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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; XIX. PINCKNEY, LIVINGSTON CO., MICH., THURSDAY, SEPT. 5, 1901. No. 36&#13;
LOCAL N E ^ S .&#13;
Mrs. Ray Thomas of Jackson is the&#13;
guest of relatives here.&#13;
Raymond Sigler and Roger Carr&#13;
were in pester Satnrday last.&#13;
The Misses Lacy Mann and Jessie&#13;
Green spent last week with friends&#13;
and relatives in Napolean, Blissfield&#13;
and Hbrton.&#13;
Edward A. Bowman,&#13;
bEPARTWENT&#13;
STORE&#13;
HOWELL. - MICHIGAN&#13;
B O W M A N ' S&#13;
la the place to get bargains:&#13;
Dry Goods, Groceries, Hardware,&#13;
China, House Furnishing&#13;
Goods, Trunks, Valises, etc.&#13;
T r u n k S a l e :&#13;
Iron bottom trunks as low as&#13;
$1.10&#13;
Fine trunks $2 to $10&#13;
Canvas telescopes as low as 20c&#13;
Valises, Shopping Bags, Pocket&#13;
Books, Purses, and Shawi Straps.&#13;
When in Howell drop in and&#13;
see us.&#13;
"SPOT CASH" saves you money.&#13;
Trade at B o W H i a i l ' s » Pfcy»&#13;
The Busy Store,&#13;
Howell, Mich.&#13;
Frank Morn went to Lansing&#13;
day.&#13;
Fannie Clinton returned to Jackson&#13;
Monday.&#13;
R. H. Efwin visited bis son in Alma&#13;
the paat week.&#13;
The sound of the schogl belt is again&#13;
heard in our village.&#13;
The rains ot the past week did a&#13;
great amount of good.&#13;
M. Yake spent Sunday and Monday&#13;
with friends in Munith.&#13;
Kitsie Brokaw was the guest of her&#13;
grandmother here last week.&#13;
Miss Mabel Read of near Ann Arbor&#13;
is the gaest of Miss Ethel Read.&#13;
C. L. Sigler and tfarl Sykes were in&#13;
Ann Arbor Jabor day—Monday.&#13;
Harley Angel of Bunker Hill was&#13;
in town Friday and Saturday last.&#13;
A. T. Mann and son of Detroit were&#13;
guests of his mother Che past week.&#13;
Several from here attended the farmers&#13;
picnic at Whitmore Satnrday.&#13;
Mrs. P. Far nam returued this wiek&#13;
from a visit with her daughter m Detroit.&#13;
W. H. Clark and wife if Gregory&#13;
were guests of Will Black and family&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
J. Parker and wife were called to&#13;
North field tie past week by the severe&#13;
illness of an uncle.&#13;
Mine Jennie Haze is spending a&#13;
couple of weeks with friends near&#13;
Ann Arbor and Ypeilanti,&#13;
J.W.Harris was able to ride out&#13;
Monday. His many friends will be&#13;
pleased to know that be is steadily improvilg.&#13;
Hon-! H. G. Briggs and wife took in the&#13;
pioneer picnic at Howell Thursday&#13;
last.&#13;
F. H. Smith of Roots, shook hands&#13;
with old friends here the last of last&#13;
week.&#13;
Mrs. Saulsbury of Jackson was the&#13;
guest of relatives and fr.ends here the&#13;
past.&#13;
Mrs. H. Rohrgass and children of&#13;
Fowlervilte were in town the last ot&#13;
last week.&#13;
Mrs. Berton C. Hicks of Jackson&#13;
spent Saturday and Sunday at H. H.&#13;
Swarthout'8,&#13;
Stoekbridge will make her crosswalks&#13;
of brick—they ordered a carload&#13;
for that purpose.&#13;
The Howell condensed milk factory&#13;
is putting down three new wells for&#13;
use in that institution.&#13;
L. B. White has our thanks for a&#13;
luscious musk melon and Ed. Reynolds&#13;
for a fine water melon.&#13;
On Friday last a barn belonging to&#13;
Wro. Ball near Hamburg was struck&#13;
by lightning ani burned.&#13;
Mrs. Wm. Bland of Putnam and&#13;
Miss H azel Bluff ot Cohoctah are visiting&#13;
relatives in Canada.&#13;
The months of October and November&#13;
are the only ones in which to hunt&#13;
ducks—one whole month yet.&#13;
The street commissioner of the village&#13;
of Bancroft is putting it crosswalks&#13;
of brick to the satisfaction of&#13;
citizens.&#13;
Who said my ad. was not O KT&#13;
Morris and Frank GFatpin of Ann&#13;
Arbor were the guests of Henry W.&#13;
Smith and wife of Marion a couple of&#13;
davs last week.&#13;
Who said my work was not O K?&#13;
Who said my prices were not O K?&#13;
Nobody!&#13;
Nobody!&#13;
Nobody!&#13;
Then why not have—all—o£_youjL_&#13;
work done, where everything is&#13;
done on the square and everybody&#13;
is satisfied.&#13;
Black The Blacksmith,&#13;
Anderson, Mich.&#13;
Those who are not taking the DISPATCH&#13;
on the F. R. D. routes will do&#13;
well to read our adv. in this issue.&#13;
We send out several samples&#13;
copies.&#13;
With potatoes at 75cts per bashel&#13;
and other things in porportion we&#13;
shall need every cent, due us this coming&#13;
winter. We hope our pstrons&#13;
will remember this.&#13;
Mrs. A. J. Wilhelm visited in Howall&#13;
this week.&#13;
Malacby Roche took the trip to&#13;
Frankfort Tuesday.&#13;
Geo. Green and wife spent Sunday&#13;
and Monday in Howell.&#13;
Mn. R. H. Teeple and s6n returned&#13;
to their home iu Manistique today.&#13;
Roger Carr was awarded the job ot'&#13;
lighting the street lamps at $8 per&#13;
month.&#13;
C. P. Sykes is putting in a system of&#13;
steam heat in the new school house at&#13;
Hamburg.&#13;
H. M.Tenney and wifoof St. Louis&#13;
Mich is the gueat of Wm. T. Allison&#13;
and family.&#13;
0. B. Jackson has been under the&#13;
doctor's care this week bit is better&#13;
at this writing.&#13;
Mrs. Nettie Vaughn and daughter&#13;
Norma returned tue past week from&#13;
ther northern trip.&#13;
Chas, Bious died July 31 at Decatur,&#13;
III., of hemorhage of the lungs. H«&#13;
was well known here.&#13;
There will be no preaching at the&#13;
M. E. church next Sunday. Sunday&#13;
school at the usual hour.&#13;
Fred Mackinder wears a broad&#13;
smile now-a-days- Why? A 9$ lb.&#13;
girl came to his home Aag. 28.&#13;
Katie Allen of Durand who has&#13;
been visiting her friend Mis3 Belle&#13;
Mclntyre, returned home Wednesday.&#13;
In comparing a boy to a wheart field&#13;
Prof. Delos Fall says: "that first he is&#13;
cradled, then thiasbed. and finally he&#13;
becomes the fro we* of the lamily.&#13;
May Hannigan of Webberville is&#13;
attenuing our school here having §n«&#13;
The state fair ground in Pontioo vere1*- He is able to be aroand howwill&#13;
have a tower, from which a view&#13;
of a gojd portion ot Oakland county&#13;
-eaa-be-had.—'The numer^&amp;-lak«s-^d-|-menLa3- follows:- -High school, 34&#13;
fine farms will make a&#13;
for the visitors to the&#13;
pretty sight&#13;
fair.&#13;
The "Fitch" Aquatic Cream Separator.&#13;
If yon're running a dairy,—be there one cow or one hundred—&#13;
your profit dedends upon the quality of cream you're&#13;
getting.&#13;
If you aren't getting all the cream there is in your milk,&#13;
you're losing just that much money.&#13;
Br the old system of milk-selting you lose from ten to twenty&#13;
per oent. of the cream, besides doing a lot of unnecssary work.&#13;
Cold water is added to the warm milk and the sudden&#13;
change in tempertnre and consistency causes the cream and&#13;
milk to separate: and because of the cream being the lighter it&#13;
is forced to the top.&#13;
Yon get «11 the cream in an hour after milking, your skimmilk&#13;
is sweet and clean, tke cream is smooth, sweet, firm and&#13;
clean, and requires less than half the time formerly required&#13;
to churn it.&#13;
The batter is better, sweeter, and you get from ten to twenty&#13;
per cent, more of it.&#13;
No pans, crocks or milk cans needed, no extra labor, no&#13;
waste cream.&#13;
Yon can wash it in two minutes and have ready for the next&#13;
milking.&#13;
Taking it all in arl, it saves the women's work, costs less&#13;
