derangement, sore eyes, bead*I&#13;
I Aohes. etc, you have theeeoondaryjitMe&#13;
I of this Blood Poison. We wrticit the&#13;
most obitinate eases, and ohallente ibe]&#13;
world forrcase we accept for treatment&#13;
and cannot cure. By our treatment tne&#13;
uteefs heal, the hair grows again, pains&#13;
disappear, the skiu becomes healthy, and I&#13;
marriage is possible and rafe,&#13;
CURES GUARANTEED Thousands of young and ln'iddUwaged&#13;
men have their vigor and vitality tapped&#13;
i by early abuses, later excesses, mental&#13;
5orry. etc No matter the cause, our&#13;
ew Method Treatment is the refuge.&#13;
WECUREIMPOTENCY&#13;
And restore «11 parts to a normal condition.&#13;
Ambition, life and energy are re-1&#13;
newed, and one feels himself a man&#13;
among men. Every case is treated indlr |&#13;
vidually—no cure-all—henco our wonderful&#13;
success. No matter what ails you,&#13;
consult us confidentially. We can furnish&#13;
bank bonds to guarantee to accem-&#13;
[ plieh what we claim.&#13;
2 5 0 , 0 0 0 CURED&#13;
We treat and cure: EMISSIONS,&#13;
I VARICOCELE. SYPHILIS, GLEET.&#13;
STRICTURE. IMPOTENCY, SECKEl*&#13;
D R A I N S . utfXATUKAI, DISCHAUG-&#13;
; ES, KIDNEY and BLADDER Diseases.&#13;
CONSULTATION FREE. BOQKS&#13;
FREE. If unable to call, write for |&#13;
QUESTION BLANK for HOME&#13;
TREAT3IENT.&#13;
|KENN£DY£ KERGAN&#13;
Cor, Michigan Ave. and Shelby St,&#13;
DETROIT, MICH.&#13;
K &amp; K K &amp; K K &amp; K K &amp;&#13;
A $ 4 . 0 0 BOOK FOR 75CIS,&#13;
The EarawK'Encyclopedia. *&#13;
^a Every thins; p*r&gt;&#13;
.&lt;^*r7^^_ ^J4 taining to the affairs&#13;
ox the farm,&#13;
h o u s e h o l d and&#13;
stock raising. Embraces&#13;
articles on&#13;
the horse, the colt,&#13;
horse habits, diseases&#13;
of the horse,&#13;
the farm, grasses,&#13;
fruit culture, daiiying,&#13;
cooitery, health,&#13;
cattle, sheep.swine,&#13;
Soultry, beta, the&#13;
og, toilet, social&#13;
life, etc., eta One&#13;
of the most complete&#13;
Encyclopedias&#13;
in existence.&#13;
A large book, 8x5U&#13;
x 1% inches. 636 agel fully illuaited,&#13;
bound in&#13;
green cloth binding&#13;
and equal to&#13;
other books costing&#13;
11.00. If you desire this bookaend us our special&#13;
oflfer price, $0.fS, and 10.20 extra for postage and&#13;
we will forward the book to you. If it is not satisfactory&#13;
return it and we will exchange it or refund&#13;
rour money. Send for our special illustrated cataoguc.&#13;
quoting the lowest prices on books, F U Z&#13;
We can save you money. Address all orders to&#13;
e) THE WERNER COMPANY, •&#13;
VnbUkhtrt and KMatutumi. AJtTOn, OhiOi&#13;
[The Werner Compan,v it thorouchlv reliable.]—Editor.&#13;
NOCTURNE&#13;
Night on the gray sea,&#13;
Arid one gray ship;&#13;
It baa bung out a light,&#13;
Gold in the gray night;&#13;
And over, sea to in a&#13;
The alienee bring*&#13;
A foreign air&#13;
A sailor 8ing»'&#13;
i ' ...; _ . . ..__;.&#13;
Remote as a dr«am, ti.* #«a&#13;
Breathes, asleep;&#13;
' Remote as a dream, the hour&#13;
Has a dream's power;&#13;
And out of the dream to m*&#13;
Comes, with the song,&#13;
-4The face of »no unsMa —&#13;
T f&#13;
O, how long!&#13;
Your myriad-mazed h«u&#13;
' Never. I know,&#13;
Shall blind my eyes with' a n i g h t&#13;
Dearer than day's light:&#13;
Be it so; but where,&#13;
Girl, are you gone?&#13;
It is my heart's cry,&#13;
And my heart cries on. *&#13;
Night falls, and a star&#13;
Flutters white in the gray.&#13;
Hushed 1B the song; to me&#13;
Whispers the warm sea:&#13;
'Hush, hush, heart!&#13;
But if I could only tell&#13;
If she be near or far.&#13;
Ah! 't were well!"&#13;
—Paul Mall Gazette,&#13;
•:-.H**&#13;
r&lt;&#13;
A * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * . * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *&#13;
\ LOYE'S OWN WAY, ! »* - •*&#13;
"I don't like to have you go skating&#13;
with Fannie Engle."&#13;
So said Mrs. Harte to her daughter&#13;
May one afternoon late in February.&#13;
"That is strange, mamma, when you&#13;
have always liked Fannie so much,"&#13;
pouted May.&#13;
"Now, daughter, you know very&#13;
well why I do not want you to g o&#13;
with Fanny," and Mrs. Harte paused&#13;
and looked straight at her daughter.&#13;
And May did know.&#13;
Exactly one month before May&#13;
Harte had become engaged to George&#13;
Noble, as fine a young man a s h i s&#13;
name. But before her engagement she&#13;
had been very "sweet," as" the girls&#13;
put it, upon Fanny Engie's brother&#13;
Horace, a young man of poor haWts,&#13;
and it was on account of Horace that&#13;
Mrs. Harte did not wish her betrothed&#13;
daughter to go skating with Fanny.&#13;
But May was willful.&#13;
"I am sorry," said Mrs. Harte,."that&#13;
May acts so. Some time she will go&#13;
too. far."&#13;
That afternoon a messenger boy&#13;
came with a letter for May and a large&#13;
bouquet of flowers. The letter read:&#13;
"Dearest May—I. drop you this line&#13;
to remind you that we are to go skating&#13;
this afternoon, and Horace says to&#13;
be sure, and send you these flowers&#13;
with our compliments. He will join&#13;
us on the ice. Lovingly,&#13;
"FANNY."&#13;
May read the note an.d smiled with&#13;
pleasure. "Isn't that sweet of Fanny?"&#13;
said she.&#13;
But her mother sighed. She did not&#13;
want May to encourage Fanny or her&#13;
brother, for she felt that it would&#13;
lead to no 5^1 ^&#13;
Werner's Dictionary 01 Synonyms i Antonyms,&#13;
HTtnolosy and Familiar&#13;
' A book that should be in the vest&#13;
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| No Two Words in the English&#13;
[Language Have Exactly the&#13;
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the precise meaning that one in*&#13;
[tends to convey a dictionary oi&#13;
Synonyms is needed to avoid repetition.&#13;
The strongest figure of&#13;
speech is antithesis. In this dictionary&#13;
the appended Antonyms&#13;
I will, therefore, be found extremely&#13;
valuable. Contains many otherfeatures&#13;
such as Mythology,&#13;
Familiar Allusions and Fortiga&#13;
Phrases, Prof. loisette's Memory&#13;
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M0NT60MERY WAR0&amp; c o , " ^ * ^ ^ * , ' — " ' -&#13;
That afternoon May went skating&#13;
with Fanny and h«r brother^ and It;&#13;
was fully 5 o'clock when tne returned.&#13;
"I am going to supper with Fanny,"&#13;
said she', "and as George was coming&#13;
to call this evening I shall drop him a&#13;
little line t o tell him not to call before&#13;
to-morrow."&#13;
Mrs. Harte objected, seriously, but&#13;
her willful daughter r was not to be&#13;
turned, so she let her go her own way,&#13;
though she felt that 4t was a mistake&#13;
for May to treat her betrothed In that&#13;
manner.&#13;
Foolish May! She was actually In&#13;
love with George, but, like many other&#13;
girls who have secured a good&#13;
/ o u n g man, she was capricious an&lt;?&#13;
liked to' try his affection. George Hadnoticed&#13;
her caprlclousness, but bore&#13;
it good naturedly.&#13;
That evening May sent her note to&#13;
George telling him not to call, and&#13;
then went to Fanny's house to spend&#13;
the evening,.&#13;
If May noticed anything strange&#13;
about the conduct of Fanny or her&#13;
brother that evening, she said nothing,&#13;
but afterward she admitted that&#13;
both had acted a little strangely.&#13;
After supper Fanny suggested that&#13;
all three go for a walk, but when they&#13;
were ready to start May was surprised&#13;
to see a sleigh standing at the front&#13;
door. "We are going for a ride Instead&#13;
of a walk," whispered Fanny,&#13;
putting her arm p'ayfully around&#13;
May's waist, "surely, you will not refuse&#13;
to go with us, dear."&#13;
Before May kenw it they were all&#13;
seated in the sleigh and the driver was&#13;
rapidly speeding along down the street&#13;
toward the main avenue which ran&#13;
through the middle of the town.&#13;
Scarcely had they gone more than&#13;
a block whe/h Fanny put her arm&#13;
aroujid May and drew her head down&#13;
on her shoulder. '"Dear May," said&#13;
she, "there Is something Horace and I&#13;
want to say tp you, and we thought&#13;
you would not refuse us."&#13;
And then to her horror and surprise,&#13;
Horace Engle began to pour into h^r&#13;
ear his tale of love and long affection,&#13;
while Fanny added a word here and&#13;
there.&#13;
May, too indignant to reply, put her&#13;
hands to her ears to shut out the&#13;
sound.&#13;
Stop, stop!" cried May. "Such dishonorable&#13;
talk I never heard. I w 11&#13;
not allow you to speak to me this way.&#13;
Remember that I am the afllanced wi.e&#13;
of George Noble, as true and gool a&#13;
m.an as ever walked, and that I "will'&#13;
not listen to such words." Then •.tuning&#13;
to her friend she said: "Fanny, I&#13;
am ashamed of you."&#13;
Fanny flushed mid stammered, hut&#13;
her brother said, "That is all very.VPl:&#13;
May but you know 'all's fair in i-~vo&#13;
and war."&#13;
Then again Fanny began to r:ax&#13;
May to. consider the step which *he&#13;
might take and make her brother so&#13;
happy. "Horace has promised to turn&#13;
over a new leaf if you will marry&#13;
him."&#13;
"Stop this sleigh immediately," almost&#13;
shrieked May. "I do not wonder,&#13;
Fanny, that you thought it n t ^ s s t r y&#13;
to bring me away out here to talk to&#13;
me in so dishonorable a way. But I&#13;
will not listen to it. Stop the 6leigh&#13;
right away. I shall wajk home, it&#13;
would be contamination for me to remain&#13;
any longer in your presence,"&#13;
she cried turning to Horace, with i&#13;
scorn In her flashing eye.&#13;
Alarmed by her vehemence, Horace&#13;
opened the sleigh door and called to&#13;
the driver, and the sleigh came to a&#13;
standstill, but scarcely before May&#13;
had bounded out. "You are a rman,&#13;
dishonorable" pair, and I shall never&#13;
speak to you again. George Noble is&#13;
worth a thousand of you," she said to&#13;
the shame-faced Horace, as she stood&#13;
with down-cast eyes upon the walk,&#13;
"and as for you, Fanny, the fact that&#13;
we have been friends from babyhood&#13;
keeps me from saying all the things I&#13;
might otherwise want to say to you.&#13;
Learn this, though; if you ever get a&#13;
hi an like George Noble, be sure you&#13;
treat his as he ought to be treated,&#13;
I am sorry I ever went skating with&#13;
you."&#13;
"Well said!" cried a manly voice behind&#13;
her, and turning May ran straight&#13;
into the arms of George Noble.&#13;
And where had George been?&#13;
After he had received 'May's hfisty&#13;
note that afternoon he read it through&#13;
several times; then, after some hesitation,&#13;
he resolved to go and call upon&#13;
May anyway. "I can visit her&#13;
mother if she is not at home," said he.&#13;
So, early in the evening George went&#13;
to May's house and spent an hour with&#13;
her mother.&#13;
Leaving early, he happened to be&#13;
parsing along the main street, when&#13;
his attention was attracted by a&#13;
sleigh which drew up at the" curb,&#13;
while two ladies and a gentleman&#13;
alighted. Something about one of&#13;
them seemed strangely famiihir, and&#13;
he took a step nearer to find out, that&#13;
it was May.&#13;
On the.wpy home May confessed all&#13;
to George, except Horace's base part&#13;
in the evening's work, but she told&#13;
Mm enough tQ give him to understand&#13;
that he had a faithul little fiancee in&#13;
May Harte, and that hereafter s h e&#13;
would not go skating with young ladies&#13;
&gt;\ho had brothers.&#13;
So May blessed the day after all, for&#13;
It taught her 4&amp; value true love when&#13;
she found it.—St. Louis Star&#13;
^t«w Ynu «4»ii 4%wi4 *&gt;p*i«Mrt n . ' r » .&#13;
Typhoid fever is usually contacted&#13;
by way of the mouth, eating impure&#13;
or poorly prepared food, or drinking&#13;
impure drinks. The mistress of every&#13;
home should take double her usual&#13;
care to see that the food is thoroughly&#13;
cooked, and the drinkables thoroughly&#13;
purefled.&#13;
The most common vehicle for the&#13;
iransmissfoa of typhoid-fever germs&#13;
is milk. Extra care should be taken&#13;
to insure the-purity of the faSinily supply,&#13;
and unless you know that i t i s&#13;
handled properly seek another dairyman.&#13;
Unless you know that the milk&#13;
is all right be sure to boil all that&#13;
goes on the table. Milk should never&#13;
be kept in a n open vessel in the rcr&#13;
frigerator, "because Tt absorbs aTT&#13;
kinds of poison with remarkable rapidity,&#13;
and is one of. the best natural&#13;
culture media for disease germs.&#13;
Being assured that everything you&#13;
eat and drink is pure and wholesome,&#13;
the next step is to watch your general&#13;
health and see that you do not get&#13;
"run down." Everyone takes into his&#13;
system an untold number of ac'.ive&#13;
disease germs every year, and the reason&#13;
that they do not become ill is that&#13;
they are in a condition to throw off&#13;
the poisons. No man or woman in&#13;
perfect health will contract typhoid&#13;
fever, except under the most unfavorable&#13;
circumstances,. and even then&#13;
the disease will not get a firm hold on&#13;
the constitution. On the other hand&#13;
if one becomes debilliated he is liable&#13;
to contract the disease no mate:1 hov/&#13;
careful he may be.&#13;
Don't overstimulate. Drink srarringly&#13;
of alcoholics and don't ttike&#13;
things to increase your energy. Keep&#13;
cool. Don't rush.&#13;
Drink plenty of water only be rure&#13;
of its purity, but avoid ice wat r in&#13;
large quantities or when overheated.&#13;
If possible take a cold sponge—not&#13;
plunge—bath every morning. This&#13;
will give tone to the system throughout&#13;
the day. In order to keep vhe&#13;
pores open, take one or two war.nl&#13;
plunge baths a week. •&#13;
Let the housewife see that every&#13;
sink, drain, tub, if fact, everything&#13;
about the kitchen and the yard is&#13;
clean. Don't rely on antiseptics&#13;
which destroys odors, but do not kill&#13;
germs, as is generally. supposed.&#13;
See that nothing is allowed to accumulate&#13;
on the premises that will&#13;
breed germs and there will be imnp.&#13;
Have the cellar whitewashed throughout,&#13;
and sprinkle lirne in all damn&#13;
corners and around the back yard.&#13;
Eat any kind of wholesome fcod that&#13;
your taste dictates, and in such quantities&#13;
as you know by-experience th.it&#13;
you can digest.&#13;
If you are afraid of the city water.&#13;
get some other kind. Whatever watt r&#13;
you drink don't be sparing with it&#13;
It is hard lo drink to much waler, especially&#13;
in hot weather.&#13;
Remember that nine-tenth? . of tl^e&#13;
precautionary measures are simply the&#13;
application of the law, "Cleanlin-fs s&#13;
next to goddliness." and keep . cieau,&#13;
and keep everything clean.&#13;
• * - * * - »11 11.•&gt; . m i../11'r&#13;
M W A B J *&#13;
S2 •.9» •"&gt;'!)•*&#13;
: * • m&#13;
We the undersijgOfti druBflUU, offer&#13;
a iesra/d ofM cttttsi*jM»j persott&#13;
who purchase* ol as, two 25e bo*e»&#13;
of Baxter* Mandrake pittera Tablets,&#13;
if it fails to care constipation, biliousness,&#13;
sick-headache, jaundice, Iocs of&#13;
appetite, aour stomaobe, dfspepatiliver&#13;
complaint, or any of the diseases&#13;
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We will also refund the money on on*&#13;
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F. \. Sigler,&#13;
———W, B. Barrow,&#13;
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of the coming crop and the&#13;
planting; of orange trees. In Mat.atee&#13;
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i iias orgjanizod 'the Venice C nipany."&#13;
whieh has* purchased lO/'O'J&#13;
acres of land, ail of which will b.^ set&#13;
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ifX Ruv. CUas. Siuipdoa, pastor. Services every&#13;
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evening at 7:00 o'clock. Prayer meeting Thursday&#13;
evenings, Sunday sctiooi at close of morning&#13;
service. LEA;. SIDLES, Sapt.&#13;
CONUUEUAi'IONAL, CtJUltCH.&#13;
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Sunday morning ac 10:90 and every Sunday&#13;
evening at 7:0C o'clock, Prayer meeting Thurs&#13;
day evenings. Sunday school at ^close of tnornin^&#13;
service. R. H. Teeple, Supt„ Mnuel SsvAtthvtit&#13;
Sec.&#13;
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high mass with sermon ac 9-.¾ a. in. Catechism&#13;
at 3;0o p. in., veepersaua benediction at 7:3U p . m .&#13;
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The A. O, II. Society of thla place, raaets every&#13;
third Saartiy intue B'r. Uitcue.v rl ill.&#13;
John Tuoiney and -M. T. Kelly, Coaaty Ujlegates&#13;
EPSVORTII LEAGUE. Meets every Sunday&#13;
evening at (5:00 oclock in the M. E. Church, A&#13;
cordial invitation is estAdeJ to everyoue, especially&#13;
young people. ^Ira. Stella Urahaui Pros.&#13;
CHRISTIAN EN'DE.-VVOR SOCIErV:-Meet.&#13;
ln£3 every Sunday evening st fr.i). President,&#13;
Miss Etta Carp'iuter; Secretary, Mrs. C. W. ttica.&#13;
m H E W. C. T. U. meets the first Friday of e;wh ,&#13;
1 month at i:3C p. m, at the home of Dr. H. F.&#13;
sigler. Everyone interested ia temperance Is&#13;
ooadially invited. Mrs. '..eal Siller, Pres; Mrs.&#13;
Etta Durfee, Secretary.&#13;
The C. T. A. and Ii. society of this place, tr*e»t&#13;
every third Saturday evening in the Fr. Matthew&#13;
Hall. John Doaohue, President,&#13;
KNIQUTS OF MACCABEES.&#13;
Meeteverv Friday evening o n or before full&#13;
of the moon at their ball in the Swarthout bldg.&#13;
Visiting brothe s ire cordiallv invited.&#13;
CHAS. CAUI'DELL, Sir knight Commander&#13;
Livingston Lodge, N'o.71:, F A A. M, Kega'ar&#13;
Communication Tuesday evening, on or before&#13;
the full of the moon. H P. Sigler, W. M.&#13;
ORDER OF EASTERN STAR meets each month&#13;
the Friday evening following th&lt; regular F.&#13;
AA.M. meeting, MRS. MARY READ, \V*. M.&#13;
ORDElt OF M J L &gt; E U M WOODMEN* Meet the&#13;
ilrbt Tnursday eveuins: of each Mouth iu tha&#13;
Maccabee nail, C. L. Grimes V. C.&#13;
LADIES OF Til E MACCABEKS. Ataat every 1st&#13;
and ;Jrd Saturday of tachiuoLtb. at 3:¾) p m. at&#13;
K. «&gt;, T. M. hall. Visiting sitte.-s cordially invited,&#13;
LILA CoxtWA/ Lady Com.&#13;
W K&#13;
A m T.a&#13;
NIGHTS OF TUB LOYAL GUAR»&#13;
meet every second Wednesday&#13;
evening of every mouth in the K. O.&#13;
T. M. Hall at 7:8J o'clock. All vieitiug&#13;
Guards welcome.&#13;
C. L, Grimes. Capt. Gen.&#13;
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H . F. SIGLER M- 0- _ C , L , SIQLER M , D&#13;
DRS. SIGLER^SIGLER,&#13;
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attended to day. or night. Odice on Uatnstr&#13;
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Horses teeth examined rree. —&#13;
o r r i C E a t ^MLL. PiNCKNCV,&#13;
"Tir'-t«&#13;
:m&#13;
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" • • &amp; &lt; &amp;&#13;
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'••''.ii&#13;
1&#13;
4&#13;
*:* - / ^&#13;
itiL*.&#13;
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* ; • « * ,,»&gt;. m&#13;
Pm&#13;
m:: &gt;.%• • ;*.'&#13;
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&gt;1'&#13;
^&#13;
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**» »&gt;»• 171^ III*» SS&#13;
FOB BSTTEK ROADS&#13;
P E R M A N E N T ORGANIZATION&#13;
E F F E C T E D AT A MEETING&#13;
- T h e New Organ Ira-.&#13;
te&gt; tee Eiown «a ftllciilgan Good&#13;
«»4 Improvement Association&#13;
Part* Ruue n Ticket.&#13;
Tw*-CJocjietvvet Good Bonds.&#13;
T h e state good roads convection cont&#13;
q d e i t t o aeasiops at Saginaw on the&#13;
w i t h Senator Dodge in the chair&#13;
&lt;uad H. S. K»rle, o l D e t r o i t , as tccret&#13;
a i y . H. II. Gross, lion, tfrank Hami&#13;
l t o n end A. Uobertson reported strong&#13;
Yeaofatk»DS op the subject of good&#13;
roads, which were adopted. They provided&#13;
for a&gt; permanent organization to&#13;
b e known as the Michigan Good lloads&#13;
and Improvement association and authorized&#13;
the appointment of a committee&#13;
of five on permanent organization,&#13;
whose duty it shall be to effect a permanent&#13;
organization, prepare a constitution&#13;
and by-laws, and to tuke steps&#13;
t o secure members of the association&#13;
i n every county of I lie state, and to&#13;
bacterid the active work of this association&#13;
into every township of the state&#13;
a t t h e earliest practical date, ulsso, that&#13;
the Michigan roadmakers arc authorized&#13;
to ufliiliatc with or merge into&#13;
a n y iatcr-state or national associations.&#13;
I t was the sense of the convention that&#13;
section nine of article 14 of the state&#13;
coastitntion shall be jimcnderl-so as to&#13;
permit the state to construct i'jads.&#13;
_Wrelt)y Crop Valletta.&#13;
The weekly crop bulletin issued' on&#13;
the 21st says: The weather conditions&#13;
of the past week were generally favorable&#13;
for crop growth and field work,&#13;
although showery weather in some&#13;
counties has interfered with t h e . oat&#13;
Harvest. Showers have been fjuitc&#13;
general in southern and "central counties&#13;
and been beneficial to corn, beans,&#13;
potatoes and pasturage, which had&#13;
suffered from the extreme heat of the&#13;
preceding week. The oat harvest is&#13;
quite generally completed in the&#13;
southern and central counties, and is&#13;
well advanced in tho northern counties&#13;
and is just beginning in the upper&#13;
RIOT AND BLOODSHED&#13;
A NEGRO AS8AUJLTER CAUSES&#13;
THE OUTBREAK.&#13;
Akron Cltl*eu» Took tbe Law in TUelr&#13;
On a l?*ud8 und Sought a Negro As*&#13;
aaulU»r-*ti Life una a Kijr itlot lUtulted&#13;
—Mulitla Called to Rettore Order.&#13;
Utido Mob Vent on Ulooclshod.&#13;
hi Akron, ()., the heart of the&#13;
boasted western reserve, a mob, ou the&#13;
night of the r.'id, sought the life of a&#13;
Negro prisoner and in a conflict with&#13;
r«*gle'» Party Ticket.&#13;
T h e Independent 'People's partj' of&#13;
Michigan held its convention at Sagin&#13;
a w o n the 22J, and placed the followi&#13;
n g state ticket in the field:&#13;
For governor—Daniel Thompson, of&#13;
Saginaw.&#13;
For lieutenant-governor—Byron E.&#13;
Nilca of Lenawee.&#13;
For secretary of state— t'!.&#13;
ningbatn, of Ottawa.&#13;
For state treasurer—llobert&#13;
ber, of Marquette.&#13;
For auditor-general—A. M.&#13;
of Saginaw.&#13;
For commissioner of the land office—&#13;
J, H. Baker, of Bay.&#13;
For attorney-general — Frank 1'.&#13;
Montford, of Macomb.&#13;
For superintendent of public instruction—&#13;
CL A. Greenfield, of Tuscola.&#13;
For member o f the state board of&#13;
education—Daniel C. Wnchs. of Kent.&#13;
F. Cun-&#13;
Jtlcnhu-&#13;
Malone.&#13;
peninsula, Oats gene^Uy- are a v e v y { mQ authorities shed blood;&#13;
fine crop in all the counties of the state.&#13;
In the upper peuinsula, barley and&#13;
spring wheat arc also beiug cut. The&#13;
pea harvest is ijuite general in northern&#13;
counties. The excessively hot&#13;
weather of the pi-eceding week has apparently&#13;
injured buckwheat, which is&#13;
not as promising, although still indicating&#13;
a fair crop. Com and late potatoes&#13;
are generally in very good condition&#13;
and promise good yields. Corn&#13;
is now glazing. Beans vie maturing&#13;
in southern counties and are nearly&#13;
ready to pull. The crap is shortened&#13;
somewhat by high temperature and&#13;
some correspondents complain of rnst._&#13;
Sugar beets continue very pi*omisin£\&#13;
In extreme snmthewi counties fodder&#13;
] and early planted dent corn is being&#13;
cut. Apple prospects are better than&#13;
was expected, although apples have&#13;
been falling badly. There are many&#13;
reports of plums rotting; pears and&#13;
grapes indicate good yields. Fall plowing&#13;
is well advanced in southern counties&#13;
and has made good progress in&#13;
central and northern counties. In the&#13;
latter section there is considerable&#13;
couiplaiut that the soil is too dry; in&#13;
southern counties the ground is&gt; iu&#13;
good condition for working. In very&#13;
few eases rye has been sown, but practically&#13;
no fall seeding has yet been&#13;
done.&#13;
MICHIGAN NEWS ITEMS.&#13;
Itotrolt Swept by a Storm.&#13;
T h e - m o s t violent wind and raiu&#13;
storm of the season visited Detroit on&#13;
the.afternoon of the 20th, striking the&#13;
city just before C o'clock, just at the&#13;
right time to catch street enrs loaued&#13;
ta their utmost capacity with passen-&#13;
£era.geing home from their day's work.&#13;
For a time the cars were tied up and&#13;
lections of the city left iu darkness.&#13;
Many accidents were reported during&#13;
tste storm; shade trees and electric&#13;
wires suffering heavily, while the&#13;
great white city of the Knights of&#13;
Pytb-ias was leveled to the ground.&#13;
T h e wind blew 3G miles an hour and&#13;
n e a r l y half an inch of rain fell. No&#13;
deaths were reported.&#13;
A.P«*«ll»r Freak of LtgfttoJog.&#13;
l*tghlning struck the residence of J.&#13;
B. Nash, at Traverse City, on the morni&#13;
n g of the 23d, and badly shattered the&#13;
building. Miss Lottie Nash, aged 18,&#13;
w a s standing in the back doorway&#13;
w h e n the shaft struck, and was terrib&#13;
l y buraed. The lightning struck her&#13;
'foot, tearing off the shoe and shatteri&#13;
n g and mangling the foot. in a horrib&#13;
l e manner. The whole inside of the&#13;
member from instep to sole, was&#13;
burned out, and the foot may have to&#13;
he amputated. The girl was conscious&#13;
a l l the time, and suffered great agony.&#13;
T h e lightning struck several other&#13;
buildings daring the storm, but did&#13;
little damage.&#13;
Copper From 8«Dtl*tonc.&#13;
Experiments are being made in the&#13;
extracting of copper from sandstone,&#13;
in which shape it is found in the western&#13;
portion of Ontonagon county, and&#13;
If successful it will mean much to that&#13;
county. There is an inexhaustible&#13;
supply of eopper in that locality, but&#13;
t h e fact that it was in the form of fine&#13;
grains scattered through soft sanustone&#13;
has prevented its beiug profit&#13;
Duraud is to have a daily paper.&#13;
Seventy-seven couples were married&#13;
at Michigan's Gretna Green on the2Cth.&#13;
The reporters at Mackinac Island&#13;
suffered a SC3.000 tire loss on the night&#13;
af the lGth.&#13;
A young chap, aged about 2."». is&#13;
working Flat Rock and vicinity with&#13;
counterfeit money.&#13;
" A young deer was lassoed while&#13;
swimming in the , lake near Mackinac&#13;
Island on the ','Cth.&#13;
A motion for a new trial in the famous&#13;
Dr. lleed will case at Port Huron,&#13;
has been denied. The case will now&#13;
go to the supreme court.&#13;
Ithaca's new ilouring mill is completed&#13;
and in operation and the townspeople&#13;
proudly claim it is the finest of&#13;
its size in central Michigan.&#13;
Dowagiae's city fathers are slow.&#13;
They have just gotten around to appointing&#13;
a dog warden, although the&#13;
law went into effect the first of May&#13;
last,&#13;
John tl. Ilawley, of Detroit, a prominent&#13;
member of the Michigan bar, and&#13;
a wpll.l:nnwn authority on criminal&#13;
Peek, a colored man was put in [jail&#13;
during the day on the charge of criminally&#13;
assaulting the little daughter of&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Theodora Maas. The report&#13;
that ho had confessed spread rapidly&#13;
and a mob gathered. Not believing&#13;
the statement of the sheriff that&#13;
Peek had been sent out of the e i t j v t h e&#13;
crowd sent committees through the&#13;
city prison a:ul the county jail to&#13;
search. This proving fruitless, the&#13;
mob gathered in front of tha city&#13;
prison, where the mayor tried to induce&#13;
them to disperse. Someone fired&#13;
a shot at 'the prison. Other shots followed&#13;
and for a few minutes there&#13;
were terrible scenes. Three persons&#13;
are dead from bulletsamttseveral badlv&#13;
wounded, at least one of the latter fatally.&#13;
Shortly after midnight the mob*&#13;
broke into a hardware store and stole&#13;
all the firearms and ammunition they&#13;
could find, including guns, rifles and&#13;
revolvers aud proceeded to the city&#13;
building and opened fire on the defenders&#13;
and finally set fire to the Columbia&#13;
hall which adjoins the city building.&#13;
Later—N&lt; gro Assaulter Peek was&#13;
returned to Akron on the 21th for his&#13;
hearing. He pleaded guilt}' and was&#13;
immediately sentenced to life imprisonment&#13;
in the state penitentiary. So&#13;
quickly and quietly was Peek brought&#13;
into court, sentenced and sent on to&#13;
Columbus that but very few people&#13;
knew what had transpired.&#13;
ably '*minedV' so&#13;
usual processes.&#13;
to speak, by the&#13;
Csiecared With Tralu Wrecking.&#13;
A aonple of Orion township women&#13;
became exasperated because the electric&#13;
cars wouldn't stop for them where&#13;
t h e y desired, s o they put a big plank&#13;
across t h e track and allowed tha*t&#13;
theyVi hare time t o climb aboard&#13;
w h i l e t h e motorman was removing it.&#13;
JNbw they have found themselves in&#13;
serions trouble, h a v i n g been arrested&#13;
f o r attempted. train wrecking r.nd&#13;
fcoood Ofcr to the circuit court for&#13;
t r i a l&#13;
- .r&#13;
to Mtcblgao.&#13;
to the state board of-health&#13;
a h o w t h a i diarrhea, rheumatism, neuralgia,&#13;
eholera infantum, and dysentesjb&#13;
fc» she order named, caused tbe&#13;
to Michigan, during the&#13;
Smallpox was reported at&#13;
-4|JUaea» eerebrc-spioal meningitis at&#13;
£ d t * * B h e r i a a t 12, whooping cough at&#13;
^ ateaatos a t 34, scarlet fever a,t 41,&#13;
ttttr at $4, and consumption&#13;
law and cxtraditiou, died on the night&#13;
of the 17th.&#13;
Wooden sidewalks don't &lt;lgo'' at&#13;
Sault Ste. Marie any more, the city&#13;
fathers having decided that it is cheaper&#13;
to build good walks than to defend&#13;
damage suits.&#13;
An idea of the magnitude of the&#13;
tramp nuisance at St. Joseph may be&#13;
had from' the fact that GO of the hoboes&#13;
were rounded up there in a single&#13;
night recentlv.&#13;
Out of 18,000 peach trees examined&#13;
this season by the yellows commissioners&#13;
of Van Buren county, 2.000 were&#13;
found to have that dreaded disease aDd&#13;
were destroyed.&#13;
A new departure in plowing is to be&#13;
tried on a Cass county farm this fall.&#13;
Six plows have been rigged together,&#13;
side by side, and a traction engine will&#13;
be used to pull the outfit. •&#13;
The boards of control of the various&#13;
state institutions are preparing their&#13;
lists for appropriations to be submitted&#13;
to the next legislature. About&#13;
850,000 will, be asked for new buildings.&#13;
Frank M. Davis, of Detroit, a bicyclist,&#13;
tried to cross the street in front&#13;
of a car on the afternoon of the 20th.&#13;
but was thrown under the wheels and&#13;
died soon after the accident at the&#13;
hospital.&#13;
Marquette is fast filling up with sufferers&#13;
from hay fever. This is the 3d&#13;
year that the sufferers of this malady&#13;
have sought relief there, and the place&#13;
can now appropriately be termed the&#13;
"sneezers' mccca.''&#13;
Alfred Schoonover, of near Utica,&#13;
was struck by lightning and instantly&#13;
killed on the afternoon of the 20th.&#13;
lie was milking at the time, and the&#13;
cow was also killed and the barn and&#13;
contents tiestroye4 by fire.&#13;
About 9500 worth of knives and other&#13;
goods were stolen from Zimmerman&#13;
Bros.1 hardware store at Marine City&#13;
on the night of the 25th. This is the&#13;
first burglary that has been committed&#13;
in that place in four years.&#13;
- During the continued hot weather&#13;
tbe farmers of Sanilac county cut a&#13;
great deal of grain, and the unexpected&#13;
downpour of rain on the 30th&#13;
caused any amount of damage, the&#13;
grain growing in the sheaves.&#13;
Sharkey Only Lnstcil Two KOUDIU.&#13;
Whipped iuto insensibility in less&#13;
than two rounds is the story in brief&#13;
of Tom Sharkey's meeting with Bob&#13;
Fitzsimmons at the Coney Island Sporting&#13;
club, New York, on the night of&#13;
the 24th. Fitzsimmons wa» the victor,&#13;
Sharkey the loser. Fitzsimmons said&#13;
all along thet when an opportunity&#13;
presented itself he would prove conclusively&#13;
that he was Sharkey's superior&#13;
and settle accounts for the injtihtice&#13;
done him when he met Sharkey in California&#13;
four year ago. Sharkey was&#13;
equally confident that lie would prove&#13;
to be Fitzsimmons" master in the ring&#13;
but the result of the battle and the&#13;
brevity of it proved that Fitzsimmons&#13;
is still a great tighter and able to beat&#13;
t he best of the heavyweights.&#13;
^ CHINA WA* W«W$.' v&#13;
. It was stated by members of the U.&#13;
S. cabinet on the 21&amp; that the Chinese&#13;
establishment, instead of being a government,&#13;
appears to be an enormous,&#13;
headless affair, without knowledge of&#13;
what is for its best good and without&#13;
power to onforce its wishes. With tho&#13;
recognized ruler in flight, no one seems&#13;
to know who, is^^jhjpdy, if directing its&#13;
affairs. As Chin A W an absolute monarchy,&#13;
without any levislattve branch,&#13;
the emperor and empress dowager are&#13;
all-powerful, and practically they are&#13;
the empire of China. Under the present&#13;
remarkable corPditions, the United&#13;
States will act w i t h extreme eau-tioh&#13;
"trrwhatsver steps it may take toward&#13;
a solution of the pending problems. In&#13;
tho ineautimc, there is reason to believe&#13;
that the United States and all the&#13;
other powers interested will keep&#13;
their armed forces on the ground, so&#13;
that order may be maintained and, at&#13;
least a semblance of stable government&#13;
brought out of tho existiug chaos.&#13;
Therefore the United States will not&#13;
lend its aid to stop hostilities.&#13;
The Chinese government on the 20th&#13;
made formal application through Li&#13;
Hung Chang, as its envoy, for the appointment&#13;
of an American eomuiicsioner&#13;
to bring about the cessation of&#13;
hostilities in China and the restoration&#13;
of general peace. This, coming since&#13;
the capture of Pekiu, is the first showing&#13;
of China's complete wc.irinesa with&#13;
the struggle and her desire to make&#13;
terms. The reply of the United States&#13;
government has not yet been made&#13;
known.&#13;
The U. S. has taken the lead in replying&#13;
to China that there will be no&#13;
temporizing negotiations, and there,&#13;
is every reason to believe the powers&#13;
will be united in this same policy. The&#13;
answer of the United States was&#13;
quickly followed by similar actior on&#13;
the part of (lennauy. They both rei&#13;
fuse to enter into negotiation with Li&#13;
Jiung Chang, believing his credentials&#13;
are insufficient to empower him to act.&#13;
The Japanese cavalry left. Pekin on&#13;
the 20th in pursuit of the dowager empress&#13;
and her court, according to telegrams&#13;
from the north received at&#13;
tflAKftVAAi* Itfsfst,&#13;
Officer Shot and Killed Hi* Slayer.&#13;
Dr. Arrington. of Platte county, Mo.,&#13;
near Hast Leavenworth,, on the 20th&#13;
shot and killed James Wallace, a&#13;
wealthy farmer, i n - a quarrel over a&#13;
line fence. Arrington then went to&#13;
the home of his mother-in-law, the&#13;
widow of William Wallace, and deliberately&#13;
shot her to tteatn. Arrington&#13;
escaped in a wagon with his young&#13;
daughter, but was pursued by Sheriff&#13;
Dillingham and a'posse, who overtook&#13;
him in a road near Farley. The murderer&#13;
opened fire, fatally wounding&#13;
Sheriff Dillingham in the breast. As&#13;
the sheriff fell he shot Arrington&#13;
through the heart.&#13;
Tornado Cao*e* ¢300,000 Damage.&#13;
A terrific wind storm struck Sheboygan,&#13;
Wis., on the 20th, coming suddenly&#13;
from the north. Eight large1&#13;
buildings were completely wrecked&#13;
and 200 small houses were blown down,&#13;
causing a loss of $300,000. At noon it&#13;
was as dark as night and intensely hot.&#13;
A fe;v moments before 1 o'^pek the&#13;
the storm broke, iucrasing in force until&#13;
it became a tornado. People were&#13;
thrown down and fences and signs&#13;
hurled hundreds of feet. The storm,&#13;
which raged for only U) minutes, was&#13;
two miles wide -and'wrecked everything&#13;
in its path.&#13;
Killed Hi* Wife and Three Children.&#13;
Theodore Wallart, a farmer living&#13;
three miles from Arlington, Minn.,&#13;
killed his wife, a boy of 10 years, a&#13;
girl of lfi years and a baby, on the&#13;
night of the 10th. He then set fire to&#13;
the barn, destroying the stable w i t h&#13;
nine horses, a corncrib and a full hay&#13;
barn. Mrs. Wallart had been trying&#13;
to secure a divorce, the couple having&#13;
separated. Wallart entered the house&#13;
through a window and slaughtered t h e&#13;
family with the exception of one child,&#13;
a boy, who w a s wounded, however,&#13;
and will probably die. Wallart fled.&#13;
Treaty.Signed With Spain*&#13;
Minister Storer, at Madrid, informs&#13;
the state department at Washington&#13;
that a treaty of amity, commerce a n d .&#13;
navigation and general intercourse has&#13;
been signed provisionally by the minister&#13;
of state and himself. This practically&#13;
marks the last step in the c o m&#13;
plete restoration of relations between&#13;
Spain and the United States.^&#13;
It is reported that Fr. de Hets, a&#13;
Lazarist missionary, with 0,000 con*&#13;
verts held out for six weeks against&#13;
20,000 boxers armed with rifles and&#13;
swords, in a small village 40 miles&#13;
northwest of Tiaa Tain.&#13;
Shanghai by Chinese ollieials. These&#13;
dispatches aver that the empress and&#13;
j her treasure train, protected by 5OT000'&#13;
j troops, have..already arrived at Wu Tai&#13;
San, in Shan Si .province.&#13;
The Chinese situation developed little&#13;
of importance on the 24th* It is&#13;
stated frankly by the olUcials ivt the&#13;
state, war and navy departments at&#13;
Washington that no dispatches have&#13;
been received bearing- «n the problem&#13;
which has yet to be solved,-namely,&#13;
the disposition of China's affairs at the&#13;
hands of the powers.&#13;
On the 23d l,r&gt;00 Americans* attacked&#13;
the Imperial palace at Pekin. and cwp-'&#13;
tured four of the courts. The American&#13;
flag is Hying over the imperial&#13;
granary, and the imperial bank has&#13;
been looted.&#13;
The V. S. is opposed tf&gt; any division&#13;
of territory in China,- and every resource&#13;
of diplomacy will be used, to&#13;
prevent it.&#13;
The work of the V. S. in China h a s&#13;
been practically aeeomplisked, fjthe&#13;
only obligation remaining is to restore&#13;
peace.——&#13;
&amp; nps? £*tms oerta^n that D e Wet,&#13;
fin4i&gt;yf i t bopelea* ^ make his way&#13;
eastward, has recrossed the Wagalie*- v&#13;
berg, with a few wounded, w i t h the&#13;
intension of returning-.to the Orange&#13;
River colony, He b i n a very different&#13;
condition from that when he lcftiBetbelehem&#13;
with s i s oreljjfht guaaand 2,000&#13;
men. His guns have mostly been buried&#13;
and his personal following cannot&#13;
be moro than 300.&#13;
Gen. Dewet has managed to elude .&#13;
Gen. Kitchener, in spite of the fact&#13;
that all the British wagons had double&#13;
teams" of ptctced^ animals. T h e Boersevaded&#13;
the British by marching at&#13;
night over grounds known to them.&#13;
while their pursuers were obliged to&#13;
march in the daytime.&#13;
The statement is published at Berlin&#13;
that Creat Britain has paid 00,00)&#13;
marks as damages to the owners-of the&#13;
German bark Hans Wagner, which tho&#13;
British unjustifiably retained in South&#13;
African waters during tho early day*&#13;
of the Transvaal war.&#13;
Baden-Powell's forces put the Boers&#13;
to plight in an engagement near Ham-&#13;
| mauskrual ou the 2kst. Tho British&#13;
loss was f o u r killed and seven&#13;
wounded, while the Boers had many&#13;
killed and wi uudedw&#13;
The Boers on the 2 Bet blew up a portion&#13;
of the railway ut Koet/.s' drift,&#13;
five mih;s north of Nc.vcastfc, and&#13;
damaged the rails at a point 30 milessouth&#13;
of Newcastle;&#13;
Special dispatches from' 1*1*0tori'a announce&#13;
that Gen. De Wet bivouacked 1&gt;&#13;
miles from that city, and that Col.&#13;
Mahon was briskly engaging him oi*&#13;
the 20th.&#13;
,/ As a result of two engagements with.&#13;
the Boors near Vantersburg: recently,&#13;
the British report that four officer*&#13;
»and 24 men ore missing.&#13;
It is stated that Stern with* a small.&#13;
bodyguard has crossed PLnaar-s river,&#13;
on his way to join Kruger at Machudodorp.&#13;
In an engagement at VanWycksvlei,.&#13;
1.") miles south of Belfast, on the 21st,&#13;
Bnller suffered 20 casualties.&#13;
Lord Kitchener, after a forced march,&#13;
has relieved Col. Hoare and the British,&#13;
garrison at Elands river.&#13;
According to Shanghai adyjees the&#13;
Russians, Germans and Japanese have&#13;
left Pekin in pursuit of tiie empress.&#13;
The native Christians in northern&#13;
China survived tho attacks upon theoi,&#13;
but are now homeless and destitute.&#13;
The U. S. will send no more troops&#13;
to China unless conditions change.&#13;
It is probable that American forees&#13;
will remain in China all winter.&#13;
1,000 C. R*A Stranded in PMrla.&#13;
Nearly 1.001» Christian Kndeavorers&#13;
from the United States are stranded&#13;
in Paris for lack of funds, after going&#13;
through remarkable experiences. As&#13;
stated by the Endcavorcrs, they each&#13;
paid in advance to a Boston tourist&#13;
agency a lump sum of several hundred&#13;
dollars, which was to cover all the expeases&#13;
of a 10-weeks trip to Europe,&#13;
including steamboat bet ths, railroad&#13;
fares in England, France, Switzerland,&#13;
Italy and Germany, accommodations at&#13;
hotels, carriage rides, etc. The tourist&#13;
agency had chartered two North&#13;
German Lloyd steamers to carry the&#13;
Endeavorors to London, but just before&#13;
the date set for their departure&#13;
both vessels were destroyed by fire at&#13;
Ho^oken. This delayed the prospective&#13;
trip three weeks, as no other vessels&#13;
could be secured, and by the time&#13;
the delegates arrived on the continent&#13;
they found the hotels crowded with&#13;
visitors, and that the hotel landlords&#13;
would not honor the coupons issued by&#13;
the tourist agency on account of tbe&#13;
delay. This, of course, necessitated&#13;
the delegate* going down in .their&#13;
pockets which caused all sorts of e n -&#13;
barrassments and inconveniences, as&#13;
they supposed -the expenses for the&#13;
trip had been paid for lit advance, and&#13;
in a great many cases what pocket&#13;
money they had had been spent in one&#13;
way or another. Dr. Hill, of Salem, a&#13;
trustee of the Christian Endeavor society,&#13;
attempts to minimize the importance&#13;
of the affair, but admits that&#13;
980,000 were tied up; that the railway&#13;
coupons .were out of date, and that the&#13;
tourist agency has been compelled to&#13;
refuse aid to the tourists.&#13;
A I&gt;^y of Riot In N&gt;w York.&#13;
A number of incipient race riots&#13;
broke out in New York on the 20th,&#13;
the direct cause being the shooting on&#13;
the night of the 25th of John Brcnnan,&#13;
a white messenger^ boy, aged 20, by&#13;
John Davis, al(as N Lamplighter," w&#13;
Negro. Breunart was one of a crowd&#13;
of whites who taunted Davis and"i&gt;ullets&#13;
from the black's revolver lodged in&#13;
his stomach arid chest, lie is in a hospital&#13;
and likely to die..&#13;
A Victim of MM!practice.&#13;
Michiel Bynn. who. with others, accompanied&#13;
Constable John Milstead to&#13;
serve a warrant for malpractice, on&#13;
Mrs. Dr. C. M. Wright, of Gilman, 111.,&#13;
on the night of the 20th, was fatally&#13;
shot by an unknown inmate of the&#13;
woman's lying-in hospital. The victim&#13;
of the alleged malpractice was a 10-&#13;
year-old girl, named Dessic Salter. The&#13;
town is in a fever of excitement&#13;
A WOIDID in the Case.&#13;
Donald Gray and Maurice Ilntchinson,&#13;
colored, of St. Paul, Minn., armed&#13;
with razors, ou the night of the 20th&#13;
fought a duel, which lasted more than&#13;
half an hour. The fight was witnessed&#13;
by a large crowd of spectators. Both&#13;
were horribly cut and Gray will die.&#13;
The. trouble was about a woman.&#13;
BASE BALL.&#13;
Helow we submit the oTidal standing or the&#13;
clubs of tbe N.vioa.il a n l American leajusi up&#13;
to aud including SunJay, August 3Cth:&#13;
Won. 00¾¾. P e r o t&#13;
Brooklyn .S8 87 .611&#13;
Pittsburg to it .529»&#13;
Philadelphia 5&gt; 48 . .Hi)'&#13;
Boston 49 4W .500&#13;
Chicago 48 M .485&#13;
Cincinnati 48 F3 .47¾&#13;
St. Louis 4u 51 .47*&#13;
New York 89 67. .406.&#13;
AMKRIC.VS LKACUS&#13;
Won. Los?.. Per e t&#13;
Ghfcazo&#13;
Indianapolis&#13;
Milwaukee&#13;
Detroit&#13;
Kansas City&#13;
Cleveland....&#13;
Buffalo&#13;
Minneapolis&#13;
6¾&#13;
CO&#13;
Gl&#13;
IS&#13;
56&#13;
43.&#13;
41&#13;
49&#13;
&amp;2&#13;
56&#13;
17&#13;
03&#13;
71&#13;
T H E M A R K E T S .&#13;
LIVE: WFsWKt&#13;
New York— Cattt* Soeep.&#13;
Beflt gTuHee...l4 4U3&amp;.00' II 15.&#13;
Lower grade*. 2 4J43 £&gt;• 2 5»&#13;
Chle*t*o—&#13;
Best grades....5 38a*90. 4 00.&#13;
Lower grades. X tt&amp;i l\ i &amp;&#13;
Detroit—&#13;
Best grades....a tA\ so 4 CO&#13;
Lower grades. .3 SOO* ft 8 •&gt;&#13;
Baffato—&#13;
Best grsdes....*40^*TJ 4 40-&#13;
flower grades. .4 uottl 49 s 7i&#13;
"ctaelnsatt—• v&#13;
Best grades.... 4 900563 4 00&#13;
Lower grade*. .1 tttfrw t tt&#13;
ifrtlSbBfSJ&#13;
BLeoswte rg rgardaedse.*.....64 21*50^»5 «0&gt;0 44 4«)0&#13;
•6 75&#13;
&amp;60&#13;
&amp;S)&#13;
400&#13;
5 6&gt;&#13;
42J&#13;
64».&#13;
6 03 4 »&#13;
550&#13;
509&#13;
.612&#13;
.[&amp;&gt;&#13;
.54»&#13;
JKU&#13;
.494&#13;
.474&#13;
14K&#13;
4:7&#13;
Hogs&#13;
66 I*&#13;
580&#13;
6F5&#13;
503&#13;
5 45&#13;
575&#13;
545&#13;
525&#13;
»00.&#13;
660&#13;
¥85&#13;
, ' : ' • ' • • - . . , &lt; ' , v&#13;
',.— .''vV&#13;
*•'' : 1&#13;
t '.&gt;&#13;
.St&#13;
ttRAUff, BTO.&#13;
Wheat. Corn.&#13;
No-troi No. 2mix&#13;
.wo death© and 1.1 prostrations from&#13;
iehe%t were* reported at Flttsburg,&#13;
Pa., 0 1 the 34th. . „&#13;
New York&#13;
Chleago&#13;
' D e t r o i t&#13;
Toledo&#13;
etuetaaatl&#13;
PUUtmrg&#13;
Buffalo&#13;
T9©79*&#13;
74074*i&#13;
7v#79N&#13;
7W»K&#13;
7*4*74*&#13;
8 as IK&#13;
soeaox&#13;
44041»&#13;
4 * 4 *&#13;
4S&amp;41H&#13;
4 2 0 4 i *&#13;
41t&gt;4l&#13;
4J04S&#13;
No. J white&#13;
•Detroit—Hay, No, t Timothy, 111 0&gt; per toe,&#13;
Potatoes* _45s per bu» . Llro FtosUqr, spring&#13;
enibkens, tl6A.por lb; fowls, to: twkeys, I0o:&#13;
Butter* ttutokj. Mt per lfc otssjuery *lt&#13;
. ' v •&#13;
*m^x&amp;N!fsm&#13;
•;t v«s»'-:,^-..-••A- •','• : .-r ••:••'•&gt;; - v ; v v-1 • ' •• A-"-V '••,,••&#13;
• J U T * i f ^ T j B ^ r'k,;'.. f J K »' AJ * ^ '...&gt;;«•&#13;
"V':'*&#13;
'•t«-;.'.."*. ri*:&gt;v:.-&#13;
• * V&#13;
•A. ;V ^ -&#13;
,*r~-&#13;
r:&#13;
¥*'"&#13;
as&#13;
CHAPTKfe Vllf.—(ConttBued.)&#13;
Not the strictest purist &lt;ra the earth&#13;
&lt;ould cavil at bis writing tb her. As&#13;
..he telt-^that Is, from %ls heart—so he&#13;
wrote to her: '&#13;
' M y Own Joyce: 1 am breaking my&#13;
lelf-lmposed resolution to tell you that&#13;
I am leaving England for Australia on&#13;
the Condor, which sails next week. I&#13;
cannot live this life any longer. Do&#13;
^ yjw know I come out at night just to&#13;
look at the house that contains you?&#13;
there Is n o joy for anything, ana 1&#13;
am afraid of breaking down under the&#13;
strain. I must work, sweetheart; I&#13;
must do something. Life is too hard.&#13;
Joyce, I do not wish to see you again.&#13;
IX I saw you again I should never&#13;
leave you; but I must hear from you to&#13;
know If you are well, dearest. I ou^ht&#13;
io -say tp you that you should try and&#13;
forgot mo, and be happy with bouio&#13;
other man, but I cannot. It is tremendous&#13;
selfishness on my part; but it&#13;
would kill me if you were to look at&#13;
another man. But it is not for that&#13;
I am writing, but to tell you 1 am&#13;
ioavlng. Your own ALAN.&#13;
"When Joyce received this letter she&#13;
?at quite still- for a littlo time. She&#13;
felt as if her heart must break when&#13;
she thought of Alan. She knew what&#13;
his unre3t meant; i;ho knew that if it&#13;
v.cio possible that he could lay his&#13;
bead against her shqulder, and feel be.'&#13;
hand upon his brow, all his troubles&#13;
would vanish. But this might not bo.&#13;
Never again could they go through lh?&#13;
agony of another parting, never asain&#13;
would they look into each other's eyes&#13;
end £G3 what it was costing them to&#13;
walk the path of duty—the only way&#13;
for them. But she—she must loos&#13;
upon bis-faee—again. She would go&#13;
rtown to Southampton,- and then she&#13;
wou'd try and get a glimpse of his&#13;
dear, face, so that she could s?e it-:-&#13;
herself how he looked.&#13;
She told no enc of her project. It&#13;
' v.as not a wise thine; to do, but it was&#13;
u thing she must do.&#13;
Veronica was resting in her room;&#13;
their: ffr*. V ' **c Hferi life &amp;t married&#13;
people*/ whose strong•-' lore for eaea&#13;
other le not stronger than their love&#13;
of duty, and who did sot scruple to&#13;
sacrifice everything they loved beet&#13;
for what they knew to be right&#13;
And as for Veronica's boy, he is like&#13;
Joyce's own. Indeed, If anything, she&#13;
spoils him more than her own .children.&#13;
, "His mother saved your life, dear,"&#13;
she said once, in after days, when&#13;
Alan expostulated with her, "and ho&#13;
Veronica sprang-up from her chair) i s a dear boy, and be is yours, so you&#13;
"•W S sa »&#13;
the instant the hall door clanged after&#13;
him. She knew he meant mischief to&#13;
Alan. She kissed her boy many, many&#13;
times before giving him in charge of&#13;
his nurse. She was always loth to let&#13;
him out of her sight; but today she&#13;
almost telt as if she would never look&#13;
upon him again. At the same_time she&#13;
felt strangely happy, for it seemed as&#13;
if at last she were able to do something&#13;
for Alan.&#13;
Alan had taken his seat in the train&#13;
without thiaking mu;h cf leaving Ensland.&#13;
It had ceased to be homo to&#13;
him; he thought he might be happier&#13;
when he was removed from the temptation&#13;
of seeing Joyce, and when he&#13;
might now and again hear from her.&#13;
And as he sat. in the corner of his carriage&#13;
he thought he saw a familiar&#13;
figure pass. It was Hutchinson's&#13;
clouch, but he did not think much&#13;
about it. He pulled his cap over his&#13;
eyes, and pretended to go to sleep;&#13;
but although he kept his eyes shut no&#13;
sleep came to him. Southampton, it&#13;
seemed to him, was soon reached. He&#13;
sot cut of the train and began collecting&#13;
his belongings. He was turning&#13;
to go when suddenly he heard the&#13;
sound ci! a report and then a woman's&#13;
cry. In an instant all was commotion.&#13;
A woman had fallen close beside him&#13;
—a dark-haired, slight woman. He&#13;
rushed forward to help hci up. quite&#13;
unconscious then that the shot that&#13;
had been fired was meant for him, ar.d&#13;
that the woman had intercepted it. He&#13;
had a dim idea, to?, t i n t he saw&#13;
Hutchinson slipping aw.?y som? where;&#13;
but he, as well as every one c"^s^ was&#13;
occupied by tnc fallen woman.&#13;
His were the arms that' helped he-'&#13;
up, and his were the eyes that recognized&#13;
Veronica. "My Go:!!" he cried.&#13;
And when' they r/!id "Do you know&#13;
her?'" •ho* answered "Yes, and the shoe&#13;
has killed her v.*as meant fOr me!"&#13;
He carried her to a room near, and&#13;
when he laid, her down the opo.aad he •&#13;
ey&lt; s and sriled. "I am s ) hippy," th&gt;&#13;
In Vast*.&#13;
see I have three of the most excellent&#13;
reasons for spoiling him."&#13;
Hutchinson was never seen again.&#13;
There was a hue-and-cry after him,&#13;
but he was never fottnd. Whether he&#13;
knew that the shot meant for Alan&#13;
had been received by Veronica no one&#13;
could tell. He disappeared, and Joyce&#13;
and Alan were glad that it should be&#13;
so. They had suffered so much that&#13;
they wanted a little peace. Most of&#13;
all, they did not want rev3ige. It was&#13;
poor Veronica who bad paid the debt,&#13;
and she had done it gladly, saying that&#13;
it was "The Only Way."&#13;
(The End.)&#13;
the boy was with her. Mow she had j said, softly. "Alan. I never thought&#13;
a nurse for him. and she had a pretty&#13;
house and all comforts; but she looked&#13;
more haggard than in the old 'days,&#13;
when one cited out a miserable exigence&#13;
by teaching. Then there w.-is&#13;
something to live for, now she had&#13;
nothing.&#13;
She heard a tap at the dear that&#13;
made her tremble. Hutchinson1 had&#13;
been a frequent visitor lately—since&#13;
she had been prosperous. His visits&#13;
always left her poorer and sadder. She&#13;
did not miud the money, having a&#13;
ehild'sh ignorance on the subject; but&#13;
she did mind the way he spoke of&#13;