than one.half as much as a full equipment of pans, skimmers,&#13;
[jars, crocks, cans, etc., besides saving enough cream in one&#13;
,year to pay for itself tenfold.&#13;
f Here are our prices:&#13;
No. 1. Capacity, 10 gals.. $3.50.&#13;
No. 2. Capacity, 15 gals., 4.50.&#13;
No. 3. Capacity, 23 gals., 5.00.&#13;
Sold on trial and warranted by&#13;
TEEPLE &amp; MDWELL&#13;
Heman Smith of Marion bad the&#13;
misfortune last Friday to injure his&#13;
left hand in a had manner. The king&#13;
bolt of bis carriaee cama out and the&#13;
fall his hand was caught in the top in&#13;
such a manner as to lascerate the&#13;
flesh for about six inches. Dr. Sigler&#13;
dressed the wound.&#13;
While in Leslie last week, Hon. 6.&#13;
W. Teeple visited the new office of&#13;
the Leslie Local., He informs us that&#13;
he still thinks we have a better location&#13;
and as good an office as onr friend&#13;
Gould. Well Bert, we bought the&#13;
building of Mr. Teeple so will have&#13;
to let him have his own way.&#13;
As usual at this season of the year&#13;
the catalogue houses are flooding the&#13;
country with their illustrated price&#13;
lists, and many people will be led into&#13;
buying much ot them because they are&#13;
not informed where else to buy the&#13;
same thing they need. Home merchants&#13;
can learn something from this&#13;
that the catalogue houses neyer let up&#13;
on their advertising. They are at it&#13;
continually and that is what brings&#13;
them the trade.&#13;
Owing to the price of coal going&#13;
"sky*ward" parties from Detroit have&#13;
been investigating the peat marsh at&#13;
Chelsea. They found peat of a firstclass&#13;
quality, reaching in some places&#13;
to a depth of thirty two feet The entire&#13;
land, comprising about sixty-five&#13;
acres, has been contracted lor, aad&#13;
within a short time a plant which will&#13;
turn out about 200 tons a day wilt be&#13;
erected. Michigan abounds in peat&#13;
fields and it may rival the olichigai&#13;
coal product yet.&#13;
tered the twelfth grade. She graduated&#13;
from the Webberville school last&#13;
year.&#13;
Rev. H. W. Hicks is attending conference&#13;
at Bay City. It |is hoped by&#13;
his many friends herd that be may be&#13;
returned to the work here for another&#13;
year.&#13;
Master Willie Darrow had the misfortune&#13;
one day last week to run a&#13;
rusty nail into bis foot injuring it se-&#13;
Fred Fish was in Fenton the paat&#13;
week.&#13;
Mamie Fish retimed Saturday to&#13;
her school near Bancroft.&#13;
J as. Fitch and wife of Stock bridge,&#13;
are the guests of relatives here.&#13;
We understand that Robt. Erwin&#13;
has gone into business in Alma.&#13;
G. A. Richards of Grand Rapids was&#13;
the guest of his parents over Sunday.&#13;
K. H. Crane and £. W. Keinedy&#13;
and son Raymond are taking in the&#13;
sights at Buffalo.&#13;
Miss Alice Winter who has been&#13;
visiting £. G. Fish and family, returned&#13;
home Fridav last.&#13;
Miss BeHe Kennedy has gone to&#13;
Wisconsin where she has been engaged&#13;
as preceptress ot a graded aad&#13;
high school. She has taught for sevral&#13;
y&lt;flp&lt; in Ypsilanti and is well&#13;
qualified for her new position. Her&#13;
many friends here wish her success. $250&#13;
Detroit&#13;
"To-Day"&#13;
• - A '• . 1&#13;
•*'%&#13;
,¾&#13;
; \ i \&#13;
A Daily Paper&#13;
and&#13;
e?er.&#13;
School commences with an enrollgrammar&#13;
department, 10; intermediate,&#13;
32; primary, 35. There will&#13;
probably be an increase during the&#13;
term.&#13;
Those desiring p'tuns for canning&#13;
can get them of Mr. Hall of near&#13;
Hamburg who will be in town the&#13;
last of this week or the first ot next&#13;
with several kinds of fine plums,&#13;
peaches etc.&#13;
H. W. Crofoot took in the $.1 excursion&#13;
to Frankfort Tuesdav. If the A.&#13;
A. railroad bad advertised that trip in&#13;
the local paper as tbey should they&#13;
would have taken a load from every&#13;
town.&#13;
1&#13;
The&#13;
Pinckney&#13;
Dispatch&#13;
A Weekly Paper&#13;
Both&#13;
One Year&#13;
For&#13;
Only&#13;
School Books&#13;
and School supplies of all kinds at prices&#13;
that defy competition.&#13;
Before&#13;
you buy get our PRICES on supplies.&#13;
A Few Groceries&#13;
yet to close out at less than COST. V.i&#13;
F. A.&#13;
Drvggifif.&#13;
' V »t.&#13;
, &gt; .&#13;
ms. liiM^siilii Pf.^-&gt;:.^? : " • " - ' i " &gt; • • • • ' ; ' • &amp; , • '&#13;
#&#13;
v: c-&#13;
$«77~&#13;
,":; ---::(-/.&#13;
TALJIAGE'S SERMON.&#13;
A TALK FULL OF THE SUMMER&#13;
SPIRIT.&#13;
Be Berth Unto the Mount and Feteh&#13;
, UU«« Branches and Pine Branches and&#13;
Myrtle Branches and Palm Branches&#13;
•* • " • * to Make Booths/'—Neh. 8: IS.&#13;
ICopyrlght, 1901, by Louis Klopsch. N. Y.] *&#13;
.Washington, Sept. 1.—This discourse&#13;
o f » r . Talmage is full of the breath of&#13;
hills and fields and is a summer&#13;
ion; text, Nehemiah viii, 15/ "Go&#13;
forth unto the mount and fetch olive&#13;
jbranohee and pine branches and&#13;
tssjrtle branches and palm branches&#13;
kxancb.es of thick trees to make&#13;
I t seems a s If Mount Olivet were un-&#13;
4B06&gt;sei. The people have gone into&#13;
t h e Mountain and have cut off tree&#13;
hrattcies and put them on their shoulders,&#13;
and they come forth now into&#13;
the streets of Jerusalem and on the&#13;
heuse tops, and they twist these tree&#13;
branches into arbors or booths. Then&#13;
the people come forth from their comfortable&#13;
homes and dwell for seven&#13;
days in these booths or arbors. Why&#13;
-do they do that? Well, it is a great&#13;
festal time. It i s the feast of taberoacles,&#13;
and these people are going t o&#13;
celebrate the desert travel of their&#13;
lathers and their deliverance from&#13;
their troubles, the experience of their&#13;
fathers when, traveling in the desert,&#13;
they lived in booths on their way to&#13;
the land of Canaan. And s o these&#13;
booths also became highly suggestive&#13;
—I will not say they are necessarily&#13;
typical, but highly suggestive—of our&#13;
march toward heaven and of the fact&#13;
th?.t we are only living temporarily&#13;
here, a s i t were, i n booths'or arbors,&#13;
&lt;oa our. way to the Canaan of eternal&#13;
r e s t And what was said to the Jews&#13;
literally may be said figuratively t o&#13;
•all this audience. Go forth unto the&#13;
mountain and fetch olive branches and&#13;
pine banches and myrtle branches&#13;
• and palm branches and branches of&#13;
.thick trees t o make booths.&#13;
"We Need Olive Branches.&#13;
» "Now, if we are today going t o succeed&#13;
i n building this gospel arbor we&#13;
Beaut go into the mount of God's&#13;
blessing and fetch the olive branches,&#13;
one! whatever else we must have we&#13;
have at least two olive branches,&#13;
With God ^ n d peace with man.&#13;
W h e a I say peace with God, I do not&#13;
to represent God as an angrjr&#13;
• ctdeftain, having a grudge against us,&#13;
bat C do mean t o affirm that there is&#13;
BO more antagonism between a hound&#13;
and a hare, between a hawk and a&#13;
pallet, between elephant and swine,&#13;
efean there is hostility between holiness&#13;
and sin. And if God is all holiness&#13;
and we are all sin there must be&#13;
a treaty, there must be a stretching&#13;
forth of olive branches.&#13;
There is a great lawsuit going on&#13;
BOW, and it is a lawsuit which man is&#13;
bringing against his Maker. That lawsuit&#13;
is now on the calendar. It is the&#13;
haman versus the divine, i t is iniquity&#13;