Alan. She prepared hersslf for battle&#13;
when she heard his kneek. He came&#13;
in, looking more bloated and excited&#13;
than ever.—Lately ho had drank vevy&#13;
heavily. Today • he was sober enough&#13;
hut he looked more angry than he-had&#13;
iUme of late.&#13;
"So that fellow thinks ho is* going&#13;
to elude me!" he said, as he came into&#13;
the room; "but he makes a mistake!"&#13;
Veronica turned pale. She knew he&#13;
„ was speaking of Alan, and that ho was&#13;
threatening him.&#13;
"What do you mean?" &amp;he asked&#13;
boldly.&#13;
"Do you mean to say that you don't&#13;
know-that that precious .husband of&#13;
yours means" to sail in the Condor on&#13;
Friday? I dare say he wants to desert&#13;
you, and to go off with that other&#13;
woman!"&#13;
"Alan would not do that," said Vera*&#13;
nica, quickly. "However much he and&#13;
she suffer, they will do nothing&#13;
wrong."&#13;
"I dare say he is a saint!'* sneered&#13;
Hutchinson. "Well, he will have a&#13;
chance of going to heaven quickly, for&#13;
I've sworn to do for him, and this is&#13;
my la81 chance!"&#13;
Veronica listened. Hutchinson had&#13;
spoken like this before, and it had&#13;
come to nothing: still, it was possible&#13;
that he might be desperate now. He&#13;
looked- it, and if he meant mischief&#13;
to Alan she must warn him. Not a&#13;
hair of Alan's dear head should fall&#13;
by this man's hand. Still, she knew&#13;
that she must not let Hutchinson suspect&#13;
that she was on the alert.&#13;
"So be sails on Friday?" she said&#13;
quietly. "From Southampton, is it not?&#13;
He wrote to wish me good-by."&#13;
"It will be a longer good-by than he&#13;
knows of," said the man. "Lend me&#13;
two pounds. Veronica."&#13;
Veronica hesitated. He might be&#13;
asking for money in order to kill her&#13;
husband; but she had often lent him&#13;
ynoney before, so she rose slowly and&#13;
went to 'the writing table and took it&#13;
cut.&#13;
"1 suppose he has made a settlement&#13;
upon you?" he asked, with cunning&#13;
leer. And poor Veronica, falling into&#13;
(he* trap, answered.&#13;
"Yea."&#13;
"Then it's all right," he uaid, and&#13;
went out.&#13;
to feel your arms round -me again."&#13;
"Veronica." he said, ramcrvjefu^ly. "I&#13;
would gladly have given my life if tin-;&#13;
had not happened!"&#13;
"I know it," she said, "but think CL&#13;
me for one instant, Alan. You sfe, 1&#13;
love you, darling-. I am dying, S J that&#13;
j it does not matter, and my life iniule&#13;
you unhappy. P,y dying fur you I&#13;
make you and her happy. It. is tho&#13;
only way, Alan—the only way."&#13;
"But. Veronica——'* he nr^ed. :»ut&#13;
she would not let him sue:tk.&#13;
"I don't think 1 have long, dear. Let&#13;
ire die like thi.; in yoiii- arms, my S:ead&#13;
upon your shoulder™so. You think&#13;
I'm pretty still, don't you What jvas&#13;
I naying? Oh, that il will not matter,&#13;
except for the boy.—But I know you&#13;
and-she will be good to him. I bin:.1:1&#13;
have-liked toTiaTe s:?^i him just oi.ee&#13;
r.gain. You know Hutchinson swore&#13;
he would be revenged on you, and so&#13;
I followed him: and when he fired at&#13;
you I threw myself between. I wr.3&#13;
so happy, Alan. dear. Th£&lt; happiest&#13;
.moment of my life was fvhen I felt&#13;
that I might die for ycu."&#13;
"veronica," he said, touched to th:-&#13;
heart, "I don't deserve it—indeed 1&#13;
don't!"&#13;
"You see," she went on, "I made&#13;
you so unhappy by living—it is the&#13;
only way."&#13;
And when the doct.:r,came a few moments&#13;
after Alan could see there was&#13;
no hope. The bullet had pierced her&#13;
side, and she was bleeding internally.&#13;
She fell into a state of semi-conscious.-&#13;
ness; but toward3 midnight she&#13;
opened her eyes suddenly.&#13;
"Kiss me, Alan," s"he said, "and love&#13;
my boy." " .&#13;
And whilst hiB lips touched hers her&#13;
spirit passed away.&#13;
Joyce, waiting at the docks for a&#13;
glimpse of the man she loved, saw the&#13;
great vessel glide out to sea without&#13;
him. Something must have happened&#13;
to delay him, she ttiought! Full of fear&#13;
and anxiety, she returned home, wondering&#13;
what had detained him: but&#13;
the next day she had a telegram with&#13;
these words: "Veronica died last night.&#13;
I am coming at once." And then sne&#13;
knew that something serious had occurred.&#13;
Alan came to her, chastened, greyhaired;&#13;
but still Alan. And when he&#13;
told her the simple, touching story of&#13;
poor Veronica's self-sacrifice and death&#13;
they wept together. And Joyce resolved&#13;
then and there to be a good and&#13;
loving mother to Alan and Veronica's&#13;
boy, which vow she nobly kept. Indeed,&#13;
there was nothing stepmotherly&#13;
about Joyce, and she could say truly&#13;
that she had had nothing but pity for&#13;
poor Veronica, even whilst she was&#13;
keeping Alan and herself apart.&#13;
Alan lost no time in marrying Joyce&#13;
again. "They had suffered so much."&#13;
he said, "there Was no need to prolong&#13;
their suffering." Now, indeed.&#13;
W I N T E R A M O N G ICEBERGS.&#13;
An Of«gonlan Says T.iat t h e Kxperlences&#13;
Are Not Uuplcasaut.&#13;
James Poole, formerly a Portland&#13;
real estate man, has returned from the&#13;
North, after two years' absence, a&#13;
portion of which time he was locked&#13;
in the ice on the shores of Kotzebue&#13;
pound. He lefc here in June, 1898,&#13;
en beard the schooner General Mcpherson.&#13;
Mr. Poole's venture in the&#13;
north has not proved a profitable one,&#13;
as; he left Nome/ ten days before the&#13;
gold-beach excitement broke out, and&#13;
has not found it convenient to return&#13;
to. that poiiu, while .Kotzebue, he&#13;
says,, has proved a delvsion and a&#13;
snare. About SCO adventurers wintered&#13;
at Kotzebue after the rush thither,&#13;
but. the place .'is now deserted, ex^'.pt&#13;
by a few hundred Eskimos, whose regular&#13;
win^r quarter* are in the sheltered&#13;
nooks near by. .He says the report&#13;
cf Kotzeoue's rich diggings arose&#13;
1'iom the fact that th? aborigines nan&#13;
bartered nuggets for food and -cio;hing&#13;
with the captains of willing vessels&#13;
visiiiug ti-.-u- region, b-t the gold&#13;
evidently had been picked up on the&#13;
shores cf Nome, to the southward&#13;
.-;o;r&gt;o 500 n.iles. He said the s&amp;nsat'.&#13;
cn cf bci::g inoiocei by iceberg;; during&#13;
a long arctic winter was not so&#13;
unpler-iant as cue rr,i:ht imagine, aa&#13;
the days are seldom less thin six hours&#13;
loner, and access'to the shore is usually&#13;
er.sy. The Genaral McPheison's decks,&#13;
were roofed over in the f.ll with lumber&#13;
brought frova Poland, and this&#13;
gave .her .the appearance of a house&#13;
surrounded by t-liiiionary iceberg;.'&#13;
Further out toward the Aictic ocean&#13;
the great w a life of ice took the aypoitunce&#13;
of windrerws, ;^H the motion&#13;
•cf the waves piled them up in parallel&#13;
Macs. When the break up comes in&#13;
the spring the real danger to shipping&#13;
is being cairied out by the floating&#13;
islands cf ice* 10 be crushed perhaps&#13;
between great masse* in motion.&#13;
From his acquaintance wirh the Eski-&#13;
Uips of that region. Mr. Poole judges&#13;
They had been discussing a new novel&#13;
which dealt with a hero with a&#13;
past.&#13;
"I think if she had really loved him&#13;
she would have been willing to accept&#13;
his past without any question/' she&#13;
said.&#13;
"Would you?" he asked.&#13;
"Why, yes—if I loved him. What's&#13;
the good" of prying into an the nooks&#13;
and corners of the years that have&#13;
gone in a man's life? They are gone,&#13;
and you can't help them or undo them&#13;
or—or—anything, and if ghosts can&#13;
sleep, where is the comfort in starting&#13;
them to walking about? But"—suddenly&#13;
facing about—"I don't believe in&#13;
one privilege for a man ar.d none for a&#13;
woman. If a woraau takes a man's&#13;
past without a question, then he has&#13;
no right to stir up her gh03ts, you&#13;
know. I believe in fair play at any&#13;
rate."&#13;
"But you know," he said, "good&#13;
women have no pasts."&#13;
"But good men may have, eh?" she&#13;
asked. "Well, it is the same old&#13;
story—a man may be a fool in his&#13;
folly and yet be good, but let a woman&#13;
be never so little a fool in her folly,&#13;
and. lo, she isn't good a bit."'&#13;
"I didn't say that," he answered,&#13;
looking Indignantly down at her&#13;
flushed cheeks, "and I believe I like&#13;
you best when you champion your sex.&#13;
Go on, dear. You are very pretty today."&#13;
But she only looked down at&#13;
the toe of her shoe and said nothing.&#13;
After a moment he reached out and&#13;
ihefn to be-of Chinese or Japanese&#13;
origin, there being a strong resemblance&#13;
in appearance, build, and language.&#13;
They are peaceable and honest,&#13;
and quite willing to act as guide*&#13;
for the whites, who employed them to&#13;
a considerable extent while prospecting&#13;
along the banks of the screams&#13;
emptying into the sound. They live&#13;
by fishing in the summer season, putting&#13;
up large quantities of the salmon,&#13;
which abound in great numbers in the&#13;
streams. This diied salmon and what&#13;
grouse they manage to snare in winter&#13;
form the bulk of their food. They&#13;
heartily rejish the white man's flour,&#13;
however, and are willing to part with&#13;
their own product a t a sacrifice in order&#13;
to obtain it. In speaking of the&#13;
adventurers attracted to the far north&#13;
by the reports of rich gold mines, Mr.&#13;
Poole said the proportion of tbosa who&#13;
lost their lives by shipwreck, hardship&#13;
and scurvy would be appalling if the&#13;
figures could ever bn known.—Portland&#13;
Oregonian.&#13;
Robert or George.&#13;
The legitimist Jacobite league of&#13;
Great Britain and Ireland, through&#13;
Registrar Rodwaye of the North American&#13;
Cycle of the Order of the White&#13;
Rose, Roxbury, Mass., has issued a circular&#13;
to the faithful, asking. "Who has&#13;
the best right" (as heir to the British&#13;
thrjone), "Robert or George?" "Robert"&#13;
is the son of Princess Mary Theresa of&#13;
Modena. now the Princess Louise of&#13;
Bavaria, who is styled by the legitimists&#13;
Mary IV. (of Scotland) and 111.&#13;
(cf England), whose descent from the&#13;
male line of the Stuarts is undeniable,&#13;
but whose ancestral claims to the&#13;
throne were set aside by the act of&#13;
succession that excluded Catholics&#13;
from the crown, 'George'* is the duke&#13;
of York, so that it is evident that "the&#13;
legitimist Jacobite league" admits&#13;
Queen Victoria and the prince of&#13;
Wales.&#13;
The average man imagines that if&#13;
all the fools were dead his opinions&#13;
Tould toon become universal.&#13;
drew her closer. "Sweetheart," he .?aid \&#13;
in a low voice, "we have no question to&#13;
ask. no ghests to walk a»bo;u. We can&#13;
safely take each other's 'pasts,' so let's&#13;
be happy in our present."&#13;
They had been married a month or&#13;
two, and no day that passed had flown&#13;
by burdened with a record cf "questions."&#13;
Tonight they were both very quiet;&#13;
he, looking over her head into the&#13;
coals that glowed and flashed and&#13;
flickered like the moods of a human&#13;
.soul: she, with her elbow on his knee&#13;
and her eyes half shut behind her open&#13;
palm.&#13;
"You are no still, dear,'' he said.&#13;
"What is-it?"&#13;
"Nothing," sard -she, without moving.&#13;
"I must have been far away, for I can-&#13;
"hot recall or wfiat I was thinking. T&#13;
dare say I wasn't thinking at all.""&#13;
"I do- not accept that," he retorted,&#13;
half laughing. "A person always&#13;
thinks, and it is no compliment to me&#13;
I . H I M ' » l H l ) l&#13;
If you- «re close enough t o&#13;
and are yet far but of my&#13;
you were not asleep,**&#13;
"No," she said, "reating fcer eWsi « *&#13;
her hand and opening w i i t i s *&#13;
"no, I wasn't asleep.&#13;
were yon thinking? Yon&#13;
still as I."&#13;
"I was not 'far away/ n he&#13;
"at all odds. X was Just&#13;
how I could ever be good&#13;
you." And he lifted her u » t »&#13;
and smoothed back the&#13;
her hair.&#13;
She turned her face down 0» M*.&#13;
shoulder. "QpnV she said. I s m&#13;
really I do—every day, that jm wilt&#13;
always believe I am good. I t a a e t&#13;
half the woman I ought to he, BO, s e t&#13;
half." And then she began to cry.&#13;
"You foolish little woman," he aatf,&#13;
patting her shoulder as if t h e&#13;
fretful baby, "as if there&#13;
of your life that yon need to live-ewer&#13;
for repentance sake.'*&#13;
"If there were you would never torgive&#13;
me," she said, drying her eyes and&#13;
lifting ber head to look into his face.&#13;
The bare shadow of a frown passed&#13;
over the brow of the man. "Knowing&#13;
there is no possibility that I shall ever&#13;
be called on to 'forgive,'*' he said,&#13;
stiffly, "I don't see why we need dlscuss&#13;
the probability of such a t h i n g -&#13;
do you?"&#13;
The woman laughed—a funny, little,&#13;
forced laugh. "We are very silly—&#13;
that is, I am,"' she corrected. "I find&#13;
myself wondering what you would do&gt;&#13;
or what I would if such and such werethe&#13;
case,.. It is very absurd, even t o&#13;
think about, isn't'it?"&#13;
"Very," he agreed promptly. **Therebeing&#13;
nothing to 'forgive,' how could I&#13;
'forgive,' and how do you know whether&#13;
I would or net if there were?"&#13;
She did not answer. By and by s h e&#13;
said a littl3 timidly, "I almost wish,&#13;
dear, there was something I conld 'forgive'&#13;
you."&#13;
He reached over, a little impatiently,&#13;
and poked the grate. Then he stood&#13;
up and faced her with a dark flush on&#13;
his face, "I heard," he said, "that a&#13;
woman was never satisfied unless a&#13;
man had some blot on his life. I never&#13;
expected, however, that you would&#13;
find fault with a clean escutcheon."&#13;
The tone was as cutting as the worUs.&#13;
It was the first tone she had ever heard&#13;
him aildress to her that had not a caress.&#13;
She grcwypp.Ie and dropped over&#13;
the chair back like some suddenly&#13;
rtris'kFn creature.&#13;
In an instant he was beside her. all&#13;
repentance. "I was a brute, dear. Now&#13;
you have something to forgive."&#13;
An hour Is tor, after t h e ' gas. was&#13;
lighted and they had read a little and&#13;
talked a little upon indifferent subjects,&#13;
she. with her mental equipoise&#13;
fully restored, quoted softly, " "Let hicr&#13;
that thinketh he staudeth take heed&#13;
te^t he fall/ Dear, I am afraid we&#13;
came dan^'iiously near to our 'pasts*&#13;
tonight."&#13;
The man locked *sober and said.&#13;
"That's enough," but when the woman,&#13;
now thoroughly mistress of the situation,&#13;
laughed and teasingly asked.&#13;
"Who was the woman, dear?" he was&#13;
wise enough simply to kiss her upturncd&#13;
face, and since then they have&#13;
both ba*» wise enough to let sleeping&#13;
ghosts Ue.—Chicago American. '&#13;
Men love women; women only love&#13;
to love men.—Ex.&#13;
Chinese Gordon's Prophesy.&#13;
I Remarkable Forecast 20 Years Ago of&#13;
i Present Events in China,&#13;
There was probably no European&#13;
more qualified to express an opinion&#13;
on the Chinese than CoL Gordon, more&#13;
commonly called Chinese Gordon,&#13;
whose strange career closed at Khartoum&#13;
in January. "1885. His militaryyears&#13;
from 1S63 to 1865, when he com&#13;
manded the Ever Victorious Army,&#13;
as it was styled, gave' him a unique experience&#13;
of the Chinese and an insight&#13;
into &lt;heir somewhat complex&#13;
character.&#13;
In 1880 Gordon said of the Chinese&#13;
that they had no fear of death, though&#13;
he had seep, them at times fleeing like&#13;
sheep. But what Europeans would&#13;
have to consider in future dealings&#13;
with that people was, he added, the&#13;
awful consequences of a general movement,&#13;
when least expected, in the vast&#13;
Inert masses of hundreds of- millions&#13;
of men to overwhelm the foreign devils,&#13;
whom they hate like poison.&#13;
The danger of such an outburst,&#13;
Gordon said, became greater every&#13;
year on account of the' way the Chi-&#13;
Of one thing Gordon felt quite&#13;
sure. The days when Europeans could&#13;
march up to Chinese troops in position,&#13;
or in defense of a position, and&#13;
sweep them away Hko flies, would&#13;
soon be over. There would be no*&#13;
association with them during the twcT-Score. military promenades by a few&#13;
neee were being harassed by the Eu=^ dalously.&#13;
ropean states with demands for com&#13;
pensations, in some cases just, in&#13;
others quite frivolous. When they&#13;
saw that their only means of meeting&#13;
the aggressions was to organize an&#13;
army with improved weapons, then&#13;
•they would buy guns and rifles and&#13;
ships, and with the aid of Europeans,&#13;
who would always be found ready to&#13;
drill and organise them, they would&#13;
create a formidable army.&#13;
hundred British and French troops&#13;
through the country, driving thousands&#13;
of Chinese before them.&#13;
Speaking of the authorities, Gordon&#13;
said a Mandarin was sever to t e&#13;
trusted, and he was only too glad&#13;
when he, left their service. The&#13;
lish, in his opinion, made the&#13;
take of thinking they were welcome&#13;
wherever they went, hut in 15 or 26&#13;
years they would find proof to t h e&#13;
contrary. With all their&#13;
tions, their vices and their&#13;
the Chinese were, in Gordon's&#13;
tion, far too good to be ruled by t h e&#13;
class that governed, them. The governments&#13;
of France, Russia and Kayland,&#13;
he emphatically declared, had&#13;
for the 40 years before the time) h e&#13;
spoke treated the Chinese&#13;
Vf?H *m&#13;
Current events are proving bow a e -&#13;
eurately Chinese Gordon judged t h e&#13;
situation, and the regret is that&#13;
tain defects of character and&#13;
ament should have caused him&#13;
abandon a position in which he&#13;
have rendered great service to&#13;
and civilization. In the light of&#13;
is passing in China to-day,&#13;
words of 20 years ago have a&#13;
ic rirr.&#13;
. '• . * 1 m&#13;
^ . • J ^ . A ^ m ^ A , ^ ^ . ^ i f r m&#13;
T.v;!&gt;:v&#13;
; - - - - r . : ' ' • • ' . • ' • • • • : : / • • ; ' - . - , : • ' ' • ; ' - • " . : * • • ' - : : . - . : / : ^ ' \ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^&#13;
:.H»*'I&#13;
i , . . i . , &gt; * ! • ' -&#13;
: ' \ v / - - J # ' &gt; . . :&#13;
Y KNOWS&#13;
:.&amp;.*;£&#13;
if&#13;
• # 7&#13;
* * : . • •&#13;
that'tea loses strength and flavor when exposed to&#13;
the air. It collects dust, dirt and impurities, and&#13;
the tender leaves are crushed In handling. The&#13;
sealed package is cheaper, because it protects the&#13;
tea and preserves its strength *nd flavor.&#13;
UAMDI TEA is sold in sealed packages only.&#13;
Pure and fragrant.&#13;
"IT COSTS MO MORE-TRY IT'9^ _ _&#13;
EAST MARION.&#13;
Thos. Richard spent last Suuday&#13;
with bis family.&#13;
Albert-Mills visited Roy Richard&#13;
the first of last week.&#13;
Edith Pierce is home agaiu after&#13;
an absence of two weeks.&#13;
13. J&gt; Allen of Howell called on&#13;
old neighbors one day last week.&#13;
A. K. Pierce and wife of Chesa-&#13;
DiugvUitdd his parents last -Saturday&#13;
and Sunday.&#13;
A free rural mail delivery from&#13;
Howell through Marion and that&#13;
within thirty days is the topic of&#13;
conversation these days.&#13;
SOUTH MARION.&#13;
Mr. A. Abbott is visiting relatives&#13;
in Fowlerville.&#13;
The Gilk's cemetery fence has&#13;
been repainted the past week.&#13;
Miss Edna Stowe is visiting relatives&#13;
in Iosco for a few weeks.&#13;
Clyde Gallaway was seen on&#13;
main street last Sunday evening.&#13;
Somebody was so kind as to disturb&#13;
Mr. Baaing's horses last Saturday&#13;
evening.&#13;
Mrs. Williston expects to start&#13;
for Bay City on Wednesday after&#13;
spending the summer with her son.&#13;
Cressa Abbott returned from&#13;
Bowling Green, Ohio last Wednesday.&#13;
She reports a very enjoyable&#13;
visit.&#13;
PARSHALL^ILLE.&#13;
Mrs.. Bell Harvy of Olivet is&#13;
visiting her aunt Mrs. George&#13;
Cornell.&#13;
During a severe storm last&#13;
Emma Gardner is the owner of&#13;
of a fine now piano, a gift from&#13;
her father.&#13;
While Grace Gardner was riding&#13;
a wheel last Monday it became&#13;
unmanagable as she was,&#13;
coasting down hill and she was&#13;
not very gently precipitated to&#13;
the ground. Miss Gardner's agility&#13;
probably saved her a few&#13;
broken bones.&#13;
The Misses Mae Hacket and&#13;
Elizabeth Selleck of Detroit ^ h o&#13;
have been visiting th3 various&#13;
Mouks families and other relatives&#13;
returned home Monday. I t is&#13;
needless to say the young ladies&#13;
enjoyed their short visit in the&#13;
country.&#13;
•»»— T T&#13;
Thursday lightning struck a barn&#13;
on the Smith farm.&#13;
Mrs. L. A. Waugh of Cleburne&#13;
Texas is visiting her cousin Mfs.&#13;
A. C. Wakeman of this place.&#13;
The funeral of a little child of&#13;
Ed Dexter of Flint was held in&#13;
the M. E. church last Thuisday&#13;
A number of the most severe&#13;
storms of wind and hail and raiu&#13;
that *ver \isited Parshalville have&#13;
occured during the past two&#13;
weeks.&#13;
The musical entertainment held&#13;
in the M. E. church on Friday&#13;
evening last for the Sunday school&#13;
was verjr fiue—reciepts something&#13;
over $12.&#13;
Miss Maud Cole of Owosso and&#13;
her brother Luke who have been&#13;
visiting in Parshalville the past&#13;
week returned home- Tuesday of&#13;
this week.&#13;
EAST PUTNAM.&#13;
The C. D. society took in 87.10&#13;
at the social Friday.&#13;
Mrs. Alex Pearson spent the&#13;
past week in Hamburg.&#13;
Miss Clella Fish and. Clayton&#13;
Placeway are on the sick list.&#13;
Mrs. Caroline CTNeil of Duraud&#13;
is visiting relatives in this vicinity.&#13;
S. L. Smith and wife of South&#13;
Lyon visited Mrs. J. R. Hall last&#13;
Tuesday.&#13;
D. M. Hodgeman of Oak Grove&#13;
visited relatives here Monday and&#13;
Tuesday.&#13;
Mrs. Geo. Brown entertained a&#13;
large company of ladies Tuesday&#13;
afternoon.&#13;
Mrs. Bert Hicks and son, Roy&#13;
spent a part of last week in&#13;
Stockbridge.&#13;
Mrs. Arthur Schoenhal of Hamburg&#13;
spent Friday at the home of&#13;
Clms. Brown.&#13;
Miss Myrta Hall returned from&#13;
Bay View Saturday where she has&#13;
been spending the summer.&#13;
Mrs. D. M. Hodgeman and Mrs.&#13;
Jones of Oak Grove spent a few&#13;
days last week with Mrs. George&#13;
Brown.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Banks, Mr. Bowen&#13;
and Mr. Ford Birch of Wixom, attended&#13;
the funeral of N. N. Whitcomb&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Mortimer Twitchell and wife of&#13;
Hamburg, Samuel Placeway and&#13;
wife of Anderson, Albert Mills of&#13;
Marion and Mabel Brown visited&#13;
at Mrs. Geo. Brown's Sunday.&#13;
AKP*RSQN.&#13;
Chaa. White and wife were in&#13;
Stockbridge Friday,&#13;
Belle Biruie visited her sister&#13;
in Howell lwt week. •&#13;
Mrs, J. R. Punning is quite&#13;
poorly at thia writing^ ,&#13;
Geo*. Black, wife and son Keuneith&#13;
Sundayed in Chelsea.&#13;
&lt; S. T. Grimes of Howell called&#13;
on friends in this place Tuesday.&#13;
People in this vicinity have begun&#13;
bean pulling and corn cutting.&#13;
Mrs. Mark Allison and daughter&#13;
Maude visited at Jas. MarbK&amp;&#13;
Tuesday.&#13;
Quite a number from here took&#13;
in the excursion to Jackson during&#13;
the races.&#13;
Floyd Durkee of Iosco was&#13;
home, sick a couple of days the&#13;
first of the week.&#13;
H. G. Briggs and wife of Pinckney&#13;
called on friends in this place&#13;
the first of the week.&#13;
Kittie Hoff is in Stockbridge&#13;
having her throat treated by Dr.&#13;
Brogan of that place.&#13;
Franc Placeway visited at her&#13;
unclws W. H. Placeway's in East&#13;
Putnam the past week.&#13;
Mina Bangs of near Gregory and&#13;
nephew Bangs Richmond of near&#13;
Pinckney called on friends here&#13;
Tuesday.&#13;
Nora and Ethel Durkee spent&#13;
Thursday and Friday of last week&#13;
visiting their cousin Geo. R. May&#13;
in Jackson.&#13;
Mrs. Lester Williams of Williamsville&#13;
and Mrs. Olive Hooper&#13;
of South Lyon visited at John&#13;
Birnie's one day last week.&#13;
Nora Durkee had the misfortune&#13;
to cut her hand quite badly&#13;
on glass Saturday. Dr. Wright of&#13;
Gregory sewed up the wound.&#13;
Mrs. and Mrs. B. Bostwick and&#13;
family returned to their home in&#13;
Detroit after a few days visit&#13;
with C. E. Bullis and others relatives&#13;
in this locality.&#13;
Alford Morgan and wife spent&#13;
the last of last week and the first&#13;
of this visiting near Detroit aud&#13;
Ann Arbor. They made the trip&#13;
with horse and buggy.&#13;
• ¥ « • * • wtmmpmmm wmmmmmmmm mmmzm w*&#13;
The Misses Lelia Coleman and&#13;
Mary Chapman returned to their&#13;
home in Lansing Wednesday.&#13;
They were accompanied by their&#13;
Grand mother Mrs. Kate Hoff.&#13;
^ m mm&#13;
MORE LOCAL.&#13;
**' v:. ;r, "**&#13;
''^;' , ..."&#13;
WEST PUTNAM.&#13;
Nella Gardner visited in Marion&#13;
last Tuesday.&#13;
The Monks Bros, entertained&#13;
visitors Friday last.&#13;
Fred Lelaud visited W. Gardner&#13;
the first of the week.&#13;
Kate Ruen of Pinckney visited&#13;
Nella Gardner last Saturday.&#13;
J^sank Parker of Pinckney callj&#13;
©d on friends here the first of the&#13;
week,&#13;
i Mike Roche of Anderson, visited&#13;
• t T . C. and W. H, Cooper's the&#13;
first of*the week,&#13;
Anna Donovan who has been&#13;
working in Jackson is spending&#13;
a month's vacation visiting friends&#13;
and relatives in this vicinit*&#13;
#3.&#13;
PLAINHELa&#13;
Maggie Grieve of Pinckney is&#13;
visiting relatives'here.&#13;
Lottie Walker is visiting her&#13;
aunt in Chicago this week.&#13;
E. L. Topping and W. H. Mapes&#13;
attended I O O F at Stockbridge&#13;
last Tuesday night.&#13;
Stella Francis,and Mae Watts&#13;
returned to Jackson Tuesday to&#13;
work in a factory there.&#13;
Prof. Lown gave a movable&#13;
picture and graphophone entertainment&#13;
here last Saturday evening.&#13;
The Ladies band done nicely.&#13;
• The Plainfield Ball team had a&#13;
great many explanations to make&#13;
where they might have done better&#13;
playing with the Unadilla team&#13;
as they were badly done up.&#13;
The jtaral Telephone Co. now&#13;
have t h ^ r phones in and seem to&#13;
be busy most of the time. S. G.&#13;
Topping k Son have placed one&#13;
in their store and are able to connect&#13;
with;fcfcNew State lines here.&#13;
-&lt;y"&#13;
Farmers want fair weather.&#13;
C. L. Grimes is repairing his residence.&#13;
Miss Emma Reason is visiting in&#13;
Detroit.&#13;
Dr. H. F, Sigler was in Detroit on&#13;
Wednesday.&#13;
Mrs. H. D. Grieve spent the past&#13;
week with relatives in Howell.&#13;
Miss Gracie Grieve is spending the&#13;
week with her grandparents here.&#13;
Mort Mortenson and family of near&#13;
Howell visited his parents here Bunday.&#13;
Miss Minnie and Master bonis&#13;
Monks are in Detroit spending the&#13;
week.&#13;
Mrs. Hugh Clark Sr., Who is 85&#13;
years old was able to attend church&#13;
Snnday.&#13;
James Smith who has beeu in Boyne&#13;
Falls for a month, returned home Saturday&#13;
last.&#13;
Mrs. Drewey of Howell was the&#13;
guest of her brother H. M. Fadley the&#13;
past week.&#13;
Mrs. J. M. Cross man of Gregory is&#13;
entertaining for a few days her sister&#13;
Hrs. Walter Gorton and daughter of&#13;
Iosco, also her nephew Master Donglas&#13;
Greene of the *ame place.&#13;
R. E.ilneb and wife wer*e called to&#13;
Waterloo the first of the week to attend&#13;
the foneral of Mr. F's mother,&#13;
The Chelsea Standard has added a&#13;
new d%i^t to. their already complete&#13;
plant \Recess t^you Bro. Ueever. i&#13;
•v='&lt;.J&#13;
Mi*$ Marjr UoVe returned home la«t&#13;
Thursday ajfter spending several wetffcs&#13;
in Marquette Michigan. '&#13;
The Misses Myrta, Flo and Nettie&#13;
Hall of East Putnam were guests of&#13;
Mrs, F. L. Andrews Tuesday afternoon.&#13;
_.&#13;
Mrs. Walter Snyder and daughter&#13;
of Horton were guests of her parents&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. A. 13. Green, the past&#13;
week.&#13;
John Clark, who has been working&#13;
for a time in Jackson, is again in town&#13;
the guest of his sister, Mrs. D. F.&#13;
Ewen. ~ , '&#13;
J. T. White was in Detroit the first&#13;
of the week making arrangements to&#13;
dispose of his fine crop of melons and&#13;
vegetables.&#13;
L. D. Brokaw and Frank Shields of&#13;
Howeli were in town the first of the&#13;
week, transacting business and calling&#13;
on friends.&#13;
The rural telepone is being extended&#13;
to take in many of our sister villages.&#13;
We wonder why they do not&#13;
work up one in this direction.&#13;
B. h\ Pierce of Chesanin« spent&#13;
Sunday with F. A. Sigler's family.&#13;
Mrs. P., who has bean visiting a week&#13;
here returned home with him Monday.&#13;
The work of painting and decorating&#13;
the school house house has been&#13;
completed and the building has a&#13;
much better appearance than ever before.&#13;
There will he a chicken pie social at&#13;
the M. E. parsonage on Wednesday of&#13;
next week. Sept. 5. Supper from 5&#13;
until all are served. Everyone welcome.&#13;
There will be a social at the home&#13;
of John Connors south of this village&#13;
on Friday evening of next week Sept.&#13;
7, given by St. Mary's society. At&#13;
this iime the picture will be raffled;&#13;
All are welcome to go and have a big&#13;
time.&#13;
The Grand Trunk Ry. cancelled&#13;
their'excursion Sunday and many along&#13;
the line were disappointed. It&#13;
is thought that fully 1,000 were intending&#13;
to make the trip. Some ruling&#13;
of the different railroads caused&#13;
the cancellation.&#13;
On Wednesday, the 29th day of&#13;
Aug. 1900, being the 50th anniversary&#13;
of the marriage of Mr. and Mrs. A. B,&#13;
Gi:een, the children and grandchildren,&#13;
with one exception, were&#13;
present to celebrate with them, their&#13;
Golden Wedding.&#13;
Those wlu aro using the—gasoline&#13;
i '-"n\\V u.vTn V I M i i'nTfr'ii1*!&#13;
air-light system in this village recaiv&#13;
ed notice this week that their insurance&#13;
polices would be cancelled Thursday&#13;
unless the light was discontinued.&#13;
The Hartford was the compan7 that&#13;
made the "kick"' and those using the&#13;
light withdrew and took out policies&#13;
in an other company.&#13;
• . . _ • « ^ * -&#13;
The healthiest spot in the work! is&#13;
Aumone, a. Freach village containing&#13;
forty people. Tv.*entj*-cight of the in-,&#13;
habitants are over eighty years of age,&#13;
and three have passed a century.&#13;
There are no graves in the, local cemetery,&#13;
and the oldest inhabitant cannot&#13;
remember seeing a funeral.&#13;
Th largest and most cumbersome&#13;
form of money is found in Central&#13;
Africa, where the natives use a crossshaped&#13;
igot of copper ore over ten&#13;
inches long. It is heavy enough tdwee&#13;
L fcn^'dohiB weaDon.&#13;
: Ostrtebee when' purauadv invariable&#13;
pun acalnat^ the wrn,d,- They are;&amp;pl*rfmmbus.&#13;
The females lay t&amp;etr eg»r&#13;
ecvem! in one neat, th* hatchlar;»e-V&#13;
lag performed by the male.&#13;
. A record output in ateel rafle ta- reported&#13;
by the Illinois Steel Company.&#13;
tb~* statement bainf made that 144?&#13;
toaa were turned out'in a da|t ihifcfc&#13;
the *i*ht anm 'following with* im&#13;
ton's.&#13;
A recent shipment -of eighty-two&#13;
thousand bns&amp;ele of wheal from Portland&#13;
Oregon," to Yokohama was the firtt&#13;
cargo made up excluaively of tfcie&#13;
cereal that ever crossed the Pacific to&#13;
Japan.&#13;
A etory is going the rounds of what&#13;
is probably the'longest. railroad train&#13;
on record, a tratn recently moved on&#13;
the Cleveland &amp; Pittsburg line, which&#13;
was one and a third miles long, o?&#13;
more exactly, abowt six-thousand fe^t.&#13;
Drivers of oxen in France, while at&#13;
work with their beasts in the field,&#13;
frequently encourage the animals to&#13;
labor by singing to them. The peasants&#13;
believe that the songs are very&#13;
acceptable to the four-footed laborers.&#13;
The nmrried and unmarried women&#13;
of the United States of Colombia,&#13;
South America, are designated by the&#13;
manner in which they wear flowers in&#13;
their haii\sthe senoras weajlng them&#13;
on the right side and the senoritas on&#13;
the left.&#13;
One of the largest works of manls&#13;
handsets the artificial lake, or reservoir,&#13;
in:lHdia, at Rajputana. This reservoir,&#13;
said to be the largest in the&#13;
world, and known as the great tank of&#13;
Dhebar, and used for irrigating purposes,&#13;
covers an area of twenty-one&#13;
square miles.&#13;
Second only to the French are tho&#13;
Chinese when it comes.to culinary.&#13;
skill, and with simple materials they&#13;
will contrive to put together a meal&#13;
which would shame art ordinary American&#13;
cook*. In peasant families tho&#13;
wife, or daughter does the cooking, bu^&#13;
in all large establishments, the ccoks&#13;
are invariably men.&#13;
Impeachment dqgs not mean conviction&#13;
any more thau indictment does.&#13;
Andrew .'lohneon was impeached -by&#13;
the House of Representatives on&#13;
.March 5, the Senate "sitting as a court&#13;
under the presidency of the Chtef Justice&#13;
of the Supreme Court. Th trial&#13;
lasted, wjth intervals—the.:session beginning&#13;
a t ' l P. M., each day—until&#13;
May 26, when the President was acquitted&#13;
and the Senate, sitting as a&#13;
court, adjourned.&#13;
Columbus sailed from Palos on a Friday;&#13;
discovered America on a Friday;&#13;
the Mayflower arrived at Provincetown&#13;
on a Frljjay;."Bunker Hill" was&#13;
won on Friday'; Gornwallls surrendered&#13;
on a Friday^ Lincoln was shot on a&#13;
Friday; Marat was killed by Charlotte&#13;
Corday on the thirteenth; the French&#13;
occupied Madrid oh the thirteenth;&#13;
Napoleon surrendered at Sedan en n&#13;
Friday; France declared war agxinst&#13;
Prussia on a Friday; China askcji Japan&#13;
to r.op the war on a JFriday.&#13;
There aro dosens of -qtherf dates;&#13;
eHfcts happen on Friday and on tho&#13;
thirteei^if the month Ju«t. as we'l ™&#13;
on dOi'er daya,- ,' '-.&#13;
Business Locals.&#13;
N o t i c e . ^&#13;
I am now ready to take in apples&#13;
and make cider at ray mill in Pettysville.&#13;
J. H. Hooker.&#13;
FARITI F O K S A L E&#13;
A good farm of 120 ^cres within&#13;
two miles of the village for sale at a&#13;
reasonable price. Anyone desiring&#13;
farm property will do well to call at&#13;
this office for particulars.&#13;
Every Wednesday until October!,&#13;
Stark takes Penny, Button and first&#13;
class Photos in Pinckney. He_ also&#13;
gives bis well known | 3 photos forfl.&#13;
Subscribe for the Dispatch.&#13;
This store closes Friday afternoons at&#13;
12:30 until Sept. 7th. L». H.&#13;
Labor Day, Blks Day,&#13;
Busy Bee Hive, Sept. 3d&#13;
You will probably cortfeto town.&#13;
Make our place your resting spot and meetyour friends&#13;
here. YOU ARE WfibGOME*&#13;
Great many of our fall goods will then be open.&#13;
Will do you good to see the great stock we have ready&#13;
for your 'examination.&#13;
Must visit our Basement Department and see what&#13;
we are doing the re.&#13;
'.)•?!••&#13;
L. H. FIELD.&#13;
V ; . VJacksoa, Mich.&#13;
. • '&#13;
• ' " ' . : " -&#13;
. . ' • • ; • ; • • ,&#13;
"'• .''V&#13;
' -&#13;
. - • . • * ' . ' * . • * • ^ - • , 4 ,&#13;
', , ^ ."I&#13;
..- V&#13;
w " ..,:^^-...,.^,,1&#13;
• • • . . ' : ! • • • " ' r ^&#13;
. ' • • ; • • : ; ^ * . . !&#13;
--r~-~^ ---^,^'&#13;
_ "•••'•Sfr--«Krt^d-.:&#13;
'•'''' •' -"hr•&#13;
. • \&#13;
1 Jj&#13;
V,&#13;
/&#13;
'f.&#13;
^4¾.&#13;
^&#13;
4&#13;
vrU</text>
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              <text>Use the Windows Snipping Tool to capture the area of the document you want to save. If you want multiple pages printed please see staff to print the pages you want. &lt;a href="https://howelllibrary.org/technology/#print" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View the library's printing information.&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch August 30, 1900</text>
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                <text>August 30, 1900 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>1900-08-30</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. xvin. PINCKNEY, LIVINGSTON 00., MIOH., THURSDAY, SEPT. 6, 1900. No 30&#13;
Coming Eventi.&#13;
Mancafcee Day, Jackiwn, Sept. 12.&#13;
Howell street Pair, Sept. 25-28.&#13;
MUford Pair, Sept 25-28;&#13;
Stockbridge Fair, Oct. 9 11.&#13;
General election November 6.&#13;
LOCAL N E W S .&#13;
Mrs. S. Swarthout and ohildren&#13;
spent tbe past week in Detroit.&#13;
Mesdamea 0 . B. and Albert Jackson&#13;
visited in Detroit tbe past week.&#13;
The rains of the-past week have not&#13;
been very profitable to bean raisers.&#13;
Jas. Fitch of Stockbridge spent Sunday&#13;
with his daughter, Mrs. Bert&#13;
Hicks.&#13;
John Kirk and Miss Zadie Holt of&#13;
Howell, called on friends here Sunday&#13;
evening.&#13;
Ed. C. Brown of Shelden, Iowa,&#13;
made friends here a hasty visit tbe&#13;
last of last week.&#13;
Mrs. Clarissa Kirk of Howell is&#13;
the guest of her sister, Mrs. H. G.&#13;
Briggs, this week.&#13;
Toe section bands were in Jackson&#13;
Saturday assisting in re-laying a sideing&#13;
for the Grand Trunk.&#13;
It looks at present as if Pinckney&#13;
citizens would have to do without a&#13;
lecture course this season.&#13;
Mrs. Hattie H. Decker went to&#13;
Grand Rapids Monday to continue the&#13;
study of kindergarten-work.&#13;
Miss Ma me Sigler spent tbe last of&#13;
last week and the first of this with&#13;
friends in Ann Arbor and Ypsilanti.&#13;
There will be a social at the home&#13;
of Jolm Connors south of this village&#13;
on Friday evening of this week Sept.&#13;
7, given by St. Mary's society. . At&#13;
this time the picture will be raffled.&#13;
All are welcome to go and have a big&#13;
time.&#13;
Mrs. F. D.'Johnson and son Gale)&#13;
visited in Jackson Monday.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Barnard spent&#13;
Sunday with relatives in Howell.&#13;
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Fayette, Sellman,&#13;
Saturday evening last, a son.&#13;
Jerry Gating has moved in+o the&#13;
Wright bouse in the western part of&#13;
town.&#13;
Mrs. Ed. Brown of Seldon, Iowa, is&#13;
the guest of her mother, Mrs. John&#13;
Kearney.&#13;
Several from here went to Jackson&#13;
Monday to help the Elks celebrate&#13;
Labor day.&#13;
Miss Florence Andrews spent Sat*&#13;
urdav, Sunday and Monday with Miss&#13;
Beth Swarthout.&#13;
Arrangements are being made for&#13;
a Sunday School convention to be&#13;
held here sometime in October.&#13;
John Small and little son, of Kansas&#13;
City Kan. is spending a lew weeks&#13;
with friends and relatives here.&#13;
Miss Carrie Jones who has been,&#13;
working for Mr-1. C. L. Sigler for some&#13;
time, returned to her home near Bay&#13;
City Monday.&#13;
Next Sunday will be the last service&#13;
of this conferlmWyearat this place as&#13;
Rev Simpson goes to Pontiac that&#13;
week to attend conference.&#13;
Lyle Martin who has been spending&#13;
tbe past month with his mother here,&#13;
started for Camp Verde, Arizona on&#13;
Tuesday to resume his work there.&#13;
The adjourned quarterly conference&#13;
of the M. E. society will be held&#13;
on Monday evening next at the&#13;
cburch, A large attendence is desired.&#13;
Mrs. Robt. Tiplady is in Toledo at-,&#13;
tending the wedding of her niece&#13;
Miss Gertrude Andrews. Miss A. is&#13;
well know a here and has the best&#13;
wishes, of many.&#13;
This is a fall month.&#13;
Have yon paid your taxes yet?&#13;
It sounds good to hear the school&#13;
bell again.&#13;
Allie Mclntyre is spending some&#13;
time in White Oak.&#13;
Mrs. Wro. Doyle and son Will were&#13;
in Howell Thursday last.&#13;
, F; G. Randall of Howell was in&#13;
town the last of last week.&#13;
Mr8. Julia Murphy of Jackson is&#13;
spending the week with the Brady&#13;
family.&#13;
Belle Kennedy returned to Ypsilanti&#13;
Monday to resume her work of&#13;
teaching.&#13;
A. J.luncker of Ypsilanti, shook&#13;
hands with friends here tbe first of&#13;
tfieireek,&#13;
jdany of our citizens were at Whitmore&#13;
lake Saturday last to tbe farmers&#13;
picnic.&#13;
Miss Mary Van Fleet was in Detroit&#13;
attending the wedding of her nephew&#13;
Fred VanFleet which took place Saturday.&#13;
The Ladies aid society of West&#13;
Marion will meet at the Home of Mrs.&#13;
Sophia Smith Thursday Sept. 13.&#13;
Everybody i n v i t e d . —&#13;
TEEPLE &amp; CADWELL&#13;
General Hardware,&#13;
Have as complete an assortment of heavy and shelf hardware&#13;
as can be found in the county, and 1900 finds us&#13;
more thoroughly equipped than ever before.&#13;
Builders Hardware a Specialty.&#13;
Doors and Common Sash always in stock.&#13;
Complete line of Buggies, Wagons and&#13;
iklPLEMENTS.&#13;
Heating Stoves, Ranges, Wood Stoves&#13;
Wood and Coal.&#13;
E. A. Densmore and family of Dansviile&#13;
passed through this place Tuesday&#13;
with a load of goods on his way to&#13;
resume his studies at the U. of M.&#13;
Rev. C. W. Rice and family returned&#13;
from their vacation Tuesday.&#13;
There will be preaching in the Copg'l&#13;
church Sunday morning as usual.&#13;
Remember the last day in which to&#13;
pay your village taxes is Sept 29.&#13;
After Sept. 15 the treasurer will&#13;
charge four per cent for collection.&#13;
Messrs W. W. Barnard and F. L.&#13;
Andrews, with their wives, enjoyed&#13;
an afternoon this week at VanWinkle's&#13;
grove. Mr. B. secured several&#13;
line views of the place.&#13;
We have in this issue an interesting&#13;
letter from the pen of Herman S.&#13;
Reed who is in the state of Wash.&#13;
That country is a very interesting one&#13;
and we hope to hear from him again.&#13;
Whitney's show which was here on&#13;
F r i d a y &gt;&gt;t&lt;t. pavft MYr»ftlUnt aaH&lt;afar&gt;»irni&#13;
Do not let those&#13;
Magazines go to&#13;
w a s t e .&#13;
Get'em bound at the Dispatch Bindery&#13;
Gft*oo*d*« Wii«obrlkc . R«te*« Pinckney*&#13;
Mrs. Sarah Sigler who has been&#13;
spending a few weeks with her daughter&#13;
at Vasser, retnrned home on&#13;
Saturday last.&#13;
A carrier pigeon awaits an owner&#13;
at tbe borne of E. J. Briggs. Owner&#13;
can have same by proving property&#13;
and paying charges.&#13;
Percy Swarthout has purchased tbe&#13;
house and eight acres of W. H. Harris&#13;
in tbe eastern part of town and will&#13;
move there in the near future.&#13;
School started ont Toesday with&#13;
good prospects but as usual the enrollment&#13;
is not as large as it will be&#13;
later. The following is th&amp; enrollment:&#13;
High School, 37; Grainmer, 15;&#13;
Intermediate, 25; Primary, 30.&#13;
Mrs. Peter Poole was very badly&#13;
scalded about the face on Monday by&#13;
steam being confined in a stew kettle.&#13;
When she started to lift the cover the&#13;
steam blew it off and into her face.&#13;
The force was such that hardly a drop&#13;
of water even, was left in the kettle.&#13;
We will deliver Hour&#13;
direct to the people&#13;
at&#13;
45 cents for a 25-pound sack&#13;
85 cents for a 50-pound sack&#13;
$3.40 for a barrel.&#13;
10 pounds Graham 15 cents.&#13;
10 lbs. granulated meal lOcts&#13;
Terms, Cash.&#13;
R . H . E R W I N .&#13;
Take&#13;
Time&#13;
By&#13;
The&#13;
Fore&#13;
Lock&#13;
i&#13;
1:1&#13;
Hi!&#13;
I I&#13;
And get t h o s e Letter-heads,&#13;
Bill-heads* Statements, Envelopes,&#13;
and Business-cards&#13;
printed now. Don't wait until&#13;
t h e last one i s gone before&#13;
ordering.&#13;
Everyone, whether h e b e&#13;
Business man, Mechanic, or&#13;
Farmer, if he w i s h e s to be up&#13;
to date, should have their r e -&#13;
turn address printed on their&#13;
Envelopes.&#13;
us for prices&#13;
!,'.IMi&#13;
D I S P A T C H O F F I C E ,&#13;
Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
t&#13;
and was largely attended. Tbis show&#13;
has always been noted for good behavior&#13;
and up-to-date performances,&#13;
and this year is no exception.&#13;
The ladies aid at the Lakin appointment&#13;
will hold theii nest meeting at&#13;
tbe home of Mrs. I. J. Abbott on&#13;
Thursday of next week, Sept. 18, at&#13;
which time they will elect officers and&#13;
a good attendence is desired.&#13;
We were surprised to learn while&#13;
Whitney's show was here .that the&#13;
firm bad been under that name ever&#13;
since 1849 and that one of tbe old&#13;
company the mother of the Whitney's&#13;
still travels with the company and&#13;
was with them here. She is 80 years&#13;
old, but likes to travel with her son.&#13;
Durand has a daiiy paper, one being&#13;
issued from the Express office since&#13;
Monday of this week. Bro. Izor is- a&#13;
practical newspaper man and knows&#13;
from experience now to coduct a successful&#13;
daily. What he need* is the&#13;
support of the people in Durand and&#13;
we will guaieutee them an excellent&#13;
paper.&#13;
Tbe Portage Lake Cottage Association&#13;
are contemplating securing the&#13;
entire lake shore by puchasing for&#13;
several thousand dollars the Cobb&#13;
property. The cottagers hold their land&#13;
on 10-year leases, and they figure&#13;
tha. if the are to be permanent occupants&#13;
it will be the cheapest and most&#13;
satisfactory course to buy the land&#13;
they occupy and enough more to make&#13;
the lake a semi-private affair. If the&#13;
purchase is made extensive improy ements&#13;
will be put into effect, with the&#13;
idea of converting the place into an&#13;
ideal summer home. The association&#13;
has an option on the Cobb property,&#13;
and they will probably arrive at a decision&#13;
this week.—Dexter Leader.&#13;
It's Surprising&#13;
How cheaply we sell our proprietary&#13;
medicines. Any of&#13;
the standard remedies that&#13;
you may want you will find&#13;
can 1&gt;e bought cheaper than&#13;
of any other druggist.&#13;
Our Patent Medicines&#13;
are always fresh, We never&#13;
allow stock to stand around&#13;
for years. We sell the best,&#13;
and for the least money.&#13;
F. A. SIGLER.&#13;
DtniflHgiBt&#13;
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Vf&#13;
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n.?.- $ • •&#13;
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0- ' • # • • • # •&#13;
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» • ' , . ! . '&#13;
» • * • 5B552SC&#13;
HV:&#13;
i'.&#13;
sr&#13;
I&#13;
For* Their Trouble at.Tecumseh&#13;
the Other Night&#13;
A WRECK ON THE M, C, .R.R.&#13;
At Monroe was Narrowly Averted—Some&#13;
Bag**** was Thrown luto the River&#13;
by the Crash—A Muskegon Eieetrl-&#13;
*!•« Nearly Shocked to DwUh. _&#13;
Tecnmseh Visited by Itarglars.&#13;
The gang of safe blowers that has&#13;
been working; in Michigan for the past&#13;
six months paid Tecumseh village a&#13;
visit on the night of the 27th. They&#13;
forced an entrance into the ofTicc of&#13;
the Xtaj'den mill and blew open the&#13;
safe. The charge of dynamite used&#13;
was a heavy one, and the big- safe was&#13;
torn into a thousand pieces. One end&#13;
of the office was blown out. There&#13;
were SftO in the inside money chest and&#13;
this was not reached by the burglars.&#13;
The currency was badly charred from&#13;
the heat of the exploding- dynamite.&#13;
The gang also blew open the safe in&#13;
Thomas Elliott's blacksmith shop, but&#13;
bccured nothing but a bank book. The&#13;
cracksmen then visited the farm of&#13;
John D. Shull, located one mile east&#13;
of the Hay den mill and stole a horse&#13;
and buggy. They also stole a handcar&#13;
from the Lima Northern railroad&#13;
.station, and made good their escape.&#13;
Weekly Crop UuUetla&#13;
The weekly crop bulletin- issued onthe&#13;
28th says: The 'mean dally toraperature&#13;
for the wcok ending August&#13;
25,' was 72.0 degrees, or 0.0 degrees&#13;
above normal; average total precipitation,&#13;
1.33 inches, or 0.S3 of inch abovo&#13;
normal; sunshine averaged 43 per cent&#13;
of the possible amount. High temperatures,&#13;
heavy rainfall, considerable&#13;
cloudiness and much high wind have&#13;
characterized the weather of the past&#13;
week. The warm, moist weather has&#13;
been very beneficial to corn, potatoes,&#13;
buckwheat, sugar beets and pastures.&#13;
-Hetrvy rains have greatly delayed[the""***'are ****»*? b a d t y e a t e n b v worms,&#13;
A Prosperous Village*&#13;
Four years ago Aug. 23 the village&#13;
of Ontonagon was destroyed by fire,&#13;
344 building being consumed by the&#13;
hungry flames and over 2,0()0 people&#13;
being left homeless in less than two&#13;
hours. Now at the end of four vears&#13;
the village has a population of close to&#13;
1,500, water works, electric lights, a&#13;
telephone exchange, three industries&#13;
giving employment to many hands, and&#13;
nearly as many buildings and business&#13;
houses as before the fire. Thirty new&#13;
dwellings and residences, besides 10&#13;
new business houses, have gone up&#13;
within the past year. In addition to&#13;
this, two new saw mills are already&#13;
built, while a new high sehool building&#13;
and a new county infirmary are&#13;
now in course of construction.&#13;
i , That Sat*' Bounty LAW.&#13;
I n a supplemental brief filed in the&#13;
supreme court on Aug. 30 H. H. Hatch,&#13;
of Detroit, attorney for the Michigan&#13;
Sugar company in its suit to collect&#13;
beet sugar bounty claimed to be due&#13;
from the state, takes the ground that&#13;
the .state is morally bound to pay the&#13;
bounty under the promise contained in&#13;
the bounty law of 1897. He holds that&#13;
for the state to go back on its implied&#13;
.promise to pay a bounty for seven&#13;
years would be to disgrace and besmirch&#13;
its reputation, and that nothing&#13;
short of absolute bankruptcy would&#13;
release a private individual from his&#13;
obligations under the same circumstances.&#13;
A Wreck on the M. C. Narrowly Averted.&#13;
A terribly wreck w a s narrowly&#13;
averted on the Michigan-Central bridge&#13;
over the Basin river at Monroe on the&#13;
night of the 28th. A passenger train&#13;
was pulling into that place from the&#13;
north, when the engine struck the&#13;
rear end of an extra freight train&#13;
which was on the bridge. The passenger&#13;
train was heavily loaded, many&#13;
passengers being compelled to ride&#13;
standing. When the collision occurred&#13;
pandemonium reigned. The engineer&#13;
set the air brakes so suddenly that the&#13;
passengers were Scattered all over the&#13;
cars, and considerable baggage was&#13;
lost into the river out of the baggage&#13;
car door. No fatalities occurred.&#13;
Galesoarjrers are Fnzzleri.&#13;
While workingmen were digging for&#13;
"building sand by the roadside, a mile&#13;
north of Galesburg recently, they came&#13;
upon a mass of some substance of an&#13;
oily consistency and estimated to'weigh&#13;
COO or 700 pounds. It was at tirst&#13;
thought that the formation was the result&#13;
of some chemical freak in the soil.&#13;
but on close examination it was ascertained&#13;
that the substance closely resembled&#13;
butter, both in appearance&#13;
and taste, and now Mr. Savers, the&#13;
owner of the adjoining property, recollects&#13;
burying a Jersey COM', which died&#13;
from milk fearer, on the spot some 10&#13;
years ago. The matter is a local puzz/ic.&#13;
harvesting of oats, peas and spring&#13;
wheat in the upper pcuinsuja and in&#13;
many cases have sprouted grain in the&#13;
shock, thus doinu considerable damage.&#13;
In the lower peninsula high&#13;
winds have blown down much fruit&#13;
and flattened considerable corn. On&#13;
the whole, the week has been generally&#13;
favorable in central and southern&#13;
counties for the progress of field work&#13;
and maturity of outstanding crops.&#13;
Corn has made wonderful progress and&#13;
is generally very promising. Some&#13;
blight to late j&gt;otatoes is reported, but&#13;
generally they are in line condition.&#13;
Beans have improved slightly and are&#13;
about ready to pull in southern and&#13;
central counties, but indicate a light&#13;
crop Buckwheat has improved, but&#13;
on the whole is not well filled.&#13;
Sugar beets continue to make fine&#13;
growth and a good crop seems assured.&#13;
Pasturage is much bettor than is usual&#13;
in August. Reports regarding apples&#13;
vary greatly. They have dropped more&#13;
than'usual and hlyh winds have blown&#13;
down considerable fruit. Some correspondents&#13;
report prospects fair, other&#13;
very poor A concensus of opinion indicates&#13;
a very fair yield of fall apples,&#13;
especially in some of the western counties&#13;
and a poor to rather light yield of&#13;
winter apples.&#13;
The ample rain fall has put the&#13;
ground in tine condition for plowing,&#13;
which is well advanced in the central&#13;
and southern counties and generally&#13;
begun—in- the ether sections of the&#13;
state. In the southern counties much&#13;