versus the imaculate, it is weakness !&#13;
versus omnipotence. Man began it.&#13;
' God did not begin the lawsuit. We bag&#13;
s * it. We assaulted our Maker, and&#13;
the sooner we end this part of the&#13;
straggle, in which the finite attempts&#13;
(to overthrow the infinite and omnipotent—&#13;
the sooner we end it the better.&#13;
Ifcarelers tell us there is no such place&#13;
aa Mount Calvary, that it is only a&#13;
bin, only a n insignificant hill, but I&#13;
/persist in calling it the mount of God's&#13;
'divine mercy and love far grander&#13;
tfcaa any other place on earth, grander&#13;
than the Alps or the Himalayas, and&#13;
there are no other hills as conipared&#13;
with It. and I have noticed in every&#13;
sect where the cross of Christ is set&#13;
forth it is planted with olive branches.&#13;
Anal all we have to do is to get rid of&#13;
t h i s srar between God and ourselves,&#13;
-of which we are all tired. We want&#13;
'to back out of the war, we want to&#13;
gat rid of this hostility. All we have&#13;
t o do is just to get up on the mount&#13;
o f God's blessing and pluck these olive&#13;
branches and wave them before the&#13;
throne. Peace through our Lord Jesus&#13;
Cbrist!&#13;
Health for Mind and Sool.&#13;
But my text goes further. It says,&#13;
"Go up. into the mountain and fetch&#13;
•olive branches and pine branches."&#13;
N o w , what is suggested by the pine&#13;
branch? The pine tree i s healthy, i t&#13;
la aromatic, it is evergreen. H o w&#13;
often the physician says to his invalid&#13;
patients: "Go and have a breath of&#13;
the pines. That will invigorate you."&#13;
Wfcy do such thousands of people go&#13;
raouth every year? &lt;Jt is not merely to&#13;
go to a warmer climate, but to get the&#13;
JaoMence of the nine. There is health&#13;
: l a it, aad this pine branch of the text&#13;
s^soggests t o e helpfulness of our holy&#13;
tcHgion. I t is full of health—health&#13;
far ati, health for the mind, health for&#13;
t h e soul. I knew an aged man who&#13;
jhad no capital of physical health. He&#13;
thad had all the diseases you could imagine.&#13;
H e did not eat enough to keep&#13;
*a child alive. He lived on a beverage&#13;
• of hosannas. He lived, high, for he&#13;
&gt;4iaed every day with the King. He&#13;
kept alive simply by the force of&#13;
holy religion. It is a hftalrhy i»a-&#13;
Hgionr-hcalthy for the eye, healthy&#13;
for t h e hands, healthy for&#13;
the feet, h e a l t h y &amp;or:"1fee k«*rt,&#13;
healthy for the liver, healthy for the&#13;
spleen, healthy for the whole man. It&#13;
gives a man such peace, such quietness,&#13;
such independence of circumstances,&#13;
such holy equipoise. Oh, that&#13;
we all possessed it, that w s possessed&#13;
it now! I mean it is healthy if a man&#13;
gets enough of it. Now, there are&#13;
some people who get Just enough religion&#13;
to bother them, just enough religion&#13;
t o make them sick, but If a&#13;
man takes a full, deep, round inhalation&#13;
of these pine branches of the gospel&#13;
arbor he will find i t buoyant, exuberant,&#13;
undying, immortal health.&#13;
But this evergreen of my text also&#13;
suggests the simple fact that religion&#13;
is evergreen. What does the pine&#13;
branch care for the snow on its brow?&#13;
It is only a crown of glory. The winter&#13;
cannot freeze i t out. This evergreen&#13;
tree branch is a s beautiful in&#13;
winter as It i s in the summer. And&#13;
that is the characteristic of our holy&#13;
religion. In the sharpest, coldest winter&#13;
of misfortune and disaster It is as&#13;
good a religion as i t Is in the bright&#13;
summer sunshine. Well, now, that is&#13;
a practical truth. For suppose if I&#13;
should go up and down these aisles&#13;
I would not find in this house fifty&#13;
people who had had no trouble. But&#13;
there are some of you who have especial&#13;
trouble. God only knows what&#13;
you go through with. Oh, how many&#13;
bereavements, how. many poverties,&#13;
I how many persecutions, how many&#13;
misrepresentations! And now, my&#13;
brother, you have tried everything&#13;
else, why do you not try this evergreen&#13;
religion? It is just as good for&#13;
you now as it was in the day of prosperity.&#13;
It is better for you. Perhaps&#13;
some of you feel almost like Muckle&#13;
Backie, the fisherman, who was chided&#13;
one day because he kept on working,&#13;
although that very day he burled his&#13;
child. They came to him and said,&#13;
"It is indecent for you to be mending&#13;
that boat when this afternoon you&#13;
buried your child." And the fisherman&#13;
looked up and said, "Sir, it i s very&#13;
easy for you gentlefolks to stay in the&#13;
house with your handkerchief to your&#13;
eyes in grief; but, sir, ought I t o let&#13;
the other five children starve because&#13;
one of them is drowned? No, sir. We&#13;
maun work, we maun work, though&#13;
our hearts beat like this hammer."&#13;
The Significance of the Palm.&#13;
But my text takes a step further,&#13;
and it says, Go into the mountain and&#13;
fetch olive branches and pine branches&#13;
ana paim Drancnes. Now, m e palm&#13;
tree was very much honored by the&#13;
ancients. It had 360 different uses.&#13;
The fruit was conserved, the sap was&#13;
a beverage, the stems were ground up&#13;
for food for camels, The base of the&#13;
leaves was turned into hats and mats&#13;
and baskets, and from the root to the&#13;
top of the highest leaf there was usefulness.&#13;
The tree grew 85 feet in&#13;
height sometimes, and i t spread leaves&#13;
four and five feet long. It meant usefulness,&#13;
limrTF~meanr victory—usefulness&#13;
for what it produced and victory&#13;
because it was brought into celebrations&#13;
of triumph. And oh, how much&#13;
we want the palm branches in the&#13;
churches of Jesus Christ at this time!&#13;
A great many Christians do not&#13;
amount to anything. You have to&#13;
shove them off the track t o let the&#13;
Lord's chariots come along.&#13;
I know the old plan was, the plan&#13;
now is, in regard to worldly investments—&#13;
you hear it, merchants tell you&#13;
—do not put everything into one thing,&#13;
do not put all your eggs into one&#13;
basket. But I have to tell you in this&#13;
matter oiSj religion you had better give&#13;
your all-^to God and then get in yourself^—&#13;
On, says some one, "My busln&#13;
e | | is to sell silks and cloth3." Well,&#13;
then, my brother, sell silks and cloths&#13;
to the glory of God. And some one&#13;
says, "My business is to raise corn and&#13;
carrots." Then, my brother, raise&#13;
corn and carrots to the glory of God.&#13;
And some one says, "My business is&#13;
to manufacture horseshoe nails." Then&#13;
manufacture horseshoe nails to the&#13;
glory of God. Th'erc is nothing for you&#13;
to do that you ought to do but for the&#13;
glory of God.&#13;
The Victory Over Satan.&#13;
But the palm branch also meant victory.&#13;
You all know that. In all ages,&#13;
in all lands, the palm branch means&#13;
victory. Well, now, we are by nature&#13;
the servants of satan. He stole us,&#13;
he has his eye on us, he wants to keep&#13;
us. But word comes from our Father&#13;
that if we will try to break loose from&#13;
this doing of wrong our Father will&#13;
help us, and some day we rouse up,&#13;
and we look the black tyrant in the&#13;
face, and we fly at him, and we wrestle&#13;
him down, and we put our heel on his&#13;
neck, and we grind him in the dust,&#13;
and we say, "Victory, victory, through&#13;
our Lord Jesus Christ!" Oh what a&#13;
grand thing it is t o have Bin under&#13;
foot and a wasted life behind our&#13;
backs. "Blessed is he whose transgression&#13;
is forgiven and whose sin is&#13;
covered."&#13;
"Some one "says 'How about the inture?"&#13;
What, says the man, I feel so&#13;
sick and worn out with the ailments&#13;
of life. You are going t o be more&#13;
than conqueror. But, says the man, I&#13;
am so tempted, I am s o pursued Th&#13;
lire. You are going t o be more than&#13;
conqueror. I, who have so many ailments&#13;
and heartaches, going to be&#13;
you a r e , so self conceited that you&#13;
want to manage all the affairs of y o u r | '&#13;
life yourself Instead of letting God&#13;
manage them. Do you want to drive&#13;
and have God take a back seat? "Oh&#13;
no," you say, "I want God t o be my&#13;
loader." Well, then, you will be mora&#13;
than conqueror. Your last sickness&#13;
will come, and the physicians in the&#13;
next room will be talking about what&#13;
they will do for you. What difference&#13;
will i t make what they do for you?&#13;
You are going to be well, everlastingly&#13;
well. And when the spirit has fled&#13;
the body, your friends will be talking&#13;
as to where they shall bury you.&#13;
What difference does i t make t o you&#13;
where they bury you? The angel of&#13;
the resurrection can pick you out of&#13;
the dust anywhere, and all the cemeteries&#13;
of the earth are i n God's care.&#13;
Oh, you are going to be more than&#13;
conqueror.&#13;
Finishing the Arbor.&#13;
My text brings us one step further.&#13;
It says, "Go forth into the mount and&#13;
fetch olive branches and pine branches&#13;
and myrtle branches and palm&#13;
branches and branches of thick trees."&#13;
Now, you know very well—I make this&#13;
remark under the head of branches of&#13;
thick trees—that a booth or arbor made&#13;
of slight branches would not stand.&#13;
The first blast of the tempest would&#13;
prostrate it. So then t h e booth or&#13;
arbor must have four stout poles to&#13;
hold up the arbor or booth, and hence&#13;
for the building of the arbor for this&#13;
world we must have stout branches of&#13;
thick trees. And so it i s in the gospel&#13;
arbor. Blessed be God that wc have&#13;
a brawny Christianity, not one easily&#13;
upset. The storms of life will come&#13;
upon us, and we want strong doctrine;&#13;
not only love, but Justice; not only&#13;
invitation, but warning. It is a&#13;
mighty gospel; it is a n omnipotent&#13;
gospel. These are the stout branches&#13;
of thick trees.&#13;
I remember what Mr. Finney said&#13;
in a schoolhouse. The village was s o&#13;
bad it was called Sodom, and it was&#13;
said to have only one good man in all&#13;
the village, and he was called Lot,&#13;
and Mr. Finney was preaching in the&#13;
school house, and he described the destruction&#13;
of Sodom, how the city was&#13;
going t o be destroyed, unless they repented&#13;
and that there would be rain&#13;
from heaven of sorrow and destruction&#13;
unless they, too, Repented. And&#13;
the people in the school house sat and&#13;
ground their teeth* in anger and clinched&#13;
their fists in anger, but before he&#13;
got through with his sermon they got&#13;
down on their knees and cried for&#13;
mercy while mercy could be found. Oh,&#13;
it is a mighty gospel; not only an in&#13;
SOME FBEAK CASES: J&#13;
PECULIAR SUITS U. f . HA8 TAKEN&#13;
INTO COURT. ,&#13;
Has Sued Dumb Animals and Inanimate&#13;
Object* aad as a Besult Has Greatly&#13;
Enriched the National Treasury—&#13;
few elry Found Guilty.&#13;
vitation, but a warning, an omnipotent&#13;
truth, stout branches of thick trees.&#13;
Well, my friends, you see I have&#13;
omitted one or two points not because&#13;
I forgot to present them, but&#13;
because I have not time to present&#13;
them. I have shown you hero is the&#13;
olive branch of peace, here is the pine&#13;
branch of evergreen gospel consolation,&#13;
here the palm tree branch of usefulness&#13;
and of victory, and here are&#13;
the stont branches of-thick trees.—T-he.&#13;
gospel arbor is done. The air is&#13;
aromatic of heaven. The leaves rustle&#13;
with the gladness of God. Come into&#13;
the arbor. Come into the booth. I&#13;
went out at different times with a&#13;
fowler to the mountains to catch&#13;
pigeons, and we made our booth, and&#13;
we sat in that booth and watched for&#13;
the pigeons to come. And w e found&#13;
flocks in the sky, and after awhile they&#13;
dropped into the net, and we were successful.&#13;
So I come now to the door&#13;
of this gospel booth. I look out. I&#13;
see flocks of souls flying hither and&#13;
flying thither. Oh, that they might&#13;
come like clouds and as doves to the&#13;
window. Come into the booth. Come&#13;
into the booth.&#13;
By following his. rigid rule of forever&#13;
standing up for his rights, Uncle&#13;
3am becomes involved in some peculiar&#13;
cases. On numerous occasions, for instance,&#13;
he has sued inanimate objects&#13;
and dumb animals, and as a result the&#13;
treasury is greatly benefited. He i s&#13;
busy, Just now, prosecuting numerous&#13;
freak suits against inanimate things&#13;
and animals. These helpless lawbreak&#13;
breakers are held as defendants, just&#13;
as though they were human beings.&#13;
They are imprisoned In the custody of&#13;
the court, and lawyers eloquently recite&#13;
their misdeeds, for they are offenders&#13;
in the unsparing eye of the&#13;
law.&#13;
Uncle Sam made a snug fortune by&#13;
suing fifteen packages of diamonds&#13;
smuggled last June through Niagara.&#13;
A few days ago the federal court of the&#13;
western New York district sentenced&#13;
them to be sold. Thirty-one thousand&#13;
dollars were poured Into the treasury&#13;
as the result of this auction. Uncle&#13;
Sam lately sued "581 diamonds, cut,&#13;
etc." suspected of having been smuggled&#13;
Into Michigan, but the District&#13;
court dismissed the case, and they&#13;
were liberated from the custody of the&#13;
United States marshal. "The United&#13;
States vs. one diamond and pearl&#13;
bracelet, one diamond and pearl brooch&#13;
with pendant, one pair diamond and&#13;
pearl earrings and one diamond&#13;
brooch," was the title of a case which&#13;
lately went against the aforesaid Jewels&#13;
in the district court of New Jersey.&#13;
They were held guilty for allowing&#13;
themselves to be smuggled and&#13;
were sent down to the auctioneer.&#13;
Misbehaving cattle have troubled&#13;
Uncle Sam to a serious degree of late.&#13;
He has arrested and tried no less than&#13;
1,023 within the past two years. They&#13;
were all accused of coming Into the&#13;
country in violation of the quarantine&#13;
laws. In these cases it was deemed&#13;
impracticable t o commit the defendants&#13;
to jail, like common human offenders,&#13;
or to lock them up In the&#13;
marshal's safe, as the diamond rings&#13;
were treated. The government had to&#13;
AWEMCV* HOTTEST "PLACE.&#13;
t W M e a t oj *tbe i&gt;e»th Valley afeosedf&#13;
Tha* of Other Spots.&#13;
The Hottest . place, in &amp;e- United&#13;
sKateetso f a r a / t h * oflcisi-records go,&#13;
is in the famous Death Valley, in,&#13;
southern California, a dead sea gorga&#13;
without the sea. The valley is narrow,&#13;
only a few miles in width, but about&#13;
130 in length. It lies 40* feet below th*&#13;
bottom of the sea, and Its bottom i s&#13;
covered with a sheet of salt, white and&#13;