ground has been fitted for seeding, and&#13;
in a few cases some rye has been sown.&#13;
— — • — • —&#13;
Plunged Through a Drawbridge.&#13;
Two locomotives and three refrigerator&#13;
cars attached to a fast eastern&#13;
freight on the Wabash railroad took a&#13;
plunge into the River Rouge, near the&#13;
drawbridge in Delray, on the morning&#13;
of the 31st. The engines are completely&#13;
submerged in the soft, sticky&#13;
mud for which the Rouge is noted. It&#13;
was very foggy as the train bowled&#13;
along toward Detroit and the engineers&#13;
were running their engines under&#13;
check, looking for accidents. The,&#13;
drawbridge had been swung open to&#13;
allow the passage of a boat. Under&#13;
the rnles of the railroad company the&#13;
engineers are supposed to bring their&#13;
trains to a full stop 100 yards from&#13;
the bridge and wait there until they&#13;
g e t the signal from the bridge tenders&#13;
to proceed.&#13;
A 1i«rolc l&gt;eed.&#13;
While adjusting so'inv brushes to a&#13;
dynamo in the Muskegon Wectric Co.'s&#13;
plant, at Muskegon, on the night of the&#13;
r.'rtth,—Walter Krobb*,—an electrician,&#13;
Burglars broke into the postoiflee at&#13;
Lake Odessa, blew open the safe and&#13;
escaped with a small amount of booty.&#13;
J as. Crandcll, of near Bad Axe,&#13;
threshed 310 bushels of wheat from&#13;
eight acres, a yield of 4¾.1¾ bushels to&#13;
the acre.&#13;
The .list annual reunion of tho 5th&#13;
Michigan Veteran Volunteer association&#13;
will be held at Farmlngtou, September&#13;
10.&#13;
The eorn crop in tho vicinity of Flat&#13;
Rock will be the finest in a number of&#13;
years. • Early potatoes are a good crop,&#13;
By President McWnley as Arbitrators.&#13;
**&#13;
THE U, S. WAS FIRST TO ACT,&#13;
received" the benefit of"$,000 Volts, passing&#13;
through the machine and although&#13;
he was not killed, he had a narrow escape.&#13;
Win. Frazee, the night engineer,&#13;
realizing what was about to happen,&#13;
threw himself upon Krebbs, although&#13;
ho knew he would receive the benefit&#13;
of the shock, aud might be killed, and&#13;
dragged him to the fltk&gt;r clear of the&#13;
dvnamo. Both-were rendered uncon&#13;
Burglars secured between 82,500 and&#13;
§3,000 by cracking the safe in the St.&#13;
Joseph postotHee on the night of tho&#13;
28th. About 31,300- of the amount was&#13;
iu er.sh.&#13;
An effort is being made to raise a&#13;
sut!icient sum among Jackson capitalists&#13;
to purchase the local street railway,&#13;
which is in the hands of a receiver.&#13;
The frequent rains are seriously injuring&#13;
the bean crop in tho vicinity of&#13;
Brighton, one farmer having turned&#13;
his crop over 12 times to dry and it is&#13;
still wet.&#13;
Growers around Highland Station&#13;
cannot pick their cucumbers fast enough&#13;
to keep them from growing too* large&#13;
| for the pickle factory's use, so heavy is&#13;
j the yield.&#13;
j The skunk farm near Burr Oak now&#13;
i has some (l(7o skunks on it. The citi-&#13;
| zens of that place always hold their&#13;
noses when the wind blows from a certain&#13;
direction.&#13;
Threshing is in operation in the vicinity&#13;
of Springport. Wheat averages&#13;
from f&gt; to S bushels to the acre and&#13;
oats from ;"&gt;0 to GO. Barlej' is reported&#13;
as being an excellent crop.&#13;
Notwithstanding-Onaway is situated&#13;
in the greatest timber belt in Michigan,&#13;
work had to be stopped on a certain&#13;
new frame building in course of&#13;
erection there for lack of material.&#13;
The new parochial school at Bronson&#13;
is about completed. It is three stories&#13;
high, of handsome red brick and stone&#13;
and makes a fine addition to the village.&#13;
The cost will be about 812,000.&#13;
It is said that Camden's village charter&#13;
is defective and that the ordinances&#13;
passed by the council are not valid.&#13;
Persons who have paid tines under the&#13;
ordinances threaten to bring suit to&#13;
recover.&#13;
» This was the wettest August ever&#13;
experienced in many parts of Michigan.&#13;
Corn,- late potatoes, beans and all&#13;
late vegetables are flourishing; but&#13;
oats are rotting in the fields and wheat&#13;
stacks are green.&#13;
August 31 was the last chance fishermen&#13;
will have for eight months to go&#13;
after the wily trout; that is, to do it&#13;
legally. The open season ends with&#13;
August, and the rods should be put&#13;
away for a long rest.&#13;
Smallpox exists at five places in&#13;
Michigan, there being one case in&#13;
Adams township, Ingham county, one&#13;
at Cass City, three at Houghton, one at&#13;
Lake Linden and two in Nottowa township,&#13;
Isabella county.&#13;
Farmers in the vicinity of Cold water&#13;
have lost a large number of valuable&#13;
cuwy reeeutl v by the: poison route. The&#13;
The fts-tfuaotffen Pat the "fcw^ ^ »U«*&#13;
i ,-wta Hie Fifth R«aa&lt;M -&#13;
The long promised and long l o o k e d&#13;
for mealing between 4a*. 4 . £o*bett&#13;
antrChas. ("KM") McCoy under the'auspitv*&#13;
of tbi* Twentieth Century club&#13;
Madison Square Garden, New Yo*k, is&#13;
over and in less than five rouuds Corbet*&#13;
proved himself to be tho better&#13;
raan,^ That Corbett and McCoy are the&#13;
cleverest exponents of the art of self*&#13;
Scheme Originated at The Hague.&#13;
Chicago Taken by the O. A. B.&#13;
The 27th was a busy and hustling&#13;
day for Chicago, and encampment week&#13;
was formally inaugurated with the&#13;
sparkle and racket of tho opening of a&#13;
colossal bottle of champagne; Chicago&#13;
is welcoming the old soldiers with&#13;
music of bands, dazzling illuminations,&#13;
flags and street pageants, and the veterans&#13;
are beginuingtoknow the warmth&#13;
and boundlessness of the city's hospitality.&#13;
The vanguard of the'"Boys in&#13;
Blue" has passed into the town with&#13;
bauds and banners, and from morning&#13;
until midnight the crowded streets&#13;
echoed to martial strains and the tramp&#13;
of feet as the visiting posts marched to&#13;
their quarters. It is the largest reunion&#13;
in the history of the big organization.&#13;
With the selection of the following&#13;
officers and tho choice of Denver for&#13;
the national encampment of 1001, the&#13;
34th national encampment of the Orund&#13;
Army of the Republic practically came&#13;
to a close on Aug. 30:&#13;
Commander-in-Chief — Leo Rassieur,&#13;
St. Louis.&#13;
Senior Vice-Commander—E. C. Millikeu,&#13;
l'ortfand. Me.&#13;
Junior Vice-Commander—Frank Seainon,&#13;
Knoxville. Tenn.&#13;
• Surgeon-GeiieraW—John A. Wilkins,&#13;
Delta, O.&#13;
Chaplain in-ehief—Rev. A. Drahins,&#13;
San Quentin. Cal.&#13;
W* 3 9 9 $&#13;
CORBSTT-M COY -PIOHX&#13;
*&#13;
\ " .,-&#13;
. % •&#13;
The Object of the Arbitration Board la&#13;
That All International Differences&#13;
May be Promptly AIMstert - Tn* t ^ . 1 ^ 1 % ^ » » « *&#13;
scions, but recovered and are all right,&#13;
with the exception of a few burns.&#13;
K. of V. Supreme Officer*.&#13;
The following were elected oulcers&#13;
of the Supreme Lodge, K. of I*. Tor the I&#13;
ensuing year:&#13;
Chancellor—Ogden H. Fethers. Janesville.&#13;
Wis.&#13;
Vice-Chancellor — Tracy R. Bangs,&#13;
North Dakota.&#13;
Prelate - l . F. Easley, New Mexico.&#13;
Keeper of Records and Seals—R. L.&#13;
i C. White, Tennessee.&#13;
Master of Exchequer— Thomas G.&#13;
Mcares. Willi ington. Del.&#13;
Master at Arms -Win Simmons, Delaware.&#13;
Inner Guard—Fred E. Beane. Maine.&#13;
Outer Guard—- John W. Thompson,&#13;
Washington. D. C.&#13;
sheriff has offered a 8100 reward for&#13;
| any information that will lead to the&#13;
conviction of tV.e miscreant.&#13;
Other cities in Michigan have reported&#13;
being visited by swarms of&#13;
grasshoppers or crickets, but Muskegon&#13;
is bouudjto have something different,&#13;
and recently myriads of beautiful&#13;
butterflies have put in an appearance&#13;
there. ,&#13;
A Bronson man is having good luck&#13;
raising Belgium hares, and starting&#13;
last fall with three pairs now has 25&#13;
young and as mau3' more expected bc-&#13;
! fore fall.-. He says the whole lot has&#13;
cost him hut 30 cents to feed: They&#13;
sell for $.'5 a pair up.&#13;
Lightning struck the telephone line&#13;
bet ween Armada and Romeo and followed&#13;
the wire into the residence of&#13;
Chas. Aldrich, demolishing his telephone&#13;
and shocking a little boy s'ttiug&#13;
near tho phone so badly that he was&#13;
unconscious for some time.&#13;
For 05 years-a Bronson- man chewed&#13;
800,000 Fire In a Colorado Mine.&#13;
The Weldon mine, located just east&#13;
of the Leadville, Colo., was totally destroyed&#13;
by fire on the 28th. The fire&#13;
started i n the engine room but the engineer&#13;
remained at his post until nearly&#13;
all the men were hoisted from below.&#13;
He was probably fatally burned. The&#13;
rest made their way out through other&#13;
mines in the vicinity. A large quantity&#13;
of giant powder was removed safely&#13;
from tBe building by the miners. The&#13;
Weldon mine is one of the richest producers&#13;
of silver in the camp, and has&#13;
been in almost constant, operation&#13;
since 1S9"». The fire burned several&#13;
other houses in the vicinity. The loss&#13;
is about 860,000, including a valuable&#13;
plant of machinery.&#13;
of the heavyweights goes without say*&#13;
ing. And keen judges of the game&#13;
who saw the fight on the 30th declare&#13;
that it was the cleverest exhibition&#13;
ever witnessed in the ring. Up t o the&#13;
moment the men stepped into the&#13;
squared circle opinions as to their respective&#13;
ability were widely divergent.&#13;
When Corbatt dropped science and began&#13;
to slug he landed hard rights and&#13;
lefts which .simply took McCoy's guard&#13;
away, and when he found a vulnerable&#13;
spot in the region of MeCoyrs heart,&#13;
two lefts divided by a right ended thu&#13;
battle.&#13;
Babe Ferns Stilt Champion.&#13;
For the first time in the history o'&#13;
boxing in Detroit, a genuine championship&#13;
contest w a s '-decided on the nigh*&#13;
of the aoth, and a big crowd witnessed&#13;
the important sporting event in- tho&#13;
Light Guard armory. It was the piece&#13;
de resistance of the Cadillac Athletic&#13;
cluDv and disappointments of the past&#13;
vanished from mind as the splendid&#13;
show progressed, it being a most satisfactory&#13;
exhibition from the time the&#13;
first preliminary w a s put on until the&#13;
gong announced the end of the welter-,&#13;
weight battle that woiind up the programme&#13;
of fistic events. Thirty-five&#13;
rounds of fighting is- what the card&#13;
produced, and the opening event was&#13;
as replete with hard fighting as wasthe&#13;
struggle for honors iu« the welter&#13;
division, while there was not a moment&#13;
of idleness in the semi-wind up&#13;
in which a Detroit boy demonstrated&#13;
that the 118 pounders from other cities&#13;
ore not so many. The scrap lasted' IS&#13;
rounds, and while Rube Ferns had&#13;
Matthews going i n the last roundi both&#13;
men were on their feet when the gong&#13;
souncted. Referee Uogan immediately&#13;
declared' Ferns the winnei\ but the decision&#13;
was vigorously protested by&#13;
Matthews' seconds.:&#13;
MICHIGAN NEWS ITEMS.&#13;
Claims Wore BejecteU.&#13;
A number of claims were presented&#13;
to the state military board on the -0th&#13;
for damaged done to property at Island&#13;
Lake during the recent state encampment&#13;
by numbers of the national&#13;
guard. There are always more or less&#13;
claims of this charter after every encampment,&#13;
but the last claimants received&#13;
but little satisfaction from the&#13;
board, as none of the claims were allowed.&#13;
Two bears were killed at Piescotton&#13;
the:rrth.&#13;
Clare is to have an independent telephone&#13;
service.&#13;
A k"jack-thc-pecpcr" is operating at&#13;
E:iton Rapids.&#13;
Pinconning is to have a grain elevator&#13;
aud feed mill.&#13;
Sheep - killing dogs are operating&#13;
I in the vicinity of Springport.&#13;
[ The tax commission lias added nearly i that there is talk of having a pulp mill&#13;
a pound and a half of "fine cut11 a&#13;
month, and 15 months ago quit and&#13;
took to chewing corn. A kernel lasts&#13;
him several hours. Since quitting tobacco&#13;
he has gained over '-•.*• pounds in'&#13;
weight and has better health.&#13;
Crickets are so numerous at Northvillc&#13;
that they are almost a pest.,&#13;
Evenings they gather in the streets by&#13;
thousands and crawl all over people.&#13;
A favorite place for them is under the&#13;
electric lights. A few evenings ago a&#13;
[)., P. A N. car was stalled for a few&#13;
minutes by them.&#13;
The cutting of pulp wood for the&#13;
paper mills is becoming such an .important&#13;
industry in the copper country&#13;
Ez-Presldents Named an Arbitrators.&#13;
The United States is one of the first&#13;
of the great powers to demonstrate its&#13;
good faith in carrying out the provisions&#13;
of the treaty of The Hague* looking&#13;
to the universal arbitration of international&#13;
differences. Under this&#13;
treaty each of the nations to it was&#13;
authorized.to appoint.four members of&#13;
an international board of arbitration.&#13;
Under this authority, President Mc-&#13;
Kinley has requested former Presidents&#13;
Harrison and Cleveland to aecept&#13;
appointments on this board. Rcsponsos&#13;
are expected very soon, when&#13;
the remaining members may be spleeted.&#13;
TRANSVAAL. WAR ITEMS.&#13;
Yellow Fever at Havana*&#13;
The surgeon-general of the marine&#13;
hospital service on t h e ?Sth received a&#13;
telegram from the chief quarantine&#13;
officer of Cuba at Havana, slating that&#13;
during the month of August, up to the&#13;
26th there have been 204 cases of yellow&#13;
fever reported at llavanna and 34&#13;
deaths. Many of the eases were- very&#13;
mild. T'^erc were aTso &gt;1 new eases&#13;
on the 27th. On account of the mild.&#13;
ness ot the cases and their short duration&#13;
the surgeon-general has wired the&#13;
various quarantine stations on the Atlantic&#13;
and gulf coasts to ivse particular&#13;
care to detect such cases.&#13;
King Humbert'* A*na*sio Coavleted.&#13;
Bresei, the anarchist, who, .Inly 29.&#13;
shot and killed King Humbert, of&#13;
Italy, at Monza, while his majesty was&#13;
returning from a gymnastie exhibition,&#13;
was found guilty at Milan, Italy, on&#13;
the 20th and sentenced to imprisonment&#13;
for life. There was a large&#13;
crowd present at the trial. The murderer&#13;
said he killed the king to avenge&#13;
the misery of the people and himself&#13;
without advice or accomplices.&#13;
S#; i*&#13;
Dlseasa in Michigan.&#13;
Reports to the state board of health&#13;
'indicate that diarrhea, rheumatism,&#13;
.neuralgia, cholera infantum and cholera&#13;
morbus, in the order named, caused&#13;
the most sickness in Michigan during&#13;
t u e past week. Smallpox was reported&#13;
•at five places, cerebro-spinal meningitis&#13;
•at 5, diphtheria a t 15, w hoop! ng cough&#13;
at 50, measles at 24, scarlet fever at 50,&#13;
•typhoid fever at 90,' and consumption&#13;
at 17«.&#13;
A valuation,&#13;
brewery-. T^ie&#13;
$0,000,000 to Manistee&#13;
Pontiac has a new&#13;
formal o w n i n g wilToccur Sept 14.&#13;
The •oflicial census of Detroit for 1000&#13;
is 2^5,701,'a gain of 79,828 iu 10 years.&#13;
A portion of Mason county was swept&#13;
by a severe electrical storm on the 26th.&#13;
Burglars secu.red 81 M&gt; by cracking a&#13;
safe at Newberry on thfc morning of&#13;
Aug. 31.&#13;
The village dads of Ilarrisville recently&#13;
purchased a 100-galIon chemical&#13;
tire engine.&#13;
located somewhere in that section,&#13;
where the wood could be eouvertcd&#13;
into putp and the latter then shipped&#13;
to the paper mills, thereby effecting&#13;
quite a saving in freight.&#13;
The first authentic news of the safety&#13;
of Baroness von Ivetteler, w h o was&#13;
formerly Miss Maud Ledyard. of Detroit,&#13;
was received on the 28th io a&#13;
dispatch announcing that she was on&#13;
her way to that city. It will be remembered&#13;
that her husband, a German&#13;
minister to Pek+h, was murdered there&#13;
during enrly hostilities.&#13;
The nine and the Cray.&#13;
An encampment of the blue and&#13;
gray, a grcav organization which shall&#13;
include every :nau w h o fought for his&#13;
principles,' north or south, to be held&#13;
in 1901, is the dream of a large number&#13;
of the followers of the Hag in Y»l, and&#13;
the effort is to be made to secure tho&#13;
adoption of a resolution looking to&#13;
that end when the veterans meet to&#13;
elect A commander-in-chief.&#13;
TVnr In Persia.&#13;
It is learned from a thoroughly wellinformed&#13;
source that n serious insurrection&#13;
has broken out in Persia \tlueh&#13;
may in all probability cause the shah'si&#13;
visit to Europe to be curtailed. Tftc&#13;
object of the revolt is to dethrone the&#13;
present shah, whose fondness for&#13;
western ideas makes him unpopular to&#13;
Persians of the old school, and to place&#13;
his brother on the throne.&#13;
f A gas war is on at Chicago,&#13;
The German subjects, residing i n t h o&#13;
Transvaal, has arrived at Berlin* which&#13;
place they went for the express purpose&#13;
of lodging a complaint against&#13;
England for the cruel trcatmeut they&#13;
received at the hands of the British a t&#13;
Johannesburg. They assert that 400&#13;
German subjects of both sexes were&#13;
arrested there-and sent to a seaport&#13;
from which point, they w^re shipped to&#13;
Flushing, where tho British , landml&#13;
them penniless. They were arrested,&#13;
according to the statement of the deputation,&#13;
in shop* and taverns and even&#13;
in their beds, and were hurried aw^iy.&#13;
barefooted and only half ciad, losing&#13;
everything they had.&#13;
Buller telegraphs from Helvetia-to&#13;
the effect tlvnt the 'Boers were com-&#13;
•pelled to• dcr.ort nil their Britifih-prisoners,&#13;
at Yedacht, while making a&#13;
quick retreat. Krugor is reported t o&#13;
have tied with his- «ommandcis to.Pilprim's&#13;
Rest.&#13;
Burghers with Botha can; get no ammunition,&#13;
and he has ordered them t o&#13;
turn their Mausers in to the Boer gov&#13;
eminent. Boers have flvd from Waterfallboveu&#13;
aiwt Watervaloader;&#13;
Commandant CM'.]'ver, a Beer general,&#13;
who has caused the British any amount&#13;
of trouble, has been, captured.&#13;
Gen. Buller occupied Maehadodorp&#13;
on the 2hth with verv few casualties.&#13;
BRIEF N E W S PARAGRAPHS.&#13;
Germany is experiencing a eoal famine.&#13;
F.I even persons died from the heat in&#13;
Now York on the 27th.&#13;
The dnkp of Manchester, Eng., has&#13;
been adjudged a bankrupt.&#13;
Free rural mail delivery w a s established&#13;
at Cold water. Sept. J.&#13;
Rov.mania is expelling Bulgarians,&#13;
and war is said to be inevitable.&#13;
Obligatory military service has been&#13;
approved by the Chilean congress.&#13;
Native Samoans are being enlisted&#13;
in Uncle Sam's service in Tutuila.&#13;
The population of Baltimore is 508,-&#13;
o:&gt;7, an increase of 74..VIS in 10 years&#13;
German troops to the numbcrof 2.000&#13;
recently arrived at. the Chinese capital.&#13;
A cyclone in Mafckingdid more damage&#13;
than the seven months' bombardment;&#13;
one person was killed.&#13;
Italy has protested against Germany's&#13;
new meat law, on the ground&#13;
that it contravenes the Italian-German&#13;
treaty.&#13;
The state troops which have £*»en&#13;
guarding Akron, ().. since the riotW'ift.&#13;
demonstrations, were withdrawn ou&#13;
the 27th, and the saloons were&#13;
tnittcd to reopen.&#13;
Two hundred bandits raided the Tartar&#13;
City of Canton on the 27th. -Several&#13;
houses were lootcik It i9 believed&#13;
that the motive of the raid was- the&#13;
Cantonese hatred of tho northerners.&#13;
It is rumored at Amoy that 13,000 Jap*&#13;
oneso troops arc coining there from&#13;
Formosa&#13;
per-&#13;
(&#13;
. . . . . . . . , . ^ ^ ^ . . ^ . . ^ . . . . . ^ . . . ^ ^ . ^ , . . ^ i ^ * * ! * * ^ * ^ * * ^&#13;
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• \ : , •&gt;&lt;•&lt;•-&#13;
M?.' •&#13;
*v&#13;
• • « .&#13;
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;&#13;
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IS -r*. i " * ! " * " " • 4 ^ A * M l W &gt; « M | M f * • * • fn&lt;Tip;i7?ii' • w&#13;
.-'•:y&lt;\t-:".&#13;
• S&#13;
855385335558855i p«i«MiMHi^0Mmifi&#13;
* *&#13;
•fsmm&#13;
V&#13;
CHAPTER &lt;L&#13;
"It Is not like going home at all,"&#13;
laid Mollie L'Estrange disconsolately,&#13;
looking round at the open trunks, the&#13;
wearing apparel spread upon every&#13;
available chair or bed i n the school&#13;
aormitory. "And I had no idea that&#13;
t possessed so many things.**&#13;
_*'You %hef been these four years&#13;
hero," said the German governess&#13;
kindly, "and you spend much money,&#13;
bad child! But they will be pleased&#13;
to see r o u home—o—h. yes!"&#13;
""I don't know who will be pleased,&#13;
I am sure," returned Mollie, with a&#13;
iigh, "for there is only ray half-sister&#13;
Kate."&#13;
"Ach himracl! Well, she is tro doubt&#13;
looking forward to your return. She&#13;
is older than you—wiser?"&#13;
**Sh« is ten years old," interrupted&#13;
the sirit sitting down on the edge of&#13;
the bed, and regarding the well meaning&#13;
FrauMn gloomily. "When I last&#13;
saw her she was about six. and my&#13;
-stepfather spoilt her shamefully.'"&#13;
"What? With whom will you lif&#13;
then, mine Mollic? With the stepfather?"&#13;
"Oh, no:; lie died twelve months ago.&#13;
I shall live at Chalfont House, the&#13;
property of my half-sister, Kate, with&#13;
her, .and her aunt, Madame Debois."&#13;
"Ach, a French lady!"&#13;
"No, but she married a Frenchman.&#13;
She is now a widow with one son,&#13;
and after my mother's death she went&#13;
to keep .house i o r her brother, Mr.&#13;
Barlowe.''&#13;
"Thy stepfather?"&#13;
'1 never called him that/' And a&#13;
Etrange look of scorn and bitterness&#13;
swept over the^girl's pretty, glowing&#13;
face. "It is wrong to hate any one—&#13;
but 'I hated him living, and I find it&#13;
hard not to hate him dead."&#13;
"So, so, the Bible teils us to hate&#13;
no man," reproved the governess, with&#13;
a placid shake of her head, as she began&#13;
to" fold up some of her favorite&#13;
pupil's clothes.&#13;
"And I try not to do so; 1 pray every&#13;
night to forgive him," burst forth&#13;
.Mollie in a shaking voice, ' b u t he&#13;
separated me from ray mother; he did&#13;
not make her happy—"&#13;
£he paueed abruptly, conscious how&#13;
impossible it was to make the solid&#13;
Fraulein understand that the wrongs&#13;
that were rankling in her, mind had&#13;
grown with her growth, and becomo&#13;
part of her life; and, as a rosy-cheeked&#13;
German maid entered at the same moment&#13;
and announced that she had&#13;
been sent to assist Frauloin I.'Estrange&#13;
to pack, nothing more was&#13;
said.&#13;
For Four years MQhic L'Eati'aiigu&#13;
had been left at Frau Seckendorf's&#13;
school in Hanover, without cmee. returning&#13;
t o England, without any one&#13;
coming to see her. But she had been&#13;
\very happy, for sho had naturally a&#13;
merry, buoyant disposition, and was&#13;
the pet and favorite .of the school establishment,&#13;
from the grave,, kindly&#13;
Fraxi herself .downwards.&#13;
Then she was liberally supplied with&#13;
pocket money by her father's trustees,&#13;
generously paid for in every way,&#13;
while Frau' Scckendorf had carte&#13;
blanche to do everything for her&#13;
amusement in the holidays, and the&#13;
time had gone "so fast that Mollic&#13;
could hardly believe she was nearly&#13;
nineteen, and that a few days would&#13;
sec her once more in her native land.&#13;
Ah. that dear nat^-e land! How often&#13;
in her dreams h&amp;d idie F,eea it as it&#13;
would be looking now, with the first&#13;
faint breath of spring rustling through&#13;
the bare, brown branches, the leaves&#13;
sprouting In the heugerows, the violet*&#13;
peeping forth from some sheltered&#13;
nook! Yes, though there was no one&#13;
now in the house where she wa3 born&#13;
to welcome her home with affection,&#13;
h would be something to be in England&#13;
in the sweet spring time, to gather&#13;
violets and primroses in the well&#13;
remembered woe as and fields around&#13;
Reverton.&#13;
The packing was accomplished at&#13;
last, more by the Frauiein's and Liza's&#13;
exertions than her own, for the girl&#13;
was restless and excited, torn by conflicting&#13;
feelings, sorry to bid farewell&#13;
to quaint old Hanover, and all those&#13;
who had been so kind to her since&#13;
•he came there,—a pale, motherless&#13;
child of fourteen—yet anxious to .rush&#13;
into the future, to see what it held in&#13;
store for her.&#13;
S o . w h e n the trunks were shut and&#13;
Liza had departed with her arms full&#13;
of the gifts s*e had bestowed upon&#13;
her, Mollie nwde her way with unusual&#13;
aedatenew to Frau Seckendorfs&#13;
private apartments. Since the girls&#13;
of her own age had left one by one,&#13;
and she t«.d outgrown the clcss room-', I&#13;
she had been promoted t « the use of&#13;
tfiese salons, and taken out to concerts,&#13;
theaters, and coffee parties by&#13;
the good Frau, w h o was secretly immensely&#13;
proud of tne pretty, welldressed&#13;
English heiress confided to&#13;
her care, and watched over her with&#13;
a vigilant eye; and Mollie looked&#13;
round them with a friendly glance,&#13;
and a sigh at the thought that after&#13;
tomorrow she should see them no&#13;
more.&#13;
The duslt was falling fast; it was&#13;
difficult to sec the houses across&#13;
the wide street, and as she stood by&#13;
the porcelain stove, warming her cold&#13;
little finders, her thoughts went back&#13;
to her childhood days as Ihey had not&#13;
done for a long time, and scene after&#13;
scene seemed to rise before her.&#13;
Mollie could not remember her father&#13;
at all, for he had died when she&#13;
was but a few months old, but her&#13;
pretty young mother had been her&#13;
playfellow, and until her sixth year,&#13;
her constant companion. Then came&#13;
the days when a tall, dark man was&#13;
always with her mother, and that&#13;
dearly loved parent was somehow not&#13;
the same to her, while the dark man&#13;
used to bring her sweets, and smile&#13;
grimly when she put her hands behind&#13;
her back, and refused to accept&#13;
them.&#13;
Yes, from the very first Mqllie had&#13;
disliked and distrusted Leonard Barlowe,&#13;
and he had cordially returned&#13;
the feeling. With her mother's second&#13;
marriage all her troubles began,&#13;
and the child would often sob hers?lf&#13;
to sleep at night, feeling neglected and&#13;
forlorn, missing the tender voie.e, the&#13;
lullaby ever since she could remember.&#13;
Afterwards Mollie grew to know&#13;
that her mother had not forgotten her,&#13;
but that her stepfather, jealous and&#13;
morose, resented even the affection&#13;
she bestowed to her own child, and&#13;
timid and clinging by nature, she had&#13;
not the strength of character to oppose&#13;
him in any way. Mollie was sent&#13;
to school soon after the birth of her&#13;
half-sister, Kate, and though she spent&#13;
the holidays at home, Chalfont House&#13;
was never the same place again.&#13;
Looking at the past through the&#13;
softening vista of time. Mollie knew&#13;
that her woes had not been imaginary.&#13;
She would have been fond enough&#13;
of the little usurper, who seemed'to&#13;
have pushed.her out of her place, had&#13;
she been allowed, for she was neither&#13;
jealous nor revengeful; but Mr. Barlowe.&#13;
while spoiling Kate until she&#13;
was unbearable, resented th&lt;_\!cast attcr/.&#13;
ion shown to Mollie. and the&#13;
nolidays had been misery, school a"&#13;
refuge. She gradually grew to knowthat&#13;
her .lother way miserable, that&#13;
she only dare caress her in vudvate and&#13;
that she feared her handsome dark&#13;
husband mere ihar she loved l*!m.&#13;
. How well she remembered the las'&#13;
time she had any tilk with her&#13;
mother! It was the night bjfore her&#13;
return to school, and her mother came&#13;
into her room as she was preparing&#13;
for bed. and, closing the door, took&#13;
her into her arms as if she were a&#13;
baby again, kissed and cried over her&#13;
in a passionate, heart-broken way,&#13;
saying that whatever happened to the&#13;
future, she must never doubt her poor&#13;
.mother's love, that save-her dead father,&#13;
no one was so precious to her,&#13;
no one; and that her last thought and&#13;
prayer would be for her own Mollie.&#13;
It WAS not until her death a few&#13;
mouths later lhat Mollie understood&#13;
what she meant, Chalfont and a good&#13;
income bad been Mrs. Barlowc's private&#13;
property.- and she left them to&#13;
her husband for his lifetime, and then&#13;
to her daughter Kate, no mention being&#13;
made of her elder child, save that,&#13;
failing them, she would be her heiress.&#13;
This had not been her mother's&#13;
wish—Mollic knew a s well as if. she&#13;
had been told—-and the fierce anger&#13;
burned in her heart, not for the loss&#13;
of the property, bnt for what Mr.&#13;
Barlowe had made her mother suffer.&#13;
Oh, how she hated him as she saw his&#13;
fine eyes roving with an air of proprietorship&#13;
round her mother's room!&#13;
In her childish heart she felt that he&#13;
had got what h e had schemed for, and&#13;
it mattered little to him that he had&#13;
ruined her mother's and Iher life to&#13;
obtain it. /&#13;
They lived at open warfare during&#13;
the months before she was sent to&#13;
Hanover; and it was an additional&#13;
blow tofind that he had constituted&#13;
h l m s e l r h e r guardian in her mother's&#13;
place. His motive was not far to seek.&#13;
Mollie was her father's* heiress, and&#13;
though he could not. touch the principc-&#13;
L a hszdscme sl.'owsjise wrs K\*.*&#13;
for the -ear* of Colonel t'Jbtra&amp;geft&#13;
daughter/ •••&#13;
f And now be, £00, was dead/and t h e&#13;
was' going back t o Hv$ a t Chalfont&#13;
House wtto- her little half-sister and&#13;
Madam Dubois! Were brighter times&#13;
coming, s h e wondered, as, i n company&#13;
with the English governess, she ones&#13;
more s e t foot on her native land, or&#13;
was Madame Dubois but a repetition&#13;
of Leonard Barlowe?&#13;
St was a bleak March day when the&#13;
governess put her charge into a first&#13;
class carriage a t one of the great L o s -&#13;
don stations, and reluctantly bade her&#13;
farewell, after carefully scertnlning&#13;
that two elderly ladies in the further&#13;
corner were going the same Journey,&#13;
and&lt; Reverton would be reached in little&#13;
over an hour, where Madame Dubois&#13;
was sure to be at the station.&#13;
So she kissed the pet and pride of&#13;
Frau Seckendorfs scfiool with tearful&#13;
eyes, atnd hurried away to catch her&#13;
own train, while Mollie sank back in&#13;
the corner of her carriage, sorry tD&#13;
part with her last friend, yet excited&#13;
at the prospect before her.&#13;
For a little while she occupied herself&#13;
in watching one familiar object&#13;
after another appear, as the express&#13;
left t h e chimneys behind and rushed&#13;
tnrough the green country. It even&#13;
amused her to see the great open fires&#13;
in the waiting rooms once more as&#13;
they flashed through the stations.&#13;
Then she suddenly became aware that&#13;
the two ladies were talking very hard,&#13;
and she heard her own name.&#13;
"You will find Reverton looking&#13;
much the same, Louise," the elder wassaying.&#13;
"The people alter, but not&#13;
the place. Why, you have net been&#13;
here since the year poor Mrs. L'Estrange&#13;
married Mr. Barlowe, have&#13;
you?"&#13;
. "No; how pretty she was! I know no&#13;
one liked him; you thought him an&#13;
adventurer. What has he done since&#13;
her death?"&#13;
"Oh, he feathered his nest well—&#13;
got the whole of her property for himself&#13;
and his wretched little girl, to the&#13;
exclusion of the elder child! Every&#13;
one knew that his poor wife was horribly&#13;
afraid of him, and he had.it all&#13;
his own way. Well, I must not say&#13;
more, for he was hurried to his account&#13;
with all his sins upon his head.&#13;
and no time to repent him of his&#13;
wickedness."&#13;
"What do you mean?"&#13;
"Did you not see it in the papers?&#13;
It was the talk of Reverton! He was&#13;
found murdered in his study nearly&#13;
twelve months ago. Yes, I remember,,&#13;
it was on Easter Sunday.''&#13;
"Murdered?" ecuoed the other&#13;
blankly, "That handsome man? Who&#13;
did it?"&#13;
"It has never been found out."&#13;
18 Jk BBAYE SOMMBfi&#13;
COL. 4ACO» H. S M I T H A tifclCK&#13;
ADIER OBNBHAU&#13;
• «&#13;
One of th« Most Capable Ofltoer* la tha&#13;
Army -*- Won Distinction at Santiago&#13;
and fat tb« FWltpplae*—I^aiaDea of&#13;
War* % *&#13;
Col. Jacob H. Smith, who has just&#13;
been appointed a s brigadier Ameral of&#13;
volunteers at the earnest recommendation&#13;
of Gens. Hall, Kent, -Wheeler,&#13;
Bates and Mac Arthur, with whom h e&#13;
Served in.both the Santiago and Philippine&#13;
campaigns, is one of our most&#13;
capable army officers. Gen. MacArthur,&#13;
!a urging Gen. Smith's promotion, retcaiied&#13;
an incident o ! the latter's great&#13;
personal gallantry at San Juan Hill,&#13;
for which he was promoted from the&#13;
rank of major to that of lieutenant&#13;
colonel. Maj. Smith prevented a stampede&#13;
by his wonderful presence of&#13;
eauta a * hour for earing; tor each little&#13;
una. If a moths* la t i n t m wishes a n&#13;
horn- or t w o free from watchin* b a r&#13;
baby, s h e only baa t o t a b * ft t o t h e&#13;
pavtlioa and t b a old m a a does thereat,&#13;
i t is amid t h a t tbe «oter*rtee i #&#13;
looked upon a s a great b o o * for motb~&#13;
era a t Atlantic City and that i t Is surato&#13;
be successful. If these statement*&#13;
are true it would not b e surprising i f&#13;
the baby pavilion would oeeupy m&#13;
prominent and important a position a t&#13;
seaside and pleasure resorts a s the t i n -&#13;
type gallery and t h e merry-go-round.&#13;
HAS SURPRISED PARIS.&#13;
CHAPTER II.&#13;
Murdered! Could this awful word,&#13;
so full of terrible meaning, apply to&#13;
her stepfather, who she had last sesn&#13;
standing at the door of Chalfont&#13;
House, full of life and health," holding&#13;
the fretful Kate by the hand? Molliv&#13;
sat up and turned hastily to the tyro&#13;
ladies, the color fading from her face.&#13;
•'My name is L'Estrange." she stammered&#13;
nervously, looking from on.2 to&#13;
the other. "I am' Mrs. B^rlovre's eldest&#13;
daughter. I thought I ought t&lt;;&#13;
tell yon 1 1 -flirt not know that&#13;
ho died like that; no one told me.&#13;
Are you sure?"&#13;
Mollie could see the ladies were gazmarks;&#13;
but she was too pager JO learn&#13;
the iruih to mind that, or anything&#13;
else. Why had. she been allowed to&#13;
1 oome' home in ignorance of "the tragedy&#13;
that hung undiscovered over Chalfont&#13;
House? In the pause- before any&#13;
one spoke she v.as not conscious c.'&#13;
feeling a r t aw row for her dead stepfather,&#13;
nor had these la'ies expressed&#13;
any; but she d.d fcel a thrill of horror&#13;
at the thousht of the c:ime that, had&#13;
been committed in the houee where&#13;
she was b o r n - h e r mother's house—&#13;
and could not repress a shudder. Then.&#13;
the first lady got up, and, coming over,&#13;
sat down heavily in the scat opposite&#13;
to her.&#13;
"I am heartily sorry you have heard&#13;
me, my dear? she said kindly. "It is&#13;
a lesson to me not to talk of ray&#13;
neighbors in the train. But arc you&#13;
really Amy Barlowo's child? Yes.&#13;
looking at you, I can see your dear&#13;
father. Your parents were my dearest&#13;
friends. You do not remember me,&#13;
but surely you have not forgotten&#13;
Reggie and Joyce?"&#13;
Mollie started, and, leaning forward,&#13;
ttu?»ed her beautiful, miserable grey&#13;
eyes on the speaker with dawning recj&#13;
oznition.&#13;
"Yes—yes, I do now." she cried.&#13;
"You are Mrs. Anstruther; you live in&#13;
that pretty white house near the&#13;
church. Oh, Mrs. Anstruther, about&#13;
tnis dreadful thing about Mr. Barlowe.&#13;
Madame Dubois wrote that he&#13;
died suddenly, and she was now my&#13;
guardian; but how did it happen?&#13;
Why was I not told?" And she glanced&#13;
imploringly at the pleasant motherly&#13;
face now regarding her with a&#13;
troubled frown.&#13;
(To be continued.)&#13;
BRIG. GEN. JACOB SMITH,&#13;
mind in coolly putting his men, t w o&#13;
battalions of regulars, through t h e&#13;
manual of arms while under a galling&#13;
flrc from the Spanish trenches. It was&#13;
Due of thqse decisive moments vv'hlch&#13;
sometimes save a battle. The Seventyfirst&#13;
of New York, brave but doubtful&#13;
imid the rain of lead, recovered its&#13;
presence of mind' at the extraordinary&#13;
spectacle of men being hit with Spanish&#13;
bullets, but continuing their evolutions&#13;
as calmly as if on dress parade,&#13;
fien. Srsith has secured some notable&#13;
triumphs in the Philippines. In November,&#13;
with two battnlions of the.&#13;
Seventeenth infantry, he captured Magalong.&#13;
taking a number of prisoners&#13;
and a lot of insurgent transportation.&#13;
And in the latter part of April Gen.&#13;
Smith distinguishedr-himself by the&#13;
capture of the well-known Filipino&#13;
leader, Gen. Montenegro, with 180 officers&#13;
and men. Montenegro was&#13;
sent to Manila to be presented to Gen,&#13;
Otis, and i.s now "amigo." One adventure&#13;
of Gen. Smith had a rather'&#13;
larger clement of romance and personal&#13;
danger about it. The president&#13;
of Alcala, in the proviuce of Pang'&#13;
asinaH, Luzon, invited th*-colcm?l to j Ever «hn-»e-the public has made&#13;
A t t h e g a y French capital, which*&#13;
during the exposition i s even moreproductive&#13;
of novelties and big event*&#13;
in society than i n an ordinary year,.&#13;
a sensation i s being created by t h e&#13;
magnificent entertainments provided;&#13;
by an American couple, Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
Thomas F. Walsh. One week it i s a&#13;
magnificent entertainment on one o f&#13;
the Seine river boats, the next somegrand&#13;
excursion for t h e American&#13;
colony In Paris, or a gorgeous, feast;&#13;
a week or two a g o it was a dinner&#13;
party at Belgium, wnere the Walshes&#13;
sat next the king, and after that a&#13;
unique trip in a sumptuous special&#13;
train of five palace cars. In short, t h e&#13;
society of the French capital has u o&#13;
greater lion than Tom Walsh. That&#13;
the \ .ilshes are not endeavoring simply&#13;
to get into society by their lavish&#13;
expenditures i s evidenced by the fact&#13;
that no particular class of society attends.&#13;
All—high and low and between—&#13;
arc made to feel welcome, and&#13;
in doing the honors, Tom Walsh derives&#13;
his chief pleasure.&#13;
Mr. Walsh is immensely wealthy.&#13;
His success can hardly be attributable&#13;
to luck, but rather t o his own h a j ^&#13;
work and enterprise. He has never&#13;
had any sympathy with idleness, having&#13;
continually recognized the dignity&#13;
and deserts of honest labor. He w a s&#13;
born in Tipporary, Ireland, in 1851,&#13;
where, after receiving a fair education,&#13;
he worked for several years a»&#13;
a millwright. He came to America&#13;
and settled in 1870 at Worcester*&#13;
Mass., for a few years. Then he went&#13;
to Colorado, and was a carpenter ami&#13;
building contractor at the new campof&#13;
Central City. He had always bcen&gt;&#13;
interested in mining, and from this&#13;
time on he began to study up the&#13;
subject during his spare time. He&#13;
was fortunate, and eventually struck&#13;
it rich. TJow he is owner of a m i n e&#13;
which he refused to sell a short timesinc^-&#13;
for $35,&lt;W0,OOO. His income isapproximated&#13;
at $100,000 a month.&#13;
The friends of h i s poorer days a r e&#13;
not neglected now that wealth h a s&#13;
come to Mr. Walsh and his charity&#13;
and friendly loans—or gifts—are&#13;
known to many of his old associates.&#13;
Mrs. Walsh's health failed three&#13;
years ago, and she was advised to try&#13;
a lower altitude. It was then that h e&#13;
concluded to go to Washington, where&#13;
he purchased a most luxurious home.&#13;
itaolf&#13;
his h,v.Tio for a t!fst.i, intending to&#13;
have the house surrounded an;l th«&#13;
colonel captured. A' Filipino amigo&#13;
gave warning. But Colonel Smith accepted&#13;
the invitation, danced with tho&#13;
ladies, and oven feigned drunkenness.&#13;
His men, concealed near the hous?,&#13;
free therein. Mr. Walsh has no&#13;
t "functions," nor "events," nor "soi-&#13;
| rc?s," nor "pink teas." He hates fort&#13;
uxality of any kind. It is this demoj&#13;
cratleWay of doing things that has&#13;
1 surprised the Parisian world. They&#13;
! open their French eyes with astonishsave&#13;
tno capturing, party invarra weicomc&#13;
v;hen they arrived, killing&#13;
and eip-uring :10. Gen. Smith v.-;:&lt;&#13;
bom in IS-iO, and w.:s n rirst l.»e-.;-&#13;
tc::;nt in tac .Second"' Kinlucky i.if.&#13;
intry during the civil war. lb- \T.Ytier.&#13;
med in many of the battle.' 0;' :'.KK&#13;
war. and WAS Pevenly wfttintlcd ut&#13;
Shilch. For gallantry in thlo onga-:^-&#13;
men: he was niode brevet msjor. &amp;v.-)&#13;
later -appointed captain1 of the regular&#13;
army. Gen. Smith carries a Mauser&#13;
bullet in his side, received during the&#13;
firsi day'^ fighting around Santiago.&#13;
T~:&#13;
ridc*',&#13;
after-&#13;
Mie Wii* Kwthe* Busy.&#13;
is a; what a middle-aged&#13;
ev's wife of Wood's Pond&#13;
Briugeton, did one of th? hot&#13;
noons and evenings of this week: She&#13;
and two 01 her children rede to Cho- ;&#13;
ste's hill, picked fifteen quarts 'of i&#13;
blueberries, walked home, a distance&#13;
oi" two miles, arriving rhcre&#13;
4: o0. Th on s li 0 ca n n e d four quart a... of ]&#13;
tho berrios. made a lot of pies, went ;&#13;
out and raked hay for an hour, hoc"; \&#13;
to the house and sprinkled her week's !&#13;
washing ready for ironing, made biscuit&#13;
for the family (comprising herself,&#13;
husband and five children), washed&#13;
the dishes, made the beds, washed&#13;
l'HOMAS F. WALSH&#13;
about i rocnt and sometimes a visible&#13;
s manifested at the ease wit&#13;
.*m*•*. Walsh invites high anddow to hi *&#13;
rug&#13;
which&#13;
bull or banquet.&#13;
Monnment IJk« Ste D«sk.&#13;
In the cemetery at Nebraska Cfty&#13;
the other day I saw a peculiar monument&#13;
erected by N. S. Harding, an i n -&#13;
the family's colored clothes, attended j surahce agent of that place, in anticlto&#13;
several minor chore*, put the pation of a time when he may used?&#13;
children to bed. all who were not old j i t A large block of sandstone, a t&#13;
enough to go it alone, and turned in | least six feet long, four feet high a n d&#13;
herself at 10 o'clock. As a finisher she ! three feet thick has been carved b y&#13;
She—A married couple should pull&#13;
together like a team of horses. He—&#13;
\es, and they probably would if lik*&#13;
a team of horses they had buc one&#13;
t tongue between them.&#13;
was obliged to be up a good part of&#13;
the night with a sick child, and the&#13;
following night went to a dance in&#13;
Denmark.—Lewiston 'Me.) Journal.&#13;
The Baby PaviWcti.&#13;
An old gentleman who i s re:cai?il: ;;&#13;
genius has started a unique i.r-.i nc";&#13;
of business at Atlantic City, which enterprising&#13;
people might introduce in&#13;
other places. It is caring for babies&#13;
at a stated compensation per hour.&#13;
Tho- old gentleman has a pavilion rigged&#13;
jp with a lot of swings, some hobby&#13;
horses, little buckets and shovels, \&#13;
playthings of all descriptions and a&#13;
few ez*y cradles. He charges only fiv ^&#13;
a competent artist to represent a roll-'&#13;
er-top office desk standing open. L y -&#13;
ing upon It are bundles of papers neatly&#13;
bound with rubber hands, and inkstands&#13;
with pens and pencils beside it,&#13;
a sponge eup. a bottle of mucilage, a&#13;
n!otter and other ordinary equipments)&#13;
• i.ea a.T are found in the office of a n&#13;
inn-urcitee agent. The stone affair is ay&#13;
copy of the desk that has been used&#13;
by Mr. Harding in h i s insurance office&#13;
for many years.—Correspondence Chicaso&#13;
Record.&#13;
'K*&#13;
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A baby is a rose without thorn*.&#13;
The thorns gradually, appear aa 1*&#13;
vr-s-Vf* E-niurify.&#13;
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— •*ew&gt; w WWWW&#13;
Sfce § incbncy iJispntdi.&#13;
h*. U ANDREWS - EDITOR.&#13;
rHUfiSDAY^SEP'T. 6, 1900.&#13;
Here Ttey 4 re. Tate Your XJuiU^&#13;
An Interesting Letter.&#13;
a • .*••&#13;
\"&lt;'&#13;
Ballard, Wash., Aug. 1900&#13;
F. L. Andrews,&#13;
Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
Thinking perhaps&#13;
it would be of interest to you&#13;
also to the^ readers of the D I S -&#13;
PATCH to have a description of my&#13;
trip west, also of the country here.&#13;
I will endeavor In a way, which I&#13;
confess will be a poor one, to tell&#13;
you about it:&#13;
The places of interest, Wonderland&#13;
etc. in Detroit are familiar to&#13;
us all. • That noble boat, * 'North&#13;
L a n d " which is due at the First&#13;
street dock at 4 p. m. was on time&#13;
This great boat is nearly 400 feet&#13;
long and about 45 feet wide, its&#13;
engines are 7,000 horse power and&#13;
she steams 22 miles an hour.&#13;
She left Detroit at 4:30 p. m.&#13;
with fully 400 passengers aboard-&#13;
The trip aloug the St. Clair flats&#13;
was full of interest. By dark we&#13;
were well up Lake St. Clair, passing&#13;
Pt. Huron in the night we&#13;
were near Saginaw Bay, the next&#13;
morning when I came ou deck&#13;
and with about 30 great white sea&#13;
gulls following in the wake of t h e&#13;
boat.&#13;
A little before noon we landed&#13;
at Mackinac Island which is certainly&#13;
a beautiful summer resort.&#13;
After a short stop here we beaded&#13;
again to the north and s p e n t the&#13;
afternoon on the picturesque St.&#13;
Mary's river with its numerous islands,&#13;
bays, etc. In the evening&#13;
we steamed up to the wharf of&#13;
Northern Michigan's most beautiful&#13;
city, Sault Ste Marie. We&#13;
went into the great Canal locks at&#13;
7:30 p. m. together with four lines.&#13;
There we were, apparently in a&#13;
great dreary prison, with cold&#13;
black walls looming up for 25ft.&#13;
The gate was closed, in 30 minutes&#13;
we were raised way above the&#13;
walls, and the beautiful parks lay&#13;
before us, with thousands of people&#13;
bathing in the moonlight.&#13;
We will wager that the Divines&#13;
at the Soo would have these boats&#13;
pass at some other hour, for evidently&#13;
all the church goers as well&#13;
as the pleasure seeker were at the&#13;
dock. About' half-way up St.&#13;
Mary's River we met and saluted&#13;
the North West, sister boat of the&#13;
Nort Land on her return.&#13;
The tonage passing through St.&#13;
Mary's Canal during the season's&#13;
navigation is three times that of&#13;
the famous Suez Canal which is&#13;
open all the year.&#13;
"We .saw a young fellow the W e w e r e soon on Lake Superother&#13;
day," says an exchange, "in- i o r a n d o n Monday morning I was&#13;
sist on carrying a young lady's g l a d t o g o t o t h e baggage room,&#13;
parasol which seemed to tax her | w h i c h i g k e p t o p e n a t ftU ^&#13;
strength greatly, just then, to g e £ m y o v e r c o a t | p u t it on before&#13;
permit the freedom of her hands ! t a k i u g a promanade on deck. We&#13;
to carry a billet doux in one hand J p a s s e ( i Keweenaw P o i n t about&#13;
and her skirts in the other. The | n0OI1&lt; The next land to be seen&#13;
Below we give the candidates&#13;
of all tickets, both national and&#13;
state.&#13;
REPUBLICAN NATIONAL.&#13;
President—William' McKinley. Ohio.&#13;
Vice- Pres.—Theodore Koosevelt, New&#13;
York.&#13;
Congress, Sixth District—Samuel W.&#13;
Smith, Oakland.&#13;
STATE TICKET. &lt;&#13;
Governor—Aaron T. Bliss, Saginaw.&#13;
Lieut. Governor-O. W. Robinson, Houhgton.&#13;
Sec.—Fred W» Warner, Oakland.&#13;
Treas.—Daniel McCoy, Kent.&#13;
Auditor General—Perry F. Powers, Wexford.&#13;
Commisioner of State Land Office—E. A.&#13;
Wildey, VanBuren.&#13;
Attorney General—Horace M. Oreu,&#13;
Chippewa.&#13;
Superintendent of Public Instruction—&#13;
Delos Fall, Calhoun.&#13;
Member of State Board of -Education--&#13;
James H . Thompson, Osceola.&#13;
DEMOCRAT NATIONAL.&#13;
President—William J. Bryan, Nebraska.&#13;
Vice-Pres.—Adlai E. Stevenson, Illinois..&#13;
STATE TICKET.&#13;
Governor—WTm. C. Maybury, Wayne.&#13;
Lieut.-Governor—Jonathan G. Ramsdell,&#13;
Grand Traverse.&#13;
Sec,—John W. Ewing, Eaton.&#13;
Treas.—Chas. Sundstrom, Marquette.&#13;
Auditor-General—Hiram B. Hudson, Antrim.&#13;
Attorney-General—James O'Hara, St.&#13;
Joseph.&#13;
Land Com.—Geo. G. Winans, Livingston.&#13;
Supt. of Public Instruction—Stephen P.&#13;
Langdon, Monroe.&#13;
Member State Board of Education, James&#13;
McEntree, Isabella.&#13;
Al-&#13;
PROHIBITION.&#13;
STATE TICKET.&#13;
-Governor—Frederick L. Goodrich,&#13;
bion.&#13;
Lieut. Governor—Trowbridge Johns, Marquette.&#13;
\&#13;
Secretary—Reuben C. Reed, Howell.&#13;
Treas.—John F. Eesley, Plainwell.&#13;
Auditor General—William D. Farley,&#13;
Battle Creek.&#13;
Cora, of State Land Office—Gideon Vivier&#13;
Detroit.&#13;
Superintendent of Public Instruction-&#13;
David S-. Warner, Spring Arbor.&#13;
Member of Board of Education—Samuel&#13;
W. Bird, Deoton, Wayne Co.&#13;
Across N. Dakota it was dry and&#13;
dusty. I t was a great sight to see&#13;
the wheat fields stretching out&#13;
for mile* and miles, and the&#13;
country just as level as could be.&#13;
I a rasorry to state that the wheat&#13;
crop there was almost a failure.&#13;
ThflfA HJBA Jtxtk. n n f n r n i - f rflim noun&#13;
* U U I O CItO t t v U Q V u r t l t V^OOOUOtV)&#13;
as t h e eye surveys the country&#13;
for miles one can see small clumps&#13;
of tress which marks a deweling&#13;
house and other buildings.&#13;
Oocasionlly a house is seen&#13;
without any trees, and it looks&#13;
dreary indeed. This sort of scenery&#13;
continued until we were far&#13;
along into Montana. We passed&#13;
through the famous Lake Park&#13;
reigon Minnesota, also by Devils&#13;
Lake in N. D. which is the largest&#13;
body of water an the plains east&#13;
of the Rockies.&#13;
We passed for miles through&#13;
the valley of the Missouri River.&#13;
At Minot N. D. our watches were&#13;
changed 1 hour, from central to&#13;
Montana time. The first placVin&#13;
Montana we passed was Ardeu.&#13;
F o r 180 miles we followed the&#13;
Milk River which flows into t h e&#13;
Missouri at Glasgow Montana at&#13;
Galate Montana, 1038 miles from&#13;
St. Paul. The first view of the&#13;
Rockies is to be had 115 miles away.&#13;
Along through these parts&#13;
I saw vast herds of cattle and&#13;
sheep. Some flocks of sheep numbering&#13;
from 3000 to 4000 head,&#13;
also one drove of cattlo of more&#13;
than-400. I was told that a man&#13;
afoot was not safe near there.&#13;
The trip over the Rockies and&#13;
do w n i n toik&amp;ff-1 at he-ad—VaUeyis&#13;
an everchauging panorama&#13;
splendid views. As wo entered&#13;
the Rockies we passed over a&#13;
trestle 286 ft. high, at Summit&#13;
were at ,«u elevation 5202 ft.&#13;
From Blackfoot to Kelispell a distance&#13;
of 109 miles, we were in&#13;
plain sight. As we were coming&#13;
out of the mountains on this side&#13;
a thunder storm came u p and&#13;
only those who have heard thunfinished&#13;
will deprive this p a r t i c u -&#13;
lar place of much of its romatio&#13;
features.&#13;
AH the way to Eve ret the cou-n&#13;
try is mountainous and rough following&#13;
river valleys and winding&#13;
passes. At Everet the first smell&#13;
water, from the Hound&#13;
is t o be had. At Everet we met&#13;
the overland from Seattle on her&#13;
way to St, Paul.&#13;
T h e rest of the way to Ballard&#13;
the railroad ran along or across&#13;
the tide flats of t h e Sound. At&#13;
10 p. m. I arrived at my destination&#13;
thoroughly tired but well&#13;
pleased with the route I selected.&#13;
If agreeable at some future period&#13;
I will endeavor to tell you&#13;
some things of interest about this&#13;
state, which is, I firmly believe&#13;
the most promising in th** West.&#13;
Ever kindly,&#13;
H e r m a n S. Reed,&#13;
Ballard, Wash.&#13;
,.- **t w h i i i f n 14M«\ v;&#13;
Eat a# you like. Ke^p strong fry'1&#13;
£j&gt;m&gt;» Dyipepai* T»biew. Th&lt;&#13;
any and all kiuds of food. M&#13;
•weefc stomachs and breaths. Try&#13;
Only 260 &amp; box.&#13;
Ple»»*»t« 3«fe wnd Stive &lt;&#13;
•re Kalll's Black Diarrhoea Pills.&#13;
berry Compound) oure Summer comp&#13;
EXCURSIONS&#13;
VIA THB PERE MARQUETTE&#13;
VTr ^»-*»»—**«wfr * W'.'U&#13;
Diarrhoea, Dysentery, Cholera Morbi&#13;
all pains of the stomach and bowels; 26( a&#13;
box. ':''k.&#13;
Orange HesUMtctt*&#13;
KniU's Orange Headache Pills, 10do?e J0e&#13;
Cure in 10 minutes, are the best and cheep&#13;