glittering in the sun. The Amargosa&#13;
river, although usually its bed i s dry*&#13;
traverses a large desert tract in southern&#13;
Nevada, flows to the south, when it&#13;
flows at all, and ends in the Valley of&#13;
Death, the northern portion of which&#13;
gradually rises to the level of the surrounding&#13;
deserts, so that the physical&#13;
geography of the valley closely re-&#13;
Bembles that of the Dead sea, great Salt&#13;
lake, and other inland bodies of water&#13;
having no outlet In 1891 a scientific&#13;
expedition was sent t o the valley by&#13;
the government, and for five months&#13;
a weather station was maintained'in&#13;
the valley for the purpose of observing&#13;
the prevailing conditions. What they&#13;
were may be best understood from the&#13;
statement that for the entire month of&#13;
July the average temperature for both&#13;
day and night was 102 degrees, while&#13;
an almost uniform record of 122 degrees&#13;
was maintained during the day- .&#13;
light hours.&#13;
.1 ' -,,-,-V&#13;
more than conqueror? Yea, unless&#13;
NOTED WOMAN SUFFRAGIST.&#13;
Gen. Cassias HI. Clay's Daughter Mas&#13;
Done Mnch for Her Sex in Kentucky.&#13;
Within the past twelve years Miss&#13;
Laura Clay, woman suffragist and&#13;
daughter of the. famous old Whitehall&#13;
general, Casslus M. Clay, has revolur&#13;
tionized the position of women in Kentucky.&#13;
She Is the president and founder&#13;
of the Equal Rights Association of&#13;
Kentucky and under her leadership&#13;
wonders have been accomplished. She&#13;
is a mild-mannered, blue-eyed, roundfaced&#13;
little woman Of pleasing address,&#13;
but in pertinacity and vigorous intellect&#13;
she is her noted father's daughter.&#13;
From girlhood Bhe has been a stanch&#13;
advocate o f the Idea that commercially,&#13;
legally, professionally and politically,&#13;
woman is and should be recognized&#13;
as the equal of man. In 1888 she&#13;
began the serious battle for this idea.&#13;
She was ehosen president of the State&#13;
Equal Rights Association in that year&#13;
and appeared in Frankfort with certain&#13;
Mils which the association wished&#13;
to have passed. At first politicians&#13;
laughed the matter away, but ere long&#13;
they found occasion t o review their&#13;
opinion of the equal rights propaganda.&#13;
They passed some of the bills and&#13;
thought that ended the matter, but the&#13;
next session found the women lobbying&#13;
a s actively a s ever. Bills were&#13;
passed going a step further, and now&#13;
the committee from the Equal Hlghts&#13;
hire a pen wherein they could be kept&#13;
under constant strrvelllaucce and out&#13;
of the way of the enterprising journalistic&#13;
interviewers. There being no&#13;
docks in the courts to suitably accommodate&#13;
them, they were denied an ear&#13;
in their own trials and had to entrust&#13;
their cases entirely t o their counsel.&#13;
The greater number were found guilty&#13;
and sentenced to pas3 under the hammer.&#13;
"The United States vs. 1,736&#13;
pounds adulterated assafoedda" was a&#13;
sensational case which lately called&#13;
forth an eloquent and profound opinion&#13;
from the circuit court of the eastern&#13;
division of Michigan. The defendant&#13;
when produced before the dignified&#13;
tribunal remonstrated s o loudly that&#13;
the spectators saw fit to clear the&#13;
court and take to the fresh air of heaven.&#13;
The records show that the honorable&#13;
court sentenced the defendant&#13;
"to condemnation and destruction." In&#13;
the federal supreme court i s pending&#13;
the case of the United States vs. certain&#13;
vessels painted white," held for&#13;
violating the law forbidding the importation&#13;
of firearms into Alaska. A&#13;
similar case "vs. one certain vessel&#13;
painted light drab," was lately decided&#13;
against the defendant, and she wa3&#13;
sentenced to "forfeiture and sale." But&#13;
when Uncle Sam came to carry out&#13;
the decree of the court he found that&#13;
she had escaped from the custody of&#13;
the authorities. The government has&#13;
sued numerous schooners, tugs, steamboats&#13;
and, other water craft in recent&#13;
years. Cases in which a schooner and&#13;
a tug are held as defendants are pending&#13;
in the supreme court. Five photographs&#13;
were recently sued fn California,&#13;
twenty-one in New Jersey and&#13;
"one lot" in Porto Rico. An of these&#13;
pictures are accused of Immorality, and&#13;
were sentenced t o "destruction by&#13;
fire." "One gross of immoral articles,"&#13;
recently defendants in a Porto Rican&#13;
case, suffered like punishment.&#13;
Areas of land appear a s defendants&#13;
in many cases before the federal&#13;
courts. In the circuit court of Rhode&#13;
Island was recently heard "the United&#13;
States against certain lands in Jamestown,'*&#13;
and "Against certain lands In&#13;
Boetent Neck." These properties were&#13;
defendants in condemnation proceedings,&#13;
the government desiring their&#13;
use.&#13;
TralQ^foflT&#13;
The acme of perfection would soon&#13;
be reached if people would only follow&#13;
the advice they give to others.&#13;
A Natural Effect.&#13;
The sentimental bride on the- park&#13;
bench watched the sun s e t in Lake&#13;
Michigan. And she murmured: "See&#13;
darling, how phosphorescent!" "It's&#13;
no wonder," responded the matter-of-&#13;
(Association is one of the n x t t t r t M t r ^ y m f t t c h f f &gt; t a r e m a d e n # r e . » T h e a 4&#13;
as the sun sank to rest, her head sank&#13;
likewise—on George's shoulder—and&#13;
all was still.&#13;
A Happy Boy&#13;
Oldenburg, 111., Sept. 2dr—Tho doctors&#13;
all failed in the case of little thirteen-&#13;
year-old Willie Keil, who suffered&#13;
with acute Rheumatism.&#13;
For over three months the poor little&#13;
fellow suffered excruciating torture.&#13;
His father, who had done everything he&#13;
could think of, saw a new Rheumatism&#13;
Remedy advertised — Dodd's Kidney&#13;
Pills. He bought some, and soon his&#13;
little son showed signs of improvement.&#13;
Three boxes cured him completely, and&#13;
he has not a symptom of Rheumatism&#13;
left.&#13;
This miraculous cure of a case which&#13;
had been given up by the physicians&#13;
has electrified Madison County, and&#13;
Dodd's Kidney Pills are a much talked&#13;
of medicine.&#13;
Hope is a star that buoys many a&#13;
man to happiness.&#13;
Never shun a duty, but proceed&#13;
cheerfully to do i t&#13;
Hall's Catarrh Cure&#13;
la taken internally. Price, 75c.&#13;
A high liver ma}'dwell on the ground&#13;
floor or in the garret.&#13;
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES are as&#13;
easy to use as soap. No muss or failures.&#13;
10c per package. Sold by druggists.&#13;
He is a miserable wretch w h o Would&#13;
strike a woman.&#13;
H O U S E K E E P E R S ; A T T E N T I O N I&#13;
Try a package of Kuss Bleaching Biue and&#13;
you will use no other. 10c at grocers.&#13;
-The highway to wealth is often a&#13;
dangerous one.&#13;
FITS Permanently Cured. No fits or nerrmwnew aft**&#13;
flrat &lt;Uy » ime of Pr. Kline'* Great Nervo ltetttorer.&#13;
Send for F R E E 02.OO trial bottle and treatise.&#13;
Da. R. H. Kuxii. Ltd., Ml Arch 8L. Philadelphia, P*3&#13;
You recommend many a man to your neighbor&#13;
whom you would not trust yourself.&#13;
y&#13;
Mrs. Wlnslow's Soothing1 Syrup.&#13;
For children teething, eoften* th9 gums, reduce* tn&#13;
ttammation, allay* pain, cure* wind colic 86c abottle&#13;