est. Never fail or leave any bad after ef&#13;
feet. Guaranteed by your druggist, v&#13;
s&#13;
• Our fee returned if we fail. Any one eendtsr&#13;
sketch and description of any invention, wifl&#13;
promptly receive our opinion free concerning&#13;
the patentability of same. " How to Obtain a&#13;
Patent" sent upon request. Patents secured&#13;
through us advertised for sale at our expense.&#13;
Patents taken out throuph us receive special&#13;
votive, without charge, in T U B PATENT RECOKO,&#13;
an illustrated aud widely circulated journal,&#13;
consulted by Manufacturers and Investors.&#13;
Send for sample copy FREE. Address,&#13;
VICTOR J. EVANS A CO.&#13;
(Patent Attorneys,)&#13;
CVMS Building, WASHINGTON, D. a&#13;
Milwaukee, Sept. 11 low rate across&#13;
the Lake by Daylight.&#13;
An excellent opportunity to visit&#13;
Milwaukee and the Northwest&#13;
will be afforded by this excursion&#13;
as tickets will be good to return&#13;
until Sept. 22. Train will leave&#13;
South Lyon at_8:33 a. m. and arrive&#13;
at Ottawa Beach at 2 p. m.&#13;
where a Pere Marquette steamei&#13;
will be waiting to complete a de-&#13;
~T!lightful trip by daylight across&#13;
Lake Michigan, arriving in Milwaukee&#13;
at 10 p. m. Round trip&#13;
rate from South Lyon, $5.00. Returning&#13;
steamers leave Milwaukee&#13;
at 9:30 p . m. every day. t-36&#13;
COMMISSIONER'S NOTICE.-State of Miohi&#13;
g«m, County of Livlng6ton, SS.—Probate Court&#13;
for said county. Eetate of&#13;
DAK JACKSON deceased.&#13;
The undersigned having beeu appointed by the&#13;
Judge of Probate of said county, Commissioners&#13;
on claims iu the matter of said estate, and six&#13;
^months from the thirtieth day of A&amp;gust A. D,&#13;
1900 having been allowed by said Judge of Probate&#13;
to all persons holding claims against said estate&#13;
in which to present their claims to us for examination&#13;
and adjustment:&#13;
Notice is hereby given that we will meet on&#13;
Friday the 80th day of November A. D. 190o,&#13;
and on Friday the 4th day of March A. D. 3900,&#13;
at 10 o'clock a. m. of each day, at the Plnckney&#13;
Kxchangev'Baok in the township of Putnam in&#13;
said cojBuy, to receive and examiue such claims.&#13;
Dated: Howell, August 80, :000.&#13;
G.vr. TEEPLK, iCommissionets&#13;
CHAS. LOVE. f on Claims.&#13;
SOME FACTS! READ THEM!&#13;
C n a m b e r l n i n ' i Cough Remedy a&#13;
Great Favorite.&#13;
The soothing and healing properties&#13;
of this remedy, its pleasant taste and&#13;
prompt and permanent ouroa have-&#13;
Stop the Cough and w o r k s off the&#13;
Cold.&#13;
Laxative Bromo-Quinine Tablets cure&#13;
a cold in one day. No'ure, no pay.&#13;
JrVice 25 cents.&#13;
young lady thought the fellow&#13;
very^ gallant. I n the evening we&#13;
saw the fellow sit on the back&#13;
porch of his father's house reading&#13;
a yellow back novel, while his old&#13;
mother carried in the big family&#13;
was the Apostle Isiauds and Duluth&#13;
781 miles from Detroit was&#13;
reached about 9 in the evening.&#13;
Duluth like many of the Western&#13;
cities is all hills, the main&#13;
street of the city, Superior, exwashing&#13;
she had done that day." | tends for miles around the head of&#13;
the lake&gt; and from the bluffs above&#13;
one should judge he could see far&#13;
out on Lake Superior.&#13;
At Duluth I took the Eastern&#13;
Minnesota Ry. to St. Paul, arriv-&#13;
Cared of Chorale Diarrhoea After 30&#13;
Years of suffering.&#13;
"i suffered for 30 years with d iairhoea&#13;
and thought I was past bein^r&#13;
cured," says John S. Hallo way, of&#13;
der roll and echo down the mouu- \ m a d e j t a « r e a t favorite with people&#13;
tains gorges, can appreciate with i «™ry where. It is especially prized&#13;
-Washington Irwing's tale of R i p ! b * m o t b e r 8 o f *m«U children for colds,&#13;
r T V 11 , T A .,, n ; croup and whooping, cough, as it al*&#13;
Van Winkle s adventure with Hen-1 ' ,„ , • ! , ,. "&#13;
drick Hudson ' and his crew at quick relief,&#13;
their game of ninepins in the&#13;
Oatskill's.&#13;
French Camp, Miss. •"! had spent so ;iUcr there at 7 o'clock on Tuesday&#13;
much time and m o n e y and suffered j m 0 r n i n g . At 9:05 I took the overland;&#13;
passin through Minneapolis&#13;
I which is only 8 miles from St.&#13;
so much that 1 had given up all&#13;
hopes of recovery. I was so feeble&#13;
from the effects of the diarrhoea that _, . ., . . . . , , -&#13;
X coald do no kind of lafeor. conld not I P f t u ! , \ , l b . e i n « » | " I » ^ M « f ° r m «&#13;
even travel, but by accident I was permitted&#13;
to find a bottle of Chamberlain's&#13;
Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea&#13;
Remedy, and after taking several bottles&#13;
I am entirely cored of that, trouble.&#13;
I am so pleased with the result that"I&#13;
am anxious that it be in reach of all&#13;
who suffer as 1 have." For sale uy F.&#13;
A. Sigler, Pinckney.&#13;
Bring your Job Work to this office.&#13;
to tell where the city limits of&#13;
either one were located. Here we&#13;
passed the State University, the&#13;
State Fair Grounds, crossed the&#13;
Mississippi near St. Anthony,s&#13;
Falls and were soon, speeding across&#13;
Minnesota, passed through&#13;
St. Cloud crossed the Red River&#13;
at Fargo, N. 1¾^ and at Grand&#13;
Forks connected with the Gt. Northern&#13;
train from Duluth.&#13;
Subscribe for the DISPATCH&#13;
The principle point of interest&#13;
through Idaho was the Priest&#13;
River. At 8 o'clock Thursday&#13;
morning we arrived a t the beautiful&#13;
city of Spokane, and I began&#13;
to feel at home for we had been&#13;
in Washington for the last forty&#13;
miles.&#13;
Watches were again put back&#13;
one hour here and we then&#13;
Pacific time.&#13;
We had made good time until&#13;
we reached YVenatchee, wbere we&#13;
found a freigt car derailed and it&#13;
took-some time to get by the obstruction,&#13;
so when we arrived at&#13;
Cascade Tunnel in_th(EL_Ca8cade&#13;
Mts. and at the base of the famous&#13;
"Switchback" we were 1 hr.&#13;
45 ruin. late. Here they attached&#13;
2 extra engines one g r e a t Mt,&#13;
engine with 12 drive wheels a n d&#13;
soon the ascent was begun.&#13;
Words can never describe the&#13;
grandeur of this famous mountain&#13;
p a s s and do it justice. Going up&#13;
three switches were made and&#13;
down there were four. There is a&#13;
4 per cent grade here, which&#13;
means that the rise of 4 feet in&#13;
every 100 ft. of track. Looking&#13;
down one can see thet rack stretching&#13;
far beneath you. As we be-t.&#13;
gan to descend one little mountian&#13;
village can be seen nearly 1000&#13;
feet below.&#13;
The clouds that hang over the&#13;
top of the mountain lower sufficiently&#13;
to envelope th e train and&#13;
the snow line is near by~ and&#13;
plainly seen. The Qi Northern&#13;
people are constructing a tunnel&#13;
18,200 f t in length,- whiohy whenways&#13;
affords quick relief, and as it&#13;
uontains no opium or other harmful&#13;
drug, it may he' given as confidently&#13;
to a baby as to an adult. F^-sale by&#13;
F. A. Sigler, Pi.ncknev.&#13;
EUREKA SURE STOP TOOTHACHE POWDERS&#13;
Gives quick and sure relief.&#13;
EUREKA COMPLEXION OINTMENT&#13;
Removes Black-heads and Pimples.&#13;
EUREKA CORN CURE&#13;
Cures all Corus, Bunions, and Callous&#13;
placer.&#13;
EUREKA 0. K. WART REMOVER&#13;
Is certain in its results.&#13;
Bach 10c, Coin or Stamps&#13;
By R e t u r n Mail.&#13;
Agents wanted—write today.&#13;
Address, E U R E K A S U P P L Y H O U S E ,&#13;
Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
Railroad Guide.&#13;
JEWELRY&#13;
A STIFLE&#13;
Look nt'the. next ten people you meet and&#13;
spe how much is worn of the so-called jewelry.&#13;
From a $.300.00 watch to a five&#13;
cent stick pin. Jewelry has come to be a&#13;
staple article of dress.&#13;
You will buy more or less of it; see that&#13;
h a d i y°u £ e l w-1!i* y°n Pa.v £°r when you buy.&#13;
You can be sure of this if you will buy of&#13;
H. W. Eilis, Pincknay, who has a full&#13;
assortment of the \V. F. Main Co. goodg.&#13;
Every article of the goods is fully warranted&#13;
to be exactly as represenated. A printed&#13;
guarantee to this effect is given with&#13;
each article of these goods purchased at&#13;
their store.&#13;
W . P . MATN C O .&#13;
A new and profitable industry&#13;
is said to have sprung up aronnd&#13;
the banks of pbnds and small&#13;
lakes. The common cat tail,&#13;
which grows in profusion in the&#13;
water's edge, has become a valuable&#13;
article and sells for a cent per&#13;
pound. T h e cat tails have largely&#13;
superseded wool, cotton and hair&#13;
upholstery and are said to be admirable&#13;
substitutes, while they&#13;
cost far less* t h a n the materials&#13;
mentioned. The demand far exceeds&#13;
the supply and is iucreaisng.&#13;
C u n a n d B r n t m Quickly^Cured.&#13;
Chamberlain's Pain Balm applied to&#13;
a cut, fcruise, burn, scald or like injury&#13;
will instantly allay the pain and&#13;
will heal the parts in. less-time than&#13;
any other treatment. Unless the injury&#13;
is very severe it will not leave a&#13;
scar. Pain Balm also cures rheumatism,&#13;
sprains, swellings and lameness.&#13;
For sale by F. A. Sigler, J^inckney^.&#13;
— Subscribe for the Pispatoh.&#13;
&gt; AND STtAMSHIP LINES*&#13;
Popular route for Ann Arbor, Toledo&#13;
and points East, South, and for&#13;
Howell, Owosso, Alma, Mt Pleasant&#13;
Cadillac, Manistee, Traverse City and&#13;
points in Northwestern iticbigan.&#13;
W. H. BENNETT,&#13;
G. P.A.Toledo&#13;
PERE MARQUETTE&#13;
JLv&#13;
Ar&#13;
Lv&#13;
Ar&#13;
UU1NU KA6T&#13;
uraud Kt 'ids.,.&#13;
Ionia&#13;
Lansing&#13;
Howell&#13;
South Lyon&#13;
Saleni&#13;
Plymouth&#13;
Detroit&#13;
OOI NO WKBT&#13;
Detroit&#13;
Plymouth&#13;
Salem&#13;
South Lyon....&#13;
Howell&#13;
L&amp;DBing&#13;
Ionia.........,&#13;
*4rand RinMa.&#13;
a—mf&#13;
10&#13;
r 40&#13;
9 04&#13;
10 06&#13;
10 86&#13;
10 46&#13;
it 00&#13;
It 40&#13;
a m&#13;
8 40&#13;
9 25&#13;
8 *&#13;
9 4b&#13;
10 S3&#13;
11 83&#13;
IS 60&#13;
t an&#13;
i&gt; in&#13;
1¾ 06&#13;
12 20&#13;
1 4fi&#13;
2»&#13;
3 04&#13;
3 25&#13;
4 05&#13;
p m&#13;
1 1 0&#13;
' 1&lt;48&#13;
8 0 8&#13;
2 36&#13;
3 3 0&#13;
4 43&#13;
s in&#13;
' p SB—&#13;
~o~80&#13;
6 00&#13;
7S7&#13;
92»&#13;
858&#13;
906&#13;
9 11)&#13;
10 06&#13;
p m&#13;
6 16&#13;
6 58&#13;
6 10&#13;
6 90&#13;
6 68&#13;
7 55&#13;
980&#13;
10 00&#13;
FRANK BAT,&#13;
Agent, South Lyon,&#13;
H. F. MOELLLK,&#13;
Acting 11. P. A.,&#13;
Grand Rapid*.&#13;
CO YEARS&#13;
BXPERIENCt&#13;
TRAOtf M A R K !&#13;
DEMONS&#13;
COPYMOHT* Ao.&#13;
fttesse tent*.&#13;
SAitonkytoyn ae a•o•nerdutnwf oau ark oetpeihn iaonnd f dr«eae «wrlhpetltohne rm efgt tioivnean stttroinc ttl»y ncornobfifdtbenlytriaml.t eHntaanMdbe.o okC ootnn mPin nwe&gt; sent free. Oldest aeefloy foraeourtriirpate&#13;
Patents taken through Mann tt Co. reoevf»&#13;
tpeci-U notice, without charge. In the Scientific flmtrieaiu eAo lhaatinodns oomf ealyn yi lsluctsetrnaWteJdo iwoaerenkalyl.. JTjewrmesst, eesljfi «!te£ti_&#13;
• 1.'&#13;
• • « • , *&#13;
' . * • &lt;&#13;
:.A* ^&#13;
•••r~.v&#13;
£ ' /-v-'&#13;
•„'"5 . • ) . ' • if! t • ( . '-, ; • ' • 1&lt; i. •• ' " • • • „ . l • . • ' • ' .- • ' ,. I - J ; . " • ' • • • '., „ • • ' • ' • ' , '&#13;
'.IT •U'!&#13;
• * » •&#13;
r i ; ' ' ' * r " i •*?*.&#13;
- ^ - .&#13;
&gt; • ! * .&#13;
t - &lt; * :&#13;
'•&gt;•• - A .••:&gt;.&#13;
-. -r#-&gt; ^-V*,- j •:•/.&gt;:( .r-f\&#13;
-,, y • -*; »";,•» JT'*-,-- 7 ; ^ * - -&#13;
r&gt;,.'&#13;
•••?»&#13;
-^:&#13;
. v i . • •' « ;. • .i&#13;
•r-v.-&#13;
A &gt;• • • ' • ' •&#13;
" - " * » •*»r« *&#13;
^-^&#13;
~&lt;x&#13;
,».-&#13;
• P *&#13;
•WPP&#13;
K 3&lt; K K &lt;v K K &amp; K K A&#13;
| 111 l * j t l | SpMWWl M AKflM&#13;
26 YEARS II MTMIT.&#13;
«0,OWCMEt.&#13;
WCCURE EMISSIONS&#13;
Nothing one bo most demoralising to 1&#13;
&gt; WNIOMM, nemmsBOft, a fat&#13;
i t u d a whototrain of symptom*,&#13;
l i t a man for nnsJno**. married&#13;
t tf • w&#13;
. u n i t » a n o busratftj MM social MppmoMi No rontttr&#13;
^ J j f f conssdjryevil habit* toi youth,,&#13;
NOCURE'NOPAY&#13;
. Btador, you need help. Bariyabfuoot]&#13;
later m u n i may have wakanad you.J&#13;
wfUcaxejoa. Yottronnoriak. 250,000 CURED Young? M a n Yoa art pala, feeble I&#13;
an4,ha«mrd; n«rv«a*, iriitaMa and oxoltable.&#13;
Yoa beeqme forgetful, morose,&#13;
and datpondeat; blotehef and pimples,&#13;
annken eye*, wrinkled faee, stooping&#13;
form and downcast oonntonanoe reveal |&#13;
the blight of your exiatenoe.&#13;
WECUREVUUCOCELE&#13;
• N o matter how serious your ease may I&#13;
oar* i L T h e "wormy veins''-return to&#13;
then* normal condition and hence the&#13;
sexual organs receive proper nourish-1&#13;
meat The organs become vitalised, swllj&#13;
nnntinral drains or&#13;
manly powers return.&#13;
losses oease and&#13;
nbr No temporary&#13;
benelttjbut a permanent euro assured.&#13;
NO ObBB.JTO PAY. NO OPJRi&#13;
f l O N NECESSARY. NO DETI&#13;
TION FROM BUSINESS.&#13;
CURES GUARANTEED!&#13;
KEY diseases.^f lCONSULTATION&#13;
FREE. BOOKS FREE. CHARGES,&#13;
MODERATE. . I f osablejp 0*11».write|&#13;
TJE8TI0N BLANK for HOME&#13;
SSfc*M BNT.&#13;
KENNEDYS KERGAN&#13;
148 SHELBY STREET,&#13;
DETROIT, MICH.&#13;
A $4.00 BOOK FOR J5zu±&#13;
The Farmers' Encyclopedia. *&#13;
Everything pertaining&#13;
to the affairs&#13;
of the farm,&#13;
h o u s e h o l d and&#13;
stock raising. Embraces&#13;
articles on&#13;
tbe hone, the colt,&#13;
horse habits, diseases&#13;
of the hone,&#13;
the firm, grastee,&#13;
fruit culture, dairy*&#13;
ing,cookery/health,&#13;
cattle, 8heep,ewfne,&#13;
Soultry, bees, the&#13;
og, toilet, social&#13;
life, etc., etc. One&#13;
of the most comp&#13;
l e t e E n c y c l o -&#13;
pedias in existence.&#13;
Alarge book, 8x5^&#13;
x \% inches. 636&#13;
pages, fully illustrated,&#13;
bound In&#13;
E n cloth bindand&#13;
equal to&#13;
r books costing&#13;
If you desire this book send us our special&#13;
offer price, $0.73, and |0.2u extra for postage and&#13;
we "will forward tbe book to you. If it is not satis*&#13;
factory return it and vre will exchange it or refund&#13;
your money. 8end for our special illustrated cat*&gt;&#13;
logue. quoting the lowest prices on books,&#13;
We cua Bave you money. Address all orders to&#13;
' « THE WERNER COMPANY, "•&#13;
l?«bii.&amp;«rt an* H&amp;nuf.c.uier*. AhTOn, OhiOi&#13;
(The W«rner C.mpanv u thoroughly relitble.1—Editor&#13;
I w. a 7. u j&#13;
^ Edited by th»W. 0. T V/&gt; Hwkney&#13;
A bill ha« passed th» imperial&#13;
diet of Japan prohibiting smoking&#13;
by minors.&#13;
PCTTYSVIU*.&#13;
School coromeDoed yeeterday.&#13;
Emery Peck of near Howell&#13;
was home, over Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. &amp; H. Swarthout visited&#13;
friends in Hnckney last week.&#13;
Mist Ira Placeway began school&#13;
in the Hanse district yesterday.&#13;
total ab- Jfnhn gl^ehan and wife attende d .&#13;
in ' •mn nil ' .1 I J j &gt;,i M&gt;pJ «l'2if PUVt " • * •'••&#13;
We tbe uoiiflf»igjied, 4« htrebjt&#13;
agree eo refand tbe money on a 0&#13;
cent bottle of Down's Elixir If it &lt;tee«.&#13;
not care any cough, cold, wboopiag&#13;
coagb, or throat trouble. We also&#13;
ffa&amp;raatee Dowa's Elixir to cure coasamptioa,&#13;
when aged according to directions,&#13;
or money back. A fall doae&#13;
M. G. Andrews and wife of 0 - 0 t t 90\nss to bed and saaall doses dar-&#13;
The ice i-ream social at Fred&#13;
Maycox'a last Tuesday evening&#13;
was a very pleasant gathering; receipts&#13;
about $8.&#13;
Thoe, Bidleman has secured a&#13;
job on the Pere Marqnette railroad&#13;
to work in a gravel pit near&#13;
Highland station.&#13;
:-1&#13;
'':••• ^¾¾¾&#13;
stainer, and at banquets where&#13;
wine is drunk he always has a&#13;
glass of milk before him. with&#13;
which he pledges, the toast&#13;
Dr. Henry D. Cogswell, 80 years&#13;
of age, prohibitionist and philanthropist,&#13;
died recently in San&#13;
Francisco. He wa» the founder&#13;
of a polytechinic college there and&#13;
presented drinking fountains to&#13;
manycit.es.&#13;
Es-United States Senator Merriman,&#13;
of S. Carolina, said: "I&#13;
have never drunk nor meddled&#13;
with liquor. I have seldom used&#13;
it my family as a medicine, and&#13;
yet it has meddled with me—it&#13;
has made my boy a wandering&#13;
vagabond, has broken my wife's&#13;
heart. Yes, when I was asleep,&#13;
thinking him at home in his bed,&#13;
be was being made a drunkard in&#13;
the bar-rooms of Raleigh.&#13;
The statistics obtained from the&#13;
replies of over 1,000 prison govern- SOUTH MARION,&#13;
ors in the United States to a cir- Casper Volmer is threshing in&#13;
the funeral of her aunt at Ypsilanti&#13;
today.&#13;
Florence Andrews of Pinckney&#13;
was the guest of Beth Swarthout&#13;
over Sunday.&#13;
Mr. Thos. Shehan and wife visited&#13;
their son at Dansville a part&#13;
of last week.&#13;
Miss Ella Melvin of Hamburg&#13;
is spending a few days under the&#13;
parental roof.&#13;
Lad and Hazel Northard of&#13;
Dexter visited at their uncles G.&#13;
P. Lambertson last week.&#13;
John McCluskey of Cal is visiting&#13;
his sister Mrs Martin Melvin&#13;
and other relatives in this&#13;
vicinity.&#13;
M.00.&#13;
cular letter addressed to them,&#13;
and a summary shows that the&#13;
general average of 909 replies received&#13;
from the license states&#13;
gives the proportion of crime due&#13;
to drink at no less than 72 per&#13;
cent; the average from 108officials&#13;
in prohibition states gives the percentage&#13;
as 37. .^ A considerable&#13;
number of the later were "bootleggers,"&#13;
in jail for selling whiskey.&#13;
They Were not all Alike.&#13;
TO C a r e a. G o l d | n O n e D a y&#13;
T a k e Lafcative B r o m o Q u i n i n e T a b -&#13;
lets. A l l d r u g g u t s r e f u n d t b e m o n e y&#13;
if i t fails t o c u r e . E . W, Grove's s i g -&#13;
n a t u r e is o n each b o x . 2 5 c .&#13;
Uerner's Dictionary o. Anonyms I Antonyms,&#13;
ayinolojy M Familiar Phrases.&#13;
A book that should be in the vest&#13;
I pocket of every person, bei-AUse it&#13;
tells you tbe right word to use.&#13;
I No Two Words in. the English&#13;
Language Have Exactly the&#13;
Same Significance. To express&#13;
the precise meaning that one in-&#13;
(tends to convey a dictionary or&#13;
Synonyms is needed to avoid repetition.&#13;
The strongest figure -of&#13;
speech Is antithesis. In this dictionary&#13;
the appended Antonyms&#13;
will, therefore, be found extremely&#13;
{valuable. Contains many other&#13;
features such as Mythology,&#13;
Familiar Allusions and Foreign&#13;
Phrases; Prof. Loisette's Memory&#13;
System, 'The Art of Never Forgetting." etc..&#13;
etc. This wonderful little book bound in a neat&#13;
cloth binding and sent postpaid for $0.95. Full&#13;
Leather, gilt edge, $0.40, postpaid. Order at&#13;
once. Send for our large book catalogue, free.&#13;
Address all orders to&#13;
THE WERNER COMPANY,&#13;
VaUiaatn sad KaamflMtann, AXXOH, OBXO&gt;&#13;
T h e f o l l o w i n g is a copy ot a l e t t e r&#13;
w h i c h a Texas c e n s u s taker s e n t to&#13;
W a s h i n g t o n w i t h his report:&#13;
NOTICE.&#13;
I am only a common farmer &amp; U6ed&#13;
fountain pen, sometimes it would let the&#13;
ink to fall &amp;. sometimes not enough thus&#13;
my schedules is damaged also it reined&#13;
every day &amp; on one occasion I got soakin&#13;
wet with a weeks supply of blanks filled&#13;
out. I drew of the worst of them, on one&#13;
occasion while under a cherry tree a cherry&#13;
droped in my port-folio &lt;&amp; meshed you&#13;
will see the sign. I trust you will find&#13;
them peseibe.&#13;
H a v e y o u a s^hee of f u l l n e s s in t b e&#13;
r e g i o n of y o u r s t o m a c h after e a t i n g ?&#13;
If so y o u will be beneficed by u s i n g&#13;
Chamberlain's S t o m a c h a n d L i v e r&#13;
T a b l e t s . T h e y a l s o c u r e b e l c b i n s a n d&#13;
s o u r s t o m a c h . T h e y r e g u l a t e t h e b o w -&#13;
els t o o . Price, 2 5 c e n t s . Sold by F .&#13;
A. S i g l e r , P i n c k n e y .&#13;
F o u r h u n d r e d e l k t e e t h w e r e&#13;
sold in Spokane, Wash., recently&#13;
for $1,000. The demands of the&#13;
members of the order of Elks and&#13;
growing scarcity have increased&#13;
the value of the teeth.&#13;
-'A7.&#13;
g*-y&#13;
We carry x " /M Wc ic^eive ""^.-'S&#13;
?~ stock &lt;JI £Otxl.1&#13;
valued ;it&#13;
\\ c tcoeive&#13;
n o m 10,000 to&#13;
£&gt;.UX) k-tiers&#13;
every d a y&#13;
this vicinity.&#13;
Geo. Bland Sr. is very poorly&#13;
at this writing.&#13;
Bean harvest has been commenced&#13;
in this vicinity.&#13;
Jonn Chapman's daughter is&#13;
visiting at V. G. Dinkle's.&#13;
H. M. Williston is riding a&#13;
bran new buggy now days.&#13;
Will Chambers visited friends&#13;
and relatives in Ann Arbar Sunday-&#13;
Will White has ordered one&#13;
hundred baskets for his peaches&#13;
this year.&#13;
Will Bland had three hundred&#13;
fourteen bushel of oats off from&#13;
seven acres.&#13;
Mrs. Will Durkee and daughter&#13;
Lena visited at Will Bland's last&#13;
Wednesday.&#13;
Bertha Backus is expecting to&#13;
attend school at Ann Arbor this&#13;
coming year.&#13;
Tim Hayes of this vicinity anticipates&#13;
going into the poultry&#13;
business this fall.&#13;
Cyrus Gardner and Mabel Sigler&#13;
called on I. J. Abbott last&#13;
Thursday evening.&#13;
Lulo Abbott is taking treatment,&#13;
for salt-rheum of Dr. Wylie from&#13;
Waterloo. She is improving.&#13;
The school children from the&#13;
Younglove District spent Saturday&#13;
afternoon with th^ir old teach-&#13;
-er Cyrus B. Gardner.&#13;
* The Gleaners of Marion Arbor&#13;
took in five new members at their&#13;
last meeting and two more report*&#13;
ed for the next meeting.&#13;
Goody Dinkle was fishing one&#13;
day last week and caught a seveD&#13;
poundlDass. Goody never takes&#13;
but the best when he goes fishing.&#13;
wosso who have been visiting&#13;
here for a con pie of weeks returned&#13;
home Monday.&#13;
' An Owosso young man played a&#13;
good joke on his barber by working&#13;
off on the latter thirty-five oldfashionec&#13;
pennies. The barber&#13;
"worked them off" on a dealer in&#13;
rare coins for $35 and the joker&#13;
felt sick when he heard of it.—&#13;
Fenton Independent.&#13;
When you want a pleasant physic&#13;
try the new remedy, Chamberlain's&#13;
Stomach and Liver Tablets. Tbey are&#13;
easy to take and pleasant in effect.&#13;
Price, 25 cents. Samples free at F.&#13;
A. Sigler's drug store,&#13;
USEFUL HINTS.&#13;
T h e papers tell of a good minister's&#13;
w i f e w h o w a s thrice married—to a&#13;
Mr. Robin, a Mr! Sparrow and a Mr.&#13;
Quayle, w i t h children or step children&#13;
by each marriage, so that in the h o m e&#13;
n e s t of her third estate there dwell t o -&#13;
gether little R o b i n s and Sparrows and&#13;
Quayles.&#13;
Debtors In Slam, w h e n three m o n t h s&#13;
In arrears, can be seized by the credit&#13;
o r s a n d compelled t o work out their&#13;
indebtedness. Should a debtor run VILLAGE OFFICERS.&#13;
PBBsu&gt;iirt....Mm....&gt;MM. Alex. Mclntrre&#13;
a w a y his father, his wife or his c h i t ' ^IKJSMBS E. L. Thompson, Alfred Monks,&#13;
•em Wki y *r aos, - r/&#13;
PARSHALLVILLE.&#13;
Will Wake man is on the sick&#13;
list.&#13;
dren m a y be held in Blavery until t h e&#13;
debt Is cancelled.&#13;
The yellow and red Spanish flag fa&#13;
t h e oldest of a n y used by the European&#13;
powers, as it w a s first flown in 1785.&#13;
T h e French tricolor w a s llrst used in&#13;
1795. the R e d E n g l i s h ensign, with the&#13;
present U n i o n Jack in the upper canton,&#13;
in 1801. the present Italian flag&#13;
in 1848; t h e present Austo-Hung^rian&#13;
flag in 1867, and the German flag in&#13;
1871. ^=»&#13;
T h e hottest place in the world Is&#13;
D e a t h Valley, in Arizona, where the&#13;
temperature often reaches 125 degrees&#13;
In t h e shade.&#13;
The exports of $40,000,000 worth of&#13;
manufactured goods from this country&#13;
in April, 1900, is a phenomenal o n e ,&#13;
and indicates that t h e exports of our&#13;
manufactures will exceed $400,000,000&#13;
for the fiscal year ending June 30,&#13;
w h i c h will be very nearly three times&#13;
the amount exported in 1890.&#13;
It is a well-established fact that&#13;
plants can be improved by crossing&#13;
and judicious selection quite as surely&#13;
and effectively as t h e breeding of a n -&#13;
imals. Th sugar beet m a y be-" quoted&#13;
as an example of what cultivation m a y&#13;
do. The sugar beet of 10-day actually&#13;
contains about three times as large&#13;
a proportion of saccharine matter as it&#13;
did a century ago.&#13;
The e'ectroohor.-'1 is meeting w i t h&#13;
favor in KngUu.&lt;J. There are m-tny&#13;
places in the leading streets'of L&gt;n o.i&#13;
wher? any o n e can. by th? payment of&#13;
where any o n can. by the payment of&#13;
a small fee, be switched for a q u a ^ s r&#13;
of an hour o n t o any of the music hulls.&#13;
Roumaivlu would appear to be the&#13;
m o s t illitor:itt country in Europe. T d e&#13;
last census s h o w s that in a popt^atlon&#13;
of nearly six million? nearly tour millions&#13;
can neither read nor write, and&#13;
that only a little over a million have&#13;
a n y education at all.&#13;
In a small lot of literary euriosi:ie3&#13;
recently cfr'i :&gt; d i'cr ^a!e in London&#13;
w a s the K'!!c.v:::p; printed -r.o'ice,&#13;
which used ro be e:ciiibi:ed c u the&#13;
Drury Lane Coffec-House about 1S22:&#13;
"It is particularly requested by the&#13;
company that those w h o are learning&#13;
t o spell will a s k for yesterday's paper.&#13;
In a perfectly dry atmosphere a n i m a l&#13;
life can exist at a temperature of 300&#13;
degrees Fahrenheit—that is. 8S d e g r : e s&#13;
above the boiling point of water.&#13;
ioff the day will oore tbe mont severe'&#13;
cold, and stop the most distresaiog&#13;
cough.&#13;
F. A. Sigler,&#13;
W. B. Darrow,&#13;
L ! „ U J J , . ' I ..,1,,- _1U.UI&#13;
Ibe ghtrttug fispatfb.&#13;
FOBiUHSD XVBM TVUBSSAY KOftVZX* S T&#13;
FRANK L. ANDREWS&#13;
Editor and PrtprUttr.&#13;
8 obscriptlon Price $1 1B Advance.&#13;
Sntorea at tbe Po«tofflca *t Pinckney, Mlobtaa.&#13;
M secoMHdSM nutter. *&#13;
Advertising rates made known on application.&#13;
BasineM Cards, 14.00 P«r year.&#13;
Peath and marriage notices pablisoed free.&#13;
Announcements of entertainment* may be paid&#13;
for, if desired, bj presenting the office with ticket*&#13;
of admission. In eaee tickets are not broosht&#13;
to tne office, regolar rate* win be cnarged,&#13;
AU matter in local notice column will be charted&#13;
at 5 cent* per line or fraction thereof, for each&#13;
insertion. Where no time 1* specified, all notice*&#13;
will be inserted until ordered discontinued, and&#13;
will be charged for accordingly. £^AUchansM&#13;
of advertisement* MUbT reach this office as early&#13;
as TncsoAT morning to insure an insertion the&#13;
same week.&#13;
JOS TSIJYlIJfGt&#13;
^ H H I 1 1 ? brMC**»»» •Jptcialty. We havea!! kinds&#13;
and the latest styles of Type, etc., whTeh enable*&#13;
us to execute all kinds of work, sacb M Books,&#13;
Pampleu, Posters, Programmes, Bill Heads, Not*&#13;
Heads, Statement*, Card*. Auction Bills, etc., In&#13;
superior atyles, upon the shortest notice. Prices as&#13;
orv u good work can b* aone.&#13;
*LL BILLS FATA.BU7 WIRAT Of &gt;VSBT MONTH,&#13;
THE VILLAGE DIRECTORY.&#13;
Daniel Richards, ueo. Bowman, 8amuel&#13;
Sykes, P. i&gt;. Johnson,&#13;
ULSBK... &gt;••«.-..~M «m.u.i,.|,.B, H*Teeple&#13;
^B£^BUBXK....*.M... •.................^.., v.. £» Jsnrpby&#13;
ASSSSSOB ^ . ^ . W. A. Can&#13;
STBBBT COMMISSIONS* J. Monks.&#13;
MAHSAHL ,.,.,4, £ . Brown.&#13;
HKALTH UMICBB Dr.H. F.SIRIW&#13;
ATTOBNBT...^^. ^....,^......^^. W. A. Carr&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
MflTHOU 1ST EPISCOPAL CHQfiCH.&#13;
Jtev. Cba*. Simpson, pastor. Service* every&#13;
Sunday morning «t 10:!w, and every Sunday&#13;
evening at 7:00 o'clock. Prayer meeting Thursday&#13;
evenings. Sunday school at close of mora,&#13;
ing service. LKALSIOLBB, Snpt.&#13;
CONtmKGATIONAL CHUKCH.&#13;
Key. C. W. Kioe pastor. Service every&#13;
Sunday morning at 10:)(0 and every Sunday&#13;
evening at 7:0C o'clock. Prayer meeting Thnr*&#13;
day evenings. Sunday school at ,doee of mornintr&#13;
service. B. H. Teeple, Supt,, Maoe! Swarthout&#13;
Sec.&#13;
'T. MA KITS CATHOLIC CHURCH.&#13;
Rev. M. J. Commerford, Pastor. Service*&#13;
•very Sunday. Low" mass at 7:30o'clock&#13;
high mass with sermon at 9:30 a. m. Catechism&#13;
at 3:00 p. m., veepers ana benediction at 7:«o p.m.&#13;
SOCIETIES;&#13;
The A. O. H. Society of this place, meets every&#13;
tblrd Sunday iatne Ff. ttittaew tlall.&#13;
John Tuomey and M.. T. Kelly, County Delegates&#13;
EPWORTH LEAGUE. Meets every Sunday&#13;
evening at &amp;00 oclock iu the M. E. Church, A&#13;
cordial invitation ia extended to everyone, especially&#13;
young people. Mrs. Stella Oraham Pre*.&#13;
GHC 1ST I AN&#13;
la^s every Sunday evening st 6:*). President,&#13;
EXDBAVOa SOCIETY:—Mret.&#13;
iday 6d0. Miss Etta Carpenter, Secretary, Mrs. C. W. Rice.&#13;
s.&#13;
K£ :b* 0&#13;
Fence In Your Swine.&#13;
After s e t t l i n g In t h e W e s t my father&#13;
pjanted a patch t o c o m . After it w a s&#13;
harvested a p i g w a s bought. T h e n a&#13;
bunch of h o g s were raised and each&#13;
r ".! r x J " * *&#13;
w9» e w e and occupy the tallest mercantile building in tne world. We have&#13;
&lt;r**r 8^00,000 customer*. Sixteen hundred clerk* ar* constantly&#13;
engaged filling out-of-town orders.&#13;
O U R G E N E R A L C A T A L O G U E lathe book of the people—it quotes&#13;
Wholesale Prices to Everybody, ha* over ifooo pages, 16,000 illustration*, and&#13;
60,000 descriptions of articles with prices. It cost* 7* cent* to print and mail&#13;
each copy. We want yem to have one. SEND FIFTEEN CENTS to ahow&#13;
your good faith, ar.d we'll send you a copy FREE, with all charge* prepaid.&#13;
M0HT60KERY VJABB &amp; GQ,"'chi••"«•••*•d"•',-s,rw,&#13;
OHICAQO&#13;
**££*&gt; *•**?&#13;
Mrs. John Bristol is spending if«ar 8[™ the hogs have been among&#13;
. _. .. [the profit makers of the home farm.&#13;
a few days m Detroit [ The first year we raised hogs in small&#13;
Geo. Cornell and family visited ! ^ f ° n ^ * y *neifhbcr « » e alon?&#13;
zL » v . f ia n d said. Why don't you fence a hog&#13;
in MMBMiatnL. c-Rruoeefnnt aat hWweoo pilvavseetrr ttwoonne eiikss. hnaavviinnigr MpaCsotuuIrden?,t" a fTfohred aInts.w" er Twhaes onfe icgohubroser . p r o m p t l v l n f o r m e d u s t h a t w e toM her annual tronble with tne hay afford it and go at it and do it. no&#13;
fever matter if we had to buy everything oh&#13;
" - . jtime. We took his advice. We fenced&#13;
avTehrye fWineo lsvueprptolny sotfo grreo icse krieeesp ainndg "ab*o u^t ninJe fa^c reans, dw ?itrae ecieedfa,rc ep osJtfsa redva -&#13;
\ •% a n d t w o ^ires all around it. It was&#13;
caned good. good clover and timothy. I don't remember&#13;
what the fence cost, but the&#13;
wire was fourteen—eents per pound;&#13;
that was the first barb wire. We&#13;
bought it on time and the-hogs paid&#13;
the bill. We sold some for eight cents*&#13;
per pound. Hogs bring only half that&#13;
price now, but fence costs only about&#13;
half that amount now.—S. A. Lussell,&#13;
in The Market Basket&#13;
THE W. C. T. U. meets the first Friday of each&#13;
month at 3:80 p. in, at the home of Dr. H. F.&#13;
Sigler. Everyone interested in temperanon is&#13;
coadiaHy invited. Mrs. lieal Sigler, Pros; Mrs.&#13;
Etta Durfee, Secretary.&#13;
Tie C.T. A. and B. Society ot this place, n&gt;**t&#13;
every third Saturday evening in tne Fr. Matthew&#13;
Hall. John Donohue, President.&#13;
NIGHTS OP MACCAKEES. ! ~ ~&#13;
Meet every Friday evening on or before full&#13;
of tbe moon at their hall iu the Swarthout bldg.&#13;
Visiting brothers are cordial I v invited.&#13;
CUAS. CAMPBELL, Sir knight Commander&#13;
LiriDgeton Lodge, Xo.79, ? &amp; A, M. K-yu'sr&#13;
Communication Tuesday evening, on or before&#13;
the full of the moon. H. P. Sigler, VI'. M.&#13;
0&#13;
AA.M. meeting.&#13;
RDER OF EASTEHN STAR meets each month&#13;
rening following th&lt;&#13;
Mas. MARY^UAD,&#13;
the Friday evening the regoiar F.&#13;
W, M.&#13;
ORDER OF MODERN WOODMEN Meet the&#13;
firet Taursday evening of each Month In the&#13;
Maccabee nail. Cf L. Grimes V. C.&#13;
1 — ' * — ' ' * • - • LADIES OF THE MACCABEES. Meat every let&#13;
and 3rd Saturday of eachmonth at 3:40 p m. at&#13;
K. O. T. M. hall.' Visiting alitera cordially invited.&#13;
LXLA COXIWAT Lady Com.&#13;
* i&#13;
KNIGHTS OP TUB LOTAL GUARD&#13;
meet every second Wednesday&#13;
evening of every month In tbe K. O.&#13;
T. M. Hall at 7:30 o'clock. AU visiting&#13;
.Guards welcome.&#13;
C. L. Grimes, Capt. (ton.&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
Mrs. Scott White who has been&#13;
visiting her mother at Clio, has&#13;
returned home.&#13;
Mrs. B. F. Andrews has been&#13;
quite sick the past week but is&#13;
some better now. ~&#13;
H. F. SJQLER M. O- C. L, SIQLER M, D&#13;
. DRS. SIGLER &amp; SIGLER,&#13;
Physicians and Sur*ei&gt;n». All call* prompt!&#13;
attended to day or mght. OJlce on Malnstr&#13;
Pinckney, Mioh.&#13;
DR. A. B. GREEN.&#13;
DE.NTIST-Eyery Fridaj; and on Thursday&#13;
when having appointment*..,, Ofiloeover&#13;
Sigler'* Drugstore.&#13;
'&gt;?%;n.&#13;
• • • ' • ' &gt; &gt; . -&#13;
1. F. MlLJfE.&#13;
VETERINARY S U R Q E O N .&#13;
Graduate of Ontario Veterinary Ooileg*, «i*o 0&#13;
the Veterinary Dentistry Colleg*&#13;
Toronto Canada.&#13;
Will promptly attend to all diseases ot tk»~tto.&#13;
meetieated animal at a reasonaoto print,&#13;
florae* teeth examined Fret,&#13;
O r r i C E a t ttlLL. PINCKNtlY,&#13;
- • • • • • &gt; &lt; &amp; $ *&#13;
•m&#13;
• H&#13;
:.m&#13;
^m&#13;
."'f'S&#13;
^&#13;
v?t-1&#13;
'•.•:V "V&#13;
''. '#:.:&#13;
• " • &lt;. H * •&#13;
/&#13;
"*****&#13;
li'fc'&#13;
'Vv-v&#13;
' W ^ J ,&#13;
•sV'.v-'.-.&#13;
??:••!.':-'!•••'""&#13;
.1 ••&#13;
¥£•&#13;
n..&#13;
giwhtfes gityatck&#13;
T*AUK L. AJUMOtWt, foMifthtfc&#13;
PINCKNEV. . • MICniOAH.&#13;
Tne acr«w in u e ioiu th jewel waeei&#13;
of a watch Is so 83iuU t'-tit a lady't&#13;
thimble would hold 1,060,OW of theax.&#13;
The average velocity of cirrus clouds&#13;
is about 89, miles an hour, while in&#13;
winter they have sometimes been&#13;
known to travel at the rate of 230&#13;
mile* fta how. ~-&#13;
Mrs, Thomas C. Piatt, the wife of&#13;
the New York neuator, gives a great&#13;
&lt;ieel of her time to study. Two years&#13;
ago she took up Preach and is now&#13;
especially proficient in that language.&#13;
When the active service section of&#13;
the Royal Berks volunteers left Maidenhead&#13;
recently on their way to the&#13;
front, each man was presented. with&#13;
a sovereign by Colonel Boxall, with&#13;
injunctions to spend the came at Pretoria.&#13;
It is announced that Prof. Charges&#13;
Eliot Norton and the other literary executora&#13;
of John Ruskin have determined&#13;
npt*tQ,issqc„,a biography of the&#13;
art critic, considering his "PraeterHa"&#13;
and Collingwood's biography sufficient.&#13;
But the executors will issue rapresentativ&#13;
£ c^lectiajvs from Mr. Buskin's,&#13;
diaries and letters.&#13;
The foreman of a ranch in California&#13;
declares that rural free delivery is&#13;
worth a thousand dollars a year to him&#13;
personally, because it keeps the hand?&#13;
^t home. This suggests one reason&#13;
#hy the service should bo extended.&#13;
Restless boys will be less anxious to&#13;
go to the city, When every day the peatman&#13;
brings, the best of the city t~&#13;
them.&#13;
Thirty - Fourth Annual Re&#13;
union of Old Soldiers.&#13;
An army, grand but without guns,&#13;
glorified but grizzled and decrepit,&#13;
stormed Chicago Monday morning,&#13;
looted the treasure house* o t i t s hospitality,&#13;
plundered its pleasures and&#13;
sackAd tho city day and night while&#13;
eyery citizen looked on approvingly&#13;
and pried "Welcome!" and "Well&#13;
done!" The scouts had been coming&#13;
for a week, the skirmish linp came Saturday,&#13;
the advance guard fell upon the&#13;
city Sunday and all Sunday night the&#13;
main army, 30,000 strong, was rushing&#13;
forward.&#13;
Twenty thousand old men who knew&#13;
about weather and war overran the&#13;
streets and parkc Sunday. Dressed in&#13;
army blue, with badges splendid only&#13;
in the significance*, th© old soldiers&#13;
waded ankle deep in pool3 of rain,&#13;
bared their heads before the heroic&#13;
figures of Lincoln, Grant and Logan&#13;
and "went a-vlsltin'" and "a-foragi&#13;
n ' " till the torrents which deluged&#13;
the streets' had soaked and bedraggled&#13;
them into condition for a camp-fire&#13;
and a bout with the canteen.&#13;
Every Train Vfa* Crowded.&#13;
During the twenty-four hours ending&#13;
at 12 o'clock Sunday night nineteen&#13;
railroads \ entering Chicago&#13;
brought into that city mere than 100,-&#13;
a Washington attorney, and Dr. J. B.&#13;
Hubbell, field agent of the society.&#13;
Other prominent members of the Red&#13;
Cross who will visit Chicago for&#13;
the encampment arc Mrs. J. Ellen Foster&#13;
of the board of control and Mrs.&#13;
Walter P. Phillips.&#13;
Mrs. Harriet J. Bodge, national&#13;
president c* the Woman's Relief corps,&#13;
is present and is a guest at the Palmer&#13;
House. Mrs. Bodge lives in Hartford,&#13;
Conn. She is accompanied by&#13;
Mrs. Charlotte E. Wright of New Haven,&#13;
Conn., and Mrs. Cordelia A. Blakeman,&#13;
of Sholton, Conn.&#13;
Monday's program, as carried, was&#13;
as follows:&#13;
6 a. m., salute to the flag; 9 a. m.,&#13;
dedication of naval arch; 10 a. m., pension&#13;
committee met at the Palmer&#13;
House; 11 a.'m., grand parade of Naval&#13;
Veterans, ex-Prisoners of War and&#13;
Sens of Veterans; 12 m., national&#13;
headquarters opened at the Palmer&#13;
House; 2 p. m., executive committee&#13;
met at the Palmer House; 3 p. m./reception&#13;
at Memorial Hall to Commander-&#13;
in-Chief A. D. Shaw, offlcer3&#13;
G. A. R., and ctate commanders. Water&#13;
front naval parade; 5 p. m., naval battle&#13;
off Lincoln Park; 8 p. m., council&#13;
of administration met at the Palmer&#13;
valley and faced the remnants of Let's&#13;
army at Appomattox. Vetera** who&#13;
participated in Hanks' Red river oaaapaiga&#13;
affiliated with comrades who&#13;
tasted the glory of the victory .at Gettysburg.&#13;
. ,&#13;
More veterans, notwithstanding the&#13;
ago of the members of the Oread Army&#13;
of the Republic, joined in the march&#13;
than ever was expected by the most&#13;
sanguine of the survivors of (he organisation.&#13;
Vetetaaa from _eveiy&#13;
In the union were there and met their&#13;
The Milne-Astor episode dies na^d.&#13;
The finale must be wholly satisfactory&#13;
to Captain Sir Berkefey Milne—his&#13;
nomination by the Admiralty as one of&#13;
three officers sent to represent the royal&#13;
navy at the funeral Of the Duke of&#13;
Coburg. The * selection of Sir Berkeley&#13;
was intended as a demonstration&#13;
and it was due to a suggestion made&#13;
by a royal personage.&#13;
February 14, 1901, will mark the&#13;
centennial of the day when John Marshall&#13;
of Virginia, the first chief justice&#13;
of tho United Stales, took his seal&#13;
upon the supreme bench. It is to br&#13;
commemorated at the initiative of the&#13;
bar assoqiation of the District of Co&#13;
lumbia, with the help of the American&#13;
Bar Association, and ex-Attorney-&#13;
General Wayne MacVeagh has been&#13;
chosen to deliver the oration.&#13;
Mrs: Laura A. Alderman owns the&#13;
largest orchard in South Dakota. According&#13;
to W, N. Irwin, chief of the&#13;
division of pomology of the Depart&#13;
ment of Agriculture in Washington&#13;
she has near Harley, Turner county&#13;
150 acres, in which are S.000 tress, t\v:,&#13;
acres being given over to plums. Be&#13;
sides the trees, there.are 1.000 r ;rran'.&#13;
bushes, 1,000 gooseberry bushes, 5JC&#13;
grape vines and three acres of strawberries.&#13;
A trade journal estimates the American&#13;
"output" of bicycles for the past&#13;
year at about eight hundred and fifty&#13;
thousand wheels. Mere than on? hundred&#13;
thousand were reserved for home&#13;
consumption. Yet the bicycle is now&#13;
no novelty. It looks as if the people&#13;
who have supposed and declared thai&#13;
wheeling was merely a temporary fat?&#13;
would haye to own themselves beaten.&#13;
and aim their dismal predictions at the&#13;
motor cycle &gt;;..d automobile.&#13;
The influence which a single person&#13;
may exert is. admirably illustrated in&#13;
the case of an Indian girl, who in 1871&#13;
was carried to Hampton wrapped in a&#13;
blanket. One of her first acts was tc&#13;
steal a watermelon, a bit of which she&#13;
immediately offered to the sun god a?&#13;
propotlation. For the past four years,&#13;
however, this refined and charming&#13;
young woman has served as United&#13;
States field matron among her own&#13;
tribe. She travels about In a buggy,&#13;
carrying a wash tub, a wringer *nd&#13;
soap, teaching squaw after squaw now&#13;
to wash, iron and cook, not ts hush&#13;
the baby to sleep with strong coffee,&#13;
how to heal weak eyes and other diseases&#13;
common among her people. \a&#13;
the* picturesque language of her tribe,&#13;
Annie Dawson "leaves a trail of light**&#13;
It hind her..&#13;
Houec, reunion of ex-prisoners of war&#13;
at Coliseum, camp fire Sens of Veterans&#13;
at Memorial Hall, deg watch of&#13;
Naval Veterans r.t Y. M. C. A. auditorium,&#13;
illumination of the Court of&#13;
lienor, electric fountain in Lincoln&#13;
Park; S:S0 p. mt. fireworks; regimental,&#13;
reunions held during the day in different&#13;
parts of the city.&#13;
Tiie G. A. It. Para.le.&#13;
Martial music and tho steady tread&#13;
VETERAN'S MET AND WELCOMED j o f t h e marching feet of veterans had&#13;
BY CHICAGO CITIZENS. i t h e attention of the great crowd of&#13;
d00 visitors, mostly Grand Army vet- j v l s i t o « * Chicago Tuesday. The&#13;
erans and their families. The rail- I f , r e a t f • rarade m the h story of the&#13;
roads and number of passengers re- | G r a n d A r m y c f t h s Republic took place&#13;
spectively are: Chicago, Rock Island &amp; j&#13;
Pacific, 16,490; Chicago &amp; Northwestern,&#13;
11,750; Chicago, Burlington &amp;,&#13;
Quiacy, 9,755; Lake Shore &amp; Michigan&#13;
—Gen, John, Watts dePeyster,, who declares&#13;
that the earth is fixed in t.pace&#13;
and who laughs at those v/ho hold&#13;
to the Copernican theory of the solar&#13;
system, is one of tho most distinguished&#13;
veterans of the Civil war and&#13;
was formerly a military expert of international&#13;
fame. In his old age—he&#13;
is now 79—he has turned his attention&#13;
to astronomy, and has just translated&#13;
a lecture of a Berlin" professor,&#13;
Prof. Schoepffer, who proves to the&#13;
general's satisfaction that Kepler,&#13;
.Newton, Copernicus and all their followers&#13;
are in zross error when they&#13;
assert that the earth moves around the&#13;
sun or upon its own axis.&#13;
Southern, 6,040; Michigan Central, 7,-&#13;
25C; Baltimore &amp; Ohio, 4,136; Wabash,&#13;
3,456; Mcnon, 2,147; Chicane, Milwaukee&#13;
fz St. Paul, 4,579; Chicago &amp; East- •&#13;
ern Illinois, 4,567; Pcre Marquette, 3,- j&#13;
546; Grand Trunk, 2,145; Pennsylvania, •&#13;
6,545; Fore Wayne, 3,640; Santa Fe, 3.- !&#13;
437; Nickel Plate, 4,511; Chicago &amp; '&#13;
Western Indiana, 5,423; Chicago ft&#13;
Great Western. 4,G25; Chicago &amp; Alton,&#13;
5,345. .&#13;
This heavy traffic has never been&#13;
equaled. All regular trains had from&#13;
one to three sections and there were&#13;
twenty-eight specials run on the&#13;
various reads. Some of the western&#13;
trains came in fivo hours late and several&#13;
eastern trains were three hours&#13;
late.&#13;
Throng* at Ileadnarters.&#13;
State headquarters were besieged&#13;
vith fresh arrivals from every section&#13;
of the country, who rush up to one another,&#13;
clasp hands and remark that the&#13;
weather was very much like that which&#13;
4he national encampment encountered&#13;
in St. Louis.&#13;
Large delegations are in attendance&#13;
from South Dakota, New Mexico, Arkansas,&#13;
Wisconsin, Michigan and Pennsylvania,&#13;
and smaller ones from Florida,&#13;
Georgia, California and other&#13;
western states. A numerous delegation&#13;
from West Virginia, headed by&#13;
Commander Arnold Brandly, and a&#13;
Kentucky delegation reached the city&#13;
Monday.&#13;
MIM Ctara Barton Present,&#13;
Clara Barton, president of the United&#13;
States organization of tho Red&#13;
Cross society and the only honorary&#13;
member of the Woman's Relief corps,&#13;
is in Chicago. She came by special&#13;
invitation of the encampment. With&#13;
her are, Mrs. Ellen Spencer Mrcuey,&#13;
general, efur.ae! if tho It'ed Crew? mil *'&#13;
at 10 o'clock. Representatives of the&#13;
Army of the Potomac touched shoul- j&#13;
der3 with the blue-clad veterans who !&#13;
marched and fought in the Ar:::y of the \&#13;
Cumberland. Jlarjly followers of Sfcer-7&#13;
I man, v/ho tramped from Atlanta to the&#13;
! sea, kept stop with men who chased&#13;
Jubal Early through the Shenandoah&#13;
y 1///&#13;
LEO RASSIEUR.&#13;
(For Commander-in-Chief.)&#13;
former comrades, and 7,000 posts of&#13;
the Grand Army had representation in&#13;
the column.&#13;
Uryaa Declines to Attend.&#13;
William Jennings Bryan was not&#13;
present to participate in any of the&#13;
encampment. He announced this decision&#13;
in a telegram to the citizens'&#13;
committee as follows:&#13;
"Since President Mckinley is detained&#13;
by public business, I believe the&#13;
proprieties of the occasion demand that&#13;
I also decline and thus relieve the reunion&#13;
of any appearance of partisanship.&#13;
W. J. BRYAN."&#13;
In reply Executive Director Harper&#13;
sent the following telegram to Mr.&#13;
Bryan:&#13;
"Your telegram declining invitation&#13;
to attend the Grand Army reunion&#13;
because of President McKiuley's absence&#13;
by reason of his public ddties is&#13;
received. The executive committee appreciates&#13;
the delicacy of sentiment under&#13;
the circumstances, but regrets that&#13;
we cannot have the pleasure and honor&#13;
of entertaining you."&#13;
Clorle* of Iron Brigade Told.&#13;
Five regiments and a battery mustered&#13;
a quota of 400 men Monday night&#13;
at the banquet of the Iron brigade in&#13;
the Chicago Athletic club. When the&#13;
story of the Iron brigade had been told&#13;
by the speakers, wJhton the count of the&#13;
battles had been made, and the lists&#13;
of losses told, it was granted easily&#13;
that there was in the banquet a fair&#13;
representation from the brigade, which&#13;
lest 1.153 of .1,833 men engaged at Gettysburg,&#13;
and-to.which official report&#13;
credited the salvation of the nation on&#13;
that field. They were tho survivors of&#13;
the Second Wisconsin, which lost 77&#13;
per cent of its men at Gettysburg, of&#13;
the Sixth Wisconsin, which lest 357&#13;
dead, of the Seventh Wisconsin, which&#13;
lect in killed and wounded 1,016; of&#13;
the Nineteenth Indiana, which lost CI&#13;
per cent; of the Twenty-fourth Michigan,&#13;
which lost. SO per cent, and of Battery&#13;
B, Fourth United States artillery,&#13;
at whose guns more men fell than in&#13;
any other battery in the unicn army.&#13;
Capt. Edward McAllister, famous&#13;
civil war hero, died near Joiict, 111.&#13;
, The state department has dispatched&#13;
Its instructions to the^ United States,&#13;
diplomatic representatives abroad in&#13;
i oonfonalty with the decision reached&#13;
I an *he«etli by the eablnet upoaiaeV&#13;
' Russian proposal to withdraw the&#13;
troops la Pekin \n order t o allow the&#13;
empress dowager and Emperor Kwangto&#13;
retain to tbe capital* t o Institute&#13;
negotiations for a settlement with the&#13;
povrer*. All of these steps a r e matters&#13;
of common afreemeat, so- i t was ootposslble&#13;
for two of the nations concerned,&#13;
Russia and the United States;&#13;
to make agreements betweear them*&#13;
es~atrtfitiritager alrte*efc. i * It i *&#13;
necessary to advise each of tbe governments&#13;
represented In China at the various&#13;
propositions as they are broached*&#13;
Hence the U. &amp; has declined to quit&#13;
Pekin on Russia's terms.&#13;
Up to and including Aug. 18 there&#13;
were 4.1,980 foreign- troops in China aa&#13;
follows: American, 155 officers and&#13;
4,470 men; British, 189 officers and&#13;
.\942 men; French, 115 officers and&#13;
::,903 men; Italian, 13 officers and 377&#13;
men; Japanese, 573 officers and 10,50«&#13;
men;-Russian, 275 officers and 11,500&#13;
men.&#13;
Fifty Americans, including the Misses&#13;
Condit-Smith, Woodward and Paine,&#13;
have arrived at Tien Ts'in from Pekin,&#13;
which city they left on the 32d by boat.&#13;
The commissary department in preparing&#13;
to establish an extensive winter&#13;
base ut Tongku. ,&#13;
Three Russian, tv/6 Japanese, one&#13;
British and one American battalion&#13;
searched the Imperial park south of&#13;
Pekin one day recently for "Boxers."&#13;
No armed force was found, only a single&#13;
Chinese scout, and he was shot.&#13;
Officers who have arrived at Tien&#13;
Tsin from Pekin report that Gen.'^Chaffee&#13;
(commanding the American forces&#13;
in China) is making all the necessary&#13;
preparations to maintain 13,000 men&#13;
through the winter. ~~&#13;
Iniring an engagement seven miles&#13;
from Tien Tsin. on the 19th, Col. Wlnt&#13;
caused the enemy to disperse after&#13;
killing about 100. The Americans had&#13;
five wo muled.&#13;
It is reported that the crnporor, the&#13;
dowager empress and Prince Tuan are&#13;
iu tho neighborhood of Tai-Yuan-Fu,&#13;
which is situated 240 miles southwest&#13;
of Pekin.&#13;
Fifteen of the American wounded,&#13;
including tin1, marines wounded during&#13;
the siege of the legations, have arrived&#13;
at Tien Tsin by boat from Pekin.&#13;
It is announced at Shanghai that the&#13;
United Stales battleship Oregon and&#13;
four German battleships have been ordered&#13;
to Wu Sung.&#13;
The American signal service corps,&#13;
co-operating &lt;with that of the British,&#13;
1ms completed the telegraph line from&#13;
T a k u t o Pvkin.&#13;
The Russians, Hermans and Japan*&#13;
esc are roustautly pushing troops on&#13;
to IVUin.&#13;
• \ % :&#13;
'•\-", l;&#13;
tnvnr.ir.s? r.\::r*ACKSi IN A CHICAGO PLXLIG SCHOOL*&#13;
(iolrt Mfflul Awnrrtwl W a l t e r Uttkwr &amp; Co.&#13;
I'urls, Aug. 20.—The judges at tho&#13;
Paris Exposition have just awarded a&#13;
g»ld medal, to Walter Baker &amp; Co.,&#13;
Ltd., Dorchester, Mass., U. S. A,, for&#13;
their preparations of cocod and chocolate.&#13;
This famous company, no?/ the&#13;
largest manufacturers of cocoa and&#13;
. 1 hocolatcin the world, have received&#13;
the Inchest awards from the great international&#13;
and other expositions in&#13;
R*irope and America. This is the&#13;
third award from a Paris Exposition.&#13;
BASE BALL.&#13;
Fi'iow wcstibHiit H19 oillclal stand 1 nor ot the&#13;
rliiUsin' tin' National aul American ieii„Mi3* up&#13;
luanit-mduiims,' Kuday, August 31st:&#13;
Won. Lfnv Per ct&#13;
Brooklyn 01 ^9 .610&#13;
PitUsbura ?&gt;6 48 .f33&#13;
Philadelphia fti ftO .510&#13;
Boston Rl :&gt;I .500&#13;
nhi&lt;:»»o... o'J :.3 AS'i&#13;
Cincinnati '....,,..-. 49 fa .4&amp;)&#13;
Si. Louis 4« 51 .4?!&#13;
Neu York 41 Ot) .40«&#13;
AMUIilCAN I.KA(iU£ '&#13;
Won. Losfi P e r c t&#13;
CTiirnjro CO 43 .616&#13;
Milwaukee 66 5U .555&#13;
ftulkmapoli.s i . . . (S3 53 .54:}&#13;
Detroit 0:) »&gt;• .504&#13;
Kuns:isCity CO 19 .ft«4&#13;
(Cleveland iiO 61 .479&#13;
UulTalo fr&gt; GS .433&#13;
M i n n e a p o l i s . . . . 45 7.'&gt; .3*5&#13;
THE MARKETS.&#13;
LIVE RTOUB.&#13;
N*w fork— cattle Sheep LamTw Hess&#13;
Best «radcs...j4 10455 no ft i;» w ;.&gt; KJ 1.¾&#13;
Lower grades. :.' 4i&gt;^3 35 L' 5tf ' 5 50 a b0&#13;
Chicago—*&#13;
Bent gra&lt;k&lt;H....5 30£.n 00 4 01 5 53 5 f,"5&#13;
Lower j;iaUe.s. U tW(frj ?.'&gt; J 35 4 00 a U»&#13;
D e t r o i t -&#13;
Best »radtift....:t 7:^4 5J 4 0) "&gt; 0) 6 4¾&#13;
Lower grades. 3 &amp;t®j 7.1 3 oj 4 i&gt; 5 0J&#13;
llaffalo—&#13;
Best crude* ....4 4U®4 ?:• 4 40 6 03 5 75&#13;
Lower vnide*. .4UX«.4 40 3 ?5 f&gt; 8&gt; 5 45&#13;
Cincinnati—&#13;
Best griHlCH... ..*• UX&amp;5 65 4 25 5 73 5 50&#13;
Lower urucltH 3 &lt;aj£4 75 3 40 4 50 tr£0&#13;
Pttuburg—&#13;
Best «ra*W*....5 fsiQit *) 4 31 5 75 5 f i&#13;
Lower tiiudcs..4 l!~Ktf4 &amp; 4 00 5 25 5 40&#13;
«RA1.N. KTC.&#13;
Ml hnut, Corn. O t t i&#13;
No. '-i ru&lt;l No. 2 mis No. S white&#13;
New York 7UC7V* **bHK ?&lt;^SS&#13;
Lhlc*«» 74^71(1 &gt;4*J9 tflQ2l«{&#13;
"o«truit. ?y®7vs&lt; 4.^4.' vyyaii&#13;
Toledo 7n075;4 43043H Z&amp;22&#13;
(Jtaclnnatl 7iO?«',% 4 ^ 4 . ^ ^3^3)¾&#13;
1'Utsbarg 8l«*»14 44iJ44 38¾¾¾&#13;
Buffulo (M0M)S( 43^43 55^85¾&#13;
^•Detroit-Hay, No. i TimoUiv.fll ft) per toe.&#13;
Potato**, 45o per U\i Livo Poultry, spring&#13;
nMckciiH, 8Hc per lb; fnwla, no: lurKoys, 10«;&#13;
ilueks, «H«-. Km* Htriclly fresh. 13opcrdb*ea,&#13;
Mutter. Iwstdalrj', 18c |Kr lb; creamery 31ft&#13;