A philosopher gains great results by putting&#13;
up with small annoyances&#13;
St.&#13;
Jacobs Oil&#13;
beats all records and always will.&#13;
Cures Rheumatism,&#13;
Sprains&#13;
'Weakness of&#13;
t h e limbs&#13;
and all&#13;
Aches, and&#13;
Pains*&#13;
Acts like&#13;
magic&#13;
Conquers&#13;
Pain&#13;
*&#13;
S0Z000NT Tootb Powdtr 2Bo&#13;
Nature's Priceless Rams*}&#13;
DR. 0, PHELPS BROWN'S&#13;
PRECIOUS&#13;
HERBAL&#13;
OINTMENT ARd CdruerwstX T&gt;hrr.w0.ifs.MB&gt;htat wa.M&#13;
RhSMMltilfflt NwifSU Sis, Weak Back, Swains,&#13;
urns, Sent ans all Pain.&#13;
&lt; your&#13;
ft, Me.&#13;
t,MIM)&#13;
us ate MOM, and for your&#13;
Jtr?ov^boleu, wa«« rwttatii nCWraa« arwaytllswourgn.Zr.T.&#13;
irh» dost not naif It, 1&#13;
11 K r ma&#13;
J*&#13;
' 1 - •&#13;
*&amp;_IJ\ £i?iaT i^.vi^^L 'ui^'i sssMMss^aaaliBaaaalsssVi&#13;
'^'•yy^ff ^^rw-n&#13;
^:^/^ ^ ^ / ^ ^ . ^ : - . ^ - 1 &gt;•". '•'i-'* • . ^ . ^ : '^-i'^ "-,*:' ::=. .J-'.-s'."^' . ^ ^ ^ ^ , , ^ ^ 7 ^ . ^ : ^ . : ."". : ' - ^ ••"••:•,•v :;" i-."'.' \ ' * ''^':-V"; ,'-V..1" ^--1" "'•.r :'^f. '-.'."-*•' '"" 'l-^: !.- ' • . ' - . ' &gt; . . - • " r ' ' - ' , - - . •' ' ' ' • ^ - ' '.. 'V ' • , , - ' , ,"'* . *-:**?,; ' ' ' ^ "' ':" ' ' • " / . : ' • ' ; ' " " • • " ' ' ' --"^ ' •' ' ' :&gt; .' •"•• '"'''' •'''•'*''"' ' ' V ' ^ •"' -*' f . "'"''',:'* '** • • • V&#13;
• 1:&#13;
v. :f.\&#13;
&amp;•&#13;
V&#13;
'&gt;"TiV&#13;
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V&#13;
A Story 9/&#13;
the E*.st...&#13;
SYLVINUS&#13;
COBB. JR.&#13;
Oofyrlgfetea tttl by l o b m Bonner's Sons.&#13;
CHAPTER XII.—(Continued.)&#13;
Trembling a t every joint the fc^ng&#13;
proceeded to the work. He pulled off&#13;
t h e robe of purple silk, and cast i t&#13;
down; then he took off the crown; and&#13;
then t h e golden chain. Julian pickad&#13;
them up, and turning once more tp the&#13;
king, said: *'—^&#13;
"I will grant you one favor before I&#13;
go. You came hither t o Bee me. II&#13;
you have any question to ask, I will&#13;
anawer it."&#13;
The king started up as though h e&#13;
had"Teceived promise of some great&#13;
blessing.&#13;
"Once I asked you who your j&gt;*r-&#13;
•ents were," he said. "You would a o t&#13;
answer me. Will you answer *ne&#13;
now?"&#13;
"No, sir," replied Julia*. -"I w i n not&#13;
speak their narae3 in your presence;&#13;
nor will I give to you the name &lt;of *he&#13;
friend whom I love."&#13;
"Be not too headstrong, air Tobber,"&#13;
urged the king.&#13;
"Is that all for whidx you sought&#13;
me?" asked the chlcfta$a, taking a&#13;
step backward.&#13;
"I sought thee to n«fl out "who .you&#13;
are. I have a reason for asking."&#13;
"What reason?"&#13;
"There is something in your ftaee&#13;
which interests me." #&#13;
"Perhaps it looks Hke Tny father's,"&#13;
said Julian, bitterly. '&lt;©, If you were&#13;
not a poor, decrepit old man, I should&#13;
smite thee; and I will take myself&#13;
away a s speedily a s possible, lest my&#13;
resolution fail me. Stand back—I will&#13;
have no more to say unto thee. Thy&#13;
slaves will find thee bece .&lt;n the morning."&#13;
The king would have followed Julian&#13;
to the door, tent tthe robber put&#13;
him forcibly back, and then, having&#13;
picked up the lantern f*om the floor,&#13;
he hastened c u t from the dungeon,&#13;
after which Selim closed the door and&#13;
bolted i t&#13;
"His cries for help cannot be heard?"&#13;
suggested Julian.&#13;
"No," answered Osmir. "These&#13;
solid walls will driific up the sound of&#13;
his voice before it reaches the end of&#13;
this first passage." — .&#13;
"Then we have " nothing more to&#13;
wait for. One lantern will suffice, so&#13;
I will leave this one behind."&#13;
Julian extinguished, the light, and&#13;
then proceeded to aTray himself in the&#13;
royal apparel; a»d when he had&#13;
donned it and stood with his form&#13;
bent and trembling, h i s companions&#13;
assured him that he would pass for the&#13;
monarch well enough. His face alone&#13;
could betray him, and that could be&#13;
easily concealed. —&#13;
And now for the \ipper world. They&#13;
stopped when they reached the place&#13;
where the captain lay, and when they&#13;
had assured themsehvee that he could&#13;
not move until he had received help,&#13;
they passed on. Up they went, Selim&#13;
going ahead with the lantern, while&#13;
Osmir followed close behind the disguised&#13;
robber. Thus they passed on to&#13;
the upper chambers, where sentinels&#13;
were posted; but no one molested&#13;
them. The seeming king walked with&#13;
his head bent, and his arms folded&#13;
upon his besom, and none dared to&#13;
approach him. Osmir and Selim were&#13;
known to be two of the most favored&#13;
of the monarch's slaves, so their presence&#13;
seemed all proper. On they went,&#13;
as freely a s though moving over a&#13;
desert plain, until they stood without&#13;
the gate of the garden wall, a t which&#13;
point Julian stopped and threw off the&#13;
royal robe.&#13;
"This chain of gold I shall "keep," he&#13;
said; "not for its value a s a trinket,&#13;
but that I may have a memento of&#13;
this night's adventure with the king&#13;
of Damascus. And now, good Osmir,&#13;
let us hasten to the place where&#13;
my faithful Hobaddan waits for me."&#13;
• In the darkness of the night, by&#13;
well known ways, the blacks led the&#13;
robber chieftain towards the dwelling&#13;
at the prime minister, being stlH ready&#13;
to serve him in the face of any danger.&#13;
CHAPTER XIII.&#13;
From One Danger Into Another.&#13;
Ulin would not retire until she had&#13;
heard from Osmir, who had gone out&#13;
in behalf of the robber chieftain. She&#13;
sat i n her chamber, with a single&#13;
lamp dimly burning, and her faithful&#13;
bondmalden kept her company.&#13;
"I feel," said Albia, breaking in upon&#13;
a long silence, "that we have done no&#13;
more than our duty in lending our aid&#13;
to t h e cause of the imprisoned chieftain."&#13;
"We have done our duty to the city,"&#13;
returned Ulin, hesitatingly. "If Julian&#13;
is set free it will save much&#13;
trouble to our king."&#13;
"Or" cried the bondmalden, impul*&#13;
•ively, "I ^on't care for the king.&#13;
When he la-your huihand, then I may I Shubal.&#13;
respect him, but I do not care for him&#13;
oow. I care more for the noble, generous,&#13;
handsome Julian. I cannot&#13;
forget how kindly h e treated us, and&#13;
now like a brother he bore himself.&#13;
And, one thing more, I cannot forget&#13;
how sad h e looked when he left us i n&#13;
the Palace of the Valley. As (true as I&#13;
live, I think 1 almost love him. He i s&#13;
the best looking man I ever saw."&#13;
"Albla, 7 0 « must not talk i n that&#13;
manner fe&amp;Sore me."&#13;
"Par-ton, m y lady. I meant no&#13;
harm.""&#13;
"I do not chide you—I do not blame&#13;
you. But—the name of the daring robber&#13;
is not one that should be used i n&#13;
my presence."&#13;
"Dear lady," plead Albia, "had° I regarded&#13;
Julian as a real criminal, I&#13;
should not have used his name a s I&#13;
'did. "But I looked upon him as a man&#13;
more honorable and true than—"&#13;
"Enough, Albia. Let us drop that&#13;
subject now. What is the hour?"&#13;
"Jt is past midnight—I should think&#13;
an hour past."&#13;
"Then go down into the garden and&#13;
see if Osmir has returned."&#13;
Albia departed without speaking further,&#13;
and when the princess was left&#13;
alone she arose from her seat and&#13;
walked across the floor.&#13;
"I do not think I have done wrong,"&#13;
she said t o herself, "in lending my&#13;
aid to this robber. I shall never s e e&#13;
him again. I do not wish t o see him&#13;
any more. And I do not suppose he&#13;
would care to see me. I hope he will&#13;
escape—I hope he will prosper i n the&#13;
years to come."&#13;
She ceased speaking aloud, and&#13;
pressed her hand upon her heart as&#13;
though the other feellng3 must not&#13;
come forth.&#13;
In half an hour Albia came back. Her&#13;
step was light and quick, and a look of&#13;
satisfaction beamed on her handsome&#13;
face.&#13;
"0, my dear mistress," she cried, as&#13;
soon as she had closed the door behind&#13;
her, "Julian is saved!"&#13;
"Thank heaven!" ejaculated the&#13;
princess, devoutly.&#13;
"He is saved, and has now started to&#13;
leave the city."&#13;
"Hnw WAR It Ann*?" .'&#13;
"Ocmir and Selim came with him;&#13;
and I only know that they led him&#13;
forth from his prison. Hobaddan was&#13;
in our garden, and when h e saw his&#13;
noble young master he fell upon his&#13;
neck and kissed him, and wep.t for&#13;
joy. They did not stop long, for they&#13;
had not the time to spare. Hobaddan&#13;
came to me and blessed me, and bade&#13;
me assure my gentle mistress that he&#13;
would pray for her while h e had life&#13;
and reason. I saw them depast, and&#13;
then T turned back."&#13;
"I hope they will meet with no more&#13;
danger," said Ulin half to herself.&#13;
"They will not be long in finding a&#13;
place of safety," returned Albia. "And&#13;
now, my mistress, what of ourselves?"&#13;
The princess started, and clasped her&#13;
hands.&#13;
"It is now almost two hours past&#13;
midnight, and in three more hours&#13;
the light of day will be upon us."&#13;
"0, Albia. I must flee from Damascus.&#13;
I dare not remain here."&#13;
"Of course we are to flee," said the&#13;
bondmalden. "We had promised that&#13;
before Hobaddan carae. You told me&#13;
ycu would flee this very night."&#13;
"And I will keep my word if I can,"&#13;
responded Ulin, resolutely. "You were&#13;
to plan for our departure."&#13;
"It is all arranged, my mistress.&#13;
Shubal will accompany us. I have&#13;
talked with him, and he is ready. He&#13;
says ho can procure horses just without&#13;
t h e gates of the city; and he knows&#13;
the way to the cave of Bon Hadad.&#13;
Once with the kind old hermit, and you&#13;
are safe."&#13;
Ulin had no need for further thought&#13;
upon t h e subject, for she had firmly&#13;
resolved that she- .would flee. The&#13;
more she thought of union with the&#13;
king t h e more terrible appeared the&#13;
fate. At times she blamed herself for&#13;
having admitted the idea of marriage&#13;
with Horam; but she did not feel that&#13;
she had willingly done wrong. When&#13;
she gave herself to the royal acceptance&#13;
she knew nothing of the w o r l d -&#13;
knew nothing of the trials she would&#13;
have to endure—and knew little of the&#13;
character of the* man who wore the&#13;
crown. Since that time she had gained&#13;
knowledge, and her eyes had been&#13;
opened. The case dwelt in her mind&#13;
now as one of life or death, and she&#13;
felt that she must save herself.&#13;
"I must write a few words to my&#13;
father," she said.&#13;
"But you will not tell him where&#13;
you have gone?"&#13;
"No. I will only tell him w h y I&#13;
have g o n e I must do that. Oet me&#13;
the writing materials, Albia; and while&#13;
I am writing you may go and find&#13;
parehment, a sharpened reed, and a&#13;
small pot W Ink; and when she had&#13;
arranged them upon the table she left&#13;
the apartment Ulin t a t down t o the&#13;
work without further hesitation, and&#13;
wrote to her father the reason of her&#13;
flight When she had written all that&#13;
she deemed necessary, s h e placed t h e&#13;
parchment where he would be likely t o&#13;
find it, and then proceeded to gather&#13;
up the few articles she meant t o take&#13;
with her. She moved steadily about&#13;
the work, and If she trembled, it was&#13;
more from anxiety than from fear of&#13;
what s h e was doing. She took her&#13;
jewels, of which she possessed a rich&#13;
store, and also packed up a few articles&#13;
of clothing. She had just accomplished&#13;
this when Albla returned.&#13;
Shubal was a stout, kind-hearted&#13;
slave, who had been many years in&#13;
the family, and his attachment for his&#13;
young" mistress was strong and true.&#13;
When she called upon him to serve&#13;
her, he had no questions t o ask, save&#13;
how he should please her best.&#13;
"Shubal," said the princess, "do ypu&#13;
know what you have to do?"&#13;
"Yes.my lady, I have t o serve you."&#13;
"But do you know why I have called&#13;
for you now?"&#13;
"Yes. I am t o go with you from the&#13;
city."&#13;
"And you are willing?"&#13;
"Yes, lady—I am willing and I am&#13;
glad."&#13;
"Then we have nothing more to detain&#13;
us. Albia, are you ready"&#13;
"Yes, my mistress."&#13;
Ulin stepped back to her dressingtable&#13;
and picked up her jewels, and&#13;
for a moment she bowed her head upon&#13;
her folded hands. When she looked&#13;
up her fair brow was serene, and the&#13;
tremulousnes3 had gone, from her lip.&#13;
Shubal took the bundle of clothing,&#13;
and then the party moved out from&#13;
the chamber. They gained the garden,&#13;
and passed out by the small gate;&#13;
and when they had reached the street&#13;
they led off with a quick step. There&#13;
was a sentinel at the city gate, but&#13;
he did not trouble those who passed&#13;
o u t As Shubal had promised, he&#13;
found horses at a small stable beyond&#13;
the wall, and in less than an hour from&#13;
the time of leaving her chamber the&#13;
princess was safely In the saddle,&#13;
with her face turned toward the northern&#13;
mountains.&#13;
At the distance of two leagues&#13;
from t h e city they came to a small&#13;
strip of wood, through which their&#13;
path lay. where they stopped to let&#13;
their horse3 drink from a living spring.&#13;
Shubal had dismounted to hand some&#13;
water up to the females, and was just&#13;
3=2 PE-RU-NA&#13;
0" DANGER&#13;
In That Critical Time When a Girl Becomesa&#13;
Woman.&#13;
;niiHii»»»iiinnn»i)niiiitiiii»iiiiiiuinmi;&#13;
possible."&#13;
'"'"T&amp;e^WhllniiTden. brought a piece of&#13;
in the act of dipping the cup, when&#13;
he was startled by the sound of a step&#13;
close at hand, and upon lifting his&#13;
head he found a man standing directly&#13;
before him. It was too dark t3 distinguish&#13;
features, but Shubal could see&#13;
that the stranger was tall and stout,&#13;
and that his garb was not of Damascus.&#13;
"Ha! Who is this" demanded Shubal&#13;
moving back a pace.&#13;
"I am a man, and have sought the&#13;
spring for fresh water," was the a n -&#13;
swer. "And now, who are you?"&#13;
Shubal recognized the voice of an&#13;
Arab; and as he gazed more sharply&#13;
on the fellow, he was able to see that&#13;
the garb was wild and filthy.&#13;
"I have sought this spring as you&#13;
have, Sir Arab."&#13;
"Ah, you recognize my tongue and&#13;
nation, do you?"&#13;
"Yes, and it would seem that you&#13;
are even with me."&#13;
"I know you are a slave, but that&#13;
does not tell me whence you come."&#13;
"I come from Damascus."&#13;
"Ah—from Damascus! And you&#13;
have ladies« with you. Perhaps they&#13;
have money with them. Perhaps they&#13;
have jewels. Damascus is a wealthy&#13;
city, and her people seldom travel with&#13;
empty purses."&#13;