*V&#13;
^:..&#13;
\&#13;
^vPiPS&#13;
M&amp;&amp; PITS mum&#13;
i nil i i I in. • ' • , •&#13;
^ ' . ^ . ^ K ^ ^ T t o f e ^ ^ B m n i a « o e p HUt «•&#13;
^ . i , V , ; ^ e ^ Q r a v « » o * * i t « l r oaetine May D»-&#13;
jtaaaa-~B*ftcues Are Frequently A t -&#13;
tteasjfttoiS."&#13;
I' ^&#13;
N~~ A at)rryppndent In Laird, Mich.,&#13;
I * .&gt;;;*;&#13;
w f i t e t ; l a i r d i s probably n o t as tough&#13;
A t o w n a a w a s Ft. Dodge i n Its prime,&#13;
b u t ' i t draw* u s much water for i t s&#13;
capacity as a n y Michigan t o w n , and a t&#13;
present Is probably about a3~tough a&#13;
•camp aa can be found at the end o f a n y&#13;
new railway i n t h e Union. T h e place&#13;
w a s a mere hamlet previous t o t h e&#13;
building of t h e Ontonagon county&#13;
branch of tho Mineral R a n g e railroad,&#13;
w"hich i s m a i n l y .responsible for t h e&#13;
present population of about 1,000.&#13;
Last week w a s rather quiet, a s times&#13;
g o here, y e t i t opened w i t h a firstclass&#13;
suicide, followed i m m e d a t e l y b y&#13;
a highway robbery, after w h i c h a&#13;
prominent citizen became e n g a g e d i n&#13;
a controversy w i t h another well-&#13;
Jmown resident and suffered t h e loss of&#13;
four front teeth. W h i l e l y i n g i n t h e&#13;
road," insensible from the r o u g h dental&#13;
practice of his opponent, the party In&#13;
question w a s "touched" for h i s cash&#13;
by a passer-by—and s o i t g o e s from&#13;
day t o day.&#13;
A short t i m e /.so a lahorer w a s discharged&#13;
b y t h e railroad contractors&#13;
for continued drunkenness. Thirsting"&#13;
for revenge, he waited till evening,&#13;
then threw a large stone through the&#13;
w i n d o w of the firm's office, s t r i k i n g the&#13;
junior partner a glancing blow o n the&#13;
temple. T h e ma a was s t u n n e d , a n d,&#13;
falling forward, knocked the kerosene&#13;
lamp from t h e table. He w a s severely&#13;
burned before rescued a n d t h e office&#13;
w a s destroyed, with nearly a l l t h e&#13;
books and papers of the firm.&#13;
_ D e p u t y Sheriff T o m N i c h o l s i s&#13;
charged w i t h k e e p i n g t h e peace i n&#13;
Laird, and despite no c o m m o n a m o u n t&#13;
of "sand," backed by unusual i n g e n u -&#13;
ity, t h e officer i s sorely p u t t o i t at&#13;
times. W h e n h e call3 on a citizen for&#13;
aid i n t a k i n g a fractious offender.there&#13;
is n o c e r t a i n t y that .the-, a s s i s t a n c e r e n - .&#13;
dered may n o t be given for t h e prisoner.&#13;
Then, again, t h e t o w n s h i p authorities&#13;
h a v e never s e e n their* way&#13;
clear t o appropriate the $500 required&#13;
to -build a'Jail, hence the officer mu3t&#13;
n o t o n l y take his prisoners w h e n and&#13;
where he best can, bat m u s t / h o l d them&#13;
without a place o f detention. Ordinarily&#13;
officers would have succumbed&#13;
to the combination of unfavorable circumstances,&#13;
but n o t s o Officer Nichols,&#13;
whose determination rises higher a s&#13;
obstacles increase i n his path of duty.&#13;
For purposes of detention, Mr. Nichols&#13;
has divided all offenders into two&#13;
classes, t h e first c o n s i s t i n g or plain&#13;
drunks, t h e s e c o n d of all law-breakers.&#13;
The plain drunks are t o w e d out tn a&#13;
steep hill, k n o w n locally a s "Nichols'&#13;
Nek," and are s h o t down the declivity&#13;
%*f;) W^ -Oi"&#13;
• M A L I . C O Y W A 3 CARJEFUi*.&#13;
Ill* Kiel WW* t » Viola** t b e U r D y&#13;
&lt;.- «masbin* the T*eefc.&#13;
3Jhe narrow strip o f asphalt w h i c h&#13;
tho city laid in Michigan a?enue from&#13;
Randolph t o River streets for the benefit&#13;
of cyclists is a constant bone of,&#13;
contention. A l l of t h e traffic in t h e&#13;
district i s of t h e heaviest kind, t h e&#13;
great trucks c t the wholesale houses&#13;
constantly passing and repassing, a n d&#13;
most of t h e drivers s h o w i n g a decided&#13;
preference for running the w h e e l s o n&#13;
one side of their trueko on t h e asphalt&#13;
strip. A battered t a n d e m o n w h i c h&#13;
two smajl b o y s were mounted wound&#13;
Its s i n u o u s way a m o n g the trucks the&#13;
other day, in momentary danger of bei&#13;
n g wiped off. tho map by a threehorad&#13;
team, T h e lads tried t o stick t o&#13;
the asphalt track a s long a s possible,&#13;
but a heavily loaded truck held t h e&#13;
right of- way i n front of them. " H e y ,&#13;
there," yelled t h e steersman of t h e&#13;
tandem. T h e driver turned s l o w l y&#13;
around and looked over tbe^heavy load&#13;
to e c c what w a s t h e matter, "Pull&#13;
out; will y o u ? " yelled t h e l a d i n a&#13;
shrill treble. The driver smiled and&#13;
turned t o his three horses again. "Say,&#13;
pull out of there," demanded t h e lad.&#13;
"I don't w a n t t o run into y o u and get&#13;
pinched."—Chicago Chronicle.&#13;
';••?':"... . -D*et far -the. ISoweJ*...&#13;
N o m a t t e r w h a t a i l s y o n , h e a d a c h e&#13;
to a cancer, y o u w i l l n e v e r g e t w e l l&#13;
u n t i l y o u r b o w e l s a r e p u t r i g h t ,&#13;
CASGAHKTS h e l p - n a t u r e , cure y o u&#13;
w i t h o u t a gripe o r p a i n , produce e a s y&#13;
natural movements; c o s t y o u just t o&#13;
oentyi t o s t a r t g e t t i n g y o u r h e a l t h back,&#13;
CASCARETS Candy* Cathartic, t b V&#13;
g e n u i n e , p u t up In m e t a l b o x e s , jevery&#13;
t a b l e t h a s C. C. C. s t a m p e d o n it, B e -&#13;
w a r e of imitations.&#13;
"\v*ith R o d and Gun i n Arkansas"&#13;
and "Enroute t o the Southland,"&#13;
are t h o titles of t w o n e w&#13;
booklets Just issued by t h e General&#13;
Passenger Department of t h e Chicago&#13;
&amp; Eastern Illinois Railroad for free&#13;
distribution. The first deals with hunting&#13;
and fishing on the St. F r a n e i s river&#13;
in Northeastern Arkansas, a region&#13;
abundantly supplied with g a m e fish,&#13;
wild fowl, wild turkey, deer and bear.&#13;
The second booklet contains a d e -&#13;
scription of t h e points of interest, Chicago&#13;
t o Nashville, historical matter of&#13;
the early days and many Indian legends&#13;
c o m m o n throughout Illinois, Indiana&#13;
and Tennessee years ago. Both&#13;
booklets are embellished w i t h m a n y&#13;
fine half t o n e cuts and are m o s t interesting.&#13;
If y o u desire a copy o f either&#13;
send your address t o d L. S t o n e , G. P.&#13;
£ " 1 7 ^ . , C. &amp; E. I . R ; R . , Chicago.&#13;
Better Times far Dra« Clerks.. .-&#13;
Governor Roosevelt has signed t h e&#13;
Henry brH,- w h i c h provides- that n o&#13;
drug clerk in N e w York s h a l l be a l -&#13;
lowed t o work m o r e t h a n seventy&#13;
hours a week; that t h e y s h a l l be a l -&#13;
lowed one hour for each meal and h a v e&#13;
one full day off i n every t w o weeks.&#13;
Another clause of t h e bill provides&#13;
that clerks must n o t sleep i n a n y&#13;
store o r apartment w h i c h does n o t&#13;
comply with t h e sanitary inspection&#13;
of t h e health board. T h e passage of&#13;
this bill will m e a n a general overhauling&#13;
of drug stores throughout t h e&#13;
city.—Exchange.&#13;
ff •I'II; I K I 0f&#13;
B O H E M I A N S T U D I O P A R T I * © .&#13;
WANTED I&#13;
Hustling man or woman to represent us in&#13;
all sections. We manufacture the Wanted Liniment,&#13;
tho most powerful and quickest healing&#13;
liniment in the world. Send 3c stamp for information,&#13;
or 10c and we will send a trial bottle&#13;
to prove what we say for the Wanted Liniment.&#13;
We give control of our goods to one person&#13;
only in a place. Address, WASTTKD P R E P -&#13;
ARATION Co., 48 Shelby St., Detroit, Mich.&#13;
The PeUgfcSf a l CoaaWnatlca o f Wmn a a *&#13;
• reraaeUty.&#13;
It, 1* Juat a s try*, said the Qb**r*»**&#13;
Girl, t h a t proper e n v i r o n m e n t c o u n t s&#13;
Quite a s m u c h i n the battle of s u c c e s s -&#13;
ful e n t e r t a i n i n g a s the- proper; placi&#13;
n g o f a n a r m y does i n actual warfare.&#13;
W h e n t h e surroundings a r e&#13;
charming, a h o s t o f e v e n very moderate&#13;
tact and ability can persuade people&#13;
i n t o believing that they h a v e&#13;
passed a m o s t delightful e v e n i n g . Perh&#13;
a p s t h i s i s w h y studio parties are alw&#13;
a y s placed a m o n g the t h i n g s t o b e&#13;
desired. Certainly a studio generally&#13;
m e a n s a t h r o n g i n g place o f m a n y old&#13;
and rare t h i n g s , all valuable in r e m i n -&#13;
iscences and compelling s t a r t i n g p o i n t s&#13;
of conversation, for if t h e s e trifles&#13;
have been picked u p a b r o a d , t h e y&#13;
either a w a k e n memories i n the m i n d s&#13;
of t h o s e w h o have been there o r raise&#13;
the h o p e s of the people w h o m e a n t o&#13;
g o s o m e day,-and thus prove a splendid&#13;
s t i m u l u s to a general talk.—Exchange.&#13;
Y o u c a n s e l d o m judpe a m a n b y h i s&#13;
a c t i o n s a w a y from home.&#13;
L O W S A T E &amp; X C U R S J © N J g y&#13;
* * • • ew^SgNP^SBBJ^SViF ^s^psjas^sr M V 0 ; f SBJBBBS^ ^mf^m^m t S B » B V B ^ ) S B B ^&#13;
tain Boot*. - ^ -.., ^&#13;
To points In the West, Southwest, and&#13;
Southeast at half-rates (plus |2) lot&#13;
the round trip. Tickets on sale Tttea*&#13;
days, September 4 and 18, October 1&#13;
and Id, November 6 and 20, and December&#13;
4 and 18» 1900. For full information,&#13;
land folders, etc., address an*.&#13;
agent of the above lines, or H. C.&#13;
Townsend, G. P. fe T. Agent, St. Louis.&#13;
Missouri. •&#13;
Qwletaa,&#13;
Freddy—Miss Smarts i s a funny girl.&#13;
I m e t her the other, d a y and w h e n I&#13;
said "hello" s h e failed t o respond. S h e&#13;
slipped off her finger ring, a n d o n l y&#13;
looked a t me kind of s a u c y - l i k e .&#13;
Arthur—She supposed you took h e r&#13;
for a t e l e p h o n e girl. Y o u s a i d "hello/*&#13;
you k n o w . So s h e did w h a t t h e t e l e -&#13;
p h o n e girls do when t h e y w a n t t o g e t&#13;
rid of you. "Ring off," y o u know.—&#13;
B o s t o n Transcript.&#13;
U n l e s s a m a n i s g e n e r o u s h e Is seldom&#13;
j u s t .&#13;
THE DEWEY HOMESTEAD&#13;
It Was All Bight.&#13;
Mr. E . C o n o m y — W h a t do you m e a n&#13;
by buying all t h e s e t h i n g s ? Mrs. E .&#13;
Conomy—Don't g e t excited, dear; I&#13;
d i d n l buy them. I had t h e m charged.&#13;
—Philadelphia Record.&#13;
Iitieky Tailor.&#13;
Samuel Kanner, a tailor, w a s anxious&#13;
a s he ran up the stairs t o his flat&#13;
on t h e second floor of No. 388 East&#13;
Houston street. He had just c o m e&#13;
from work.&#13;
"It's a boy," said the nurse, w h o met&#13;
him a t the door.&#13;
"And I also wish t o congratulate&#13;
you," said a stranger, "for y o u have&#13;
won $1,000 in a lottery. You guessed&#13;
the lucky numbers."&#13;
"It wasn't me who guessed," shouted&#13;
the happy tailor. "It was m y wife.&#13;
A baby and $1,000 in one day! W h a t&#13;
a lucky day i t was for mo when I married&#13;
Betsy rierzfeld'"—New York&#13;
World.&#13;
GUNS, SrORTING GOODS&#13;
and Fisbtajr Tackle. Our catalogue gives Just&#13;
what huntars are looking for. Lowest prices on&#13;
lamat and most reliable Guns, Rifles and Hunters"&#13;
outntn. Latest game law*. Largest Sportng&#13;
goodshouBe In Michigan. V. KlndWr.Saginaw&#13;
The golden opportunity of a man's life is when&#13;
be asks a chance to marry an heiress.&#13;
Ball's Catarrh Cure&#13;
Is taken internally. Price, 75c.&#13;
Virtu re does not consist rathe absence of&#13;
passions, but in the control of them.&#13;
the&#13;
DO Y O U NEED A T O N I C ?&#13;
Lemon Bitters will brace you up. Send lOe&#13;
to pay postage on free bottle. Lemon Bitters&#13;
Med. Co., St. Johns, Mich.&#13;
Virtue Is like the polar star, which keeps its&#13;
place, and all stars turn towards it.&#13;
FITS l&gt;rm»nAt!yCured. NofltaornerroonteMafter&#13;
first &lt;Ujr'« n*e of Dr. Kline** Great Nerre Kestorer.&#13;
Bend for F R E E S2.O0 trial bottle and treadae.&#13;
Da. U. H. Kusu, Ltd., »31 Area St., 1'hlUdelphU, Pa.&#13;
A parlor match is often the result, rather than&#13;
the precursor, of a steady name.&#13;
Mrs. Wlntlow's Sootning Syrup.&#13;
For children teething, softens the sums, reduces to&#13;
fiammallon, alian pauiucures windcoUc 35o a bottle.&#13;
Some men are so stlngry they refuse to smile&#13;
except at the expense of others.&#13;
1&#13;
A F T E R P A Y DAY.&#13;
by the strong a r m of t h e law. T h e&#13;
hill i s s o steep t h a t tonly a perfectly&#13;
' sober man can ascend i t , and n o victim&#13;
o f e v e n one g l a s s o f t h e local&#13;
brand, of^ "tanglefoot" has been k n o w n&#13;
to return t o t o w n until c o m p l e t e l y over&#13;
. the effects of his spree. A s m o o t h and&#13;
clearly marked path h a s been worn&#13;
from top t o bottom of «&gt;e hill by the&#13;
victims of J o h n Barleycorn.&#13;
Deputy Sheriff N i c h o l s i s provided&#13;
with a gcx&gt;Jy supply of handcuffs and&#13;
has taken p o s s e s s i o n of a tall row o f&#13;
fence posts a l o n g the r i g h t of way of&#13;
the railroad. T h e s e p o s t s are nearly&#13;
a foot in t h i c k n e s s and full eight feet&#13;
high. T h e parties arrested for, any&#13;
minor offense than the p r e v a l e n t one&#13;
of drunkenness are escorted, o n e a t a&#13;
time, t o t h i s row o f posts, and each i s&#13;
handcuffed w i t h h i s a r m s behind him&#13;
and around t h e post. R e s c u e s are occasionally&#13;
made, but the r e s c u i n g party&#13;
must secure a file t o cut t h e handcuffs,&#13;
or else chop d o w n t h e post, and a s&#13;
either procedure i s usually a t t e n d s ) b y&#13;
more or less loss o f blood on t h e part&#13;
of t h e rescued, o w i n g t o misapplied&#13;
seal o n the r # r t o f his friends, t h e average&#13;
offender prefers t o remain a&#13;
prisoner. A t t i m e s of unusual excitem&#13;
e n t or hilarity, such a s follow pay&#13;
day, the scene i s decidedly novel, for&#13;
.'the entire row of posts i s i n use, e t c h&#13;
holding i t s prisoner, chained t o t h e&#13;
• t a k e a s t h o u g h for m a r t y r d o m by fire&#13;
or t o suffer death a t t h e p o i n t s o f&#13;
aboriginal t o m a h a w k a a n d scalping&#13;
kalvea.&#13;
' y&#13;
KIDNEY TROUBLES OF WOMEN&#13;
alias Frederick's Letters Show How Sha&#13;
Belled on Mrs. Einkham and Was&#13;
Cored.&#13;
" D E A B Mns. PiNKnA.si:—I h a v e a&#13;
y e l l o w , m u d d y complexion, f e e l tired&#13;
and h a v e bearing d o w n pains. M e n s e s&#13;
have n o t appeared for three m o n t h s ;&#13;
s o m e t i m e s a m troubled w i t h a w h i t e&#13;
discharge. A l s o h a v e kidney a n d bladder&#13;
trouble.&#13;
I h a v e b e e n this w a y for a l o n g t i m e ,&#13;
and feel s o miserable I t h o u g h t I w o u l d&#13;
w r i t e t o y o u and sec if y o u c o u l d d o m e&#13;
a n y g o o d . " — M i s s E D X A . F B B D E B I C K ,&#13;
Troy, Ohio, A u g . 6, 1899.&#13;
" D E A R M B S . P I N K H A M :—I h a v e used&#13;
L y d i a E . P i n k h a m ' s V e g e t a b l e Compound&#13;
according t o directions, a n d c a n&#13;
s a y I h a v e n o t f e l t so w e l l for y e a r s a s&#13;
I d o a t present. Before t a k i n g y o u r&#13;
medicine a more miserable person y o n&#13;
n e v e r s a w . I could n o t e a t o r s l e e p ,&#13;
a n d did n o t c a r e t o t a l k w i t h a n y o n e .&#13;
N o w I f e e l s o w e l l I c a n n o t b e g r a t e f u l&#13;
e n o u g h t o y o u for w h a t y o u h a v e d o n e&#13;
for me."—Miss E D N A F B K D X B I C S , Troy,&#13;
Ohio, S e p t 10, 1899.&#13;
Backache Cured&#13;
** D E A R M R S . P I N K H A M :—I w r i t e t o&#13;
t h a n k y o u for t h e g o o d L y d i a K. P i n k -&#13;
h a m ' s V e g e t a b l e Compound h a s d o n e roe.&#13;
I t i s t h e o n l y - m e d i c i n e I h a v e f o u n d&#13;
t h a t h e l p e d me. I doctored w i t h o n e&#13;
of t h e b e s t physicians i n t h e c i t y o f&#13;
N e w York, b u t received n o benefit. I&#13;
h a d b e e n a i l i n g for a b o u t s i x t e e n y e a r s ,&#13;
w a s s o w e a k and n e r v o u s t h a t I could&#13;
hardly w a l k ; h a d continued pain i n m y&#13;
back a n d w a s troubled w i t h leucorrhcea.&#13;
Menses w e r e irregular a n d p a i n f u l .&#13;
Words c a n n o t e x p r e s s t h e benefit 1 h a v e&#13;
derived from t h e u s e of y o n r medicine.&#13;
I hoartily r e c o m m e n d it t o all suffering&#13;
w o m e n . * * — M B S . M A S T BAjtsHuresi*&#13;
Windsor, Ps* _ '&#13;
—Carter's Ink la SclentlUcally&#13;
compounded of the best materials. If your&#13;
dealer doos not keep it he can get it for you.&#13;
Self-interest is more likely&#13;
judgment than anything el^f.&#13;
to wurp a man's&#13;
The above picture shows the house where George Dewey was born December 36th,&#13;
1837. I t was occupied by the Dewey family until after the death of the Admiral**&#13;
father. I t then came into the ftosse*Aion of Captain Edward Dewey, who sold i t t o&#13;
Its present owner and occupant, T. P . Gordon, Esq., in the summer of 1889. Mr. Gordon&#13;
moved it to its present site i n the .oil owing February, 1890, and has occupied i t until&#13;
the present time. Mr. and Mrs. Gordon are unfailing in their courtesy to tho thousands&#13;
w h o visit this shrine, the birthplace of Admiral Dewey.&#13;
A recent letter from T. R. Gordon to the Parana Drug M T g Co., Colambus, Ohio,&#13;
reads as follows: ^ , .&#13;
"It i s with great satisfaction that I find myself able, after an extended trial, to&#13;
write y o n in this emphatic manner of the good yonr Peruna has done m y wife. 1 "She has been troubled with catarrh from childhood, and whenever the&#13;
has a cold, br any unusual condition of the weather, It was worse than usual,&#13;
and seemed more than she could bear. The dropping in her throat at night prevented&#13;
refreshing sleep; in fact, w e had come t o look upon i t a s incurable, and from&#13;
the many remedies used in vain we had reason to.&#13;
*&lt; We are thank tul and happy to say that your 'Peruna' has been of great&#13;
benefit to her, and I confidently look lor * complete and entire cure. High&#13;
praise is not too much to bestow upon your remedy." T. R. G o s n o s .&#13;
Address The Peruna Medicine Co., Columbus, Ohio, for free book on catarrh.&#13;
:u,\,,,,-t •&lt;,,!,&gt;»,.T K K | ) | | a t * J p l M i l I&#13;
J. &amp; C'MAGUIfrt'S EXTRACT u . l i ^ , " : , . ' 1 V J ' • . 1 • r , . , , ••&#13;
Plso's Cure cannot be too highly spoken of as&#13;
a cough cure.— J. W. O'BRIKN. 3¾ Third Ave.,&#13;
N., Minneapolis. Minn., Jan. 6.1900.&#13;
The good Samaritan does not carry oil in- his&#13;
cruse and vitrei ononis tongue.&#13;
i&lt;t^rrhco,v.. P j S e n t e i ^ a Jut B &gt; w - l&#13;
C o r n r M a i n t S . . N E^V ETR F A I L S ! ^9MQ t,n •**:« m . K i . - i . - , i n c n l 8 4 t , tti.:&lt;&gt;mm&#13;
o t &gt; , e d ' o y ' o V i d i h ' t &gt; " P h y s i c i a n e . U s e d to&gt; o u r AetnV' a n ( i N;&gt;vv.&#13;
}. 6t'"c;. M A G V M r t E M E D ' C I N E C O . , St," L o u i s . M o .&#13;
DRUQC1S1&#13;
Lots of hair, which often man the prettiest ftca,&#13;
prerftntea by PAIEKII'S HAIS BALSAM.&#13;
XIufDXsooasB, the best cure for corns. licU.&#13;
^&#13;
Minds of steel are of ten narrowed down that&#13;
they may have a cutting edge. ABSOLUTE&#13;
P U T N A M F A D E L E S S D Y E S are fast&#13;
to sunlijrht, w a s h i n g and rubbing. SECURITY.&#13;
• i n i r O I When doctor! and other.. faU to rcl&#13;
l l l I r N ' Uereyoo.try N. F.J«.K.;Jt never fatts.&#13;
box free. Hn.au&#13;
The hen is a liberal fowl;&#13;
when she takes a grain.&#13;
she gives, a peck&#13;
"AH the Sweetness of Living Blossoms." the match&#13;
lew perfume, Murray &lt;K Lanman Florid* Water.&#13;
Genuine&#13;
Unless a man keeps&#13;
soon throw him down.&#13;
moving the world will&#13;
When cycling, take a bar of Whites Yucatan.&#13;
You can ride further and easier.&#13;
An e m p t y parse i s responsible&#13;
s o m e m a t r i m o n y failures.&#13;
for&#13;
Bar Gantla Retort&#13;
Judge Taft of Ohio tells this story&#13;
of how his wife once turned the tables&#13;
on h i m when h e attempted a b i t of&#13;
sarcasm at her expense.&#13;
i'he J u d g e and Mrs. Taft attended&#13;
church one Sunday morning, and after&#13;
service Mrs. Taft was t h e center of a&#13;
group of women w h o stood in the aisle&#13;
and held a long and animated discus*&#13;
sion o n some topic of feminine inter*&#13;
est. a s women will.&#13;
T h e judge g r e w impatient a t the delay,&#13;
and was very g r i m o n t h e way&#13;
home. • At lost he said:&#13;
"Do y o u know you chattering w o m e n&#13;
remind me of Balaam's a s s blocking&#13;
the w a y ? "&#13;
"O, no," replied Mrs. Taft severe!.?.&#13;
"You are mistaken. It w a s t h e angel&#13;
t h a t blocked t h e w a y of t h e . a s s ! " —&#13;
Memphis Scimitar.&#13;
Carter's&#13;
Little Over Pills.&#13;
Must Bear Signature of&#13;
CHEAP FARMS&#13;
DovogwurtmiK? IAD AAA ll*BCC Improved and unimproved&#13;
l U U - U U U A M I t s e farming lands to be divided&#13;
and sold on longtime and easy payments, a UttM&#13;
each rear. Cnrae and tee UB or write, THE TBUM AX&#13;
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Th J Truman Moss Estate,Cro*sweil,$anilac Co..Mica.&#13;
T H E STANDARD&#13;
SEWIII&#13;
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m-ike 25 styles, including&#13;
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Also best low priced ma*&#13;
chines. For prices address&#13;
J. B. ALWttCH. State Mae*.&#13;
DETROIT, Mica.&#13;
5ee Pac-Sbnlle Wrapper Batow.&#13;
ICARTEKS FOSIEAmCHL&#13;
F0I DIZZINESS.&#13;
FBI UU0USIESS.&#13;
rot TOftMB uvea.&#13;
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1,000 NEWSPAPERS&#13;
Are now using our&#13;
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No extra charge is made for sawing plates&#13;
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Send a trial order to this office and be&#13;
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WESTERN • E W S P A P E * UNION,&#13;
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•txw'AU,ranoarOaaMBS oanatveet fotaareaMlesaaaiattt&#13;
Uaayeipartloe^aiatBe^ooaipareniHthw^kiaea tba&amp;tera MUaMM toia^&#13;
•ve^eaep^oaeaaeeatt laewywaythe aqaalof aneataaehtata,tae moat &lt;—-*•&#13;
•pea at sewing moniae ^ajeea, f3tMMwinaata.Mi Teaws*&#13;
SOBtfT&#13;
offense*&#13;
IttleSAsli'*1**&#13;
rsaeaj.&#13;
OOff&#13;
aaae* m» ie&#13;
Daneatooee&#13;
T . H L M U R T S SUi^Y.t9WC.MInM^&#13;
Preterit Hat a Capital*&#13;
Pretoria is not, as is generally supposed,&#13;
the capital of the Transvaal.&#13;
Potchefstroom la the capital of the&#13;
state, tad Pretoria the seat of government.&#13;
They art about 10* ailea apart.&#13;
ttkeaaatweTlnfl Ms. plaata resHea this paper MONEY FOR [ BABY'S BAm TUB H S S S&#13;
SOLDIERS' HEIRS ur- cu** ****•"—*** *****"***&gt; *^**, B«4no&lt;T^lo»8oMl«rfwtMBiaaaho» W.N".U.-PBTROIT--MO.3O~I»OO Kataaaada oiea&gt;e aa)a, rtef t tbaeet caeaM JW«moea faiJ.li »nMai i(saiioi&#13;
l o t aold ee? asaa. JMirM*^aiMea. K^aaTareWTwaw&#13;
Viet aatveriaf MferHnawiri Wetta&#13;
- Keatioa Ittt faatr.&#13;
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V , .. »• • . « . . • • •&gt; • •• »•• : . . : . , ' V&#13;
•': 6 '• ,'.-'•' W . •» . . . ••%[. \\! , ••• • f: : . ; : .&#13;
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ASK YOUR GROCER FOR UANDI T ^ SOLD BY ALL .FIRST-CLASS DEALERS.&#13;
iALEO PICKA6ES ONLY-PURE MO FRIBRMT.&#13;
"IT OOSTS MO MORE-TRY IT"&#13;
ANDERSON.&#13;
Mrs. Clark is visiting relatives&#13;
near Adrian.&#13;
Wm, Sprout and wife now sport&#13;
a ne wrcanopy.&#13;
School began Monday with Will&#13;
Eoche as teacher.&#13;
Nora Durkee was in Stockbridge&#13;
Wednesday of last week.&#13;
Jas. Hoff was elected direccor&#13;
at the annual school meeting.&#13;
Mollie Wilson visited Jessie&#13;
Green in Pinckney one day last&#13;
week.&#13;
Will Singleton visited his sister&#13;
near Mimith Saturday night and&#13;
Sunday.^&#13;
L. E. Howiettr of the county&#13;
seat was in this place the first of&#13;
the week.&#13;
A goodly number from this&#13;
place attended the show in Pinckney&#13;
Friday.&#13;
Harry Moore and wife of Howell&#13;
visited Mrs. M's parents here&#13;
the first of th« week.&#13;
Glenn Hagerty spent the last of&#13;
last week and the first of this&#13;
among relatives in Perry.&#13;
Edward Bullis and wife visited&#13;
$heir daughter Mrs. M. Wasson,&#13;
near Stockbridge, Monday,&#13;
Mike Kuen and Lyle Martin of&#13;
Pinckney, called on friends in&#13;
this locality one day last week.&#13;
Mesdames Jas. Roche and Will&#13;
Dunning of Pinckney, called on&#13;
Anderson friends one day last&#13;
week.&#13;
Mrs. E. J. Durkee and son Fred&#13;
visited at the home of Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. Edward Cranna, near Gregory&#13;
Thursday.&#13;
Mrs. B. Singleton visited her&#13;
son Harry, near Stockbridge and&#13;
daughter Emma near Munith a&#13;
few days last week.&#13;
Floyd Bandall of Howell visited&#13;
friends here the last of last week.&#13;
He started Monday for Big Rapids&#13;
to attend school.&#13;
Chas. McGee is working for&#13;
Mrs. Wood in Dillivan Durkee's&#13;
place. They have moved temporially"&#13;
into part ~ot Mrs. Wood's&#13;
house.&#13;
Dillivan Durkee began teaching&#13;
in TJnadilla Monday and Samuel&#13;
Wilson in the Younglove district.&#13;
This is the first term for either&#13;
and we wish them succes3.&#13;
The following is the program of&#13;
the fanners' club for Sept. but we&#13;
are not informed where it will be&#13;
held:&#13;
Paper, Mike Ruen-&#13;
Solo, Florence Hoff&#13;
Paper Will Roche&#13;
Duet,. .Misses Minnie and Kittle Hoff&#13;
Paper, Will Sales&#13;
Recitation, Pacie Hinchey&#13;
Myrtle, the only child of Mr.&#13;
and Mrs. Fred Mackinder, aged 6&#13;
months died Saturday of intussusception&#13;
of the bowels. The y o q w&#13;
Margaret Greiner has gone to&#13;
Mt. Pleasanc to attend school.&#13;
Mrs. V. Perry visited at the&#13;
home of Mrs. Chas. Wood Thursday.&#13;
Florence Hoff spent the past&#13;
weejfc,visiting friends in Fowlerwile.&#13;
Highway commissioner, Lavey,&#13;
has put a new bridge in the crossway&#13;
just east of Mrs. Martin's&#13;
place.&#13;
WEST PUTNAM.&#13;
EH Plummer Sundayed in Uuadilla.&#13;
H. B. Gardner was in Howell&#13;
Tuesday.&#13;
Mrs. S. E. Barton is no better&#13;
at this writing.&#13;
Julia A. Braday is teaching at&#13;
Chubb's Corners.&#13;
John Haze of Marion is working&#13;
for Robt. Kelly.&#13;
Geo. White of Hamburg, called&#13;
on his parents Tuesday.&#13;
•School commences Monday with&#13;
Miss Mame Brady as teacher.&#13;
Mary Brown of Hamburg visited&#13;
at Robt. Kelly's last week.&#13;
James Fitzsimons of Pinckney,&#13;
is working for C. V. Van Winkle.&#13;
Ella Murphy began the fall&#13;
term in the Sprout district Monday.&#13;
John Watson and wife of Genoa&#13;
visited at D. M. Monk's&#13;
Monday.&#13;
Miss Georgia Gardner is in the&#13;
•WMMMPNM&#13;
I — . ^ V M M&#13;
HAMBURG.&#13;
Laura Becker is teaching in&#13;
Lock township, Ingham Co.&#13;
Ruby Kisby returned to his&#13;
school at So. Lyon Monday.&#13;
Ella Crane, of Oakley, visited&#13;
friends in this place last week.&#13;
Frank Perry and wjfe of Owosso,&#13;
called on friends here last Saturday.&#13;
- Gertrude Durand of Perry, visited&#13;
at the home of H. Olsaver&#13;
last week.&#13;
Jas. and .Mrs. Sam. Jones returned&#13;
Monday from their visit in&#13;
New York.&#13;
Edna, Florence aud Leland Ball&#13;
will attend school in Ypsilauti the&#13;
coming year.&#13;
About half of the population of&#13;
this village attended the farmer's&#13;
picnic last Saturday.&#13;
Mrs. Fred Stuart, of Dixboiough&#13;
is visiting with her parents, Wm.&#13;
Featherly and wife.&#13;
northern part of the state visiting&#13;
her aunt&#13;
K. VanWinkle and wife visited&#13;
her parents in Anderson the first&#13;
of the week.&#13;
G. "W. Sates~l6st; a '"horse Mon&#13;
day—an oyer supply of green corn&#13;
caused death.&#13;
Mrs. Phil Kellly and daughter&#13;
and Miss Swartz of Richmond,&#13;
Va. visited at P. Kelly's last&#13;
week.&#13;
The annual school meeting was&#13;
a disgrace to the district. Words&#13;
cannot express the disgust felt by&#13;
many.&#13;
EAST PUTNAM.&#13;
Wm. Pardee and family spent&#13;
While Jas. Hayner has been on&#13;
his vacation, a first-class barber&#13;
from Lansing has been running&#13;
the shop.&#13;
School opened Monday with&#13;
Bernice Greer as teacher. A&#13;
meeting of the district . was held&#13;
Monday evening and it was dicided&#13;
to have the new school house&#13;
ready for use next fall.&#13;
- » « « - » 4&#13;
RESOLUTIONS.&#13;
At a regular communication of&#13;
Livingston Lodge No. 76, F, &amp; A. M.,&#13;
held Sept. 4, 1900, the following resolutions&#13;
on the death .f N. N. Wbitcomb&#13;
were prepared and adopted:&#13;
WHEREAS:—The Almighty Ruler of the&#13;
universe has seen tit to remove from our&#13;
midst our worthy brother, N. N. Whitcomb,&#13;
who departed this life on the 24th&#13;
day of August, 1900, thereby severing- all&#13;
earthly ties that bound us together, therefore&#13;
RESOLVED:—That in this dispensation&#13;
of Divine Providence, the community has&#13;
lost a faithful citizen, his wife a devoted&#13;
husband and the Masonic fraternity a true&#13;
mason.&#13;
RESOLVED;—That in this the hour of&#13;
their desolation, we tender to the bereaved&#13;
family our deepest, kindest sympathies&#13;
and in their sorrow con?mend them to Him&#13;
who will fold the arms of His love and&#13;
protection around all those who put their&#13;
trust in Him.&#13;
RESOLVED:—That the foregoing resolui87tye^&#13;
fiscrtbed~on the minutes of the&#13;
Lodge, a eopy sent to the family and that&#13;
the same be published in the DISPATCH.&#13;
G. W. Teeple, f&#13;
Chas. Love, \ Committee.&#13;
W. J. Black, [&#13;
m m •&#13;
Business Locals.&#13;
Notice.&#13;
I am now ready to take in apples&#13;
and make cider at my mill in Pettysville.&#13;
J. H. Hooker.&#13;
Sunday in Gregory.&#13;
Mrs. Ransom Lake returned to {&#13;
her home at Ithaca, Wednesday.&#13;
Mayme Fish returned to her&#13;
-school duties at Fenton Saturday.&#13;
A goodly number from here&#13;
took in the farmers picnic Saturday.&#13;
Herbert Schoenals and family&#13;
of West Putnam, spent Sunday&#13;
here.&#13;
Roy Richards and Albert Mills&#13;
of Marion, called on friends here&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
J. W. Sweeney and wife of&#13;
Chilson, were callers in this place&#13;
Tuesday.&#13;
We are glad to see Thos. Eagan,&#13;
who was injured quite badly a&#13;
FABITI FOK SALE&#13;
A good farm of 120 acres within&#13;
two miles of the village for sale at a&#13;
couple have the spmpathy o f ^ J ¥^ot^ ^ m e a S0 ' a ^ e *°' be out.&#13;
community.&#13;
h4 .. ..i j&#13;
»-.'&#13;
Card of Thasks.&#13;
vVe desire in thi3 way to'ex&#13;
onr heartfelt thanks to all those who&#13;
«o kindly assisted us in the sickness&#13;
and death of onr darling child and&#13;
also to the cboir who furnished the&#13;
beautiful music. May God reward&#13;
tbtm all.&#13;
' r Sr.andMr».F. W. MqEiodor&#13;
G. W. and Miss Kate&#13;
iBrown visited Mrs. Bert Hause in&#13;
I Hamtrarg Tuesday and Wednesday.&#13;
Mrs. R. W. Lake who has been&#13;
spending several days- wilh her&#13;
son in Marion, returned home the&#13;
past week. «&#13;
I Subscribe for Dispatch.&#13;
reasonable price. Anyone desiring"&#13;
farm property will do well to call at&#13;
this office for particulars.&#13;
The A t h l e t i c Girl.&#13;
The athletic girl is apt to be influential,&#13;
to have power—and most of us&#13;
like this—and when she expresses an&#13;
opinion she is generally listened to&#13;
with respect. A sound mind in a&#13;
sound body is the superlative o* attraction,&#13;
and thi? a girl may and&#13;
should possess. For most gir^e, as&#13;
for many older women too. it 1«? wo'l&#13;
to strive for the rounded life, the T e&#13;
of symmetry, the life which is not unduly&#13;
developed in one dirrc ion ^ the&#13;
expense of another.—Ladies' Home&#13;
Journal.&#13;
A j ' t i n i t n g r A p t i W i l l&#13;
A wealthy engineer recently talked&#13;
his last will and testament into a&#13;
phonograph. Then with a hot copper&#13;
wire he r.igned his name om the wax&#13;
roll of the phonograph, the witnesses&#13;
doing likewise, and the "document**&#13;
was thereupon completed.&#13;
. Ceylon is the home of the largest&#13;
spider in the worla. This web spinning&#13;
monster lives in the most mountainous&#13;
districts of that rugged islanl.&#13;
and places Its net, measuring fiom 5&#13;
to ten feet in diameter, across the&#13;
chasms and fissures In rocks..&#13;
The largest painting in the world,&#13;
exclusive of panoramas and cyclodramas,&#13;
is in the grand salon of the&#13;
Doge's Palace at Venice. This painting&#13;
is 84 feet wide by 84 feet high.&#13;
KWAIMG-SU.THE EMPEROR&#13;
Ilia lt«iffii iu China KotulmUljrCoi»m*»p*4.&#13;
1» the Yoar 1«0».&#13;
The Emperor of China Is thirty&#13;
years old. His reign nominally commenced&#13;
In 1862. The Empress Dowuger&#13;
as Regent ruled China until 1889,&#13;
waen the Emperor took the actual con*&#13;
trol of the government. He still has&#13;
the appearance of a delicate you h. He&#13;
is small and thin, pale and intellectual&#13;
looking. His eyes are large and&#13;
black and his face smooth and hairless.&#13;
The first audience at which he received&#13;
the foreign Ministers, or those&#13;
of them who attended, took place in&#13;
1S91. The representatives of France&#13;
and Russia refused to accept audience&#13;
because the hall set apart for the ceremonial&#13;
was not situated in the Forbidden&#13;
City.&#13;
Afterward in 1894 the Emperor consented&#13;
to receive the foreign representatives&#13;
in the Hall of Literary Glory in&#13;
the Forbidden City.&#13;
On occasions of audience the Emperor&#13;
is seated on a throne placed on&#13;
a dais raised five steps above the floor.&#13;
The foreign representative was not allowed&#13;
until recently to ascend this&#13;
dais. He now approaches close to the&#13;
throne. Standing in front of it he&#13;
read his address. The .Emperor replied&#13;
in a few words, which were received&#13;
by Prince Kung or Prince Ching&#13;
kneeling and afterward translated&#13;
from Manchu.&#13;
The language of both speeches was'&#13;
formal. For instance, the Emperor expressed&#13;
his great satisfaction and joy&#13;
at the kind sentiments of the President&#13;
of the United States which the Min*&#13;
ister had conveyed to him and hoped&#13;
the President was-wetfc—He then per--&#13;
soaally complimented the Minister on&#13;
his having been fair and even-tempered&#13;
in the transaction of business and&#13;
expressed the hope that the relations&#13;
of friendship between the two countries&#13;
might daily become closer and&#13;
more intimate and that each might enjoy&#13;
tranquility and peace. After these&#13;
remarks were translated to the legation&#13;
interpreter and this functionary&#13;
had translated them into English the&#13;
Minister retired, bowing at each four&#13;
steps, and the audience was over.&#13;
Except on these occasions no foreign&#13;
Minister and no other foreigner&#13;
except Prince Henry of Prussia has&#13;
ever seen the Emperor. It was regarded&#13;
at Peking as a very unnecessary&#13;
piece of etiquette for the German Minister&#13;
to require the Emperor to rtturn&#13;
in person the call of Prince Henry.&#13;
The usages, customs and particularly&#13;
the sacred isolation fit the Emperor&#13;
are regarded as parts of the constitution&#13;
of the country. Every country&#13;
has its methods and usages, and it is&#13;
not deemed necessary or proper to&#13;
demand their abrogation and the substitution&#13;
of other methods in their&#13;
place. The Emperor of Morocco, for&#13;
instance, receives foreign envoys on&#13;
horseback.&#13;
Shortly after his accession to the&#13;
throne the Emperor became very anxions&#13;
to learn English. He secured two&#13;
teachers from the Tungwen College,&#13;
Which w a s P r e s i d e d nvpr h y n n r f.1|,.&lt;&#13;
cuie ana even the Ittstmct'of; self-de*&#13;
fence are scattered to the windJ; a n *&#13;
I believe, honestly, 1 would be capabt*&#13;
o t j i n y Infamy in order to escape. 1&#13;
have no hesitation in confessing this.&#13;
because, as far as I have been able to&#13;
find out, everybody acta exactly the&#13;
same way in the throes of nightmare;&#13;
and I f**l certain I, would not m a k e&#13;
such a pitiable spectacle of myself in&#13;
real life, no matter what might befall.&#13;
**T thinJc that the explanation of*the&#13;
nightmare panic is to be found in the&#13;
fact that the dream is almost invariably&#13;
accompanied by a sense of suffocation.&#13;
It is welj established that&#13;
choaking—the 'shutting off of one'*&#13;
wind,' to use a homeiy phrasc-^a-j&#13;
an effect upon the mind which is • t*&#13;
tirely distinct and different from that&#13;
produced by any other form of paiu&#13;
or peril. It fills the victim with such&#13;
horror and distraction, that •* U fpr&#13;
the moment insane. He will -to anything&#13;
to get relief. This h i * Ues*&#13;
brought out on" more than on?? occasion&#13;
in the defence of men w t o have*&#13;
been choked and killed their a railants,&#13;
and Judges have held that th«&#13;
circumstances of such an attack should&#13;
be given specif 1 consideration as extenuating&#13;
the deed. In dreams the •-ntire&#13;
nervous system is relaxed, and&#13;
it is natural to suppose that the m^v al&#13;
effect of suffocation would be intensified.&#13;
At least, that is the best apology&#13;
I have to offer for my sprint' thtougi&#13;
nightmare land."—New Orleans Tla.e*.&#13;
Democ:at.&#13;
i n e &gt; V e « l l * * I i M l e i &lt; l o t h i t ^&#13;
The Germans make flannel undarclothing&#13;
of the fibre of the pine roedies,&#13;
as well as socks for n:en and&#13;
-stockings for women, -wbtre-—knee——&#13;
warmers, knitting and darnirg yarns,&#13;
oork soles, quilts, wadding, doafenins&#13;
paper for walls, pine needle soap, incense,&#13;
and even cigars made from this&#13;
raw material have been impor-cC Trom&#13;
G?rmazy for years.&#13;
*wcitizen.&#13;
Dr. W. A. T. Martin. These&#13;
teachers had to attend on their pupil&#13;
about 4 A. M and often had to wait&#13;
for several hours. At the beginning&#13;
the Emperor took his lesson every day&#13;
and faithfully wrote his exercises.&#13;
There was a rush among the prince's&#13;
and Ministers to learn English also,&#13;
and for a while the scheme was very&#13;
flourishing, but soon zeal flagged and&#13;
the scheme dropped.—Charles D^nby.&#13;
"-and trimmed the first season. •&#13;
The following season $2.50 will keep&#13;
the field in good condition until picking&#13;
time. Under favorable conditions&#13;
the plants shpuld bear much fruit the&#13;
second season. I prefer mulching thje&#13;
.second season, as this conserves the&#13;
moisture and keeps down weeds.&#13;
This makes a total cost of $37.50 for&#13;
plants and labor.&#13;
No Mini a Hero in a &gt;'iK ht!imre.&#13;
"Strange that we are always so&#13;
cowardly in nightmares,", remarked a&#13;
New Orleans lawyer who has a taste&#13;
for the bizarre. "I don't believe anybody&#13;
ever lived who stood up and&#13;
matip a square stand against the amorphous&#13;
horror that .invariably pursues&#13;
us in such visions. When I have a&#13;
nightmare and the usual monster gets&#13;
on my trail my blood turns to water&#13;
and my conduct would disgrace sheep.&#13;
I am beside myself with stark, downright&#13;
fear, and I have no idea left in&#13;
my head except to run like a rabbit.&#13;
All pride, self-respect, dread, of ridillrlngiuff&#13;
Ittuqiberrieft I n t o IteHrinj*.&#13;
The cost of bringing Into bearing an&#13;
acre of blackcap raspberries varies and&#13;
depends in each and every particular&#13;
upon the manner in which &gt; the work&#13;
is done and the cost of material and&#13;
labor. Although I have only 2.000&#13;
plants I will estimate the cost of raising&#13;
raspberries. First comes the cost&#13;
of plowing, whioh will be $1.25; then a&#13;
thorough harrowing, which will cost&#13;
50 cents. I set my plants in rows six&#13;
feet apart and three feet apart in the&#13;
row. A furrow was plowed for each&#13;
row, and with a three foot marker run&#13;
across the furrows, at right angles intersections&#13;
were-made, at which place&#13;
the plants were set. This can be done&#13;
for 5fl cents.&#13;
By planting as above, it will take 2,-&#13;
400 plants. I paid $10 per 1,000 for&#13;
mine, or $24.00 per acre.&#13;
I found the most desirable way to&#13;
set the plants was to have -one man&#13;
drop two rows at a time, and two men&#13;
follow and set them. Three good men&#13;
will thus set out 2,400 plants a 4ay, at&#13;
a cost of U-75.&#13;
At a coit of $5 an acre blackcaj?&#13;
raspberries can be properly cultivated&#13;
WHAT ^WOMAN THINKS&#13;
If you would rot be known to do a&#13;
thing, don't do it.&#13;
A woman is often credited with being&#13;
mad when she is only verylnuch&#13;
in earnest.&#13;
It's strange that the man who knows&#13;
it all turns his. knowledge to so little&#13;
practical account.&#13;
You can-learn more about a persar&#13;
when it is five minutes too late, than&#13;
In five years before.&#13;
We are always particularly plea?.i&#13;
with ourselves when some one els*'&#13;
voices our opinions.&#13;
L. 'H. .FIELD,&#13;
• Jackson, Mioh.&#13;
S h i r t VYafst Closing.&#13;
All our 9Sc, $1.25 and 81.50 Colored Percale and Madras&#13;
Waists we shall clean up at 3 9 c&#13;
Now on sale.&#13;
S p e c i a l Closing P r i c e on Ginghams.&#13;
12}c for a lot of 20c Ginghams.&#13;
16c for a lot of 25c, 30c and 45c Ginghams.&#13;
All best Summer Percales, 10c.&#13;
12£c Seersuckers, short lengths, 8c;&#13;
12Jc Ginghams for 6J.&#13;
Small lot Best Prints, 4}c.&#13;
Opening N e w Dress Goods.&#13;
38-inch All-wool Cheviots, in the New Fall Shadings:&#13;
•ponged and shrunk, 59c.&#13;
40-inch AH-wool CamelVHair Bines, Grays and&#13;
Castor Shadings, 60c.&#13;
54-inch All-wool Zibelines, Grays, Castors and&#13;
Blacks, |^(K&gt;.&#13;
56-inoh Homespuns, very heavy, for rainy day ikirti,&#13;
&lt; St $1.26.&#13;
CO-inch Pebble Cloths, Black and Navy, $1^5.&#13;
- 54-Inch Favorita Clot**, new ahadingf, f 1.26. /•&#13;
:-^ «*&#13;
• • ' &lt; ' )&#13;
• ' " ' . ' • ' • » $&#13;
•.••'•v^S&#13;
o &lt; ,&#13;
s&#13;
\ ««rr HidiMto tf-^.i.B^VJitu.iMA&#13;
' i.t.tiL&gt;.^*^". --,^-»L»J..Mc. '^mtmm^^^</text>
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              <text>Use the Windows Snipping Tool to capture the area of the document you want to save. If you want multiple pages printed please see staff to print the pages you want. &lt;a href="https://howelllibrary.org/technology/#print" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View the library's printing information.&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch September 06, 1900</text>
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                <text>September 06, 1900 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/XVin. PINOKNEY, LiyiNGSTON CO., MIOH., THURSDAY, SEPT. 13. 1900. No.&#13;
GreafSacrificeSale&#13;
During Howell S t r e e t Palis&#13;
i i i « •&#13;
Cloak* Jacke ts, Furs, Clothing, Dry Gooda, Crockwy, China, Lamps, Carpets, Mattinga,&#13;
Oil Cloths, Shoes, Wall Paper, Baby Cabs, Go Carta, etc.&#13;
. i . . . • : • " • ' ' : • ' - Make Our Store Your Headquarters Durln* the Fair&#13;
We will have our Grand Display of Ladies1 Misses and Children's&#13;
Cloaks, Jackets and Fnra on sale and ready for your inspection.&#13;
•We can e a v e y o u $ 2 . 3 0 t o g a on e Cloek or docket. The Lateat «nd Bobby 8tyl«*&#13;
Grand Display of Glothing.&#13;
I&#13;
-$5.00&#13;
We can fit you out from&#13;
Head to Foot for $5.&#13;
Good salt, Fine Shoes, Hat&#13;
Shirt, Suspenders, Necktie,&#13;
Collar and Handkerchief.&#13;
There is no use of anyone&#13;
going "slouchy" when&#13;
they can buy an outfit for&#13;
£ 5 . 0 0&#13;
We can save yon from $2 to $5 on&#13;
a single Suit or Overcoat.&#13;
All our $15 valne Suite for $9.89&#13;
during the fair.&#13;
Men's Dress Suits, $2.50 and up.&#13;
Young Men's Suits, $2 and up.&#13;
Children's Suits, 75c and up.&#13;
LOCAL NEWS.&#13;
Grand display of Dress and Dry Goods.&#13;
Prints 3{c per yard. Scotch Plaids, just the thing for children, 3Jc per yard*&#13;
Fine Dress Goods from 10c up. Fine Black Dress Goods, Serges, Henriettas&#13;
Cashimeres, all the new and nobby shades. We will close out a lot of Shirt&#13;
One lot wraps for 69c. Waists for 23c.&#13;
Great S h o e Sale*&#13;
One lot Shoes 50c, 75c, $1.00. Children's Shoes from 25c up. Men's Shoes,&#13;
Fine, 99c,.$1.25,1.49 and tip. We can save you from 50c to $1 on a pair of Shoes&#13;
during this sale. " Men's Boston Duck, Railed Edge, combination, with Wool Boot,&#13;
regular $2.75 goods, during this sale, $1.99.&#13;
Crockery.&#13;
We hare the finest line of Crockery, China, and Lamps that you ever laid eyes&#13;
upon. MsfWe have the only exclusive Crockery Department in the county.&#13;
All our high priced Dinner Sets that sold at 13, 14, 15 and 18 dollars we will close&#13;
oat at $9.98. Fine While Poruelane, Fine White Decorated Ware.&#13;
Fine Jardineres from 10c up. Dinner Sets $4.50, 6.50, 7.50 and 9.98.&#13;
Decorated Chamber Sets, $1.75, 2.00, 2.50 and up. Fine Lamps, 69c to $10.00.&#13;
Carpets.&#13;
Our stock of Carpets is immense. Carpets from 15c, 18c, 21c, 25c, 29c, 39c, 65c&#13;
and up.&#13;
You can save your expenses at the Fair by trading&#13;
at This Great Sale.&#13;
86?* With every purchase of $10 we will give a Fine Mirror, frame alone would&#13;
be cheap at $1.50. '&#13;
T h e BIA Palp S t o r e ,&#13;
O p p o s i t e C o u r t House,&#13;
H o w e l l . A . J. Prindle.&#13;
TEEPLE &amp; CADWELL \ ^&#13;
General Hardware,&#13;
Have as complete an assortment of heavy and shelf hardware&#13;
as can be found in the county, and 1900 finds us&#13;
more thoroughly equipped than ever before.&#13;
Builders Hardware a Specialty.&#13;
Doors and Common Sash always in stock.&#13;
Complete line of Buggies, Wagons and&#13;
Heating Stoves, Ranges, Wood Stoves&#13;
Wood and Goal.&#13;
S)&#13;
Do not let those&#13;
Magazines go to&#13;
waste,&#13;
1 Get'em bound at the Dispatch Bindery.&#13;
, Finckney* • Good Work.&#13;
Reasonable&#13;
M I S M M &gt; I M M » I I H » a i m M S M f M l t M S » M S S H I t&#13;
Bentley show, Sept 18.&#13;
Id. T. Kelley was in Jackson Saturday.&#13;
F. J. Wright and wife of Webster&#13;
spent Sunday here.&#13;
Miss Ellen Carrol started for Ann&#13;
Arbor Thursday last.&#13;
BOSB Bead is attending the High&#13;
School at Ann Arbor.&#13;
Dan Richards and grandson, Glenn,&#13;
were in Dexter Monday.&#13;
Boy Hoffof Stock bridge spent Sanday&#13;
with his parents here.&#13;
Mrs. F. £. Wright has been under&#13;
the Dr's care the past week.&#13;
Mrs. Wolfer has gone to Qaincy for&#13;
a visit among old aqoaintances.&#13;
H. M. Pad ley and wife spent Saturday&#13;
with relatives at Orchard Lake.&#13;
Miss Ella Winegar of Howell was&#13;
the guest of her sister Mrs. Geo Green&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Do not forget that ice cream will be&#13;
served at the opera house Saturday&#13;
evening.&#13;
Chas. Henry received the past week&#13;
$200 back pension and will receive | 8&#13;
per month.&#13;
Some from here will spend Sunday&#13;
in Pontiac in attendence at the M. £.'&#13;
conference.&#13;
Mrs. H. G. Briggs and sister Mrs;&#13;
Clarissa Kirk visited a sister in Brighton&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
Chas. McGilvery and family spent&#13;
the last of last week with- R. H. Erwin&#13;
and family.&#13;
Mrs. Chas. Crane and Mrs. Ora&#13;
Crane, of Munith visited at R. M.&#13;
Glenn's last week.&#13;
Mrs. Cbas. Potts of Milford who has&#13;
been visiting her father, Abel Smith,&#13;
returned home Saturday.,&#13;
J. M. Smith and family have moved&#13;
into the Vooheis cottage on Pearl St.&#13;
recently purchased by him.&#13;
P. G. Teeple of Marquette spent&#13;
last week with bis parents and oiher&#13;
relatives in this village and Howell.&#13;
He returned home Saturday.&#13;
Coming ET&lt;&#13;
Howell street Fair, Sept. 25-28.&#13;
fiilford Fair, Sept. 25-28.&#13;
Stockbridge Fair, Oct 9-11.&#13;
Ganers.1 election November 6.&#13;
JEWELRY&#13;
A STAPLE. ©v&#13;
The Society ot church workers will&#13;
serve dinner at tbe home ot Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. Win. H. Placewoy next Wednesday&#13;
Sept. 19. to which all are cordially&#13;
invited.&#13;
We are glad to note that Fr. Goldrick&#13;
of Northfield, who has been very&#13;
sick with appendicitis, is recovering.&#13;
He is well known here, having visited&#13;
this place many times.&#13;
The ladies of tbe Cong'l church and&#13;
society will serve ice cream and cake&#13;
at the opera house on Saturday evening,&#13;
Sept. 15. All are cordially invited.&#13;
Pinckney Cornet Band will be&#13;
present and discourse music. Ladies&#13;
attention! Do not forget to bring&#13;
plenty of cake.&#13;
On Friday evening of this week,&#13;
Sept. 14, the people of Gregory and&#13;
vicinity are to enjoy a treat in the&#13;
shape of reading by £. Eeverett Howe&#13;
from his novels, "Tbe Chronicles of&#13;
Break O'Day" and "The Barleyfors;&#13;
Devil.'1 The entertainment is given&#13;
under the auspices of tbe KOT.d and&#13;
should be largely attended.&#13;
Look at the next ten people you meet and&#13;
see how much is worn of the so-called jew*&#13;
elry. From a $500.00 watch to a five&#13;
cent stick pin. Jewelry has come to be a&#13;
staple article of dress.&#13;
Yon will buy mure or leas of it; see that&#13;
yon get what yoa pay for when yon buy.&#13;
Yon can be sure of this if yon will buy of&#13;
W. H. BbLsIS, Pinckney,&#13;
who has a full&#13;
assortment of the W. F. Main Co. goods.&#13;
Every article of (he goods Is fully warranted&#13;
to be exactly as represenated. A printed&#13;
guarantee to this effect is given with&#13;
each article of these goods purchased at&#13;
their store,&#13;
- W . P . M A I N C O .&#13;
We will deliver Hour&#13;
direct to tt)9 people&#13;
at&#13;
45 cents for a 25-pound sack&#13;
85 cents for a 50-pound sack&#13;
$3.40 for a barrel.&#13;
10 pounds Graham 15 cents.&#13;
10 lbs. granulated meal lOcts&#13;
Terms, Cash.&#13;
R. H. ERWIN.&#13;
Take&#13;
Time&#13;
By&#13;
The&#13;
Fore&#13;
Lock&#13;
ib And g e t t h o s e Letter-heads,&#13;
Bill-heads, Statements, Envelopes,&#13;
and Business-cards&#13;
printed now. Don't wait until&#13;
the last o n e Is done before&#13;
ordering.&#13;
Everyone, whether h e b e&#13;
Business man, Mechanic, or&#13;
Parmer, If he w i s h e s to b e up&#13;
to date, should have their return&#13;
address printed on their&#13;
Envelopes.&#13;
S e e us for prices&#13;
urn DISPATCH OFPICE,&#13;
P i n c k n e y , Mich.&#13;
Wish His Return.&#13;
'Rev.C. W. Simpson of the M. E.&#13;
church is in Pontiac this weak attending&#13;
the annual conference. He has labored&#13;
faithfully two years among the&#13;
people here and has made many warm&#13;
friends, both in and out of the church&#13;
who sincerely wish for his retnrn for&#13;
another year.&#13;
Should Mr. Simpson conclude to&#13;
take a work again he will undoubtedly&#13;
retnrn but the chances are that be&#13;
will locate at Mt Clemens and give&#13;
up the regular work, fie baa been a&#13;
faithful servant of the Lord and is en*&#13;
titled to the rest he so richly deserves.&#13;
Should he be returned here everyone&#13;
would rejoice.&#13;
It's Surprising&#13;
How cheaply we sell our proprietary&#13;
medicines. Any of&#13;
the standard remedies that&#13;
you may want you will find&#13;
can be bought cheaper than&#13;
of any other druggist.&#13;
Our Patent Medicines&#13;
are always fresh. We never&#13;
allow stock to stand around&#13;
for years. We sell the best,&#13;
and for the least money.&#13;
F. A. SIGLER.&#13;
m&#13;
i a i t •"••'"'&#13;
m&#13;
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&amp; $ • - , .&#13;
&lt;Vfc'* •••.• • '&#13;
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jp-.-'*r *• ' '&#13;
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. » • • • ' , . . • *&gt;: • : . •'•• '. &gt; V / . ' i # . . ' • * r - . .: . v *• •• , # , - . - . . . • * • • . * '. . • . • . • • ' • • . • • • • • • f • , . : . • • ' . . • • " " • • .. • - V ' ,. . . • . ' • .• - ' -; . • . . • . .-&#13;
J- '•.&#13;
» * : • * : •&#13;
' « • « « * « * * . m&#13;
4 - - : . ..-*'&#13;
L I M P REPORT&#13;
mmm • * - !&#13;
SAYS COKN A N D LATE POTA-&#13;
• TOES ARE DOING FINE.&#13;
. A Wfcela B a t e * of Interesting Items&#13;
From »11 O m Iticatfeu Dolled&#13;
Dawn for Beady Beading—Of £ • -&#13;
pMUtl i B t o r w l «o Mftehifaaders.&#13;
Weakly Ciwp Bulletin.&#13;
T h e w e e k l y w e a t h e r crop bulletin&#13;
i s s u e d o n t h e 4 t h s a y s : The m e a n&#13;
d a i l y t e m p e r a t u r e f o r t h e w e e k e n d i n g&#13;
fiepi* 1 w a s 1UZ d e g r e e s , o r 7.3 degrees&#13;
above, normal. T h e a v e r a g e total prec&#13;
i p i t a t i o n w a s a 7 1 of a * vtnoh« or 0.19&#13;
o f a n ' l o c h a b o v e normal. T h e sunshine&#13;
a v e r a g e 71 p e r c e n t of t h e possible&#13;
a m o u n t Generally w e a t h e r conditions&#13;
h a v e b e e n favorable for crop g r o w t h ,&#13;
a n d field w o r k . I n t h e upper peninsula&#13;
a n d n o r t h e r n c o m i t i e s , w h e r e the rainf&#13;
a l l w a s c o m p a r a t i v e l y l i g h t , outstandi&#13;
n g s p r i n g w h e a t , o a t * a n d peas have&#13;
b e e n secured, a l t h o u g h considerably&#13;
d a m a g e d by t h e previous w e e k ' s heavy&#13;
* rainfall. A n amp~*e rainfall in all sect&#13;
i o n s of t h e s t a t e h a s p n t the ground&#13;
i a fine c o n d i t i o n for fail p l o w i n g ,&#13;
w h i c h is w e l l a d v a n c e d in most count&#13;
i e s of t h e l o w e r p e n i n s u l a . Iu many&#13;
fields t h e s e e d b e d for w h e a t and rye&#13;
h a s been prepared; a n d rye seeding beg&#13;
u n . Corn a n d l a t e p o t a t o e s continue&#13;
t o d o very finely. M e a d o w s and past&#13;
u r e s are i n e x c e p t i o n a l l y good condition.&#13;
B u c k w h e a t h a s made good&#13;
g r o w t h , b u t g e n e r a l l y i t is not w e l l&#13;
filled. T h e b e a n harvest is quite gen-&#13;
•erai, b u t t h e y i e l d s are rather poor.&#13;
E a r l y corn is b e i n g c u t and late corn&#13;
i s m a t u r i n g rapidly. Corn c u t t i n g will&#13;
be q u i t e g e n e r a l in a l l s e c t i o n s d u r i n g&#13;
t h e n e x t 10 days. G e n e r a l l y it is heavi&#13;
l y eared a n d promise.! a fine yield.&#13;
T h e .hot w e a t h e r h a s been bad for&#13;
f r u i t Pears, p l u m s a n d peaches rot&#13;
. easily, w h i l e apples c o n t i n u e to dron&#13;
badly. _ ^ _&#13;
Disease la Michigan.&#13;
Tteports t o t h e s t a t e board of health&#13;
s h o w t h a t d i a r r h e a , r h e u m a t i s m , chole&#13;
r a morbus, c h o l e r a i n f a n t u m and neur&#13;
a l g i a , in t h e order n a m e d , en used the&#13;
m o s t s i c k n e s s i n Michigan during the&#13;
p a s t w e e k . S m a l l p o x w a s reported at&#13;
t h r e e places, w h o o p i n g c o u g h nt 13,&#13;
&gt; s p i n a l m e n i n g i t i s a t 5, d i p h t h e r k v a t&#13;
18, m e a s l e s a t 20, s c a r l e t fever at 54,&#13;
t y p h o i d fever a t 104, a n d c o n s u m p t i o n&#13;
. a t 170. S m a l l p o x i s believed to exist&#13;
a t s i x places, a l t h o u g h reports were&#13;
• r e c e i v e d from b u t t h r e e places, w h i c h&#13;
l a s t w e e k reported t h i s disease p r e s e n t&#13;
Compared w i t h t h e preceding w e e k ,&#13;
t h e reports from all sources indicate&#13;
t h a t t y p h o i d fever, s c a r l e t fever and F&#13;
• d i p h t h e r i a w e r e more prevalent, and&#13;
m e a s l e s , w h o o p i n g c o u g h and smallp&#13;
o x less p r e v a l e n t t h a n d u r i n g the&#13;
p r e c e d i n g w e e k .&#13;
'Ono Insane W w n w Kill* Another.&#13;
I n t h e i n s a n e a s y l u m a t t a c h e d to t h e&#13;
W a y n e c o u n t y h o u s e , o n t h e m o r n i n g&#13;
• of t h e 7 t h , o n e female p a t i e n t tolled&#13;
a n o t h e r f e m a l e p a t i e n t b y c h o k i n g her&#13;
t o d e a t h w i t h a rope m a d e o a t of an&#13;
u n d e r g a r m e n t T h e murderess is Miss&#13;
L u l u T u r p e n l n g . S h e i s 2T» years old&#13;
&gt;and h a s b e e n i n t h e a s y l u m for six&#13;
years. S h e i s gwffcringr from phrnnin&#13;
M I C H I G A N N E W S I T E M S .&#13;
A "jack-the-peeper" i s o p e r a t i n g in&#13;
? i n c k n e y .&#13;
T h e b o n d e d - i n d e b t e d n e s s of P o r t&#13;
Huron is 9503,011.&#13;
T h e n e x t s t a t e band t o u r n a m e n t w i l l&#13;
be held at Lansing.&#13;
Ann Arbor will use the voting mac&#13;
h i n e s in November.&#13;
T e n cars of fruit are b e i n g shipped&#13;
from Hart daily for t h e west.&#13;
The summer resorts around Port Huron&#13;
report a prosperous season.&#13;
E i g h t horses w e r e s t o l e n f r o m a pasture&#13;
n e a r Camden on t h e 7 th. N o clue.&#13;
Ground h a s been broken for t h e erection&#13;
of three n e w brick stores a t Te»&#13;
konsho.&#13;
T h e chicory factory at A n n Arbor&#13;
w i l l b e g i n i t s w i n t e r o p e r a t i o n s about&#13;
O c t 10.&#13;
It is said that gold in p a y i n g q u a n -&#13;
tities h a s been discovered in Delta&#13;
county.&#13;
Seventy - three m a t r i m o n i a l k n o t s&#13;
were tied at Michigan's Gretna Green&#13;
on t h e 9th.&#13;
The Oakland County T e l e p h o n e Co.&#13;
has b e e n granted a 30-year franchise&#13;
at Pontiac.&#13;
There is s t r o n g talk of b o n d i n g the&#13;
village of Carsonville l o r a s y s t e m of&#13;
water w o r k s .&#13;
T w e n t y divorce&#13;
noticed for trial at&#13;
a record-breaker.&#13;
A livery stable&#13;
eases have been&#13;
Marshall, w h i c h is&#13;
at Benzonia w a s&#13;
on t h e 4th and&#13;
m a n i a b u t w a s considered a most harml&#13;
e s s i n m a t e . T h e murdered woman&#13;
w a s Miss R e b e c c a T i r c n a n . an imbec&#13;
i l e , a g e d 25, w h o w a s s e n t from Detroit&#13;
to the c o u n t y h o u s e seven y e a r s&#13;
ago.&#13;
struck by l i g h t n i n g&#13;
four horses killed.&#13;
Labor Day, Sept. »3, w a s appropriately&#13;
celebrated in most of the larger&#13;
cities in this state.&#13;
T h e business men of M t Clemens&#13;
are t a l k i n g of forming an independent&#13;
telephone company.&#13;
The large salt plant of the Anchor&#13;
Salt Co.. at L u d i n g t o n , s h u t d o w n indefinitely&#13;
on the 1st.&#13;
A L a n s i n g priest h a s issued orders&#13;
c o m p e l l i n g ladies to w e a r their hats&#13;
while a t t e n d i n g service. «&#13;
iTekonsha is again w i t h o u t a lawyer,&#13;
the o n l y one in the place h a v i n g left&#13;
for more lucrative fields.&#13;
The school census just completed&#13;
s h o w s that Coldwater has 1,520 children&#13;
of t h e r e g u l a t i o n age.&#13;
Musscy township, St. Clair county,&#13;
on the Cth voted to bond for $3,500-for&#13;
the erection of a t o w n hall.&#13;
A deaf and dumb school has been&#13;
started at Menominee, as a branch of&#13;
the local public school s y s t e m .&#13;
An unusually violent wind storm did&#13;
considerable damage in the vicinity of&#13;
Bellaire on the night of the 2d.&#13;
The Indians in Mikado t o w n s h i p ,&#13;
Alcona county, have built a n e w church.&#13;
One of the tribe is the preacher.&#13;
The tax commission w i l l raise the&#13;
a s s e s s m e n t s on copper m i n e s in H o u g h -&#13;
ton c o u n t y more than $35,000,000.&#13;
Wm. A. Florence, a farmer of near&#13;
Constantine, suicided on the (ith by&#13;
s h o o t i n g himself t h r o u g h the head.&#13;
The n e w planing mill at Imlay Cityhas&#13;
j u s t started up, and will give emp&#13;
l o y m e n t to quite a number of men.&#13;
— B i c y c l i s t s in Port Huron will not be&#13;
One Man Killed at Alsrunac.&#13;
A l b e r t S h a r r o w , of Algonac, who,&#13;
w i t h h i s son-in-law, Alex. Price, had&#13;
b e e n t o w i n g u p from Mwir's Landing&#13;
i n a r o w b o a t , h i t c h e d t o the Idle wild.&#13;
Was struck b y t h e p a d d l c w h e e l of'that&#13;
s t e a m e r a n d i n s t a n t l y killed on the&#13;
-evening of t h e 5th w h i l e the boat w a s&#13;
b a c k i n g u p preparatory t o Lfucl at her&#13;
•dock. P r i c e w h o h a d b e e n s w e p t to&#13;
o n e - s i d e b y t h e s w e l l from the w h e e l s .&#13;
w h e n the b o a t w a s capsized, was resc&#13;
u e d . S h a r r o w ' s body h a s not yet been&#13;
recovered.&#13;
A Serf OMW.&#13;
Mrs. L u c i e n H. Parse died at Lansing&#13;
o n t h e 7 t h after a n i l l n e s s of but seven&#13;
hours. F o r s o m e w e e k s hm; husband&#13;
h a s been v e r y i l l w i t h Uright's disease.&#13;
a n d s h e w a s h i s c o n s t a n t and faithful&#13;
a t t e n d a n t S h e w a s a t h i s bedside adm&#13;
i a i s t e r i n g t o h i s w a n t s w h e n she w a s&#13;
s t r i c k e n w i t h a p o p l e x y and rapidly&#13;
s a n k t o h e r d e a t h . H e r husband has&#13;
passed i n t o u n c o n s c i o u s n e s s and his&#13;
d e a t h is h o u r l y expected.&#13;
State Fair.&#13;
T h e e x e c u t i v e c o m m i t t e e of the State&#13;
F a i r association m e t a t Grand Rapids&#13;
o n t h e 5 t h a n d transacted a lot of rout&#13;
i n e business. P r o s p e c t s for a successi&#13;
n l fair are s a i d t o b e e x c e l l e n t and the&#13;
m e m b e r s are l o o k i n g a h e a d t o the best&#13;
y e a r t h e y h a v e y e t had. General Supt.&#13;
Fifieid m a k e s t h e p o s i t i v e announcem&#13;
e n t t h a t t h i s y e a r t h e r e w i l l be absol&#13;
u t e l y n o g a m b l i n g o r g a m b l i n g devices&#13;
.allowed upon t h e grounds.&#13;
Will C a v e aa Official O.rffAi*.&#13;
T h e 13th r e g u l a r convention of th£&lt;&#13;
-C. M. B. A. of M i c h i g a n , in session at&#13;
Mt. Clemens, c a m e t o a close on t h e&#13;
5 t h a f t e r a b u s y d a y ' s session, Among&#13;
t h e i m p o r t a n t m a t t e r s decided upon&#13;
w a s t h e e s t a b l i s h m e n t of an oinciol&#13;
o r g a n t o be p u b l i s h e d under the supervision&#13;
of t h e g r a n d secretary a n d t h e&#13;
•creation of a .disability fund.&#13;
obliged to carry l i g h t s hereafter and&#13;
will be allowed to travel at a speed of&#13;
10 m i l e s an hour.&#13;
F i s h arc b e i n g killed at Iron Mountain&#13;
by the use of/dynamite, contrary&#13;
to the statute, and somebody is liable&#13;
to get into trouble.&#13;
Arenac County Agricultural society&#13;
will abandon its fair this year o w i n g&#13;
to the soldiers' and sailors' reunion to&#13;
be held at Standish.&#13;
J u d g e W'va. N e w t o n ' s wife, of Flint,&#13;
died o n the Gth from a pistol shot&#13;
w o u n d which she inflicted on Aug. 31&#13;
w i t h suicidal intent.&#13;
The Seventh Day Adventists. in&#13;
camp at Ionia, predict t h a t t h e end of&#13;
the world is so near that some people&#13;
now l i v i n g will see it.&#13;
i Diphtheria has broken out at F l y n n&#13;
Center, Sanilac county, and several&#13;
d e a t h s are reported. A strict quarantine&#13;
has been imposed.&#13;
T h e o p e n i n g of school at Vicksburg&#13;
has been postponed till Sept. 1? on account&#13;
of the building of a primary addition&#13;
to the school house.&#13;
Imlay City claims to be one of the&#13;
b i g g e s t hay shipping points in eastern&#13;
Michigan, many carloads b e i n g shipped&#13;
from there each week.&#13;
T h e h i g h w a t e r mark for marriages&#13;
at Michigan's Gretna Green w a s reached&#13;
on the 2d. there being^T02 w e d d i n g s&#13;
solemnized there on t h a t day.&#13;
The village of St. Charles, S a g i n a w&#13;
county, will vote Sept. 10 on the proposition&#13;
to bond the t o w n for $11),000&#13;
for t h e construction of a water w o r k s&#13;
system.&#13;
Old-fashioned fever and ague is said&#13;
to be prevalent in B e n t o n Harbor this&#13;
summer, the first time in many years&#13;
that any cases of it have been k n o w n&#13;
there.&#13;
T h e old soldiers and sailors of four&#13;
counties—Genesee, Lapeer, Sanilac and&#13;
Tuscola—will meet at Millington,&#13;
September 12 for their annual three&#13;
days' reunion.&#13;
The principal streets of St. Joseph&#13;
will be g i v e n over t o t h e carnival on&#13;
September 10, 20 a n d 21, and teams&#13;
will have to keep off t h e m in the day&#13;
time a n d evening.&#13;
C. C. Briggs, of Harrisville, h a s a&#13;
crop Of beans w h i c h are of e x t r e m e l y&#13;
l a r g e siae. Several o f t h e pods measure&#13;
25 inches in l e n g t h . T h e y are a&#13;
Chinese variety a u d of t h e snap bean&#13;
family.&#13;
A b o l t o f l i g h t n i n g w h i c h struck i n&#13;
Coloma o n the 2d, shook the s e t t l e m e n t&#13;
from one e n d to the other. Several&#13;
people and animals w e r e t h r o w n to&#13;
the ground, bufr n o o n e w a s seriously&#13;
injured.&#13;
T h r e e Hillsdale business men are&#13;
a b o u t to embark o n a hare-raising venture.&#13;
T h e y w i l l g o i n for breeding t h e&#13;
B e l g i a n species w h i c h h a s become so&#13;
popular of late.&#13;
Cans Quelettc, of Menominee, an&#13;
aged man, w a s buried to h i s c h i n to.&#13;
cure rheumatism. Officers d u g out t h e&#13;
old m a n In spite of t h e t h r e a t s of his&#13;
wife t o g o a t t h e m w i t h an ax.&#13;
Attorney-General Oren s a y s t h a t s u i t&#13;
will shortly b e c o m m e n c e d a g a i n s t t h e&#13;
Henderson-Ames Co., of Kalamazoo, to&#13;
recover the a m o u n t due the state&#13;
t h r o u g h the military supply deal.&#13;
Geo. Mills, an O g e m a w c o u n t y man,&#13;
has made a $10,000* deal w i t h Chicago&#13;
parties for a piece of land near h i s&#13;
h o m e w h i c h he would n o t n o w dispose&#13;
of for ¢100,000. It c o n t a i n s marl pits.&#13;
T h e peppermint industry in Muskeg&#13;
o n c o u n t y seems t o be d y i n g o u t&#13;
T h e r e are but five s t i l l s i n operation&#13;
in Moorland t o w n s h i p t h i s year, w h e r e&#13;
not very l o n g a g o there were over 20.&#13;
A s a n experiment r, farmer near Tek&#13;
o n s h a planted a f e w beans for cann&#13;
i n g purposes. A l t h o u g h he h a d but&#13;
one-eight of an acre they n e t t e d h i m&#13;
824, or 20 times the value of a w h e a t&#13;
crop.&#13;
T h e village council at Wayne has&#13;
finally decided to buy a fire e n g i n e —&#13;
after m a n y m o n t h s of discussion o n&#13;
t h e subject. T h e f e e l i n g over the&#13;
m a t t e r in the village h a s become very&#13;
bitter. - —&#13;
Gov. Koosevelt, Republican nominee&#13;
for Vice-President of the United States,&#13;
f o r m a l l y opened the campaign in Michi&#13;
g a n a t Detroit on t h e e v e n i n g of the&#13;
(ith. About 4,000 people listened to&#13;
his address.&#13;
An Oxford man h a s invented a combination&#13;
iceboat and ice-cutting machine,&#13;
which he t h i n k s w i l l revolutionize&#13;
i c e - h a r v e s t i n g methods, and&#13;
at the same time m a k e the sport of icebo(&#13;
ating profitable.&#13;
T h e heaviest storm of t h e season in&#13;
Montmorency county prevailed at Big&#13;
Hock on the 3d. The rain fell in torr&#13;
e n t s and the wind b l e w a hurricane.&#13;
Many buildings were unroofed, and a&#13;
large number of trees were uprooted.&#13;
T h e outlook for b u y i n g cedar in&#13;
n o r t h e r n ' M i c h i g a n is very discouragi&#13;
n g s o far t h i s season. Prices are very&#13;
l o w , and unless they advance very little&#13;
cedar" will be c u t t h e c o m i n g winter.&#13;
T h i s is o w i n g to over-production&#13;
last year.&#13;
W h i l e backing into t h e depot over&#13;
t h e t r e s t l e at Detroit on t h e 3d a Wabash&#13;
train and an e n g i n e collied. The&#13;
end car of the train, a Pullman sleeper,&#13;
and t h e ''light'' e n g i n e suffered somew&#13;
h a t , b u t no one w a s i i u x t . The crash&#13;
w a s heard t w o blocks a w a y .&#13;
Samuel Locke, a w e l b k n o w n farmer&#13;
l i v i n g 3};. miles east of F a r m i n g t o n ,&#13;
GAFPfiBY AND H0WJB 5?&#13;
W I L L H E A D T H E T H I ^ D ^ P A R T Y&#13;
T I C K E T — T H E N A T I O N A L .&#13;
The Platform Adopted furs Imperial&#13;
Polio/ U D*oj(«roa« — BtJUves in «&#13;
Slnglo Gold eta attar d and Sound&#13;
Hanking System.&#13;
R M W mm* •mm *&#13;
C H I N A W A R N * W # .&#13;
&lt; Third Party Ticket and Ito Platform*&#13;
T h e N a t i o n a l party—I h e official name&#13;
of t h e third p a r t y — m e t iu c o n v e n t i o n&#13;
o n t h e 5th In Carnegie hall, N e w York,&#13;
and n o m i n a t e d c a n d i d a t e s for Presid&#13;
e n t a u d Vice-President of t h e U. 8.&#13;
A platform w a s adopted and a title and&#13;
e m b l e m chosen. T h e s e m e n are the&#13;
candidates: &gt;&#13;
For President—Donaldson Caffery, of&#13;
Louisana.&#13;
For Vice-President—Archibald Murray&#13;
Howe, of Cambridge, Mass.&#13;
There were no o t h e r candidates for&#13;
t h e positions and t h e n o m i n a t i o n s w e r e&#13;
received w i t h h e a r t y applause. T h e&#13;
platform adopted says:&#13;
"Wo citizens of the United States of America,&#13;
assembled for the purpose of defending the&#13;
wise and conservative principles whloh underlie&#13;
our government, thu* declare our alms&#13;
and purposes:&#13;
"We nod our country threatened with alternative&#13;
perils. On the one hand is a public&#13;
opinion misled by organized forces of commercialism&#13;
who have perverted a war intended by&#13;
the people to'be u war of humanity into a war&#13;
of conquest. On too other hand is a public&#13;
opinion swayed by demagogic appeals to foo-.&#13;
ilonal and class passions, the most fatal of disease&#13;
to a republic. We believe that either of&#13;
these Influences if unchecked would ultimately&#13;
eompass the downfall of our country, but we&#13;
itfso believe that neither represents the M&gt;ber&#13;
conviction of our countrymen,&#13;
• "Convinced thut the extension of the jurisdiction&#13;
of the United States for the purpose of&#13;
holding foreign people as colonial dependencies&#13;
is as innovation dangerous to our liberties&#13;
and lcpngnant to the principles upon which our&#13;
government is founded, we pledge our efforts&#13;
through all constitutional means.&#13;
"First—To procure the renunciation of all&#13;
Imperial or colonial pretentions with regard to&#13;
foreign countries cluimed to have been acquired&#13;
turough or In consequence of military or&#13;
uavftl operations of the last two years.&#13;
"Second—We further pledge our efforts to&#13;
secure a single gold standard and a sound banking&#13;
system.&#13;
"Third -To aeeure a public service- bused on&#13;
merit, only.&#13;
"Fourth—To secure the abolition of all corrupting&#13;
special privileges, whether under the&#13;
(ruise of subsidies.*bounties, undeserved pensions&#13;
or trust-breeding tariffs."&#13;
tried t o stop a Detroit &amp; Nurtliwestern&#13;
car near his place on the e v e n i n g of&#13;
the 2d by standing on the track and&#13;
l i g h t i n g a match. T h e track is down&#13;
grade at t h a t point and t h e motorman&#13;
w a s unable to stop t h e car. It struck&#13;
Locke and killed him.&#13;
One of the largest s a w m i l l s in the&#13;
world is to be erected soon by t h e Ward&#13;
estate in Otsego county. It w i l l have&#13;
a capacity of :250,000 feet every 10 hours,&#13;
aud is to be located in the midst of&#13;
such i m m e n s e tracts of heavily timbered&#13;
land t h a t even at t h a t enormous&#13;
rate of consumption the supply of timber&#13;
w i l l be sufficient t o keep it in&#13;
operation for years.&#13;
A party of tourists from North L e w -&#13;
isburg, 6 . , stopping on "The Island"'&#13;
on t h e lakes above Bellaire, met w i t h&#13;
a serious accident on t h e n i g h t of the&#13;
3d. T h e party were stopping temporarily&#13;
in a large dance pavilion, and&#13;
were about retiring at $ o'clock w h e n&#13;
a v i o l e n t g u s t of w i n d b l e w d o w n the&#13;
building. One man w a s seriously and&#13;
11 o t h e r s slightly injured.&#13;
Work on the Newaygo^ Portland Cem&#13;
e n t plant j s progressing. T h e founa&#13;
a i i o n for the m a m m o t h structures&#13;
are n o w all laid, one section of the&#13;
dam is completed and w o r k on the&#13;
roadbed out to the marl deposits haye&#13;
commenced. January, 1901, is the&#13;
time specified for t h e completion of the&#13;
plant, and upon that date will be made&#13;
its first barrel of cement for w h i c h a&#13;
Chicago g e n t l e m a n w i l l pay 85,000.&#13;
Labor Commissioner Cox has m a d e a&#13;
c a n v a s s of the h o t e l s of t h e state and&#13;
finds 70 per cent of t h e proprietors&#13;
s m i l i n g w h i l e the o t h e r 30 per c e n t report&#13;
a f a l l i n g off in business as compared&#13;
w i t h last year. Of the number&#13;
canvassed 35 per cent report a falling&#13;
off in t h e number of traveling m e n and&#13;
a t t r i b u t e t h e decrease to the trusts&#13;
and c o m b i n e s in the main. One landlord&#13;
blames the free rural mail delivery,&#13;
ns it k e e p s t h e people from c o m -&#13;
ing to t o w n .&#13;
1 i&#13;
BRIEF NEWS PARAGRAPHS.&#13;
Frjghtfni Loss of Life In Texas.&#13;
T h e West I n d i a n s t o r m w h i c h&#13;
reached t h e Gulf coast on t h e 8th&#13;
w r o u g h t a w f u l h a v o c in. Texas. Reports&#13;
are conflicting, but it i s 'known&#13;
t h a t an a p p a l l i n g d i s a s t e r has befallen&#13;
t h e city of Galveston, w h e r e , i t is reported,&#13;
a t h o u s a n d or more l i v e s have&#13;
been blotted o u t and a tremendous&#13;
property d a m a g e incurred. Meager&#13;
reports from Sabine Pass a n d Port&#13;
Arthur also indicate a h e a v y loss of&#13;
life b u t t h e s e reports c a n n o t be confirmed&#13;
at t h i s hour. T h e first n e w s t o&#13;
reach H o u s t o n from the stricken city&#13;
of Galveston w a s received t h e night&#13;
after t h e storm. J a m e s C. Tiramins,&#13;
w h o resides in H o u s t o n , and w h o is&#13;
t h e general s u p e r i n t e n d e n t of the Nalional&#13;
Compress Co., arrived in t h e city&#13;
w i t h t h e n e w s . H e w a s the first to&#13;
reach Houston w i t h t i d i n g s of the&#13;
g r e a t disaster w h i c h h a s befallen that&#13;
c i t y and the m a g n i t u d e of the disaster&#13;
remains~to be told because of his endeavors&#13;
t o reach home. After remaini&#13;
n g t h r o u g h the hurricane he departed&#13;
from Galveston o n a schooner and&#13;
w e n t across the hay t o Morgan's Point,&#13;
w h e r e he c a u g h t a train for Houston.&#13;
T h e hurricane, Mr. T i m m i n s said, w a s&#13;
t h e w o r s t ever knowr n.&#13;
England Mast Whack Up»&#13;
T h e descision of t h e A n g l o - G e r m a n&#13;
commission respecting the i n d e m n i t i e s&#13;
to be paid to the o w n e r s of German&#13;
v e s s e l s seized by British w a r s h i p s in&#13;
South African w a t e r s , i s a s follows:&#13;
For the detension of the Bundesrath,&#13;
General and Herzog, the E a s t African&#13;
line receives £20,000, and £5»000 will&#13;
be paid t o . the o w n e r s of t h e goods.&#13;
T h e o w n e r s of t h e bark H a a s Wagner&#13;
w i l l receive £4,437, and t h e o w n e r s of&#13;
t h e bark Marie £130. B o t h governm&#13;
e n t s agree to accept the decision;.&#13;
T h e y e l l o w fever situation at Hav&#13;
a n a i s improving.&#13;
Three persons^were poison in Chicago&#13;
on t h o 5th bv e a t i n g ice cream soda.&#13;
In American Solt&#13;
A c t i n g i n a c c u r d a n c e w i t h t h e provisions&#13;
of an act a t . the l a s t session of&#13;
c o n g r e s s the officials of t h e n a v y dep&#13;
a r t m e n t are m a k i n g a r r a n g e m e n t s for&#13;
b r i n g i n g h o m e to t h e United S t a t e s for&#13;
i n t e r m e n t t h e r e m a i n s of officers and&#13;
e n l i s t e d m e n of t h e navy, a n d marine&#13;
corps w h o died or w e r e k i l l e d i n action&#13;
a s h o r e or afioat a n d buried o a t s l d e of&#13;
t h e continental .limits of t h e United&#13;
S t a t e s since April 21, 180S, t h e official&#13;
d a t e of t h e b e g i n n i n g of t h e Spanish&#13;
war. A careful research s h o w s that&#13;
t h e r e are 105 cases of t h i s description,&#13;
i n c l u d i n g 5 officers, 5? e n l i s t e d men of&#13;
the navy, and 4a e n l i s t e d m e n of the&#13;
marine corps.&#13;
13 Killed and SO Injured.&#13;
T h i r t e e n persons killed and over .10&#13;
others injured i s t h e Appalling record&#13;
of a rear-end collision b e t w e e n an excursion&#13;
train and a milk train on the&#13;
B e t h l e h e m branch of t h e Philadelphia&#13;
&amp; R e a d i n g r a i l w a y at Hatfield, Pa., 27&#13;
miles north of P h i l a d e l p h i a , o n t h e&#13;
m o r n i n g of t h e 2d. T h e w r e c k e d train&#13;
consisted of 10 d a y coaches a n d w a s&#13;
the first section of a l a r g e excursion&#13;
made u p of people from Bethlehem*&#13;
A U e n t o w n and s u r r o u n d i n g t o w n s to&#13;
A t l a n t i c City.&#13;
T h e Chinese i n t h o P«i HovaUay a r #&#13;
p a y i n g dear fofsthc folly of t h e i r g o v -&#13;
e r n m e n t T h e retribution they* a r e '&#13;
• S t r i n g e x c e e d s t h e ordinary p e n a l *&#13;
t i n s of WAR, A l o n g t h e river a n d r o a d s&#13;
traveled by t h e foreign troops b e t w e e n '&#13;
T i e n Tsln and P e k i n an o r g i e of l o o t -&#13;
i n g a n d destruction c o n t i n u e s w i t h&#13;
much useless s l a u g h t e r of u n o f f e n d i n g&#13;
inhabitants. W h i l e t h e i n t e r n a t i o n a l&#13;
forces were a d v a n c i n g t h e c o m m a n d -&#13;
ers, notably t h e J a p a n e s e , A m e r i c a n&#13;
a n d British, e n f o r c e d a c e r t a i n d e g r e e ,&#13;
of protection for property n o t n e e d e d&#13;
for military purposes. A t t h a t t i m e&#13;
m o s t of the p o p u l a t i o n e x c e p t s t h e&#13;
fighting men h a d fled. B u t n o w t h e&#13;
p e o p l e are r e t u r n i n g t o their h o m e s , •&#13;
o n l y t o find n o s h e l t e r or vice or occupation.&#13;
I n - t h e overcrowded, f a m i n e -&#13;
threatened d i s t r i c t s a w a y from t h e&#13;
river their lives a n d smalt possessions&#13;
are a t the mercy of b a n d s o f s o l d i e r s&#13;
t r a v e l i n g about w i t h o u t officers.&#13;
T h e latest e x p r e s s i o n a s t o t h e atti»&#13;
t u d e of the p o w e r s o n t h e e v o c u t i o n of&#13;
P e k i n comes from t h e U n i t e d S t a t e s&#13;
ambassador a t Paris, Gen. H o r a c e&#13;
Porter, w h o h a s advised t h e a u t h o r i t i e s&#13;
a t 'Washington t h a t t h e a t t i t u d e of t h e&#13;
F r e n c h g o v e r n m e n t is favorable t o t h e&#13;
p o s i t i o n taken by Russia. A l m o s t ,&#13;
s i m u l t a n e o u s l y w i t h t h i s dispatch f r o m .&#13;
Gen. Porter earae a n o t h e r f r o m t h e&#13;
A m e r i c a n c h a r g e d'affaires at B e r l i n ,&#13;
g i v i n g t h e a t t i t u d e of Germany o n R u s -&#13;
sia's proposaL T h i s in s u b s t a n c e s t a t e s&#13;
t h a t Germany, w h i l e a n x i o u s t o avoid&#13;
a n y friction b e t w e e n t h e p o w e r s , reg&#13;
a r d s the c o n d i t i o n s a t P e k i n s u c h as*&#13;
to* require t h e c o n t i n u e d presence of&#13;
German forces there. N e i t h e r ^ G e a ;&#13;
P o r t e r nor Mr. J a c k s o n g i v e t h e t e x t&#13;
of t h e answers, b u t o n l y t h e s u b s t a n c e&#13;
of t h e positions t a k e n by t h e t w o g o v -&#13;
ernments..&#13;
According t o i n f o r m a t i o n received'&#13;
from* a reliable s o u r c v o n l y t h e U. S.&#13;
g o v e r n m e n t h a s a s y e t a n s w e r e d 4hc&#13;
proprosals of Russia. A n e x c h a n g e of&#13;
ideas b e t w e e n t h e p o w e r s i s in progress.&#13;
T h e various g o v e r n m e n t s have t e l e -&#13;
g r a p h e d their r e p r e s e n t a t i v e s in P e k i n ,&#13;
a s k i n g a n opinion- r e g a r d i n g the w i t h -&#13;
d r a w a l of the troops and w h a t t h e military&#13;
situation w o u l d be r e s u l t i n g from&#13;
t h e decision of Russia.&#13;
A very interesting d i s p a t c h w a s r e -&#13;
ceived at the w a r d e p a r t m e n t o n t h e&#13;
4 t h from Gen. Chaffee; I t d e s c r i b e d&#13;
the- military s i t u a t i o n a s e m i n e n t l y&#13;
satisfactory, a n d w o u l d h a v e been of&#13;
g r e a t e r value, b u t for t h e o m i s s i o n&#13;
c o m m o n to all of t h e a other official disp&#13;
a t c h e s from China, namely, t h e d a t e&#13;
line. . In his opinion the p r e s e n t U. S.&#13;
force in China is ample to- cope w i t h&#13;
t h e situation. "~~&#13;
N e w s h a s b e e n received of t h e k i l l -&#13;
i n g of several A m e r i c a n w o m e n m i s -&#13;
sionaries by the Chinese. T h e w o m e n&#13;
w e r e first subjected t o horrible indign&#13;
i t i e s — t h e y were led a b o u t t h e c o u n -&#13;
try naked, repeatedly abused, and finally&#13;
killed by a m e t h o d t o o r e v o l t i n g&#13;
tib be described.&#13;
All danger of a clash b e t w e e n t h e&#13;
a l l i e s i n China i s declared to be past.&#13;
Responses to Russia's proposals h a v e&#13;
b e e n received w h i c h , w h i l e n o t defin&#13;
i t e l y settling t h e future course of t h e&#13;
powers, makes i t certain, t h a t w h a t -&#13;
ever action may b e t a k e n will be harmonious.&#13;
T h e railroad from Y a n g Tsun to Pek&#13;
i n is totally wrecked. Material h a s&#13;
been ordered f r o m S h a n g h a i t o reconstruct&#13;
it. A bridge is b e i n g b u i l t a t&#13;
Y a n g Tsun. Roadbed g a n g s are w o r k -&#13;
i n g at rTbth ends of the wreck, on t h e&#13;
road.&#13;
A b o u t 1,200 more British I n d i a n&#13;
troops have landed a t S h a n g h a i , m a k i n g&#13;
a l t o g e t h e r 2,000 of such troops a n d&#13;
1,000 eainp f o l l o w e r s a t t h a t port.&#13;
T h e Chinese troops have w i t h d r a w n&#13;
from the vicinity of N o w C h w a n g t o&#13;
Liao-Yay-Chow, where- t h e y a r e e n -&#13;
trenched; —&#13;
A dispatch from Pretoria, d a t e d the-&#13;
3d, s a y s that Gen. B a d e n - P o w e l l&#13;
s t a r t e d for Cape Town; on t h e 1st..&#13;
I n t h e recent e n g a g e m e n t »t T i e *&#13;
T s l n it i s e s t i m a t e d t h u t t h e r e w e r e&#13;
20,000 Chinese k i l l e d .&#13;
Bfe-Ktnley's Letter mt Acceptances&#13;
T h e letter of P r e s i d e n t M e K i n t e y&#13;
a c c e p t i n g t h e n o m i n a t i o n of t h e R e -&#13;
p u b l i c a n n a t i o n a l c o n v e n t i o n for t h e&#13;
office of President o f t h e U n i t e d S t a t e s&#13;
w a s m a d e public o n t h e n i g h t of t h e&#13;
0th. H e discusses many q u e s t i o n s of&#13;
m o m e n t that n o w e n g a g e t h e a t t e n -&#13;
t i o n of electors; r e i t e r a t e s t h e a d m i n -&#13;
i s t r a t i o n ' s purposes a s to. Cuba a n d&#13;
d w e l l s upon our r e l a t i o n s w i t h t h e&#13;
Filipinos. He s a y s the f u t u r e s t a t u s&#13;
of t h e Philippine I s l a n d s rests e n t i r e l y&#13;
w i t h congress; t h a t t h e r e h a s never&#13;
b e e n a time since Manila's fall w h e n&#13;
t h e troops could or s h o u l d be w i t h -&#13;
d r a w n . He further s a y s t h a t t h e F i l i -&#13;
p i n o s are to be fitted for s e l f - g o v e r n -&#13;
m e n t a s rapidly a s p o s s i b l e , and g i v e n&#13;
it as rapidly as fitted for i t .&#13;
Gale In Floridn.&#13;
T h e tropical hurricane which d o n e '&#13;
considerable d a m a g e o n t h e islands of&#13;
J a m a i c a and Cuba struck the F l o r i d a *&#13;
c o a s t o n the 5th, the w i n d at o n e t i m e&#13;
r e a c h i n g a velocity of nearly 100 m i l e s&#13;
a n hour. It is feared t h a t tho c r e w s&#13;
bf a t least t w o vessels were s w e p t overboard,&#13;
about SO m i l e s s o u t h of Miami,&#13;
Flo. Telegraph w i r e s . w e r e b l o w n&#13;
d o w n a n d that p a r t o l j t h e country w a s&#13;
s h u t off from t h e outside, world forsev-»&#13;
e r a ! days*.&#13;
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• " '&#13;
mmmm&#13;
..A PAIR Of PtOHERS..&#13;
•flilinff&#13;
"For the best of ail the miracles the&#13;
summertime can work us.&#13;
Js the. canvas-tented, sawdust-scented,&#13;
much-frequented circus!"&#13;
"A-circus! &gt;Co»ta''to town!" Old&#13;
Marth gtebbJue, pressing out her&#13;
youngest grandchild's Sunday gown,&#13;
paused with iron suspended. "For the&#13;
land's sake, Billlc! Do tell! Are you&#13;
sure?"&#13;
Billte w&amp;s thrilled by the Interest&#13;
which his news had awakened. Therefore,&#13;
tie looked as imperturbable as&#13;
possible. He hoisted himself up on the&#13;
table, and sat there picking sandbars&#13;
off his sleeves, And swinging his bare&#13;
legs.&#13;
"Gimme a cooky, an' 111 tell yon ail&#13;
about it."&#13;
There was no compromising^ with&#13;
Billte. He was a young man of his&#13;
word. Of this his grandmother "was&#13;
aware. She looked at him .bard a moment,&#13;
Then eho set the iron down,&#13;
and went Into the pantry. She -came&#13;
back with two cookies.&#13;
"ThereV she said,* "now go on!"&#13;
"After T'd been to mill I went uptown.&#13;
There was two men puttinV pictures,&#13;
on the blank v:all near the livery,&#13;
stable. They'd get 'em up already by&#13;
the lumber yard. Another feller wag&#13;
gcin* into the shops, and scttin' signs&#13;
put in the window*. And, I say,&#13;
grandma, yon just want to see them&#13;
pictures. They're—they're jlmminggee."&#13;
Grandma irened an, but less energetically&#13;
than before the return of Bil-&#13;
Jle. "Go on r.ri' tell me about them&#13;
pictures," she r.r^ed. "I used to like&#13;
awful well to go to circuses when I was&#13;
young. Ssems 1 i!;e I went to every one&#13;
that come to our town. One ain't been&#13;
near this place ^ltvce I ccrae here to&#13;
live^ with your ma. That was when&#13;
Emily Louise was born—fifteen years&#13;
QUO."&#13;
Billle went on to tell her bTThe glories&#13;
of the posters. He gallantly gave&#13;
ladles the- preference in his description.&#13;
He ftret told her about the barearmed&#13;
female, standing in the Roman&#13;
chariot, driving the plunging steeds;&#13;
about the little £irl, standing on a&#13;
white Shetland pony; about the radiant&#13;
damsel In the abbreviated skirt,&#13;
who made flying leaps through paper&#13;
hoops; about the muscular sisters who&#13;
swung from trapezes. Then the men&#13;
came in for their share of admiring remarks.&#13;
Ho was half-way from the&#13;
ringmaster to the'Clown, and grandma&#13;
was listening with breathless delight,&#13;
when a step was heard In the hall.&#13;
Grandma guiltily -picked up her cold&#13;
iron and pattered across the kitchen to&#13;
the stove for a hoi one.&#13;
"Mother! You ,gat that ironin* most&#13;
done?"&#13;
The voice suited the face, a hard,&#13;
intolerant face, with dull eyes and converging&#13;
lines around the mouth.&#13;
"Mostly, Belinda!" tried back the old&#13;
lady with nervous cheerfulness. "Ain't&#13;
morn'n half a dozen mere pieces. Billie&#13;
•here's got beck from mail."&#13;
She. moistened the tips of her fln-&#13;
;gers with her'tongue, sad spatted away&#13;
on the iron to test its temperature.&#13;
"I can see that," tartly. 'Billle, your&#13;
father eit off with that stock? That's&#13;
good. Now, I don't want you scttin'&#13;
pound like this when there's his chores&#13;
to be done well's your own- You hear?"&#13;
"Yes'm."&#13;
There was a brief silence when she&#13;
had gone. Martha Stebblns seemed to&#13;
see through a mist the garments shewas&#13;
Ironing. Suddenly the kitchen&#13;
seemed smaller and hotter than It had&#13;
five minutes ago. All at once, too, the&#13;
lovely ladies, and dashing men, pud&#13;
wonderful animals of the circus seemed&#13;
more distant, Inapproachable.&#13;
"Are—you thiukin' you'll be let go,&#13;
Biiiis?"&#13;
"Dunno." He lifted his foot and&#13;
looked pensively at the stonebruise on&#13;
the toe. "Will ft I can. I'll see if I&#13;
can't get a job carry in' water for the&#13;
elephant. Lot's of boys get in that&#13;
way."&#13;
"The elephant!" She looked across&#13;
•t him with brightening eyes. "Have&#13;
they got real elephant along? I ain't&#13;
seen elephant I don't know when*"&#13;
Something wistful in her tone '&#13;
struck JBlliiv He wes net a p:.r;jc ?::i&gt; J&#13;
ly bright boy, but he was.affectionate&#13;
in a dumb and clumsy way. He had&#13;
never known the joy of self-expression,&#13;
but he and grandma had had soma secrets&#13;
of their own. These secrets, involvingTis&#13;
they frequently did her connivance&#13;
and ner silence, were necessary&#13;
to his humanity and protection.&#13;
N o v he wishod—he hardly knew what&#13;
he7 wished.&#13;
~S3y, grandma, I kinder think you'd&#13;
like to go to the circus yourself!"&#13;
~Me!" she shrilled. "O, dear, no!&#13;
Whatever put such an idea in your&#13;
head Me—I'm that old! And besides&#13;
—•gracious, If I ain't gone and scorched&#13;
that shirt! I hope your ma won't notice&#13;
it, but I got • that flustered—to&#13;
think of such a tiling!"&#13;
Billle looked puzsled. "Well, somehow,"&#13;
he persisted, stubbornly, "I do&#13;
think so, gramma. And," he added&#13;
boldly, tfl dont see why you shouldn't,&#13;
cither, if you got a mind to— there!"&#13;
"Why, Billle!" she cried, weakly,&#13;
but there W.^.B a yielding tremor In her&#13;
voice. She" put down the Iron, glancing&#13;
furtively at the door as she did so.&#13;
She went over to'the tabic, and stood&#13;
next the audacious young fellow.&#13;
"Your mn wcrnM never hear to such a&#13;
thing. Eeridcs, we ain't got the&#13;
money."&#13;
"O, we couldn't get a cent from&#13;
her!" Involuntarily he lowered his&#13;
voice, as was his habit when a fishing-&#13;
trip was projected, and the question&#13;
of secretly securing "provender&#13;
therefor, confidently discussed. I can&#13;
work enough to pay for myself sure.&#13;
You've .gai_.tliat...lii cents Mis' Murray&#13;
give you for makin* her check-row&#13;
sunbunnit. I can sell Tom Cnss my&#13;
pigeon-house. yKe'll let me have a&#13;
di?_tc for-4t. T\fo only trouble is the&#13;
gettin' there*:—it's a good four-mile to&#13;
town. Ma wouldn't hoar to us takin'&#13;
the hcrsc out after sundown, and you&#13;
• never could "&#13;
"I could—O, I could. Billie!" she&#13;
broke in e::dtedly. Her wiinkled old&#13;
faca was radiant—her knotty old hands&#13;
were trembling. " 'Twouldn't be enny&#13;
harder than bein' on rny feet "from 5&#13;
in the mornin' till after supper like I&#13;
am. I could walk every step of it,&#13;
but " the enthusiasm began'to fade&#13;
out of her face. She drow a long sigh&#13;
—a sigh of bitter renunciation, "Belinda—-"&#13;
"Gramma!'' lie- leaned forward,&#13;
whispering as he did when he was asking&#13;
her to leave the back buttery window&#13;
open when he was to be out after&#13;
houis. "Ma don't need—to know—a&#13;
single- thing about it!"&#13;
He unllmbered himself from the&#13;
table. "I'lt im:n.ige it!" he avowed&#13;
confidently.&#13;
The week that followed was one of&#13;
the most intense, the most absorbing&#13;
anticipation Martha Stebblns had&#13;
known in many u year. She went about&#13;
the drudgery of her daily tasks on&#13;
winged feet. She-laughed attlie jokes,&#13;
of the hired man. She brushed and&#13;
cleaned Billie's best clothes until they&#13;
did not look within a year of their&#13;
age. She put a new band on his hat.&#13;
She fixed over her own ancient black&#13;
bonnet during the temporary absence&#13;
of her daughter. She smiled to herself&#13;
when she was alone. Once, indeed,&#13;
they even heard her singing.&#13;
'That don't sound like a hymn tune,&#13;
mother!" remarked Mis. Malone, suspiciously.&#13;
"It's 'The Banks and Braes o' Bonnie&#13;
Doon," said the old lady softly.&#13;
6, the myriad fluttering moments&#13;
and apprehensive instants which led&#13;
up to that night! The temerity of undertaking&#13;
a flight so unwonted, the&#13;
danger .-of-.discovery, of recapture—&#13;
these but enhanced the ccstacy of it&#13;
all!&#13;
They made their escape while the&#13;
youngest scion of the house of Malone&#13;
wae being put to bed upstairs. Down&#13;
through the dusk, between the rows of&#13;
stragglhrg gooseberry bushes that&#13;
.caught at her gown, out into the .path&#13;
around the wheat field skirting the&#13;
corn, grandma skurried like a little&#13;
gray rabbit. And there, en the high&#13;
road was Billie waiting for her—Billie,&#13;
kindly, encouraging, swelling with the&#13;
impo-taxkee .of the adventure. How he&#13;
did strive to restrain her impetuosity.&#13;
How he did explain that they had lots&#13;
of time, thai the seats were already&#13;
secured, that she would be tired out&#13;
before she got there. But neither&#13;
speech nor movement was to fee regarded&#13;
In the exhilaration ov that delicious&#13;
experience. How sweet the green things&#13;
smeiled with the dew on them!&#13;
Ah, never would the memory of that&#13;
night fade—that "witching, wonderful&#13;
night!" The entrance Into the lively&#13;
town, the sight of the domed canvas&#13;
tent, the hurrying crowds of pleasureseekers,,&#13;
the lighted shops; the smell of&#13;
(he sawdust, the glimpse of tired faces,&#13;
the torches, the music—best of all, 0,&#13;
incomparably best of all—the circus itself&#13;
! Never did so stately a ringmaster&#13;
stride into the arena. Never did&#13;
so witty a clown break hjs hones on&#13;
collapsable barrels, and stt the benches&#13;
in a roar! No snch agile acrobats e v e&#13;
*a)axced la£Cei3 ?.ni ciargJcdCrpm i:\ipezeev&#13;
' N o suoV lovely ladies ever;&#13;
poised, and pirouetted on barebackhorsts.&#13;
No such stately Amazon ever&#13;
lashed her steads to victory. And all&#13;
the rest merged tor Billie into one exquisite&#13;
glovf that was almost p a i n -&#13;
pain and rapture—-when he beheld:&#13;
Upon a milk-white pony,&#13;
Pit for a fairy queen, ^&#13;
The loveliest little damsel&#13;
His eyes had ever seen!&#13;
It was over. They bad enjoyed it all.&#13;
They had seen the animals—every one.&#13;
They had eaten popcorn, and drank&#13;
lemonade, and. munched peanuts, And&#13;
now they were plodding back to the&#13;
farm along the road that stretched&#13;
ahead Ilk a ribbon of amber .velvet&#13;
Neither spoke. Their hearts were too&#13;
full—hers with memories, his with imaginings.&#13;
They were as Daudet represents&#13;
Parisians after the Salon: "Satiated,&#13;
but not weary, still thrilled by&#13;
that air charged with artistic electricity."&#13;
They made no mention of&#13;
the morrow. Not even reproach then&#13;
could wrest this experience from them.&#13;
"Are you tired, grandma? Rest on&#13;
me—lean hard."&#13;
"0, I ain't tired, Billie! I couldn't&#13;
be tired tonight. I've bad a beau-tifultime!"&#13;
The night was magical. The sleeping&#13;
world was sweet. The hour wr.s&#13;
the full-blown rose of—&#13;
The peace of out-lived blisa!&#13;
—Chicago Tribune.&#13;
A TRAGEDV RECALLED.&#13;
Tiveuty-One Year* A g o t h e P r i n c e I m -&#13;
perial W a s Slain by Z u l u * 8&#13;
It is 21 years ago that General Buller,&#13;
then a colonel commanding a&#13;
detachment of the Frontier Light&#13;
Horse, saw one day, as he was strolling&#13;
leisurely near his camp in Zululand,&#13;
four men galloping wildly toward&#13;
him. The foremost horseman&#13;
was Lieutenant Carey, the three others&#13;
his escort. They brought the&#13;
news that prince imperial of France&#13;
baa been killed by the Zulus. Buller&#13;
Kent the cavalry brigade at daylight&#13;
the next morning to recover the body.&#13;
When they came to the place where&#13;
Carey and his men had been surprised&#13;
by the natives they found the&#13;
horribly mutilated body of a owad&#13;
trooper, and a few yards further on&#13;
the body of the prince. He had the&#13;
marks of many spear thrusis in nia&#13;
body, but was not mutilated in any&#13;
way. Round his neck was a thin gold&#13;
chain, and slung upon it was a miniature&#13;
of his mother. ex-Empress Eufrenie,&#13;
and a tiny gold reliquary containing&#13;
a fragment of the true cross.&#13;
The relic was given by Pope Leo III&#13;
IO Charlemagne on the day when he&#13;
crowned the great Prankish lord emperor&#13;
of the west. Since then dynasty&#13;
after dynasty of French inonarchs&#13;
had worn that, scrap of gold and wood&#13;
as'a talisman. And as i' talisman the&#13;
Zulus regarded it. and they stayed&#13;
their sav-age hands above the poo:&#13;
slain iad.—Utica Globe.&#13;
P o o r H o u s e b o a t Show.&#13;
There, will be a poar houseboat show&#13;
at Henley, near London, this year, as&#13;
only about a dozen boats have been allotted&#13;
positions on ih?. course. The&#13;
war has been blamed for this, but ;he&#13;
chief reason may be found in the retention&#13;
of the rules which prevent the&#13;
subletting of beats after places have&#13;
been allotted by the conservancy, thus&#13;
dispensing with the speculative owner.&#13;
Lasr year these^ rules brought the&#13;
number of houseboats and launches&#13;
on the course down to fifty-one. and&#13;
this year there will be in all under&#13;
thirty. The increased railway facilities,&#13;
too, and the popularity of club&#13;
lawns have had "their share in the&#13;
"slump," and also seriously affect the&#13;
letting of houses and ,hotel business&#13;
during the regatta week, for perhap3&#13;
the most popular method of visiting&#13;
Henley now is by train each day from&#13;
London, while a ticket for one of the&#13;
club lawns provides everything that is&#13;
necessary for the enjoyment of the&#13;
racing under pleasant conditions.&#13;
TftANSVAAL WAR ITEM*.&#13;
' The fallowing dispatch from Belfast,&#13;
Transvaal, under date of Sept 5, was&#13;
received on the 7th: Ian Hamilton&#13;
traversed Dnlstroora yesterday with&#13;
slight opposition. Buller engaged the&#13;
enemy's left this morning. Hamilton&#13;
is endeavoring to turn the enemy's&#13;
right. Boers with two guns and one&#13;
pompom this morning attacked 135&#13;
Canadian mounted infantry guarding&#13;
the railway between Pan and Wonders*&#13;
feldC Mahon proceeded to their assistance,&#13;
but the little garrison had,&#13;
beaten off the enemy before he arrived.&#13;
It was a very creditable performance.&#13;
The wounded were MaJ. Handera and&#13;
Lieut Moodle, slightly, and two men.&#13;
Six men are missing.&#13;
The siege of Lady brand has been&#13;
raised after several desperate attempts&#13;
to capture the town and its little garrison&#13;
of 150 British troops. The Boers&#13;
who attacked Lady brand are-estimated&#13;
to have numbered more than 2,000 men.&#13;
The British were summoned to surrender&#13;
Sept 2, but refused, and from&#13;
that time they were subjected to continual&#13;
cannon and rifle fire. The burghers&#13;
twice tried to rush the British&#13;
position. Probably the approach of a&#13;
relief force saved the little garrison.&#13;
Mr. Kruger and Mr. Steyn have gone&#13;
to Barbcrton. It is believed they are&#13;
preparing for flight. The general opinion&#13;
is that the war is now very near&#13;
the end; but, should the Boers construct&#13;
strongholds in the bush, on the&#13;
veldt, or elsewhere, and begin a system&#13;
of raids, the British would require&#13;
further large supplies of horses.&#13;
Commandoes ander Fourier, Grobeler,&#13;
Bemmer and Hassebrock, together&#13;
with 200 of Theron's scouts are&#13;
investing the British garrison at Lafaybrand.&#13;
It is reported that the troops&#13;
have already burned their stores, and&#13;
it is fearod that they will be compelled&#13;
to surrender.&#13;
A force of Uoer.^ under Commandant&#13;
Theron broke through the British&#13;
lines and captured and burnt a supply&#13;
train at Kilp river station, taking 33&#13;
prisoners. Brabant's Horse proceeded&#13;
thither, recaptured all the prisoners&#13;
and drove the Boers into the hills.&#13;
Col. Plumer dispersed a small "commando&#13;
under Commandant Pretorius&#13;
east of Piunar's river, capturing 2G&#13;
Boers, a number of wagons ,and a&#13;
quantity of cattle and rifles.&#13;
Gen. Buller moved 14 miles northwestward&#13;
along Lydenburjj road and&#13;
crossed Crocodile river to Badfontcin.&#13;
He found the Boers concentrating in&#13;
the Crocodile mountains.&#13;
It is reported that Lord Roberts has&#13;
issued a proclamation formally annexing&#13;
the Transvaal to the dominions of&#13;
the British crown.&#13;
F i r e P e r i s h e d In un E a r t h q u a k e .&#13;
An earthquake at Lituya'bay, according&#13;
to information brought out by&#13;
the steamer Bertha, did a vast amount&#13;
of damage. Five "^tfdians are known&#13;
to have been killed. The disturbance&#13;
occurred on Aug. 11 in the district of&#13;
Mount Elias and Mount Fairweather.&#13;
Chief (leorpc, one of the best known&#13;
j characters in the north, was one of the&#13;
drowned Indians.&#13;
Two St. Louis, Mo., policemen were&#13;
killed by electric shocks sustained&#13;
while they were usin# the police telephone&#13;
on the night of the ?&gt;&lt;}. Eleven&#13;
other ottkiMs were injured in the samo&#13;
manner.&#13;
BASE. BALL.&#13;
rtelow we submit tiia o^leial standlnsr of ttas&#13;
clubsof thfi N.Ltioa li a n i American leairue^ up&#13;
to and iDciuiiin^ SunJay. September 9th:&#13;
NATIONAL LlCAOUE.&#13;
Won. List. P e r c t&#13;
Brooklyn 03 43 .(¾)&#13;
Pittsmirs,' 64 49 ..T63&#13;
Philadelphia 5rt 53 .514&#13;
Chieajro 55 wj .487&#13;
Boston wi 53 A7&amp;&#13;
St. Louis 51 55» .461&#13;
Cincinnati .VJ 61 A&amp;Q&#13;
New Yurli 46 to .42U&#13;
A.MKK1CAN LKACIT&amp;&#13;
Won. f^ost, P :- (*»&#13;
Chicago : ^... 73 49 .00¾&#13;
Milwaukee &gt;i.. Tt 57 .55&gt;&#13;
I n d i a n a p o l i s . . . . . (H 5© .«35'&#13;
Detroit 68 • «.' .523&#13;
Kan Mas City rS 67 -185&#13;
Cleveland ."# 67 ACS&#13;
Buffalo.... . is 73 .44:&#13;
Minneapolis W 8J -U«&#13;
NUOOKTV O F f t F O K M A T i a m&#13;
There were Iff wfwtfm , kttUi 1m&#13;
France last yaar. •'• " ^ - ^ '••''••^&#13;
Tallow fever a» spHewtn atf alats?&#13;
the Mexican porta s o d at Itaasjsja*&#13;
Of tae 46*988 sloths v M d i uwwmeec&#13;
Is Paris tn 189», aa ntaar «* iyn*&#13;
were attributed to tobercaloai* o r&#13;
more than one-fourth.&#13;
The kangaroos, vbkfe ased to be m&#13;
plague In Australia, are mam flatting;&#13;
so aearee that It pay* to rasat t h e * ta»&#13;
herds.&#13;
Tea was euttrrated In China S , W&#13;
years before the Chrtatlasi era and ta&#13;
that country' *t waa first aaed as a&#13;
beverage. N&#13;
George F. T^Cook, who hat Just to*&#13;
tired from Tfie^afflce of saperiatendent&#13;
of schools for the Pistrict of Columbiav&#13;
has held that p-laee for thirty-one&#13;
years.&#13;
A lubricant svttabJe for bicycle&#13;
chains is made by grinding together&#13;
black lead with four times Its weight&#13;
of lard or tallow.&#13;
Proof has just been furnished i o&#13;
Chippewa Falls, Wis., that lightning&#13;
does sometimes strike more than once&#13;
in the same place, the dome of the&#13;
courthouse there having been sun*&#13;
jected to its third visitation.&#13;
WHEN YOU CO TRAVELING.&#13;
DOn't think so much about the new&#13;
gown that you forget a paper of pins.&#13;
Just foresee tbe times you will&#13;
scrape up a trunk tray for some extra&#13;
hairpins.&#13;
•Leave out the chiffon cape if yon&#13;
must, but put in black and white&#13;
thread and a needle.&#13;
If you live in the north yon know&#13;
how cold it can get suddenly, and you&#13;
don't need to be reminded of the ne- -&#13;
ceasity of a thick wrap. Take i t&#13;
Don't select essays to read on the&#13;
train. The woman who aits in front&#13;
of you will probably be a bride and&#13;
you will need something good.&#13;
Tip the porter at the start. Ton win&#13;
get lots of little things that will be&#13;
omitted if you only do it at the end for&#13;
decency.&#13;
If you slip a towel in your bag, yotr&#13;
won't have to wipe your face on one&#13;
that smells of sleeping car soap.&#13;
If you are leaving a lake city ask for&#13;
a seat on the lake sid».&#13;
Mother—"I notice, Ostend, that yot»&#13;
did not eat any pie at dinner." C*tend:&#13;
—"I asked for a piece, ma." Mother—&#13;
"But I did not hear you. Ton should&#13;
have asked a second time." Ostend—&#13;
"But. ma, you told me never to ask for&#13;
pie the second time."&#13;
Teacher (infant natural history&#13;
class)—"You will remember that&gt; will&#13;
you, Tommy—that wasps lie in a torpid&#13;
state all winter?" Tommy (with&#13;
an air of retrospection)—"Yes'm, an*&#13;
I'll try an' remember that they make&#13;
up for it in summer."&#13;
Clergyman (to newly wedded pair)—&#13;
The marriage state imposes various&#13;
duties. The husband must protect tbe&#13;
wife, while the wife must follow tbe&#13;
husband withersoever he goes. Bride—«.&#13;
Lor* sir, can't that be altered in our&#13;
case? My husband is going to be a&#13;
country postman.&#13;
Friend (noticing the confused heaps&#13;
of goods of every description scattered'&#13;
promiscuously around the shoj)—&#13;
Hallo! what's happened? Been taking&#13;
an inventory, had a fire or are you&#13;
going to move out? Haberdasher—&#13;
That shows how little you know about&#13;
shopkeeping. We have merely been&#13;
waiting on a lady who dropped in for&#13;
a paper of pins;&#13;
A Gift f r o m T h a c k e r a y .&#13;
At a dinner party at tbe Baden-&#13;
Powells when he was not yet 3 years&#13;
old, the guests being all learned and&#13;
distinguished men, such as Buckle&#13;
and Whowell, Thackeray was handing&#13;
Mrs. Baden-Powell in to dinner when&#13;
he noticed that one of the little children&#13;
was following behind. This was&#13;
the.future scout, and the young gentleman,&#13;
as was his wont, was just&#13;
scrambling into a chair, when Thackeray,&#13;
fumbling in his pocket, produced&#13;
a new shilling and said in his caressing&#13;
voice: "There, little one, you shall&#13;
have "This shilling If you are good&#13;
and run away." He carried that shilling&#13;
With him, and it is now one of his&#13;
most treasured possessions.—London&#13;
Star.&#13;
THE MARKETS.&#13;
LIVK STOCK.&#13;
X o w T o r k — Cattle Sheep&#13;
l»est grades...»4 40f?is SJ&#13;
40@3 8«&#13;
Groo&gt;« Reported Plentiful.&#13;
The game department of Ontario reports&#13;
that the grouse will be very&#13;
plentiful in western Ontario this year,&#13;
in the neighborhood of Sarnla they&#13;
will be particularly plentiful. The&#13;
season has been particularly favorable&#13;
to the brcMfng of same birds, none o*&#13;
t V yours iav! :s fcfca Urowseo c-!f&#13;
Lo we r grades.&#13;
Chlcajt*'—&#13;
Best grades..&#13;
Lower grades&#13;
D e t r o i t —&#13;
Best grades..&#13;
Lower grades&#13;
B u f f a l o —&#13;
Best grades .&#13;
Lower erodes&#13;
C i n c i n n a t i —&#13;
Best g r a d e s . . . 5 I0@£ C&gt;&#13;
Lower grades. 3 ?;&lt;£* T.»&#13;
P t t t a t m r x —&#13;
Best grades... .;&gt; 13Q5 8J&#13;
Lower grades..4 25@1 85&#13;
5 uO®1) 0)&#13;
4 (X*M To&#13;
i 03®*» 30&#13;
3 00® l 73&#13;
4 40®* 00&#13;
3 6U®I 00&#13;
*1 30&#13;
.' 50&#13;
:? S3&#13;
ii 35&#13;
4 :*)&#13;
300&#13;
4 10&#13;
3 73&#13;
4 -:¾&#13;
3 40&#13;
4 30&#13;
4 00&#13;
Lambs Hog*&#13;
sa 5j $-i 00&#13;
1 50 3 70&#13;
» 7a&#13;
4 £-&gt;&#13;
500&#13;
4 e&gt;&#13;
6 00&#13;
4 25&#13;
5. *—t&#13;
n JO&#13;
5 W&#13;
5 3C&#13;
a 'A&#13;
5 7T.&#13;
546&#13;
5 5^&#13;
4 50 5 20&#13;
5 75 5 73&#13;
5 » 5 4;&#13;
U R A I N , E T C .&#13;
, Wheat. Corn. Oats.&#13;
No. 2 red. No. 2 mix. No. 'J wbijte.&#13;
X e w Y o r k 70®78X &lt;5«4:&gt;H veTfcM*&#13;
ChkMMTO 73©73ft 38638¼ Clf?:» \£&#13;
* B * t r * i t 75©7o* 4!@41H J ^ S t J i&#13;
TolMto ?3©?3Ji 4lfcHfc 21681¾&#13;
C i n c i n n a t i 77&amp;t7% 43®43 23©22$i&#13;
P i m t n r r 77®77* 43®43g ^ 0 2 6 ¼&#13;
B u f f a l o 7S@7S* 43©42X tt&amp;Sg&#13;
•Detroit - H a y . N0.1 Timothy. St J 00 per ton.&#13;
Potatoes, SK* per bu. Live Poultry, sprin*&#13;
chickens, to per ft: fowls. 8c; turkeys. 10c;&#13;
ducks, Stfc. Ktfgs. strictly fresh, l i e per dote*&#13;
liuttct, bys*. dairy. 18*: rcr *&gt;; creamefy. 2jc.&#13;
eWTifis—&#13;
LUKEST WtBS&#13;
of Men's S3 audi&#13;
&gt;$3^ft*hoesinthei&#13;
: world. We sell;&#13;
;more $3.00 and',&#13;
$3^0aheeithsat&#13;
{airy other twol&#13;
^tbe U.S.&#13;
. Ttt^rftfH&#13;
/WJ«J&gt;Mglas$3i»\&#13;
/and $340 shoes are1&#13;
, sold than any other\&#13;
• make isbeeassetheyare'&#13;
taebirtinthevorJd. ^AS^hOoOefSefrcel^ofMarit S.00.&#13;
' liOQOJBOO'&#13;
iBarhtc the larmt Haatt&#13;
5 5 1 ^ ^ 1 ^ ^ * ^ e * e « i t»aSmeaTal i n n&#13;
monld keep them t we ntPMn»e*lkv i&#13;
, Plata « » m - © »&#13;
•hwewfll naek&#13;
hl*Joen«t^.&#13;
m':&gt;\&#13;
fo •;:•- :'';" •••:&#13;
£•' .\''.Vu'., '-y&#13;
'•X'f&#13;
l.C- I&#13;
W&#13;
&gt;;s* '&#13;
\J'&#13;
1» I&#13;
';:'/&#13;
'. J&#13;
i&gt;/&#13;
n&#13;
IVVW&#13;
• i f •&#13;
jsr $ w m Mm^^M .« £&amp;&#13;
$&#13;
« ;&#13;
5; i .¾¾¾¾¾¾ 5&amp; it • v, A'y-f-'i :*H ; . ( • • . » ; .».:** &lt;,fi&#13;
•i- V •.&lt;.&lt;•&#13;
;;S\' f;'-Vn.''."H" 'i|,|l)i.»&#13;
' . • i ' V • : . ' • &gt; ; ••&lt;r, W-:•)&#13;
rM * * \ f •: ".&lt;**-• •4--T1"&#13;
'.t.ift, r,*r»'&#13;
*V. 4v?/.r&gt;&#13;
; • " ' ' • k:% s#?#$&#13;
• " . * . - \ / '1 A&#13;
"i ; ' x ' '&#13;
is1/"-.'&#13;
v* •»&#13;
•em* 1 1 . 1 T*V&#13;
Site fiwfetttjj § tepatofc.&#13;
f. U. ANDREWS E D I T O R .&#13;
THURSDAY, SEPT. 13, 1900.&#13;
Here Tltey Are. Take Tour Choice.&#13;
Below we give the candidates&#13;
of all tickets, both national and&#13;
state.&#13;
REPUBLICAN NATIONAL.&#13;
President—William McKinley, Ohio.&#13;
Vice-Pres.—Theodore - Roosevelt, New&#13;
York. &lt;y&#13;
Congress, Sixth District—Samuel W.&#13;
Smith, Oakland.&#13;
STATE TICKET.&#13;
Governor—Aaron T. Bliss, Saginaw.&#13;
Lieut. Governor-O. W. Robinson, Houhgton.&#13;
Sec.—Fred W. Warner, Oakland.&#13;
Treas,—Daniel McCoy, Kent.&#13;
Auditor Geueral—Perry F. Powers, Wexford.&#13;
Commiaioner of State Land Office—E. A .&#13;
Wildey, VanBuren.&#13;
Attorney General—Horace M. Oren,&#13;
Chippewa.&#13;
Superintendent of Public Instruction—&#13;
Delos Fall, Calhoun.&#13;
Member of State Board of E d u c a t i o n - -&#13;
James H . Thompson, Osceola.&#13;
DEMOCRAT NATIONAL.&#13;
President—William J . Bryan, Nebraska.&#13;
Vice-Pres.—Adlai E . Stevenson, Illinois.&#13;
STATE TICKET.&#13;
Governor—Wm. C. Maybury, Wayne. /&#13;
Lieut.-Governor—Jonathan G. Ramsdell,&#13;
Grand Traverse.&#13;
Sec.—John W. Ewing, Eaton. /&#13;
Treas.—Chas. Sundstrom, MXrquette.&#13;
Auditor-General—Hiram B. Hudson, Antrim.&#13;
Attorney-General—Jxmes O'Hara, St.&#13;
Joseph. /'&#13;
Land Com.—Ge^. G. Winans, Livingston.&#13;
Supt. of Pubifc Instruction—Stephen P.&#13;
Langdon, Monroe.&#13;
Member State Board of Education, James&#13;
McEntree, Isabella.&#13;
The young ladies are able to go&#13;
about the streets now hafclessy because&#13;
it is a fad. Next winter&#13;
they will feel very badly when&#13;
they go to an entertainment, if&#13;
they are requested to remove a&#13;
hat as large as a bushel basket ia&#13;
order that other people can see.&#13;
Cuuand Bruise* Quickly Cured.&#13;
Chamberlain'* Pain Balm applied to&#13;
a cut, fcruise, burn, scald or like injury&#13;
will instantly allay the pain and&#13;
will heal the parts in less time than&#13;
any other treatment. Unless the injury&#13;
is very severe it will not leave a&#13;
£car. Pain Balpi also cures rheumatism,&#13;
sprains, swellings and lameness&#13;
For sale by F. A.Sigler, Pinckney.&#13;
/&#13;
Tpe Pontiac Journal speaks of&#13;
a class that can be found in other&#13;
towns as well as Pontiac, as follows:&#13;
There are business men in&#13;
Pontiac who howl like jackalls,&#13;
because some people persist in going&#13;
to Detroit to buy goods, and&#13;
wonder why the local press do&#13;
not cry out against it. While at&#13;
the same time they are uot found&#13;
patronizing the advertising columns&#13;
but two or three times just&#13;
before Christmas,' and get their&#13;
job printing abroad.&#13;
Al-&#13;
PROHIBITION.&#13;
STATE TICKET.&#13;
Governor—Frederick L . Goodrich,&#13;
bion.&#13;
Lieut. Governor—Trowbridge Johns, Marquette.&#13;
Secretary—Reuben C. Reed, Howell.&#13;
Treas.—John F. Eesley, Plain well.&#13;
Auditor General—William D . Farley,&#13;
Battle Creek.&#13;
Com. of State Land Office—Gideon Vivier&#13;
Detroit.&#13;
Superintendent of Public Instruction—&#13;
David S. Warner, Spring Arbor.&#13;
Member of Board of Education—Samuel&#13;
W. Bird, Denton, Wayne Co.&#13;
C n a m b e r t a l n ' H C o u g h R e m e d y a&#13;
/ ' G r e a t F a v o r i t e .&#13;
y The soothing and healing properties&#13;
of this remedy, its pleasant ta^te and&#13;
prompt and permanent cures have&#13;
made it a great favorite with people&#13;
everywhere. It is especially prized&#13;
by mothers of small children for colds,&#13;
croup and whooping cough, as it always&#13;
affords quick relief, and as it&#13;
contains no opium or ofher harmful&#13;
drug, it may be given as confidently&#13;
to a bahy as to an adult. For sale by&#13;
F. A. Sigler, Pinckney.&#13;
W. C- T. Mi&#13;
Edited by tb© W. C. T n.o Ptaoktuy A&#13;
Stop t h e C o u g h a n d w o r k i o f f t h e&#13;
Cold.&#13;
Laxative Bromo-Quinine Tablets cure&#13;
a coloVin one day. No&lt;ure, no pay.&#13;
Price 25 cents.&#13;
A preacher at Ft. Scott, Kansas&#13;
delivered a brief but truthful fun-&#13;
Arrangemeuts are about completed&#13;
with the Ann Arbor R. R.&#13;
company whereby the tunnel will&#13;
be graded down and sodded, and&#13;
three new iron bridges will be&#13;
placed at the street crossings.&#13;
This will be both an imprvement&#13;
in appearance and safety, and we&#13;
hope there will be nothing to&#13;
hinder this much needed work being&#13;
done at as early a date as possible.—&#13;
Livingston Herald.&#13;
Haye you a sense of fullness in the&#13;
region of your stomach after eating?&#13;
It' so you will b« benefited by using&#13;
Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver&#13;
Tablets. They also cure belching and&#13;
sour stomach. Tbey regulate the bowels&#13;
too. Price, 25 cents. Sold by F.&#13;
A. Sigler, Pinckney.&#13;
It is said a Marshall bachelor&#13;
out of patience with flies which&#13;
era! M m m ' t t o ' o t h w d^T" H ^ e j » T , d e d . W ! , r 0 0 " ' s e c n r e d ^ , °&#13;
it is: "A word to yoo all. P o s t I ^ e e ^ of 8tiaky fly paper wh.oh&#13;
mortem praises are in the a i r . ! he placed on chmrs near a mndow.&#13;
People kiss their dead who never | » « ™ * ™ 8 • » * « » * » f " h* for"&#13;
stop to kiss their living: they hov- ? o t * f W ^ 0 0 ' 8 ^ s a t d o w n&#13;
er over open caskets in hysterical in of the chairs. He soon got up&#13;
sobs, but; fail to throw their arms&#13;
around their loved ones who are&#13;
fighting the stern battles of life.&#13;
A word to cheer the struggling&#13;
soul in life is worth more than the&#13;
roses of Christendom piling high&#13;
over casket covers." t&#13;
Cured o f C h o r a l e D i a r r h o e a A f t e r 3 0&#13;
T e a r s o f S u f f e r i n g .&#13;
*'l suffered for 30 years with diarrhoea&#13;
and thought I was past being&#13;
cured," says Jphn S. Halloway, of&#13;
French Camp, Miss. "I had spent so&#13;
much time and money and suffered&#13;
so much that 1 had given up all&#13;
hopes of recovery. I was »o feeble&#13;
from the effects of the diarrhoea that&#13;
1 could do no kind of labor, could not&#13;
even travel, but by accident I was permitted&#13;
to find a bottle of Chamberlam's&#13;
Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea&#13;
Remedy, and after taking several bottles&#13;
I am entirely cored of that trouble.&#13;
I am so pleased with tbe result that I&#13;
am anxious that it be in reach of all&#13;
who auffer as 1 have/* For sale oy F.&#13;
A. Sigler, Pinckney.&#13;
Bring your Job Work to this office.&#13;
and proceeded to pick the paper&#13;
off the south end of his trousers.&#13;
As it was a bad place to ^et at he&#13;
took the pants off and while cleaning&#13;
them unconsciously sat down&#13;
in the other chair.&#13;
TO C u r e a C o l d i n O n e D a i :&#13;
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets.&#13;
All druggists.refund the money&#13;
if it fails to cure. E W. Grove's signature&#13;
is on eacb box. 25c.&#13;
Chauncey Crytz, of Scio, at one&#13;
time postmaster of the hamlet,&#13;
has in his possesion a XL S. sub&#13;
treasury order for one ceut. He&#13;
remitted one cent to much to the&#13;
government when settling up&#13;
with the post office department&#13;
and in due time received back order&#13;
No. 250,031 drawn on the subtreasury&#13;
at Chicago with as much&#13;
formality as if it were for a hundred&#13;
dollars.—Chelsea Herald.&#13;
For some years, a decided inclination&#13;
has been apparent all over&#13;
the country to give up the use of&#13;
whiskey and other strong alcohols&#13;
using a s j a substitute beer and&#13;
other compounds. This is evidently&#13;
founded on the idea that beer&#13;
is not harmful, and contains a&#13;
large amount of nutriment; also&#13;
that bitters may have some medical&#13;
quality which will neutralize&#13;
the alcohol it conceals, etc.&#13;
These theories are without confirmation&#13;
in the observation of&#13;
physicians. The use of beer is&#13;
found to produce a species of degeneration&#13;
of all the organs; profound&#13;
and deceptive fatty deposits&#13;
diminished circulation, conditions&#13;
of congestion and pervasion of&#13;
functional activities, local inflamation&#13;
of both the liver and kidneys,&#13;
are constantly present.&#13;
Intellectually, a stupor amounting&#13;
to almost a paralysis,, arrests&#13;
the reason, changing all the higher&#13;
faculties into mere animalisam,&#13;
sensual, selfish, sluggish, varied&#13;
only with paroxysms of anger that&#13;
are senseless and brutal-&#13;
In appearance the beer drinker&#13;
may be the picture of health, but&#13;
in reality ne is most incapable of&#13;
resisting disease. A slight injury&#13;
a severe cold, or shock to the body&#13;
or mind, will commonly provoke&#13;
acute disease ending fatp.ly.&#13;
Compared with inebriates who&#13;
use different kinds of alcohol, he&#13;
is more incurable and more generally&#13;
diseased. The constant use&#13;
of beer every day gives the system&#13;
no recuperation, but steadily lowers&#13;
the vital forces. I t is our observation&#13;
that beer drinking in&#13;
this country produces the very&#13;
lowest kind of inebriety, closely&#13;
allied to criminal insanity. R e -&#13;
course to beer as a substitute for&#13;
other forms of alcohol merely increases&#13;
the danger of fatality.-—&#13;
Scientific American.&#13;
mmmmm .iijli'. !TJPR&#13;
EXCURSIONS&#13;
VIA THB&#13;
PERE MARQUETTE&#13;
Sunday, Sept. 23, Last One Ttris Tear&#13;
to Grand Ledge and Grand Rapids.&#13;
Train will leave South Lyon at&#13;
8:40 a. m. Returning leave Grand&#13;
Rapids at 6:30 p. m. Round trip&#13;
rate to Grand Ledge 10.75, Grand&#13;
Rapids $1.60. Last chance, t-38&#13;
State Fair at Grand Rapids.&#13;
Sapt. 24 to 28, inclusive, Pere&#13;
Marquette agents at all stations&#13;
in Michigan witt sell tickets t o&#13;
Grand Rapids and return, on account&#13;
of State Fair, at one way&#13;
fare plus 50 cents for admission to&#13;
the fair. Children under 12 half&#13;
rate. Return limit of all tickets&#13;
Sept. 29.&#13;
MORE LOCAX.&#13;
Perry Blunt was in Ann Arbor Saturday.&#13;
M«\ Buttler of Hamburg, spent&#13;
Sunday with friends here.&#13;
The Detroit M. E. Conference is in&#13;
session at Pontiac this week.&#13;
There are Othen Besldea Cfclcago.&#13;
We went to Detroit l*st Monday,&#13;
and now sa/it it* a risk of one's life to&#13;
do business in that city. The electric&#13;
ears oa alt sides, bicycles automobiles&#13;
and other vehicles, and their sudden&#13;
dash towards the pepestrian when not&#13;
expected, make a vwy 'undesirable&#13;
coudition for one used to a quiet country&#13;
or village life.—Byron Herald.&#13;
What in the world would Bro.&#13;
Sleeth do in a real, live city, like Chicago.—&#13;
Fowlemlle Review.&#13;
If that is tbe way Bro. Adams&#13;
thinks of his own state and her metropolis&#13;
he had better move to Chicago.&#13;
Detroit is one of the busiest, cleanest&#13;
cities in the United States.&#13;
Uat what ! • • »lke.&#13;
lE»V*» you Ukt. Keep strong by taking&#13;
Knill'i Dyapepaia Tablet*. They digett&#13;
any and all kind* of food. Make pure,&#13;
tweet stomachs and breaths. Try them.&#13;
Only 25c a box. : .?&#13;
Pleawaat. *ufe *ud Sure . ,a t&#13;
are KnM's Blsck Diarrhoea Pills. (BJaek&#13;
berry Compound) cure Summer complaints&#13;
Diarrhoea, Djieatery, Cholera Morb.uaand&#13;
all pains of the stomach and bowels; 25oa&#13;
box. *&#13;
Orango Headache.&#13;
KniU'BOrange Headache Pills, 10 doee lQe&#13;
Cure in 10 minutes, are t he best and cheap&#13;
est. Never fail or leave any bad after ef&#13;
feet. Guaranteed by your druggist.&#13;
- • • • • • -&#13;
t i i i j i i ii ' H&#13;
RESOLUTIONS.&#13;
At tbe regular review of Livingston&#13;
Tent, No. 2¾. KOTM Sept. 7, 1900,&#13;
the following resolutions were adopt*&#13;
ed:&#13;
W H E R E A S : — T h e supreme Ruler of the&#13;
universe, in his intiuite wisdom, has removed&#13;
from our midst our beloved brother&#13;
and Sir K m g h t , N . N . Whitcomb, Aug.&#13;
24; therefore, be it&#13;
R E S O L V E D : — T h a t in the death of our&#13;
brother the community has lost an upright&#13;
and honorable citizen, the wife a loving&#13;
and devoted companion, and the Maccabees&#13;
a true- and loyal Sir Knight.&#13;
RESOLVED:—That in this hour of sorrow&#13;
and affliction, we tender to the bereaved,&#13;
family our deepest and truest sympathies.&#13;
R E S O L V E D :---That these resolutions be&#13;
entered upon the records of the Tent; that&#13;
a copy be sent to the family; and that the&#13;
same be published in the Pinckney D I S -&#13;
PATCH. And be it further,&#13;
RESOLVED:—That the charter of our&#13;
Teut, and the chair occupied by our Sir&#13;
Knight be drapped in mourning for a period&#13;
of thirty days.&#13;
C. L . Grimes, f&#13;
E. R. Cook, I Committee.&#13;
G. P. Lambertson, (&#13;
SOUTH MARION.&#13;
Andrew Roche is at home sick&#13;
with the quincy.&#13;
Mae Brogan is attending school&#13;
in the Younglove District.&#13;
Miss Pond spent last week with&#13;
her cousin Geo. Younglove.&#13;
Chas. Dey, wife and children&#13;
called at N. Pacey's Monday.&#13;
, Edna Stowe commenedd. school&#13;
at Marion Center last Monday.&#13;
B. S. Miller of Pingree- called&#13;
at I. J. Abbott's, Tuesday last.&#13;
Mrs. Kellogg of Detroit is visiting&#13;
her brother Darwin Carr.&#13;
Mrs. Brown is spending a few&#13;
days witn her cousin Mrs. Geo.&#13;
Bland.&#13;
Henry Hutson of White Oak,&#13;
has been purchasing stock in this&#13;
vicinity.&#13;
E. Kuhn of Gregory transacted&#13;
business at the County farm last&#13;
Tuesday.&#13;
Mrs. Crane and daughter Ora of&#13;
Munith is visiting her sister M rs.&#13;
R. M. Glenn.&#13;
Sohool commenced in District&#13;
No. 11 Marion and Putnam last&#13;
Monday with Samuel Wilson as&#13;
teacher. This being his first experience.&#13;
H. M. Williston sowed \ of an&#13;
acre of rape last spring on which&#13;
he has patured ten hogs ond 20&#13;
sheep all summer. Some of it is&#13;
five feet high at the present time.&#13;
PATENTS GUARANTEED&#13;
Our fee returned if we fail. Any one lending&#13;
•ketch aud description of any invention wiu&#13;
promptly receive our opinion free concerning&#13;
the patentability of same. "How to Obtain a&#13;
Patent" sent upon request. Patents secured&#13;
through us advertised for sale nt our expense. '.&#13;
Patents taken out through us receive apeciat&#13;
*o»»ce, without charge, iu T U E PATENT RECORD,&#13;
an illustrated and widely circulated journal,&#13;
consulted by Manufacturers rmd Investors.&#13;
Send for sample cupy FREE. Address^&#13;
VICTOR J . EVANS A CO.&#13;
(Patent Attorneys,)&#13;
ftvans Building, WASHINGTON. O. 0»&#13;
COMMISSIONER'S NOTICE,-St*te of Miohi&#13;
gso, County of Livingston, §S,—Probst* Court&#13;
for said county. Estate of&#13;
DAN JACKSOK deceased.&#13;
Tbe undersigned having been appointed by the&#13;
Judge of Probate of said county, Commissioners&#13;
on claims in tbe matter of said estate, and six&#13;
montns from the thirtieth day of August A. D.&#13;
1900 having been allowed by said Judge of Probate&#13;
to all persons holding claims against said estate&#13;
in which to present tbetr claims to us for examination&#13;
and adjustment; _ ,&#13;
Notice is hereby given that we will meet on&#13;
Friday the 80th day of November A. D. lfiOo,&#13;
and on Friday the 4th day of March A. D. 1906,&#13;
at 10 o'clock a. m. of each day, at the Pinckney&#13;
Exchange Bank in the tovfrnship of Putnam in&#13;
said county, to receive and examine such claim s.&#13;
Uated: Howell, Au«uet 80, :900.,&#13;
G.w. T-uwu,— ^Commissioners&#13;
CHAS. LOVK. f ... on Claims.&#13;
SOME PACTS! READ THBM1&#13;
EUREKA SURE STOP TOOTHACHE POWDERS&#13;
Gives quick and Bnre relief.&#13;
EUREKA COMPLEXION OINTMENT&#13;
.Removes Black-heads and Pimples.&#13;
EUREKA CORN CURE&#13;
Cures all Corns, BunionB, and Callous&#13;
places.&#13;
EUREKA O.K. WART REMOVER&#13;
Is certain in its results.&#13;
E a c h 1 0 c , C o i n o r S t a m p s&#13;
By R e t u r n Mall.&#13;
Agents wanted—write today.&#13;
Address, EUREKA SUPPLY H O U S E ,&#13;
Piuckney, Mich.&#13;
Railroad* Guide.&#13;
PARSHALLVILLEThomas&#13;
Bidleman moved his&#13;
family to Highland last Monday.&#13;
Farshallville school commenced&#13;
the bouse witb tbe scarlet tever.&#13;
. Mike Murphy beld the luck number&#13;
which drew the Brady horse.&#13;
Dell Beebe and wtfefot^Fowlerville&#13;
Subscribe for the DISPATCH&#13;
When you want a pleasant physic&#13;
try the new remedy, Chamberlain's&#13;
Stomach and Liver Tablets. Thevare&#13;
easy to take and pleasant in effect.&#13;
Price, 25 cents. Samples free at F.&#13;
A. Sigler's drug store,&#13;
Miss Ethel Graham Is contined to Monday morning with Frank&#13;
Dodd as teacher.&#13;
Free Mail delivery is being&#13;
talked quite strong for this place&#13;
and vicinity.&#13;
Mrs. W. H. Allshonse of Hanibal&#13;
"Wisconsin is visiting her cousin&#13;
Mrs. A. C. Wakeman.&#13;
We hear that sometimes during&#13;
the past week a little girl came&#13;
to the home of Herb and Cora&#13;
Preston. We hope they may keep&#13;
her a long time.&#13;
»&#13;
There was s o service in the&#13;
Baptist church last Sunday morning,&#13;
the congregation attending&#13;
the M. E . church to hear Bev.&#13;
Walker's farwell sermon before&#13;
going to conference.&#13;
AND STEAMSHiP UNM8*&#13;
Popular route tor Ann Arbor, Toledo&#13;
and points East, South, and for&#13;
Howell, Owosao, Alma, Mt Pleasant&#13;
Cadillac, Manistee, Traverse City and&#13;
points in Northwestern Michigan.&#13;
W. H. BENNETT,&#13;
G. P . A. Toledo&#13;
PERE MARQUETTE&#13;
R a i l x o o A , 2ntm.y 1 3 , 1 C O O .&#13;
L.V&#13;
Ar&#13;
Lv&#13;
Ar&#13;
GOING EAST&#13;
Mrand Ri. 'Ids.&#13;
Ionia . . .&#13;
LaoeiDg&#13;
Howell&#13;
South Lyon...&#13;
Salem&#13;
Plymouth&#13;
Detroit&#13;
GOING WK8T&#13;
Detroit&#13;
Plymouth....&#13;
Salem .,&#13;
South Lyon....&#13;
Howell&#13;
Lasting&#13;
Ionia&#13;
"rand Rapine.&#13;
a m.&#13;
i in&#13;
740&#13;
U 04&#13;
10 05&#13;
10 36&#13;
10 4«&#13;
11 00&#13;
11 40&#13;
a m&#13;
sU 025&#13;
8 86&#13;
9 46&#13;
10 28&#13;
ii a&#13;
13 80&#13;
i an&#13;
» 10&#13;
U 05&#13;
12 20&#13;
1 45&#13;
2 33&#13;
8*04&#13;
325&#13;
4OT&#13;
P IB&#13;
1 10&#13;
148&#13;
3,08&#13;
886&#13;
8 30&#13;
4 45&#13;
R 10&#13;
v m&#13;
ft 80&#13;
600&#13;
7*7&#13;
0 2»&#13;
8 58&#13;
008&#13;
»iXT&#13;
10 OS&#13;
p m&#13;
A IS&#13;
568&#13;
6 10&#13;
6 »&#13;
658&#13;
755&#13;
980&#13;
10 00&#13;
spent Sunday witb J. J, Teeple's fam-&#13;
« ! • • •&#13;
Mrs. A. G. Leland is spending a&#13;
couple of weeks with relatives in&#13;
South Lyon.&#13;
Wm. Going raised 25J bushels of&#13;
beans from 14 acres of ground on the&#13;
Will Harris lots.&#13;
W. E. Murphy aud K. L. Andrews&#13;
were in Detroit Thursday of last week&#13;
on business and took in the two ball&#13;
frames between Detroit and Kansas&#13;
City. .&#13;
FAAMK Bay,&#13;
Agent, South Lyon.&#13;
Br F . MOELLEK,&#13;
Acting l*. P. A.,&#13;
Urand Rapid*.&#13;
6 0 YEARt&#13;
EXPERIENCE&#13;
TRADE MARKS DcaiaN*&#13;
CCOTRKIHT* A C .&#13;
»«Wjrtml&#13;
ttonattrtethr confidential.&#13;
•ent free. OtdeM agency for Monri&#13;
muoiea*&#13;
Handbook«P Pi I i l l&#13;
tenia.&#13;
Lsyona vending a sketch and deecuptlop M f&#13;
eklr aeoettain oar opinion free whether « •&#13;
ention it proh*My pntentebba, Oonirouolealojrpe&#13;
Patents taken thronRh Mnnn «vCo, reott*t&gt;&#13;
gpecUU notice, Without ebartte, tn the Scientific American. Ai lhaa^naneooftf.tae^iye IeDJeeQtf^tesdte wwerfncatjh, IT*»ernraee»,tf&lt;tifrl»»&#13;
Mar&lt; f6wino«lM,fL Sol&#13;
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)&#13;
BY EDWARD S. HUME. .&#13;
F o r Twanty-five Year* a n American, Reaidtnt of B o m b a y ,&#13;
H a v i n f J o i t returned f t a * India. I h a v e r e a d t h e a c c o u n t ! of th© f a m i n e&#13;
ta A m e r i c a n papers, I have aeen t h e pictures, I h a v e seen t h e conditions in&#13;
t h e f a m i n e districts, a n d I c a n assure y o u t h a t t h e actual s t a t e of affairs i s&#13;
m u c h more terrible .than painted or pictured. A n d t h e worst of it i s that, e v e n&#13;
if t h e J u n e rains are entirely favorable, n o relief can be e x p e c t e d till the crop&#13;
i s g a t h e r e d in October. F a m i n e photographs frequently represent h a l f starve&#13;
d a n d d y i n g persons lying on t h e street or in s o m e field. T h e y are poor&#13;
t u t s e l l respecting people, w h o h a v e never been the objects o f public charity&#13;
t h e m ; s e r o m , i n s t r u m e n t s a n d e v e r y t h i n f M e d a £ fofc eJBctetot JWUt « • Provided,&#13;
tmfc thp H i n d o o s n a v e n o t t a k e n k i n d l y t o t h i s r e m e d y . A l l k i n d s o f&#13;
w i l d rumour h a v e b e e n spoead a n d h a v e h e e n w i d e l y b e l i e v e d t o t h e effect&#13;
t h a t inoculation Is m o s t harmful; t h a t i t h a s been d e v i s e d by t h e E u r o p e a n&#13;
doctors t o punish t h e £ l n d o o * for s u p p o s e d disloyalty a n d a s a m e a n s for&#13;
destroying.caste. In v i e w of t h i s t h e g o v e r n m e n t offers t w o d a y s ' w a g e s t o&#13;
e v e r y man, w o m a n or child w h o is inoculated. X k n o w a little f e l l o w 8 y e a r s&#13;
old, Whose mother d i e d a n d w h o s e f a t h e r i s a helpless invalid. B e a r i n g t h a t&#13;
m o n e y w a s paid t o every person w h o w a s w i l l i n g t o b e inoculated* t h i s poor&#13;
H U N G E R K I L L E D W O M A N ,&#13;
a n d h a v e refused t o g o to famine relief c a m p s until at last death h a s stared&#13;
t h e m In the .face, and unbearable distress h a s driven them ou£ In search of&#13;
help. W e a r y and hungry, they have laid t h e m s e l v e s d o w n t o rest and h a v e&#13;
d i e d before w a k i n g . Not long before l e a v i n g India, while w a l k i n g w i t h a&#13;
brother missionary at Ahmedabad, not f a r from his house, he pointed t o a&#13;
tree at the roadside and said: "The other day I s a w the emaciated figure of&#13;
a" m a n lying, face d o w n , under that tree. On going near and touching the&#13;
b o d y I found it already stiff and cold. E x a m i n i n g it more carefully, I found&#13;
one side torn a w a y , evidently eaten by jackals. A couple of rods a w a y lay&#13;
. t h e dead body of an Infant. A little&#13;
farther on w a s found a w o m a n , still&#13;
alive. She w a s the w i f e of the m a n&#13;
and mother of the child. She, too, poor&#13;
thing, died before she could reach t h e&#13;
poorhouse, w h i c h stood within sight&#13;
and call of the spot w h e r e these patient,&#13;
helpless o n e s h a d fallen d o w n t o&#13;
die."&#13;
A starving m a n i s devoid of Judgm&#13;
e n t and of m o s t of h i s natural feelings.&#13;
In April w e received a group of&#13;
famine girls. A m o n g them w a s one&#13;
who, although much emaciated, began&#13;
to improve from the day, she c a m e t o&#13;
us^ After a w e e k _ s h e rapidly g r e w&#13;
worse. In spite of everything t h a t&#13;
could be done for her she soon died.&#13;
W e learned at laBt that, w h i l e she w a s&#13;
so ill that w e w e r e giving her a f e w&#13;
spoonfuls of nourishment at a time,&#13;
raising her gently, b e c a u s e she seemed&#13;
unable to m a k e any effort to help herself,&#13;
and even later, w h e n she seemed&#13;
unable t o see or to speak, she had been&#13;
dragging herself at intervals, w h e n w e&#13;
w e r e absent, out into t h e garden, a distance&#13;
of 50 yards, in order t o g e t s o m e&#13;
green mangoes to eat. For the poor&#13;
famine child they were deadly poison.&#13;
She k n e w it, but the a w f u l g n a w i n g in&#13;
her stomach m a d e prudence impossible.&#13;
The only effective preventive to&#13;
the spread of plague that has yet been&#13;
discovered is inoculation with plague&#13;
serum. Wherever an outbreak of t h e&#13;
disease is imminent, inoculation sta-&#13;
HINDOO PEASANT woicAN I N HAPPY TiMBfl. tlons are opened. Doctors are sent t o&#13;
R E S C U E D F A M I N E G I B L $ .&#13;
little lad presented h i m s e l f at one of t h e Inoculation stations. A s soon a s h i s&#13;
a r m w a s healed he w e n t t o another station, a n d this t h i n g w e n t o n until t h e&#13;
poor b o y had actually been inoculated five t i m e s In each a r m for the S4 c e n t s&#13;
b e received and with w h i c h h e supported himself and f a t h e r for s i x w e e k s .&#13;
The government has already expended more than $47,000,000 in t h e&#13;
free distribution of food to those w h o are unable to work and in e m p l o y i n g&#13;
t h e ablebodied at cash w a g e s in t h e construction of reservoirs, irrigation&#13;
ditches and other public w o r k s t h a t w i l l mitigate future droughts. I n addition,&#13;
there are generous and splendidly'&#13;
organized s y s t e m s of private charity,&#13;
the f u n d s being supplied from every&#13;
part of the civilized world and managed&#13;
chiefly by American and Europea&#13;
n missionaries of long experience in&#13;
India. It is the duty and privilege of&#13;
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evenings, lat«&#13;
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Sunday school at cloee of mora-&#13;
LIAL SiQLJB, Supt.&#13;
S&#13;
COSU&amp;UQAnoaAL CHVRCH.&#13;
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day evenings. Sunday school at ,cJoee of morn,&#13;
ini service. B. H. Teeple, Supt,, Maoel Swartboat&#13;
Sec. '&#13;
(J Bev. M. J. Commerford, Pastor. .Services'&#13;
every Sunday. Low mass at 7:3« o'clock&#13;
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A $4.00 BOOK FOR 7 5 0 5 ,&#13;
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ferner's Dictionary of Synonyms c Antony as,&#13;
MyUtoloer and Familiar&#13;
A book that should be in thorest&#13;
pocket of every person, becauso it&#13;
tells you the right word tc i:se.&#13;
No Two Words in the English&#13;
Language Have Exactly tiie&#13;
Same Significance. To expree*&#13;
the precise ir.uaniug that oue idtends&#13;
to convey a dictionary o;&#13;
Synonyms is needed to avoid repetition.&#13;
The strongest figure of&#13;
speech is antithesis. In thit&gt; dictionary&#13;
toe appended Antonyn's&#13;
will, therefore, De found extremely&#13;
valuable. Contains many other&#13;
features such as Mythology,&#13;
Familiar Allusions and For-&#13;
Phrases, Prof. Loisette's Memory&#13;
STILL MORE LOCAL.&#13;
sign&#13;
Sy atom, 'The Art of Kerer Forgetting.'' etc&#13;
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'JOJttlT&#13;
O E N S R A L C A T A L O G U E is the book of the people--it quotas&#13;
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M0NT80MERY WABD &amp; 0 0 . ^ ^ ¾ ¾ ^ ¾ ^ ^ 1&#13;
M\&#13;
Mi«s Mabel Sitrler is s p e n d i n g tha&#13;
week with relatives in Detroit.- I&#13;
T h e B r i g h t o n team d o n e u p tlj&amp;&#13;
VVebbervil/e boys on F r i d a y last, score |&#13;
16 to 9.&#13;
T h e M. E. society took in over $ 1 2&#13;
at t b e i r chicken pie social W e d n e s d a y :&#13;
ot last week. ;&#13;
J o b n M c D o n a l d of D e t r o i t was in&#13;
t o w n one d a y last week s h a k i n g b a n d s&#13;
with old friends.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Cbas V a n o r d e n of 1&#13;
of W e b b e r v i i l e , s p e n t S u n d a y w i t h&#13;
Jeff P a r k e r and wife.&#13;
Aliss M a m e S i g l e r w h o has b e e s v i s - ;&#13;
itintr in A n n A r b o r , Y p s i l a n t i a n d&#13;
Detroit, r e t u r n e d h o m e t h e first of thb&#13;
week.&#13;
T h e brick work on t h e Colby c o t t a g e&#13;
is n e a r l y c o m p l e t e and c a r p e n t e r s w i l l .&#13;
soon be p u s h i n g the b u i l d i n g to com*&#13;
p l e t i o n .&#13;
T h e democratic c o u n t y c o n v e n t i o n&#13;
w i l l be held in H o w e l l on M o o i a y .&#13;
Sept. 17. P u t n a m t o w n s h i p is e n t i t l -&#13;
ed to s e v e n d e l e g a t e s .&#13;
If y o u can g e t there, do not fail to j&#13;
attend the e n t e r t a i n m e n t at G r e g o r y J&#13;
Friday e v e n i n g . Air. H o w e is one of&#13;
the r i s i n g a u t h o r s of the day.&#13;
J a m e s Fitch w e n t to Pinctcney last&#13;
S a t u r d a y on a visit. M o n d a y be r e -&#13;
t u r n e d a n d h a s since been confined to&#13;
his bed by s i c k n e s s . — S t o e k b r i d g e&#13;
j Brief.&#13;
1&#13;
( A t the social held by St. Mary's peo&#13;
! pie at J o h n Connors on F r i d a y e v e n -&#13;
i u g last the society rook i n over $ 1 0 .&#13;
Tbe p i c t u r e w a s d r a w n by Miss H e l e n&#13;
Carroll.&#13;
A l e t t e r from Harry N i l o f F . H.&#13;
N i x &amp; S o n p h o t o g r a p h e r s locates bira&#13;
in D i g B a p i d s w h e r e be baa g o n e i n t o&#13;
bosioeasvpermeutly. H e i n f o r m s u s&#13;
t h a t h e has e l l ol i P i n c k n e y n e g a t i v e s&#13;
and a n y o n e d e s i r ' n g t o d o so-can &lt;ret&#13;
duplicate* a t a n y t i m e by w r i t i n g h i m&#13;
at B i g R a p i d s .&#13;
A Chelsea man has a cherry&#13;
tree which had a fine crop of&#13;
cherrie in season and now has&#13;
blossomed out a second time.&#13;
SOCIETIES;&#13;
j * s a — • • • • • sasBJkma*JLmjBssuu DJ&amp;K.&amp;K. Til Uaiiu Socialists tfAaMka I&#13;
20 Ystrs li DtfriH.&#13;
250,000 Cam.&#13;
WECURESTRICTURE Thousands of young and middle-aged&#13;
[ men are troubled with this disease-an ny&#13;
unconsciously. They may bare a smart-&#13;
' ing sensation, small, twisting stream,&#13;
sharp catting pains at time*, slight discharge,&#13;
difficulty in commencing, weak&#13;
organs, emissions, and all the symptoms I&#13;
of nervous debility—they have,STRICTURE.&#13;
Don't let doctors experiment on&#13;
yon, by cutting, stretching, or tearing&#13;
you. This will not cure you. as it will return.&#13;
Our HEW METHOD TREATMENT&#13;
absorbs the stricture tissue; :&#13;
hence removes the stricture permanently.&#13;
It can never return. No pain, no suffer,&#13;
ing, no detention from business by our ,&#13;
method. Tbesexaalorgansarestrength- I&#13;
ened. The nerves are Invigorated, and&#13;
the bliss of manhood returns. WECURE GLEET Thousands of young and middle-aged&#13;
men are having their sexual vigor and&#13;
vitalitareontinuaily sapped by this disease.&#13;
They are frequently unconscious&#13;
of the cause of these symptoms. General,&#13;
Weakness, Unnntunu Discharges, Failing&#13;
Manhood, Nervousness, Poor Memory,&#13;
Irritability, at timet* Smarting Sensation,&#13;
Sunken Eyesi with dark circles.&#13;
The A. O. H. Society of tbis place, meets ever/&#13;
third Sunday iottie Fr. H%ttnew d»U.&#13;
John Tuomer and M. T. Kellr, Count/ Delegates&#13;
EPWORTH LEAGUE. Meet* every Sunday&#13;
evening at 6:00 oclock in the M. H. Cnurcn. A&#13;
cordial inriutiuu is elteuded to ever/one, especially&#13;
young people. Mrs. titella Or*ham Pre*.&#13;
-' „ • 11- • , — • • • • • » , ^ „ • • • • 1 • • ! . • • 1 • m ^ — — • — ^ - — — ^ — CHRISTIAN ENDEAVOR SOCIETY:-\Ceet.&#13;
io^s every Sunday evening at 6:W. PreaMsut,&#13;
iliss Etta CarpADter; Secretary, Mrs. C. W\ Rice.&#13;
m H E W. C. T. U. meets the first Priday of each&#13;
I month at 3 :&amp; p. uu at the home of Dr. H. P.&#13;
Nigler. Everyone interested in temperance i$&#13;
coactlally iavlted Mrs. 'weal Sigler, Pres; Mrs.&#13;
JCtta Durfee, Secretary.&#13;
The C.T. A. and B. soewty of this place, n»*et&#13;
every third Sataraay evening in the Pr. k»cthew&#13;
Hall. John Donohae. Tresident.&#13;
KNIGHTS OP MACCABEES.&#13;
Meet every Friday evening on or before fall&#13;
of the moon at tbeir hall in the Swarthout bidg.&#13;
Viaiting brothers sre cordiallv invited.&#13;
CUAS. OAMPBKU* Sir Knight Commander&#13;
LiTingston Lodge, No. 7^, ? * A, M. Rega'ar&#13;
ComaiuuLcation Tuesday evening, on or before&#13;
the full of the moon. H. P. Sigler, W. M.&#13;
ORDER OF EASTERN STAR meets each month&#13;
the Friday evening followiujj the regular P.&#13;
AA.M. meeting, Mas. "MART &amp;*AD, rvr&#13;
ORDER OF MODERN&#13;
drat Taursday evening&#13;
WOODMEN Meet the&#13;
_ of each Month in the&#13;
*iaccabee hali. C. L. Grimes V. C*&#13;
LADIES OF THE MACCABEES. Meet every 1st&#13;
aod ird Saturday of eacumoota at d :30 p m. at&#13;
K. «&gt;. X. M. halL VUiting aivters coriiaUy iuvited.&#13;
LILA CONIWAT Lady Com.&#13;
Weak Back, General Depression^ Lack&#13;
of Ambition, Varicocele. Shrunken&#13;
Part*, etc GLSBT and STRICTURE V KNIGHTS or THB LOTAL GUARD&#13;
meet every second Wedneaoay&#13;
eTeoin» of every mouth in the K. t&gt;.&#13;
T. M^ Hall at 7:;« o'clock. All visiting&#13;
Guards welcome.&#13;
C. L, Grimes, Capt. tten.&#13;
may be the cause. Don't consult family&#13;
doctors, as they have no experience in&#13;
these special diseases—don't allow&#13;
Quacks to experiment on yon. Consult&#13;
Specialists, whohare made a life study of&#13;
Diseases of Men and Women. OurN&amp;W&#13;
METHOD TREATMENT will positively&#13;
core you. One thousand dollars&#13;
for a case we accept for treatment and&#13;
cannot sure. Terms moderate for a cure.&#13;
CURES GUARANTEED&#13;
We treat and cores EMISSIONS.&#13;
S T V I C T T O O M P O T K ^ T ! SECRET*&#13;
DRATN8.UNNATURALDISCHARGES.&#13;
KIDNKY and BLADDBB IHseasas.&#13;
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g£i»f l rrtQair&#13;
KENNEDYrktRGAN&#13;
C^.IAklipiAiliidSwlilySJ.&#13;
._ OITftOITp M I C H .&#13;
BUSINESS CAROS.&#13;
H. F. 8IQLER M. D- C. L. SIOLCR M, 0&#13;
DKS. SIGLER &amp; SIGLER,&#13;
Physiclaua and Surxejus. Alt calls proiaptl&#13;
attended to day or ui^nt. Odlae oa Maiastr&#13;
Finckoey, Mich.&#13;
DR. A. B. GREEN.&#13;
DENTIST-Eyery Fridaj; and on Tharsday&#13;
nhen having appotatmcata. OflUceover&#13;
Silver's Drug store.&#13;
LvexEaiwARY S U R Q E O N .&#13;
Graduate of Ontario Veterinary College, also 0&#13;
, tbe Veterinary Dvntlairy Collate&#13;
Toronto Canada.&#13;
K &amp; K K ^ K K A K K ^&#13;
Will promptly attend to all diseaaeg of the do*&#13;
sneeticeted s^tifit1 at a reasonahle prioa.&#13;
Horaea teeth eaamioed Free.&#13;
orncc at AILU PWCKNCV.&#13;
SferV.i&#13;
w&#13;
M&#13;
.1^.&#13;
""A&#13;
Ki m&#13;
•VA&#13;
•if/&#13;
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••^1 •1&#13;
• 1-1 &gt; J&#13;
•i.,Ai&#13;
.*?&lt;&#13;
%$&#13;
• V&#13;
,.,:':,;. .- . „ ; / - -&#13;
Rfcfv &gt;• V.,;i' ';;\lV'&#13;
V ^.&gt;-'vrv'•':••-,:••&#13;
*©$•?': V.-&#13;
V ' ? ; • : • * • • • - vw'.,v.&#13;
S V V ••..••• ••&#13;
&lt; . \ • • , '.,&gt; • . .&#13;
'.V' '••rf''- • • ,&#13;
«-4-,.'&#13;
Lr&#13;
J;..!1. . .&#13;
) \ / ••'••&#13;
« 1 - . ... T.&#13;
[ * ,&#13;
• * • , • • &lt;&#13;
! &gt;-&#13;
' # a * • « :•&#13;
• •'•.» •;.&gt;*. : r.&#13;
f 'i'V-^&#13;
T.-f"&#13;
'•wa» a * MS*&#13;
j j i y&#13;
•SfSSS m*+&gt;&#13;
ft*&#13;
f«U*B L.' ANDREWS,rubltshe* .&#13;
PINOKNEY, T ^ T MICHIGAN&#13;
* w c ftft as««« w^^i*«p*B *&#13;
TALMAGB'S SEJtMOtf. i - ¾ 5 ¾ ¾ ^ ^&#13;
DISCOURSES ON THE REDEMPTION&#13;
QF TH« RACB.&#13;
Halm azM. aauKatar of jne Hon&#13;
John Hay, will .v»!»c rmbiish a collec-,&#13;
lion of humorous child v«r«e entitle* w f h e Utile Boy Book*."&#13;
The Hawaiian island* in the Facifte,&#13;
recently f native, ^kingdom, no* * territory&#13;
of the United States, will apparently&#13;
have the honor of being the first&#13;
country to establish the Marconi system&#13;
of wireless telegraphy on organised&#13;
official lines. It is to be tested&#13;
on a large scale, and if successful, it&#13;
will provide a much,-neede4 means of&#13;
quick communication between the islands&#13;
for planters and merchants.&#13;
The United States produces more&#13;
honey than any other nation. As&#13;
long as 30 years ago the product was&#13;
15,000,000 pounds annually. Twenty&#13;
years ago it had risen to 25,000,000&#13;
and ten years ago it was 65,000,000&#13;
pounds. At the present time Iowa produces&#13;
9,000,000 pounds of honey annually,&#13;
and many states including California,&#13;
produce from 4,000,000 to 5,-&#13;
000,000 pounds a year.&#13;
Tasmania's Giant Beeches.—In Tasmania&#13;
are large forests of the Australian&#13;
beech, a tree which sometimes&#13;
measures 30 feet or more in circumference&#13;
at the base of the trunk. The&#13;
wood is employed for purposes similar&#13;
to those served by the beech woods&#13;
of northern • forests, but it is harder&#13;
and heavier, polishes easily, and is&#13;
very lasting if not exposed to the&#13;
weather.&#13;
• Topic Suggested by the Fatuoot Paintings&#13;
of Munich—-Typee of Humaalty&#13;
Represented by tho Two Atalofactor*&#13;
—A riutiffe Into Darkness.&#13;
The principal object of Maitrc Laborl's&#13;
lecturing tour of the United&#13;
States next winter, it is said, is to recuperate&#13;
his fortunes/destroyed beyond&#13;
repair in France by his connection with&#13;
the Dreyfus case. Not only did his&#13;
defense of the persecuted captain&#13;
bring him no return for his services,&#13;
but lost for him his expenses,' his ncg:&#13;
4ected clients, and any prospect—ofprofessional&#13;
success in the future on&#13;
account of the unpopularity of his&#13;
success in the "grande affaire.""&#13;
It looks now as if New York's permanent&#13;
naval arch may never be built.&#13;
No contributions of any account have&#13;
been received since last April, and the&#13;
whole matter i3 practically at a standstill.&#13;
The original intention was to&#13;
raise $1,000,000. This has been cut to&#13;
$500,000, and it is doubtful if even so&#13;
much will be subscribed. For the last&#13;
three months there has not been&#13;
enough cash subscribed to pay office&#13;
rent for the committee. The amount&#13;
of the subscription to date is $197.-&#13;
780.12 in cash and pledges, with n&#13;
great deal more in pledges than in&#13;
cash.&#13;
An agent of tire*department of agriculture&#13;
has just returned from the Sahara&#13;
desert, where he went to secure&#13;
.varieties of date palms for use iu&#13;
Arizona. It is believed that the date&#13;
industry in this country will some time&#13;
become very important. In the Sahara&#13;
the dates grow in the oases which&#13;
are formed about wells of water. Since&#13;
the French have occupied Algeria they&#13;
have sunk many artesian wells, about&#13;
which new oases have sprung up, much&#13;
to the surprise of the nomads. It is&#13;
a striking exhibition of the interdependence&#13;
of the nations that the old&#13;
Desert of Sahara is at last furnishing&#13;
material to help to complete the agricultural&#13;
resources of thi&amp; new and fertile&#13;
land.&#13;
(Copyright, 1300, by Louis Klopaeh.)&#13;
The famous paint lags in the picture&#13;
galleries of Munich seem to have suggested&#13;
the topic of this discourse.whlch&#13;
Dr. Talmage sends from the quaint Bavarian&#13;
town, but the theme which inspired&#13;
the painters awakens in the&#13;
great preacher thoughts of the redemption&#13;
of the human race, which was the&#13;
supreme design of that scene of suffering&#13;
and death. The test is- Luke xxiii,&#13;
33, "There they crucified him and the&#13;
malefactors, one on the right hand and&#13;
the other on the left".&#13;
Just outside of Jerusalem is a swell&#13;
of ground; toward which a crowd are&#13;
ascending, for it is the day of execution.&#13;
What a mighty assemblage!&#13;
Some for curiosity to hear what the&#13;
malefactors will say and to see how&#13;
they will act. The three persons to be&#13;
executed are already, there. Some ot&#13;
the spectators are vile of lip and bloated&#13;
of cheek. Some look up with revenge,&#13;
hardly able to koep their aanas&#13;
off the sufferers. Some tear their own&#13;
hair in a frenzy of grief. Some stand&#13;
in silent horror. Some break out into&#13;
uncontrollable weeping. Some clap&#13;
their hands in delight that the offenders&#13;
are to be punished at last. The&#13;
soldiers, with drawn swords,drive back&#13;
the mob which »resse3 on so hard.&#13;
There is fear that the proceedings m:iy&#13;
be interrupted. Let the legion, now&#13;
stationed'at Jerusalem, on horseback&#13;
dash along the line and force back the&#13;
surging multitude. "Back with you!"&#13;
is the cry, "Have you never before&#13;
seen a man die?"&#13;
Three crosses in a row—an upright&#13;
piece and two transverse pieces, one on&#13;
the top, on which the hands,are nailed,&#13;
and one at the middle, QD which the&#13;
victim sat. Three trees just planted,&#13;
yet Dearihg fruit—the one at the right&#13;
bearing poison ar.d the one at* the left&#13;
bitter aloes,- the one in the middle apples&#13;
of love. Norway pine and tropical&#13;
orange and Lebanon cedar would net&#13;
make so strange a grove as this orchard&#13;
of Calvary. Stand and give a look&#13;
at the three crosses.&#13;
Just look at the cross on the right.&#13;
Its victim dies scoring. More awful&#13;
than his physics! anguish is his scorn&#13;
and hatred of him on the'middle cross.&#13;
' That rrght hand crosi^-thousands&#13;
have perished on it i t wo?w agonies.&#13;
For what is physical pain compared to&#13;
remorse at the last that life has been&#13;
wasted and only a fleeting moment&#13;
stands between the soul and its everlasting&#13;
overthrow? O God. let me die&#13;
anywhere rather than at the foot of&#13;
that right hand cro«s! Let not one&#13;
drop of that blood fall upon my cheek.&#13;
Rend not my ear with that cry. I see&#13;
it now as never before—the loathsome*&#13;
ness and horror of my JBibelief. That&#13;
dying malefactor was not so much to&#13;
hlame as I. Christianity was not established,&#13;
and perhaps not until that&#13;
day had that man heard of Christ. But&#13;
after Christ h?-s stpod almost 19 centuries,&#13;
working the wonders of his&#13;
grace, you reject him.&#13;
That right hand cross, with Its long&#13;
beam, overshadows all the earth. It is&#13;
planted in the heart of the race, When&#13;
will the time come when the spirit of&#13;
God shall, with its az, hew down that&#13;
right hand cross until it shall fall at&#13;
the foot of that middle cross, and unbelief,&#13;
the railing malefactor of the&#13;
world, shall perish from all our hearts?&#13;
Away from me. thou spirit of unbelief!&#13;
I hate thee! With this sword of God&#13;
I thrust thee back and thrust thee&#13;
through. Down to hell; down, most&#13;
accursed monster of the oarth. and&#13;
talk to those thou hast already damned!&#13;
Talk no longer to these sons of&#13;
God. these heirs of heaven.&#13;
"If thou be the Son of God." Was&#13;
there any "if" about it? Tell, me, thou&#13;
star, that iu robe of light did run to&#13;
point out hi3 birthplace. Tell me, thou&#13;
sen, that didst put thy hand over thy&#13;
lip when he bade thee be still. Tell&#13;
me, ye dead who got up to see h!m&#13;
die. Tell me, thou sun in midhcivcn,&#13;
who for him didst pull down over thy&#13;
face thy veil of darkness; Tell me, ye&#13;
lepers who were demised, ye dead who&#13;
were raised, is he the Son of God?&#13;
Aye. aye. responds the universe.&#13;
The flowers breathe it; the stars chime&#13;
it; the redeemed celebrate it* the angels&#13;
rise or&gt; their thrones to announce&#13;
it. And yet on that m'serable malefactor's&#13;
"ifvhow many shall be wreckedfor&#13;
all eternity-! That little "if-" has&#13;
enough venom in it3 sting to cause the&#13;
death of the soul. No "if* about-it. 1&#13;
| know it. Eccc Dei's! I frel it thorj&#13;
oughly—through every muscle of the&#13;
I body, and through every faculty of my&#13;
mind, and through every energy of my&#13;
poul. Living, I will preach it; dying.&#13;
I will pillow my head upon its consolations—&#13;
Jesus the God.&#13;
Away, then, from this right hand&#13;
cross. The red berries of the forest&#13;
are apt ?o bo poisonous, and around&#13;
.-4-: iifc I'&#13;
me through and through. They tell mt&#13;
t « u s t dl* forever. They wttl push}&#13;
me out into the darkness unless thou&#13;
Witt help me* I confess it »11. Hear&#13;
the cry o r the dying *j*|#ft 'tort, » •&#13;
member* me when thon comest into&#13;
thy kingdom/ I ask ao treat things, 1 m&lt;*u Ar« &gt;ow ooiat H**W to **•»•*«*&gt;&#13;
lAIJW^^^^ra^&#13;
WAS * « » C T $ © IN t d f A £ N © -Jtf&#13;
&lt;•;• V-':'-*V&gt;-&#13;
This wretched man tvrus half around j t h i 3 t r e e o f c a r n a g e grow the red. pois&#13;
The last pu.blic school in Hawaii in&#13;
which instruction was given in the&#13;
native tongue has been closed, and&#13;
English is now the official language&#13;
throughout the islands. For more&#13;
than 50 years a dual system has been&#13;
maintained in court proceedings. All&#13;
accused persons having Hawaiian blood&#13;
in their veins had to be tried in the&#13;
Hawaiian language, oven although&#13;
they could speak English. l a civil&#13;
cases where one of the parties was of&#13;
native descent, the jury was half Hawaiian&#13;
and half white. The territorial&#13;
act which made the islands United&#13;
States territory provides that only&#13;
persons who can read, speak, write&#13;
and understand English are eligible&#13;
, for jury duty.&#13;
i&#13;
Chicago is congratulating Itself—&#13;
and with good reason—on the steady&#13;
improvement in the health of its Inhabitants.&#13;
Records kept by the board of&#13;
health show a constant decrease In the&#13;
death rate during the last twenty years,&#13;
particularly among children. Out of&#13;
every thousand deaths during the first&#13;
quarter of^this twenty-year period, five&#13;
hundred and twenty-two were those&#13;
of children under five years of age.&#13;
During the last quarter the number&#13;
has been only three hundred and thirty-&#13;
eight The gain is attributed to the&#13;
diligence of the board of health hi'&#13;
spreading a knowledge among the&#13;
poorer people of the best way of feeding&#13;
Infants during hot weather, and to&#13;
the establishment of day nurseries,steri:&#13;
fzed milk depots, floating hospital,&#13;
Lnd other admirable charities.&#13;
on the spikes to hiss at the One in the&#13;
middle. 1? the scoffer could get one&#13;
hand loose and he were within reach,&#13;
he world ajuite the middle sufferer in&#13;
the face. He hates him with a perfect \&#13;
hatred. I think he wishes he were&#13;
down on the ground that he might&#13;
spear him. He envies the mechanics |&#13;
who with their nails hr.ve nailed him j&#13;
fast. Amid the settling darkness and !&#13;
louder than the crash' of the rocks |&#13;
hear him Jeer out these words: "Ah, j&#13;
you poor wretch! I knew you were an |&#13;
impostor! You pretended to be a God, !&#13;
and yet you let these legions master j&#13;
you!" It wp.s in som" such hate that \&#13;
Voltaire*in his death hour, because ho&#13;
thought he saw Christ in his bedroom,&#13;
got up on his elbow and cried out,&#13;
"Crush that wretch!" What had the&#13;
middle cross done to arouse up this&#13;
right hand cross? Nothing. Oh, the&#13;
enmity of the natural heart against&#13;
Christ! The world likes a sentimental&#13;
Christ or a philanthropic Christ, but&#13;
a Christ who comes to snatch men&#13;
away from their sins—away with him!&#13;
| On his right hand cross today I see&#13;
typified the unbelief of the world. Men&#13;
say, "Back with him from the heart!&#13;
I will not let him take my sins. If&#13;
he will die. let him die for himself,&#13;
not for me." There has always been a&#13;
war between this right hand cross and&#13;
the mfddle cross, and wherever there is&#13;
an unbelieving heart there the fight&#13;
goes on. Oh, if when that dying malefactor&#13;
perished the faithlessness of&#13;
man had perished, then that tree which&#13;
yields poison would have budded and&#13;
blossomed with life for all the&#13;
world!&#13;
A PJnng-e I n t o D a r k n e s s .&#13;
Look up into that disturbed countenance&#13;
of the sufferer and see what a&#13;
ghastly thing it is to re.lect Christ. Behold&#13;
in that awful face, in that pitiful&#13;
look, in that unblessed* death hour, the&#13;
stings of the sinner's departure. What&#13;
a plunge into darkness! Standing high&#13;
upon the cross on the top of the hill,&#13;
so that all the world may look at him,&#13;
he says, "Here 1 go out of a miserable&#13;
life into a wretched eternity!" One!&#13;
Two! Three! Listen to tho crash of&#13;
the fall, all ye ages! So Hobbes, dying&#13;
after he had 70 years in which to prepare&#13;
for eternity, said, "Were I master&#13;
of all the world, I would give it all to&#13;
live it one day longer." Sir Frances&#13;
Newport, hovering over the brink.cried&#13;
out: "Wretch that I am, whither shall&#13;
I fly from this breast? What will become&#13;
of me? Oh, thai I were to lie&#13;
upon the fire that never is quenched a&#13;
thousand years to purchase the favor&#13;
onou's beirie? cf which many have tasted&#13;
and died, I can see no use for this&#13;
right hand cross,#except it is used as a&#13;
lever with which to upturn the unbe-&#13;
•Hef--of-4he-woi44.—&#13;
i&#13;
T h e rctilteitt U M e ' n c t o - . /&#13;
Here from the ri?ht hand crosa I go&#13;
to t^e left liar.d cross. Pa.?s clear to&#13;
the other side. The victim also twists&#13;
himself upon the nails to look at ihe&#13;
center cross, yet not to*- scoff. It is to&#13;
worship. He. too, would like to get&#13;
his hand loose, net to smite, but to deliver&#13;
the si'fferer of the middle cross.&#13;
He cries to the railer cursing on the&#13;
other side: "Silence! Between us is&#13;
innocence in agony. We suffer for our&#13;
crimes. Silence!" Gather round thi3&#13;
left hand cross. O ye people! Be not&#13;
afraid. Bitter herbs are sometimes a&#13;
tonic for the body, and the bitter aloes&#13;
that srow on this tree shall give&#13;
strength and life to thy soul. This left&#13;
hand cross is a repenting cross. As&#13;
men who have been nearly drowned&#13;
tell us that in one moment, while they&#13;
were under the water, their whole life&#13;
passed before them, so I suppose in&#13;
one moment the dying malefactor&#13;
thought over all his past life—of that&#13;
n'ght when he went into au unguarded&#13;
door and took all the silver, the gold,&#13;
the jewels, and ns the sleeper stirred&#13;
he put a knife through his heart; of&#13;
that day when, in the lonely pass, he&#13;
met the wayfarer, and, regardless of&#13;
the cries and prayers and tears and&#13;
struggles of his victim, he flung th&lt;?&#13;
mangled corpse into the dust of the&#13;
highway or heaped upon it the stones.&#13;
He says, "1 am a guilty wretch. I&#13;
deserve 'this. There i3 no need of my&#13;
cursing. That will not stop the pain.&#13;
There is no need of blaspheming&#13;
Christ, for he has done me no wrong.&#13;
And yet I cannot die so. The tortures&#13;
of my body are" undone by thetortures&#13;
of my soul. The past is a scene of misdoing,&#13;
the present a ^crucifixion, tho&#13;
future an everlasting undoing. Come&#13;
back, thou hiding midday sun! Kiss&#13;
my cheek with one bright ray of comfort.&#13;
What, no help from above—no&#13;
help from beneath? Then I must turn&#13;
to my companion in sorrow, the One&#13;
on the middle cross. I have heard that&#13;
he knows how to help a man when he&#13;
is in trouble. I have heard that he&#13;
can cure the wounded. I have heard&#13;
that he can pardon the sinner. Surely&#13;
in all his wanderings up and down tho&#13;
earth !^e never saw one more in need&#13;
of his forgiveness. Blessed Dae, I turn&#13;
to thee. Wilt thou turn for the moment&#13;
away from thy own pangs to pity me?&#13;
Lord, it is not to have my hands reliev&#13;
I sHek no throne,in heave*,.no ch&amp;jrloJ&#13;
to take me to the skies, bjk jujt think&#13;
of me when this day's horrors hav&lt;&#13;
passed. Think of me a Utti*-««f me&#13;
the one now hanging at thy side, wher&#13;
the shout of heavenly welcome takei&#13;
thee back into thy glory. Thou wilt&#13;
not forget me, wilt thou? 'Lord, remember&#13;
me when thou comest intc&#13;
,thy -kingdom.' Only Just remember&#13;
me."&#13;
Likewise muit we repent'. You say.&#13;
"I have stolen nothing." I reply, "W«&#13;
have all been guilty of the mightiest&#13;
felony ofv the universe, for we hav*&#13;
robbed God—robbed him of our time,&#13;
robbed him of our talent, robbed him&#13;
of our services." Suppose you send a&#13;
man out as a s agent of your firm, and&#13;
every month you pay him his salary,&#13;
and at the end of t;n years you find out&#13;
that he has been serving another firm,&#13;
but taking your salary, would you not&#13;
at once condemn him as dishonest?&#13;
God sent us into this world to serve&#13;
him. He has civen us wages all the&#13;
time. Yet how many of us have been&#13;
serving another master! When a man&#13;
is convicted of treason, he is brought&#13;
out; a regiment surrounds him. and&#13;
the command is given: "Attention,&#13;
company! Take nim! F:re!" And&#13;
tho man falls with ta^hjigdred bullet3&#13;
through his heart. There comes a time&#13;
in a man's history when the Lord calb&#13;
up the troop of his iniquities, aud at&#13;
God's command they pour into him a&#13;
concentrated volley of torture.&#13;
True -Condition of Hie r u p a r d o n o d .&#13;
You say, "I don't feel myself to be a&#13;
sinner." That may be. Walk along by&#13;
the cliffs, and you see sunlight and&#13;
flowers at the'mouth'cf the cave, but&#13;
take a torch and go in, and before you&#13;
have gone far you ses the flashing eye&#13;
of a wild beast or hfear the hiss of a&#13;
serpent. So the heart seem3 in the&#13;
sunlight cf worldllnes3. But-as I wavo&#13;
the torch of God's truth and go down&#13;
into the deep cavern of the heart, alas,&#13;
for the bristling horrors and tile rattling&#13;
fang3! Have you ever noticed&#13;
the climax of this passage of Scripture:&#13;
"The heart is deceitful." That seams&#13;
enough. But the passage goe3 on and&#13;
says, "The heart is deceitful above all&#13;
things." Will you net say that is&#13;
enough? But the passage goes on further&#13;
and says, "The heart is deceitful&#13;
above all things and desperately&#13;
wicked!" If wo could see the true&#13;
condition cf the unpardoned before&#13;
God, what wringing of hands there&#13;
would be! What a thousand voiced&#13;
shriek of supplication and despair!&#13;
But ycu are a sinner, a sinner. t&#13;
speak not to the person who sit3 next&#13;
you, but to you. You arc a sinner. All&#13;
the iransrrcc.sions of a life time have&#13;
heen 'gathered up into an avalanche.&#13;
At any moment it may slip from^tho^&#13;
cliffs and crush you fOTCYerrnSayT^e&#13;
Lord Almighty, by his grace, help us&#13;
to repent of our sins while repentance&#13;
is possible.&#13;
Thjs left hand cross was a believing&#13;
cross. There was no gues3v/ork in that&#13;
prayer.no "if" in thatsapplication. Tho&#13;
left hand cros.i flung itself at the foot&#13;
of the middle cross, expecting mercy.&#13;
Faith is only just opening the hand to&#13;
take what Christ offers us. The work is&#13;
all done; the bridge is built strong&#13;
enough for i:s all to walk over. Tap&#13;
not at the door of God's mercy with the&#13;
tip of ycur fingers, but as a warrior&#13;
with gauntleted fists beats at the castle&#13;
gate. So with all the aroused energies&#13;
of our souls let us pound at the&#13;
gate of heaven. That gate is locked.&#13;
You go to it with a bunch of keys.&#13;
You try philosophy. That will not&#13;
open it. A large door generally has a&#13;
ponderous key. I take the cross and&#13;
place the foot of it in the lock, and by&#13;
the two arms of the cross I turn the&#13;
lock, and the door opens.&#13;
Forthwith the left hand crass be&#13;
comes the-abode of contentment. The&#13;
pillow of the malefactor, soaked iu&#13;
blood, Jbecomes like the crimson upholster&#13;
of a king's couch. When the body&#13;
became still and the surgeons feeling&#13;
the pulse said one to another. "He Is&#13;
dead," the last mark of pain had gone&#13;
from his face. Peace had smoothed his&#13;
forehead. Peace closed his eyes. Peace&#13;
closed his lips. Now you see why there&#13;
were two transverse pieces on the&#13;
cross, for it has become a ladder into&#13;
the Bkies. That dying head is easy&#13;
which has under it the promise, "This&#13;
day thou shalt be with me in paradise."&#13;
Ye whoselips have been filled&#13;
with blasphemy, ye whose hands for&#13;
many years have wrought unrighteousness,&#13;
ye who have companioned&#13;
with the unclean, ye who have scaled&#13;
every height of transgression and&#13;
fathomed every depth and passed every&#13;
extreme of Iniquity—mercy,mercy!&#13;
"The dying thief rejoiced to see&#13;
That fountain in his day,&#13;
And there may. I, though vile as he,&#13;
Wash alLmy sins away/'&#13;
IS 1v9m this Bevag/N of T1«M&gt; ' Wao&#13;
Bttltt W h e n&#13;
Flr.it S e t t l e d .&#13;
U&amp;e West- tTas ttetajg&#13;
h, •A'&#13;
(Special Letter.) *'&#13;
In the state of Kansas thers ere&#13;
ceveh capitol buildings, Including thepresent&#13;
handsome structure at fopekay&#13;
net yet completed, but none has a more&#13;
romantic history than the state house&#13;
which was first' erected m Pawnee&#13;
township. Efforts are now being, made&#13;
by the people of XCansas to preserve&#13;
from the ravages of time this ancient&#13;
relic. . It is one of few reminders of&#13;
early days left standing, there and i t&#13;
was built when the settlement of the&#13;
west was just beginning. It stands near&#13;
Fort Riley in the central part of the&#13;
state, and is all that }s left of the town&#13;
of Pawnee.the flrst oapitol of the state.&#13;
The town was started by boomers who&#13;
"stood in" with the territorial governor,&#13;
A. H. Ucder. who owned land&#13;
there and was a good deal of a speculator.&#13;
—&#13;
.•The town association built the capitol,&#13;
a stone structure, two storie3 high&#13;
and 40x30 feet in outside dimensions.&#13;
It laid out the streets and boardinghouses&#13;
weie made ready for the firsi&#13;
meeting of the legislature. Then, in&#13;
1835, the governor called the legislature&#13;
to meet there, and the solons decided&#13;
that they would not assist him.&#13;
They went from eastern Kansas iu&#13;
prairie schooners, a long procession&#13;
that wound its way 150 miles out on&#13;
the prairie, the travelers growing more&#13;
angry that chc governor had selected&#13;
so distaint a place. 'They had provisions&#13;
for the trip, and when thry&#13;
reached Pawnee not one of them went&#13;
to th&lt;? boarding houses as had been expected,&#13;
but they cooked In their wagons&#13;
and lived on the edge of the town&#13;
site.&#13;
On the dr.y for the opening of the&#13;
of God, and to be reconciled to Mm cd or my feet taken from the torture&#13;
,-igain! Oh. eternity! Oh, eternity! —I c b stand all this—but. oh. ray&#13;
Who cr.n discover the abyes of ettr-; sins, my-xto, n:y tins! They picree&#13;
KANSAS' FIRST; &amp;APITOL BUiLDINO.&#13;
legislature they went to the nrsw stone&#13;
building and held a session, which consisted&#13;
of organizing and adjourning ti&gt;&#13;
Shawnee Mission in the eastern part of&#13;
t h o st.ntP, yyhor^ Hpvp^ft nil t h n /SfTnrN&#13;
of the governor, the remainder of tho&#13;
session was held.&#13;
Pawnee did not make a town. The&#13;
cholera broke out the next year at Fort&#13;
Riley and the people fled. The stato&#13;
house stands out on the plain, deserted,&#13;
the roof gone and the interior a&#13;
place for the hiding of coyotes and&#13;
sandhill owls. The state has been asked&#13;
to purchase the o l i ruin and preserve&#13;
it for future generations, who&#13;
will doubtless appreciate It as a reminder&#13;
of the efforts of the flrct comevi,&#13;
to make this a great city, and for a&#13;
time it seemed likely thai they would&#13;
succeed.&#13;
The tip of the tongue is chiefly sensible&#13;
to pungent and acid tastes, the&#13;
middle portion to sweets or bitters,&#13;
while tbc back is confined entirely to&#13;
the favors of roast meat3 and fattv&#13;
Eutet^nces. •&#13;
«&#13;
Cannon to Dissipate Clouds.&#13;
To protect their vineyards against&#13;
the ravages of hailstones the vinegrowers&#13;
of southern France attack&#13;
approaching storm clouds with volleys&#13;
from cannon until the cloud ir, dissipated.&#13;
Thi.i practice originatad In&#13;
Italy and was known in France over a&#13;
hundred years ago, but it is to be more&#13;
extensively employed this year than&#13;
ever before.&#13;
Fifty-two cannon, manned by 104&#13;
gunners and officers, have been distributed&#13;
over an area of 2,500 acres of&#13;
rich vine^ _laud,_At_ the_approach of&#13;
thiniaiTeloud a shot is fired from this&#13;
post, and at this signal all the remaining&#13;
cannon are fired, twice a minute at&#13;
first, and then, more slowly. This&#13;
"bombarding of the heavens" is almost&#13;
invariably successful. The expense of&#13;
the experiments so far has" been borne&#13;
partly by the government, the National&#13;
French Agricultural Society, and a&#13;
number of wealthy wine growers.&#13;
Electric L i g h t s o n Dog*.&#13;
A. Fortuguese Inventor has patented&#13;
an application of the electric light t»&#13;
fox and badger hunting. The fox and&#13;
the badger are animals that live, in&#13;
dens underground, and terriers and&#13;
other kinds of dogs are used to dig&#13;
them out of their burrows or to fight&#13;
and kill them underground. The ingenious&#13;
Portuguese conceived the idea&#13;
of attaching: an electric lamp to the&#13;
collar of the dog so as to light the&#13;
way 'for him in his descent into the&#13;
hole, and of making the light colored&#13;
so as to scare the animal and cause it&#13;
to rush forth to its destruction. A patent&#13;
upon this scheme has actually been&#13;
granted. /&#13;
;.M»r&#13;
~0 »&gt;&#13;
•,!'' *&#13;
SP&#13;
* , - * * ?W&#13;
.*:* =&#13;
1';$*,'•? •'' Vinn&#13;
V"&#13;
tMUMfM&#13;
f t " J?" 5S5 iMiltUTJi ASS&#13;
535&lt; •*••»*«•••*•: as W»&#13;
her'enemies aatf tfcjnk. no evil.&#13;
"••^Wtat" a*r y&lt;at tfoin*t* dejfctndsd&#13;
M tmpsrloni voles auddsaly, ;-,,&#13;
Mollie wa* so startled that the&#13;
I?? P5S&#13;
XXX © y E L T O N H A R R I S XXX&#13;
J" ' I !&#13;
CHAPTER tt.-(Continued.)&#13;
"Thai I cannot say," 8he returned&#13;
"Eesitatingly. "I suppose they thought&#13;
it wise not to inform you. As for&#13;
how your stepfather died they can&#13;
^oaly conjecture, nor &lt;pn any motive&#13;
bd given for the crime. He was found&#13;
by the servants In the morning when&#13;
they went to open the study, and was&#13;
lying on the floor near the window—&#13;
which was wide open. You know how&#13;
bitterly cold it was last Easter? Well,&#13;
it had bean snowing hard all night,&#13;
and it had drifted in and was lying&#13;
thicfcly oa hisshoulders,Had any&#13;
trace of his assailant been possible on&#13;
the hard ground the snow had covered&#13;
n, and this showed that the deed must&#13;
have been done early in the night before&#13;
it began. There were no signs of&#13;
any struggle, nor was anything taken;&#13;
and they fancy ho must have been&#13;
asleep in his chair, for death was&#13;
caused by two terrific blows on the&#13;
back of the head. Now, Mollie, I&#13;
have told you all, and you must not&#13;
let this depress you, or I shall feel&#13;
more than ever to blame. Joyce will&#13;
be,delighted to have your companionship,&#13;
and ,the White House is not so&#13;
very far off, you know."&#13;
With a great effort Mollie sliook off&#13;
the vague feeling of coming evil that&#13;
had fallen upon her, and she looked up&#13;
at her friend with an attempt at a&#13;
smile.&#13;
Mrs. Anstruther's face Was rapidly&#13;
getting familiar to her again; her&#13;
voice seemed a pleasant echo from the&#13;
past, E?veB^th^Jittie way she half ol&#13;
shaking her head to emphasize her&#13;
words was the same as of yore.&#13;
She and Mrs. L'Estrange had been&#13;
left-widows about the same time; but&#13;
while one had made the rash marriage&#13;
that had ruined her life, the other&#13;
had devoted herself to her two Children&#13;
and their interests.&#13;
Mollie had seen little of them since&#13;
she had been at school, for whea she&#13;
was at home for the holidays, they had&#13;
been away; but she had happy recollections&#13;
of a whlte-frocked little girl&#13;
who was Joyce, and a tall boy who&#13;
used to send them flying to and fro&#13;
in a swing under some great trees.&#13;
"Thank you very much," she said,&#13;
straightening herself and sitting up.&#13;
"It is nice Jto think that I shall have&#13;
kind friends near me.&#13;
with a firm, nervous grip that almost&#13;
made her scream out with pain.&#13;
Then she was conscious that Mrs.&#13;
Anstruther hud kissed her kindly at&#13;
parting while responding very distantly&#13;
to Madame Dubois' greeting, and&#13;
then they were bowling through Reverton&#13;
in a high .mail phaeton behind&#13;
a pair of fine horses, which madame&#13;
drove with consummate skill.&#13;
In spite of her deaire to look'out for&#13;
old landmarks, the girl was furtively&#13;
studying the hard face by her side as&#13;
they dashed along. Instinctively she&#13;
distrusted it, somehow; though it&#13;
would have been difficult to have put&#13;
her thoughts into words; and her feelings&#13;
were cf the gloomiest as the&#13;
chimneys of Chalfont came in sight.&#13;
It was a large, ugly, red-brick house,&#13;
standing in well-kept grounds, and&#13;
looked very much as she had remembered&#13;
it all her life; but she could not&#13;
repress a shudder as she thought of&#13;
what had happened there, and in imagination&#13;
saw her stopfather's tall&#13;
form at the hall-door as they drew&#13;
up before it.&#13;
"Where is my half-sister. Kate?" she&#13;
inquired, .as she followed madamipf&#13;
I—I—it feels&#13;
rather lonely coming home like this,&#13;
you see. And though I hated—that is.&#13;
disliked Mr, Barlowe, still, it is a terrible&#13;
thing to have happened,- and&#13;
there is my half-sister Kate—"&#13;
"Yes, yes, of course. Well, Mollie,&#13;
your mother and I were true friends,&#13;
though Mr. Barlowe prevented us seeing&#13;
too much of each other in late?&#13;
years. Come to me whenever you like&#13;
m y child." t '&#13;
"Oh, I will," responded Mollie more&#13;
cheerfully. "Tell me, Mrs. Anstruther,&#13;
shall I like Madame Dubois; d£ you&#13;
know her?** ~&#13;
Mrs. Anstruther moved uneasily,&#13;
and drew out her watch.&#13;
"We shall be at Reverton in a few&#13;
minutes now," she exclaimed almost&#13;
in a tone of relief. "Of course, not&#13;
having been friendly with Mr. Barlowe,&#13;
I do not know his sister well;&#13;
but we are on speaking terms, and&#13;
Henri Dubois comes ovei* to play tennis&#13;
with my young people when he is&#13;
at home. Now, here we are. and don't&#13;
forget that you are to come to us&#13;
whenever you like."&#13;
With tjie uncomfortable impression&#13;
that Mrs. Anatruther was trying to&#13;
make the best of things', Mollie thanked&#13;
her, and thc.iiRTt mnaent the train&#13;
stopped at the dear old country station&#13;
she remembered so well, and she&#13;
was In Reverton once more!&#13;
There was only one person on the&#13;
platform—a tall and remarkably&#13;
handsome woman, with a dark, almost&#13;
masculine face, and piercing&#13;
black eyes under heavy brows, and&#13;
these same eyes fell upon the unconscious&#13;
Mollie as the train slowly glided&#13;
into the station, and t?ok in every&#13;
detail of the sweet little face with a&#13;
strange, Quick Intsntness. She was&#13;
moat elegantly attired in half&#13;
mourning, that showed off her splendidly&#13;
powerful figure to the greatest&#13;
advantage; and as Mollie sprang out&#13;
and looked round she came up quickly&#13;
with a smile on her wide, thin-lipped&#13;
mouth.&#13;
"Miss L'Estrange, I think," she said,&#13;
in a loud, deep voice. "I am your&#13;
aunt, Madame Dubois, and I have been&#13;
greatly looking forward} to your arrival.&#13;
Ah; Mrs. Anstruther, how are&#13;
you?*&#13;
Her aunt! Leonard Barlowe's sister&#13;
her aunt! MoUle'a brain reeled at the&#13;
notion, while her hand was shaken&#13;
who was talking volubly, into tlifiu..«Me4Ufi would have ruthlessly put the Med. Co., St. Johns. Mich&#13;
exdrawing-&#13;
room.&#13;
"I will send for her. Poor child,&#13;
she is not strong; she makes me very&#13;
anxious," she returned, sweeping over&#13;
to the table, and pouring cut tea in&#13;
the energetic manner, that seemed&#13;
habitual to her. "You will hardly&#13;
.kjL0_w_JieiLajaUn^0JV-144eee% theplacet&#13;
My brother made so many improvements."&#13;
"It did not want improving,"&#13;
claimed Molly, shortly. "What -was&#13;
good enough for my mother was certainly&#13;
good enough for Mr. Barlowe."&#13;
Madame Dubois shrugged her shoulders.&#13;
Though an Bngfishwoman she&#13;
had many French gestures and expressions,&#13;
and her black eyes swept&#13;
over Colonel L'Estrange's young&#13;
daughter with a lightning glance.&#13;
"You are impulsive, sweet child,"&#13;
she said, shortly. "But you will soon&#13;
grow to like the changes, and be very&#13;
happy with me and your sister."&#13;
"My half-sister," corrected Molly,&#13;
quietly. "Whom I was never allowed&#13;
to love as a child, of whom I know&#13;
nothing. How did she bear her father's&#13;
dreadful death?"&#13;
Madame Dubois dropped the sugartongs&#13;
with a loud clatter, and suddenly&#13;
her face changed to an ashen hue,&#13;
her whole demeanor altered.&#13;
"How has she-heard It?" she muttered&#13;
between her teeth Then, turning&#13;
fiercely to Mollie, "Never mention&#13;
anything belonging to it if yon do not&#13;
wish to drive me crazy! Is it not always&#13;
before me day and night, day&#13;
and night?" Anci she sank back in&#13;
her chair, as it unable to sit up, while&#13;
her eyes swept round the room in a&#13;
strange, cowering manner.&#13;
Astonished at the effect of her words&#13;
Molly sat blankly regarding her. Had&#13;
she spoken in sorrow her tender heart&#13;
would have melted toward her at once,&#13;
even though she was Leonard Barlowc's&#13;
sister, but there was only an&#13;
odd. frightened passion in her voico&#13;
and bearing, and something in her&#13;
hard face repulsed and kept Mollie&#13;
silent,- whiler before she could think&#13;
of anything suitable to say. madame&#13;
had recovered herself auu had suggested&#13;
thai she take off her outdoor&#13;
garments.&#13;
Like a girl in a dream she followed&#13;
the tall, strong figure through hall&#13;
and passages that were the same, ycV&#13;
different, and Anally to a room that&#13;
she did not recognize at all, where a&#13;
housemaid was unstrapping her&#13;
trunks. And this wa3 her homecoming,&#13;
this was the way sho returned&#13;
to her mother's house—a stranger&#13;
among strangers, where everything&#13;
was altered, where uot even a servant&#13;
who knew her remained. Dismissing&#13;
the maid,'she threw herself down by&#13;
the bed, dark forebodings and dread&#13;
weighing down her usually bright nature,&#13;
and a dreary longing for the&#13;
mother with whom "every spot in Chalfont&#13;
had been associated tearing at&#13;
her heart-strings.&#13;
Poor little schoolgirl! She fought&#13;
down the choking feeling in her&#13;
throat with mingled pride and resolution.&#13;
Colonel L'EstrangeV daughter&#13;
must not give way before strangers.&#13;
But ah, it was hateful to think that&#13;
she was in the charge of this Madame&#13;
Dubois! Then she began to reflect&#13;
that she must make the beet of it, and&#13;
certainly tears would not help her, GO&#13;
she buried her head in the white quilt&#13;
and prayed for strength to forgive&#13;
sprang* up, and, turning round* beheld&#13;
&amp; little girl, dressed, in the latest Par*&#13;
islan fashion for children, standing&#13;
regarding her with curious-eyes. She&#13;
was not pretty, foe her small, sharpfeatured&#13;
face was thin and witch-^ike&#13;
her expression old vand cunning; but&#13;
Mollio noticed with relief that sht&#13;
bore little resemblance to Mr. Barlowe,&#13;
and masses of flaxen curls, sc&#13;
fair as to be almost white,, softened&#13;
the little-face.&#13;
For a minute the sisters regarded&#13;
each other gravely. Mollie's beautlfu}&#13;
pink and white face had flushed&#13;
brightly, her sweet gray eyes were&#13;
fixed wistfully on the child, but the&#13;
latter was quite composed; her thin&#13;
lips were pressed together a3 she coolly&#13;
surveyed her half-sister from her&#13;
sunny brown head tq her dainty foot.&#13;
"Well, Kate, do you remember me?''&#13;
asked Mollie, gently.&#13;
"Hardly. What were you doing?"&#13;
"I was saying my prayers. Don't&#13;
you say yours?"&#13;
"No," returned Kate, loftily. "I am&#13;
a free thinke/, like my Cousin Henry."&#13;
"Oh!" ejaculated Mollie, astounded.&#13;
"I don't think, Kate, you knocked before"&#13;
you came in."&#13;
"Of course not," was the calm reply.&#13;
"This house and everything here is&#13;
mine."&#13;
Truly this was a promising beginning.&#13;
The child evidently had been&#13;
taught to'believe herself a person of&#13;
great importance, and during the halfhour&#13;
she spent with Mollie she condescendingly&#13;
repeated both her aunt's&#13;
and the servant's injudicious -flattery,&#13;
and unconsciously revealed much of&#13;
the inner life of the house—revelations&#13;
by no means attractive—and&#13;
1-fcoft-lffiuai.f. ynit Alii !*.«.*•, ffnt-wrf^ 4Saesv*fOw4er. It nukesflight « • « « ;&#13;
until jsmft W e l s are put right ahoeseasy. Cu/esswoltea,ho*,»we»ting:&#13;
CASCARBTS *-.-*_.-*--*•. . — — « -&#13;
^5535 &lt;*&gt;•*•&#13;
Best tor tb» Wow*!*&#13;
Nib matter what ails yon, headache&#13;
w * • * « p »&#13;
help nature, cure you&#13;
without a grip** or pain, produce easy&#13;
natural movements, cost you just to&#13;
cents to-start getting your health back.&#13;
CASCARRfS Candy Cathartic, t h c |&#13;
5? 5*&#13;
%m*m C*%» Wear «lw»e«, &amp;&#13;
One size smaller after u»ingAI ten's Foot*&#13;
aaiiing; feet, 1 ngre-wtagJiaiht, corn* *ft4&#13;
bunions. All dxuggi»t»Hodaboe store*.&#13;
2fic. Trial package -FJft&amp;ft by mail. Address&#13;
Alien ». Olmstert, LeRoy, X. Y.&#13;
genuine, put up in metal boxes, every * Do your duty however unpleasant Ft&#13;
tablet HUHC. C. C. stamped ou it.&#13;
ware of imitations&#13;
ite&#13;
Poverty in not a eriiius morally, but&#13;
it is matrimonially.&#13;
The Truman Moss Bstate of Croswell,&#13;
Sanilac county, Mich., whose advertisemeat&#13;
appears in this issue, is the oldest&#13;
firm in the real estate business in&#13;
Michigan. They have large tracts of&#13;
farming lands in the state, with easy&#13;
access to all the eastern markets. They&#13;
sell farms on liberal terms, buyers being&#13;
allowed from 10 to 25 years In&#13;
which to pay for same. It will pay&#13;
you to write them for particulars.&#13;
may be.&#13;
A lover's quarrel is the sauce that&#13;
seasons the courtship.&#13;
Are You Unlus; Allen'* Pool* Kaaa?&#13;
I t i s tins o n l y c u r e for S w o l l e n ,&#13;
Smarting-, Huruing, S w e a t i n g Feet,&#13;
Corns and 1!1111ioiis. A s k for_ A l l e n ' s&#13;
Foot-Rase, a powder t o l&gt;e s h a k e n i n t o&#13;
t h e shoes. At all D r u g g i s t s a n d S h o e&#13;
S t o r e s 25«. Sample hent. KRRE. Address&#13;
Allen S. Olmsted, l ^ l t o y , N . V&#13;
Women&#13;
Think&#13;
About This&#13;
In nddrosslng Mrs*&#13;
Pmkhmn yon ore cm&#13;
nnmkmtlng with&#13;
A Woman&#13;
T h e Ixtst w a y to k c c p u s i i U umbrella&#13;
is not- to UWKI it.&#13;
I t requires n o experience t o d y e w i t h&#13;
P U T N A M KADKI.KSS DYKS. S i m p l y&#13;
b o i l i n g your goods in t h e d y e is all&#13;
t h a t ' s necessary.&#13;
Dead c r o w s are s i l e n t m e m e n t o s of&#13;
t h e lost caws.&#13;
H A V E Y O U C O N S T I P A T I O N ?&#13;
Send lt)e to pay postage on boitle of Lemon&#13;
Bitters. Cum KuurunUttU. Lemon Hitters&#13;
young lady out of her room* by the&#13;
shoulders had she not exercised great&#13;
self-command. Yet it was very disheartening.&#13;
Who had she in the world&#13;
to love but Kate. And she craved love&#13;
as a flower needs the sun. It would&#13;
have jnade tiings no better could she&#13;
dtmve heard Mrs. Anstruther's comment&#13;
as she entered her carriage.&#13;
"I cannot bear to think of that poor&#13;
child!" she declared, • Impatiently.&#13;
"What business has a L'Estrange to&#13;
be in the care of that unprincipled,&#13;
underbred woman! She is already&#13;
more disliked in Reverton than her&#13;
brother was, and that is saying much.&#13;
Oh, why was Amy so weak!"&#13;
CHAPTER III.&#13;
"It must be two days since Mollie&#13;
came in to see us," said Joyce Anstruther&#13;
one afternoon, looking up&#13;
from a mass of tangled wool she was&#13;
sorting. "I hope nothing is the matter?"&#13;
"Oh, no! I met her this afternoon,"&#13;
responded a deep masculine voice fiuiu&#13;
the depths of a lounge-chair. "She&#13;
was going to tha woods io get moss&#13;
for the church."&#13;
"Oh, the Easter decorations! Why&#13;
didn't she come for me?"&#13;
Reggie got up and crossed the room..&#13;
He was a great big fellow, in a rough&#13;
.shooting suit, with fair curly hair,&#13;
blue eyes and the pleasantest face in&#13;
the world: while at the present, moment&#13;
there was a comicil smile on it&#13;
that would somehow have explained&#13;
why, he was such a favorite in the regiment&#13;
in which he had the honor to&#13;
serve his Queen and qpuntry; why all&#13;
Reverton, beside*; hi.; mother and s!£-&#13;
ter, loved him.&#13;
"She did suggfsc it," ho said, blandly.&#13;
"In fact, she was -coming hero,&#13;
but I said you were bvsy.*'&#13;
'Oh. R e g g i e ! "&#13;
"Don't get excited. Seeing he:- fare&#13;
fall—for there is not i\mci\ rtisgvlse&#13;
about Mollie—I stepped into the&#13;
breach and went myself."&#13;
"Then I hope you did not meet Madame&#13;
Dubois!" exclaimed Joyce, laughing.&#13;
"For I feei sure that she would&#13;
strongly objeci io you as an escort."&#13;
"Why?" And Reggie leaned against&#13;
the wide *indow-seat, and stroked his&#13;
mortrer*s great Persian cafTwho wa'sf&#13;
sunning himself In tb«? cornerT;&#13;
"Why. you old stupid? Because she&#13;
intends Mollie and her fortune for her&#13;
adored son, Monsieur Henri Dubois,&#13;
and no poaching will be allowed."&#13;
"That little toad?" he muttered in&#13;
a curious tone. "Mollie said they were&#13;
expecting bim today. I say, Joyce, do&#13;
you really think it?"&#13;
"Mother thinks so." she replied,&#13;
glancing at his ruffled face with a&#13;
suppressed smile. "And certainly&#13;
madame has been most amiable to&#13;
Mollie so far. She asked *ne the other&#13;
day what Henri was like, for madame&#13;
was always speaking of him, and Kate&#13;
quoted him frequently."&#13;
"Oh, it is preposterous!" declared&#13;
the young fellow. "However, wait&#13;
until she sees him. I shall be very&#13;
much astonished if she falls in with&#13;
the arrangement then."&#13;
(To be Continued.)&#13;
The first real American hotel in England&#13;
will be located adjoining the new&#13;
Wateloo railway station, London. It&#13;
will be entirely o&lt;* steel construction.&#13;
Hot. words between friends are usually follo.&#13;
vcd by a oolu wave.&#13;
flall'M Catarrh Curn&#13;
Is a constitutional cure. Price. 75a&#13;
4 w o m a n w h o s o&#13;
rionoo m iromtmg fomrnto&#13;
Ko to gmotor man that&#13;
of any uvmg parson, mam&#13;
Thirteen—An unlucky number, whan mnrin up&#13;
*of a judge4ind jury.&#13;
Mr*. fVlnft!ow*« Roottiing Syrup.&#13;
For children teething, softens tb« gams, reduces Irr&#13;
flunm«UoB,&amp;]l«jrs&amp;&amp;lii.LuraairlndcoUc. 23c»botu»&#13;
t,tff&gt;—A realistic story that would read like&#13;
Action if published.&#13;
f do not beliovo T'lso's OHIO for Consumption&#13;
has an equal for coughs and colds. JOHN K&#13;
BOVfclt, T r i n i t y S p r i n g s , h i d . . l'Vb lu, 190U.&#13;
P e o p l e r e s r m M e pianos w h e n t h e y are square,&#13;
u p r i g h t and &lt;-M;IIXI&#13;
Lnzurtnnt h*!r with l u youthful rotor Assured by&#13;
QtlDg PAn*EJi'» HAIR BALSAM.&#13;
HUIDUCOK.\$, tbo l&gt;e*t cure foi coru*. )jcts_.&#13;
Com pli men is are tins rod liies Lhat light up&#13;
life's dingy MViiery.&#13;
rinsehn)! players: iSolf players; all players&#13;
chew White's Vncataii wliilst'playiu^.&#13;
-The man who \n in love with himself, has ho&#13;
fear of being jilted.&#13;
'•All tho SwoHiir.** of l.ivlnir |:ie&gt;#noins." the m»tob&#13;
Irsa jM'1'fiiiiu', Muriiij &amp; Luiimun Kloritiu Water.&#13;
An interesting tabic of contents-that of the&#13;
dinner table&#13;
Sho has fifty thousand&#13;
suoh tosthnoniai iottsrs&#13;
as waarooonstantiy publishing&#13;
showing that Lydm&#13;
k\ Plnkham's Vagotonia&#13;
Compound Is dally ro~&#13;
Having hundreds of suffering&#13;
women*&#13;
Every woman knows&#13;
some woman Mrs* Pinkham&#13;
has restored to&#13;
health.&#13;
Mrs* Plnkham makes&#13;
no statements sho cannot&#13;
prove* Her advice Is&#13;
free* wS dia E. Piakham&#13;
C.n L v n o V&#13;
&lt; Mir 4'»tnioftue ffiven junt what hunter*&#13;
»!« liKiktni; lor. 1 .a test improvement*&#13;
anil Iowesr-prices onOunx, KlfleH, Ffobintz&#13;
Tacklf and general Sportlnir ftooda.&#13;
J.tUf»t £um&lt;» law*. Large*' Sportimr&#13;
giv-Hlft IIOUM&gt; in Mii'hiifnn. Send So for 1'a.tulogue aatl&#13;
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ThjTrwmsH Moss Estaie.Croiswail.Sanilac Co.. Mich.&#13;
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MACHME CO.&#13;
make 25 styles, including*&#13;
the only two-in-one lock&#13;
and chain stitch machine.&#13;
•Also best low priced ma*&#13;
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J. B. ALDR1CH, Stale Nafr-&#13;
UXTROIT, M i c a .&#13;
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Always Bought&#13;
/ &lt; H I I . D K l . N&#13;
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Contains neither&#13;
Opium,Morphine nor Mineral&#13;
NOT XARC OTIC.&#13;
r&lt;fcM(*&#13;
Aperfecl Remedy for Constipation&#13;
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Worms.ConvuisionsJReverishness&#13;
and LOS9 OF SLEEP.&#13;
Facsimile Signature of&#13;
N EW YORK.&#13;
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For Over&#13;
Thirty Years&#13;
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EAST MARION.&#13;
Thomas Bichards was taken eeriouly&#13;
ill Monday.&#13;
O. If. Sexton of Ohilson called&#13;
at Elder Pierces on Monday.&#13;
Elder Blood preached his farwell&#13;
sermon at the Corners last&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Justice Swarthout of Pinckney&#13;
called on W. Hendee the first of&#13;
the week.&#13;
- Mr. and Mrs. Hart of Oak&#13;
Grove spent last Sunday with&#13;
their son I. Hart and family.&#13;
Mabel and Ethel Montague entertained&#13;
their friend from HoweH&#13;
Master Torn- Itsell over Sunday.&#13;
EA&amp;T PUTNAM.'&#13;
Ohas. Brown was in Ann Arbor&#13;
Monday.&#13;
Mrs. B. W. Lake left Saturday&#13;
for Forest Hill.&#13;
Miss Clella Fish opens a year's&#13;
school here this week.&#13;
Miss Effie Allen of Howell, is&#13;
visiting old neighbors here.&#13;
Warren Lewis entertained a&#13;
brother from Tecumseh over Sunday.&#13;
W. E. Brown of Stockbridge,&#13;
spent the Sabbath with 0. Brown&#13;
tmd family.&#13;
Mrs, Eugene Smith and Belle&#13;
Birnie made a trip to Hamburg&#13;
Monday.&#13;
Dillivan Dnrkee and Will Sin*&#13;
gleton were at the county eeat&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
Minnie Hoff is assisting at the&#13;
Whipple Bouse, Howell, until after&#13;
tho street fair.&#13;
Edward Crauny and wife visited&#13;
Edd's sister, Mrs. John Birnie&#13;
and family Sunday.&#13;
Etttie Hoff returned to Stockbridge&#13;
Tuesday to continue treatment&#13;
for throat trouble.&#13;
Mesdames Chas. Stevenson and&#13;
and Ohas. White took in the excursion&#13;
to Jackson Wednesday.&#13;
Sunday, Sept. 9, was the laat&#13;
Sunday of preaching of this conference&#13;
year. Sunday school as&#13;
usual at 4 o'clock.&#13;
Mrs. H. G. Briggs of Pinckney&#13;
and Eister of Howell, called on&#13;
friends here Thursday, on their&#13;
way to visit in Unadilla.&#13;
BiAimrot WBUDrae.&#13;
• - * "&#13;
Additloal Local.&#13;
Henry Plummer and wife of&#13;
Anderson, visited with Wm. Dardee&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Frank Boylan, wife and daughter&#13;
of So. Lyon, Sundayed at W.&#13;
H. Placeway's.&#13;
Miss Kate Brown left Saturday&#13;
for Chicago where she resumes&#13;
her school duties.&#13;
Miss Lyda Allison of Oak Grove&#13;
who has-been visiting Mrs. N. N .&#13;
Whitcomb for a couple of weeks,&#13;
returned Saturday.&#13;
The C. E. Society of this place&#13;
held their semi annual election of&#13;
R. D. Roche of Howell was in town&#13;
Tuesday.&#13;
F, A. Sigler war in Detroit tbe first&#13;
of tbe week.&#13;
Dr. Darling of Ann Arbor was in&#13;
town Tuesday.&#13;
Mrs. W. W. Barnard is spending&#13;
tbe week in Howell.&#13;
Miss Effie Allen wf.Howell was the&#13;
— J guest of Mrs.jBoodrich the past week.&#13;
Mrs. S. Jenkins of Mason was tba&#13;
guest of tbe Webb families tbis week!&#13;
Forty-oue tickets were sold Inre&#13;
Wednesday for Jackson—Maccabee&#13;
day.&#13;
Miss Mame Steptoe of DetrorKspent&#13;
part of the pant week with her sister&#13;
Wks. F. D. Johnson.&#13;
Phil Kelley of Richmond, Va,, is&#13;
spending tbe week with his parents&#13;
and other relatives here.&#13;
The Misses Boyle and Hals tea d bare&#13;
returned from their visit in Leslie and&#13;
can be found at their millinery parlors&#13;
over the bank.&#13;
officers Wednesday evening last&#13;
and the following were elected:&#13;
Pres. Fred Fish; vice Pres. Flo&#13;
Hall; Treas. Sarah Pearson; Sec.&#13;
Clella Fish.&#13;
We clip the tallowing from the Toledo&#13;
Daily Newt/in rsgard to the&#13;
wedding of Miss Gertrude Andrew!&#13;
whioh will be read with interest by&#13;
her many friends her):&#13;
Miss Gertrude May Andsewi end Mr.&#13;
Levi A. Corson of 2?ew CeeUe P*«» were&#13;
united in marriage at (he Immaculate Conception&#13;
church tail morning (Sept. 4,) at 9 &gt;&#13;
o'clock. The ceremony wis quiet, only&#13;
the nearest friends being invited to witness&#13;
it, The bride, an exceedingly pretty and&#13;
graceful girl, was the loveliest of brides in&#13;
a perfect fitting, tailored gown of Quaker&#13;
gray and carried brides roses. She wore&#13;
becomingly a pretty hat of gray. The&#13;
maid of honor. Miss Elisabeth Graham, a&#13;
cousin of the bride, wore a castor suit with&#13;
hat to match and carried pink roses. Mr.&#13;
James McLaughlin of Chelsea, Michigan,&#13;
accompanied Miss Graham, Rev. Father&#13;
McCluskey assistant pastor at the Immac*&#13;
ulate Conception, epoke the. words that&#13;
joined these two lives, the beautiful music&#13;
of the bridal song from Lehengrtn was&#13;
played by Mr. Charles Kunz, and as an of*&#13;
fertory solo Miss Stella Parker sang the&#13;
O'Salutaris. After the ceremony a breakfast&#13;
was served at home of the brides aunt,&#13;
Miss McLaughlin on Broadway, where the&#13;
young couple will reside after a brief wedding&#13;
trip. A host of choice gifts in china,&#13;
silver, bric-a-brac, cut glass, tapestry and&#13;
costly pieces of funiture attest the love of&#13;
many friends. At the breakfast were Mrs.&#13;
Graham and children, Miss Elizebeih&#13;
Graham, Mr. J. McLaughlin, Miss Therea&#13;
Coeheis, Miss Coeheis, Misses Shea., Miss&#13;
Mabel Cahill and Miss McLaughlin. Mr.&#13;
and Mrs, Corson begin their new life und&#13;
v sunny skies and that there may be no&#13;
clouds on their Gorizon is the friendly&#13;
wish of all who know them.&#13;
Business Locals.&#13;
«L; *.Am' r&#13;
' „ • * * &gt;&#13;
w&gt;&#13;
ANDERSON.&#13;
Aggie Hinkley of Ann Arbor is,&#13;
visiting her parents here.&#13;
Frank Shields of Howell was&#13;
through this place Thursday.&#13;
Mrs. Geo. Phelps of Stockbridge&#13;
is visiting her daughter, here.&#13;
The Ladies' aid meets today,&#13;
Thursday, at Mrs. Jas. HoiFs.&#13;
Henry Whipple and Miss Elva&#13;
Hoff visited friends here Sunday.&#13;
0. D. Bennett and wife of Howell&#13;
visited Mrs. B's parents here&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Wm. Pyper and .. wife of Unadilla&#13;
called on Mrs. £. J. Dutkee&#13;
Sunnay. _ ^ _ _ _ _&#13;
B. Singleton and wife visited&#13;
their son Harry, near Stockbridge&#13;
Monday.&#13;
Fred Mackinder and wife spent&#13;
^Sunday with Fred's parents in&#13;
^Unadilla.&#13;
Jim Birnie and Olive Brearley&#13;
visited at John Birnie's the first&#13;
of the week.&#13;
School began in the Livermore&#13;
district Monday with Miss Mary&#13;
Scofield as teacher.&#13;
Eugene Smith and wife were&#13;
in Stockbridge Tuesday. Mr. S.&#13;
brought home a new bean threshing&#13;
machifieT—;———&#13;
Word reached here Thursday,&#13;
Sept 6, that Hazel, the six year&#13;
old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C.&#13;
Powell, formerly of this place,&#13;
died at their home at Sherman,&#13;
of typhoid fever. Miss Mary&#13;
Sprout* aiater of the mother, left&#13;
for thttt* Wednesday.&#13;
The people of Livingston and other&#13;
counties will get a good thing by subscribing&#13;
for tbe Legal Information&#13;
Quarterly for 25c of W. H. S. Wood,&#13;
Howell, tbis month as the price will&#13;
doable after October number.&#13;
The horrible storm on tbe Gulf of&#13;
Mexico in which over 2,000 human&#13;
lives were loss and nearly the entire&#13;
city of Galveston, Texas wiped off the&#13;
eirth, will go down in history as one&#13;
of tbe most destructive storm that ever&#13;
struck the U. 8.&#13;
While passing through Oakland&#13;
county last week we saw a scene which&#13;
might make one think of tbe snnny&#13;
South—large fields waving with tobacco.&#13;
This is a growing industry in&#13;
Oakland county and the development&#13;
will be watched with interest.&#13;
Wm. S. Pearson of Flint, nominee&#13;
for State Senator from the 13th dis-f&#13;
taict, was a caller at tbis office Wednesday.&#13;
He was the guest of Hon. U.&#13;
W. Teeple while here. Mr. Pearson&#13;
is a very pleasant gentleman to meet&#13;
and is oaer~Df~rhe rising lawyers of&#13;
Flint.&#13;
Bentley'8 Great One Dime Show&#13;
will exhibit here Tuesday evening&#13;
next, Sept. 18. The show is giving&#13;
excellent satisfaction throughout the&#13;
state. The program consists of music&#13;
acrobatic, juggling, dancing, singing&#13;
and everything that pertains to fun.&#13;
laughter and a general good time and&#13;
all for ten cents.&#13;
For Sale.&#13;
A good milch cow 6 years old, due&#13;
to calve Oct. 1. Inquire of A. Straitb&#13;
4 mile east of Birkett.&#13;
LOST.&#13;
Strayed or stolen from tbe premises&#13;
of W. J. Hill, near Portage lake one&#13;
Brown mare weight 900 short tail&#13;
mane roached. Any information will&#13;
be rewarded. Address Pincknev Mich.&#13;
Xotice.&#13;
I am now ready to take in apples&#13;
and make cider at my mill in Pettysville.&#13;
J. H. Hooker.&#13;
FARM FOR SALE&#13;
A good farm of 120 acres within&#13;
two miles of the village for sale at a&#13;
reasonable price. Anyone desiring&#13;
farm property will do well to call at&#13;
tbis office for particulars.&#13;
aim are* % note from her porta&#13;
with the slenderest of flitters, covered&#13;
with pearl-tray suede, andpleced it at,&#13;
the manager's elbow.'&#13;
"There will not, X think, be any Mr&#13;
Acuity about that/' said the lady, afe?&#13;
nlflcently glancing at the note; 'although&#13;
ft le neccasary that she shojld&#13;
not know until an hour beforehand;&#13;
and. if you will accompany me on that&#13;
piano, I will go through the lines.&#13;
Queen Lettuce follows the radish. I&#13;
think/'&#13;
She unfastened her long, light cloak&#13;
of shimmering gray, lined with silk qf&#13;
a pale-rose shade, and revealed such&#13;
an enchanting vision that the hardened&#13;
manager was completely bewildered.&#13;
The lady was dressed as Queen Lettuce,&#13;
with the difference that her costume&#13;
was of real silk and lace and the&#13;
finest gossamer, instead of the coarser&#13;
materials used by the costumier to the&#13;
theatre.&#13;
"Play the opening bars, please, and&#13;
I will take my entrance from the&#13;
door."&#13;
The manager went to the piano and&#13;
struck some chords. The visitor fluttered&#13;
gracefully into the" centre of the&#13;
room, curtseyed to an imaginary audience,&#13;
and began the first verse of&#13;
Queen Lettuce's song in a voice which&#13;
though not powerful, was deliciously&#13;
sweet and well trained.&#13;
"There," she smiled brightly after&#13;
the first verse. "1 need not finish now;&#13;
but I know it by heart, I assure you."&#13;
* * *&#13;
The musicians were beginning the&#13;
overture to tbe second act. %Has it begun yet?" a gentleman&#13;
asked, handing his overcoat to an attendant.&#13;
"Not yet, monsieur." said the girl,&#13;
with a smile and a nod of recognition.&#13;
"I have kept monsieur's seat."&#13;
M. le Conite d'Allier was a handsome&#13;
man of about two and thirty. In his&#13;
well-cut and easily iitting evening&#13;
dress, and with his broad shoulders,&#13;
he was conspicuous among the other&#13;
short, stout Frenchmen.&#13;
From the opening night of the&#13;
--Grand-Theatre the Comte had occupied&#13;
the same fauteuil, always, when alone,&#13;
appearing In time for the second PC+.&#13;
And the other habitues smiled at hfs&#13;
constancy, RIM! observed to e^ch otb»r&#13;
that Louise • Coudfrt was extremely&#13;
lucky to have such a distinguished admirer.&#13;
Inclined to be stout, this young&#13;
woman had the usual apearance and&#13;
manner of the cafe-chantant artists.&#13;
Her bold black eyes singled out the&#13;
Comte immediately, and she gave him&#13;
a dazzling smile.&#13;
The orchestra started a fresh motif,&#13;
and a dance was performed which!&#13;
proved highly satisfactory to the audience.&#13;
- * ,J&#13;
At its conclusion a very stout lady,&#13;
clad in scarlet tights and a scarle:,&#13;
sleeveless bodice, came forward and&#13;
announced natively and with an undulating-&#13;
movement of the hips&#13;
"1 am the lobster, juicy and fresh."&#13;
"And I the crisp little cress," chirped&#13;
a second. "And I the mayonnaise,"&#13;
sang a third. "And I the luscious&#13;
beetroot," declared a substantial&#13;
fourth "And I the garlic," "and I&#13;
the chicory," "and I the radish," and&#13;
so on until the whole gamut was&#13;
reached. At this point a radiant ap-&#13;
*m*m —*m mm&#13;
mm w*&#13;
- • • • • • -&#13;
Sepobllcan Caaetfs.&#13;
The Republican electors of the&#13;
Township of Putnam are requested to&#13;
meet at tbe Town Hall in the V ill age&#13;
of Pinokney on Saturday Sept. 15,&#13;
1900 for the purpose of electing seven&#13;
delegates to attend the Livingston&#13;
County Convention to be held at Howell&#13;
Mich ou Sept. 20 1900 and to&#13;
transact such other business at may&#13;
come before the the &amp; eating. Dated&#13;
Pinckney Mich. Sept. 10 1900. By&#13;
order of the committee.&#13;
The manager of the theatre attached&#13;
to the Casino at Rochersles-Bains was&#13;
well satisfied with himself and his affairs.&#13;
His present programme was a success,&#13;
and the theatre was well-filled&#13;
nightly. The special feature was an&#13;
Idea of his own, and it had "caught&#13;
on" at once. It was called "The&#13;
Dream of a Salad," and the dresses&#13;
were especially designed to represent&#13;
the component parts of a yery com*&#13;
prehensive salad.&#13;
"Queen Lettuce" was a trifle too&#13;
plump, and her accent was detestable&#13;
even for a variety artist, But she&#13;
stepped higher than any of the others,&#13;
so her accent did not matter.&#13;
Some one knocked at the door. He&#13;
gave permission, and, at the first&#13;
glance, his customary "Well, my dear,&#13;
what is it this time?" was strangled&#13;
in utterance.&#13;
The woman was young, very dainty&#13;
looking, with the unmistakable cachet&#13;
of the Maison Doucet^ or Worth&#13;
stamped upon her attire/&#13;
"Please excuse me, monsieur, for&#13;
calling without an appointment. 1&#13;
will explain my visit." The voice was&#13;
clear and- the intonation refined. It,&#13;
quite as much as her appearance, proclaimed&#13;
the owner to be as far removed&#13;
from the members of the manager's&#13;
company as the Rue de la Paix at 6&#13;
P. M. from the Quartier Latin at midnight.&#13;
"I am listening, madame."&#13;
"It is my wish to play in your theatre&#13;
to-night."&#13;
The manager waved his hands and&#13;
shrugged his shoulders.&#13;
"Let me finish, please. It Is absolutely&#13;
necessary that I play to-night "&#13;
"But it is impose "&#13;
"The part of Queen'Lettuce in The&#13;
Dream of a Salad/ as played by Mademoiselle—&#13;
what Is her name? Louise&#13;
Coudert, I believe?"&#13;
"Tea; but really, madam&#13;
paritlon appeared, approached the foot&#13;
lights, and, with a smile and a most&#13;
graceful curtesy, broke into the song&#13;
of Queen Lettuce.&#13;
The count looked stupefied.&#13;
There was not the slightest doubt,&#13;
in Queen Lettuce he recognized hlB&#13;
wife! And standing there, in the&#13;
blaze of the footlights, with her lovely&#13;
hair and sparkling eyes, her charming&#13;
costume, her exquisitely proportioned&#13;
and rounded limbs, he appeared so&#13;
pretty, so fascinating, so mischievous,&#13;
that involuntary applause rang out&#13;
from every pt rt of the theatre, and it&#13;
was some moments before she could&#13;
commence her song.&#13;
This passed off with a success which&#13;
was phenomena], and the Comte found&#13;
himself making comparisons between&#13;
his wife and Mile. Coudert, which were&#13;
certainly no*, in favor of the latter.&#13;
* * *&#13;
On coming out of the theatre the&#13;
lady was confronted by her husband.&#13;
He was looking very grave and cold,&#13;
and she burst out laufrhii.^&#13;
•. vtttietre you ar¥tr '&#13;
, "So yen *tv*%cid*4 to go on the&#13;
variety atafer* fee said quietly.&#13;
*&lt;Oh. ao! I %ve merely tried an&#13;
experiment, w i n a husband deceive*&#13;
4Ms wife there Ma two courses before&#13;
bar .either to sJMown andoery, which&#13;
t* sqjy; or tofftugh, as i nave done.&#13;
in any case she ought to compare her&#13;
•elf with her rival,"&#13;
'And your experience?"&#13;
"Has taught me that I have the advantage.&#13;
Has Mile. Coudert ever gained&#13;
such a success as I have gained&#13;
to-night? You know she never&#13;
hee." .&#13;
"And what is your decision, th?n?~&#13;
'•This. Had you given me a rival&#13;
who was my superior I should not&#13;
have excused your fault* but it might&#13;
have been compromised, As It is, 1&#13;
have eclipsed Mile. Coudert. You&#13;
have humiliated me and I shall obtain&#13;
a divorce. Good bye!'&#13;
"The brogham is waiting*. Will you&#13;
let me take you to the hotel?" he said.&#13;
"Oh, very well!" she answered, indifferently,&#13;
and, disdaining his arm,&#13;
got into the carriage, sqeezing herselz&#13;
up in a corner, where she remained&#13;
silent and motionless.&#13;
His principal feeling was a desire to&#13;
strangle Mile. Coudert—to blot her out&#13;
from his memory. His eyes rested always&#13;
on that delicious little figure in&#13;
the corner, dressed so perfectly, so becomingly,&#13;
and in his ears rang still&#13;
tbe delighted applause of the theatre&#13;
given to Queen Lettuce. Heavens!&#13;
What admiration she had received!&#13;
And there she was, close to him.&#13;
the delicious perfume of white lilies,&#13;
which she always used, delighting his&#13;
senses.&#13;
He moved nearer, but she appeared&#13;
to be asleep.&#13;
He coughed slightly. She did not&#13;
stir.&#13;
He took her hand, and, as it was not&#13;
withdrawn, put his arm round her&#13;
waist* —Then -sheawoke—&#13;
"Stupid! You are making a mistake."&#13;
"I am making no mistake.'&#13;
She took away her hand, pushed his&#13;
arm from her waist, and drew her&#13;
cloak around her as though to mark&#13;
a boundary between them.&#13;
But he got possession of her hand&#13;
again and the next minute his face&#13;
was touching hers.&#13;
"No, no! Let me alone! It Is ended!&#13;
I do not care for you now!*&#13;
But he persisted gently though descisively,&#13;
and she cried petulantly:&#13;
"How silly you are! You worry me!&#13;
Oh, Raoul, my hat! Take care!&#13;
Don't you see it is impossible to kiss&#13;
me? My vep"—&#13;
And whilst she was speaking she&#13;
was laughing inwardly at the success&#13;
of her experiment.&#13;
After allr it was easy enough. Simply&#13;
to make a comparison. And she&#13;
had triumphed—completely. Her resistance&#13;
gave her an added charm, and&#13;
as she looked into her husband's eyes,&#13;
brilliant with love and admiration, she&#13;
laughed a^ud.&#13;
After all it had only entailed a little&#13;
trcrl)&gt; .&#13;
"You must understand," she said, as&#13;
the eaninfce stopped at their hotel,&#13;
"that to-night's entertainment^as cost&#13;
mo a thousand franr*.—Dn not put mft to this expense every day, for my dot&#13;
Would not hold out!*&#13;
But she was not obliged to repeat&#13;
her experiment.&#13;
There is one significant fact Which&#13;
bears on the queltton of a college education&#13;
for girls. It is that all the&#13;
American women who have won distinction&#13;
in original work of any kind,&#13;
received the old-fashioned training.&#13;
College-bred women, so far, have been&#13;
successful only as teachers. 13 this because&#13;
the woman in one case was suffered&#13;
to develop naturally like a growing&#13;
tree, and in the other was moulded&#13;
artistically the same as is one brick in&#13;
a heap of bricks? I cannot answer&#13;
this question.—Ladies' Home Journal.&#13;
Oysters cannot live in the Baltic&#13;
sea. The reason is that it is not salt&#13;
enough. They can only live in water&#13;
that contains at least 37 parts of salt&#13;
in every 1,000 parts of water.&#13;
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Table Linens.&#13;
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              <text>Use the Windows Snipping Tool to capture the area of the document you want to save. If you want multiple pages printed please see staff to print the pages you want. &lt;a href="https://howelllibrary.org/technology/#print" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View the library's printing information.&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch September 13, 1900</text>
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