Shubal started up, and laid his hand&#13;
upon the hilt of h i s sword.&#13;
"Your words give token of a curious&#13;
disposition, Sir Arab."&#13;
"Words are nothing. With a simple&#13;
contracting of the lips I can produce a&#13;
sound that has power to call up&#13;
spirits from the earth. Hark!"&#13;
(To be continued.)&#13;
MISS BESSIE KELLOG.&#13;
Miss Bessie Kellog, President of the&#13;
Young Woman's Club, of Valley City,&#13;
North Dakota, writes the following&#13;
from First street, South, Valley City,&#13;
North Dakota:&#13;
"Ever since I matured I suffered with&#13;
severe Monthly pains. The doctor did&#13;
not seem to understand what the&#13;
trouble was and the medicine he pre*&#13;
scribed from time to time did not help&#13;
me. He finally suggested that I have&#13;
an operation. One of my Mends who&#13;
had been cured of a similar affliction&#13;
through the use of Peruna, advised me&#13;
to give It a trial first, and so I used It&#13;
for three weeks faithfully. My pains&#13;
dlmlshed very soon and within two&#13;
months I had none at all,&#13;
**Thls Is six months ago, and during&#13;
that time I have not had an ache nor&#13;
pain, I give highest praise to Peruna,&#13;
Every woman ought to use it, and I&#13;
feel sure that It would bring perfect&#13;
health,*'—BESSIE KELLOQ.&#13;
The experience of Miss Bessie Kellog,&#13;
of North Dakota, ought to be read&#13;
by every girl in the land. It Is a critical&#13;
period in a woman's life when she&#13;
ceases to be a girl and becomes a woman.&#13;
Very few pass through this period&#13;
without some trouble. The doctor is&#13;
called and h e generally advises a n o p -&#13;
eration. Perhaps be will subject the p a -&#13;
tient t o a long series of experiment*&#13;
with nervines and tonics. The reasoo&#13;
he does not often make a cure i s b e -&#13;
cause he does not recognize the troublsv&#13;
In a large majority of the ease* c a -&#13;
tarrh of the female organs is the cans*.&#13;
Peruna relieves these cases promptly&#13;
because i t cures the catarrh. P e r n s * tone*&#13;
a palliative or a sedative or a nervine&#13;
or a stimulant I t is a speeffle/&#13;
for catarrh and cures catarrh whereveir&#13;
it may lurk i n the system.&#13;
This girl w a s lucky enough t o fbaeT&#13;
Peruna a t l a s t As she says, the doe*&#13;
tors did not seem to understand w h a t&#13;
the trouble was and the medicine fc»&#13;
prescribed from time t o time did n o t&#13;
help her. Peruna hit the mark at o n e *&#13;
and s h e is now recommending thls&gt;&#13;
wonderful remedy to all the other girts-.&#13;
in, the United States.&#13;
Thousands of the girls who look a t&#13;
her beautiful face and read her sincerev&#13;
testimonial, will be led to try P e n i n a&#13;
in their times of trouble and critical&#13;
periods. Peruna will not fail them.&#13;
Every one of them will be glad and I t&#13;
is t o be hoped that their enthusiasm&#13;
will lead them t o do as this girl d i d —&#13;
proclaim the fact to the world so that&#13;
others may read it and do likewise.&#13;
Mrs. Christopher Pllehmann, Amsterdam,&#13;
N. Y., writes:&#13;
"I have been sick with catarrh of the)'&#13;
stomach and pelvic organs for about&#13;
five years, and had many a doctor, bttt&#13;
none could help me. Some said I w o u l d&#13;
never get over it. One day when I read&#13;
you almanac I saw those who had been&#13;
cured by Peruna; then I thought 1&#13;
would try i t I did, and found reliet&#13;
with the first bottle I took, and after&#13;
two more bottles I was as well a n d&#13;
strong as I was before."—Mrs. Christopher&#13;
Fliehmann/&#13;
If you do not derive prompt and aat*&#13;
lsfactory results from the use of P o -&#13;
runa, write at once to Dr. Hartman.&#13;
giving a full statement of your c a s »&#13;
and h e will be pleased to give you M »&#13;
valuable advice gratis.&#13;
Address Dr. Hartman, President o f .&#13;
The Hartman Sanitarium. Columbus, O.&#13;
Health Commandments,&#13;
The requirements of health can be&#13;
counted on the fingers of one hand.&#13;
They are good air, good food, suitable&#13;
Nothing, cleanliness and exercise and&#13;
/est. The first two requirements affect&#13;
the blood, and as the blood circulates&#13;
all over the body, including the brain,&#13;
every part is affected. Fre3h air affects&#13;
the purity of the blood. The&#13;
freshest air is out of doors, and it is&#13;
the duty or every one wno wishes to be&#13;
in good health to spend a certain&#13;
amount of time in the open air. Good&#13;
food is not necessarily expensive food.&#13;
Exercise and rest should alternate and&#13;
balance each other. It is quite possible&#13;
to take too much exercise, and this&#13;
side of the question must be guarded&#13;
against as carefully as the other.&#13;
La Grippe conquers life—Wizard Oil&#13;
conquers La Grippe. Your druggist,&#13;
sells Wizard Oil.&#13;
Other people must die in order that&#13;
the undertaker may live.&#13;
YELLOW CLOTHES ABE UNSIGHTLY&#13;
Keep them white with Russ Bleaching Blue.&#13;
Get the genuine. All grocers, 10c&#13;
The shoe dealer is always on the lookout for&#13;
slippery customers.&#13;
Rotation of Calendars.&#13;
An evening contemporary has been&#13;
informing its readers that they can&#13;
use the same calendars every twenty&#13;
years—when the dates of the month&#13;
fall on the same days of -the week—-&#13;
thereby avoiding the expense of five&#13;
almanacs for the present century, But&#13;
here i s something better than that.&#13;
Persons who have the double advantage&#13;
of ancient family and careful&#13;
forefathers, by turning up the calendars—&#13;
unfortunately they are - not&#13;
printed ones, for the twelfth century,&#13;
by Solomon Jarchus, will find the days&#13;
and dates coincident with the present&#13;
century. Such persons can save the&#13;
expense of buying for 100 years.&#13;
Again those with a frugal mind, who&#13;
have preseved the almanacs of the&#13;
nineteenth century, will avoid an outlay&#13;
for calendars of the century commencing&#13;
Jan. 1, 2201. as the dates foi&#13;
the 100 yeara following will be coin-&#13;
I am sure Piso's Cure for Consumpton saved&#13;
my life three years airo,—Mrs. THOS. BOBBINS,&#13;
Maple Street, Norwich, N. Y.. Feb. 17, lyUO.&#13;
PAINT IN T H E F A L L&#13;
Fall painting is best; the&#13;
paint gets well seasoned before&#13;
the hot sun gets busy.&#13;
You want your paint to&#13;
last, and to protect your property.&#13;
If you use Devoe ready&#13;
paint, you'll have both.&#13;
Lasts longer than lead and&#13;
oil; costs less. Deroe is a safe&#13;
name in paint things.&#13;
Ask your dealer for Devoe; dont be&#13;
satisfied with less. Send for our pamphlet&#13;
about paint and painting; free;&#13;
thing's you ought to know.&#13;
G O O D - P A I N T D E V O E CHICAGO.&#13;
Hot Weather Health*.&#13;
During the heated term of July aodv&#13;
August one should be careful to k e e p all&#13;
the organs of the system in free working&#13;
condition.&#13;
Baxter's Mandrake Bitters taken h e -&#13;
fore meals will ward off diseases incident&#13;
to this try in j? season.&#13;
FRAGRANT&#13;
ODONT&#13;
for the Teeffr&#13;
25' 7Se&#13;
A. scientifically prepared and&#13;
strictly pure Liquid Dentifrice&#13;
in a New Size, handy to use.&#13;
U r f e UQUID and POWDER* .&#13;
S0Z0D0NTT0OTH POWDER,&#13;
At all the Stores, or bv Mail for the pries*&#13;
Sample of Sozodont for the postage, 8 cents.&#13;
HALL A RUCKEU New YORK&#13;
SHOES V ~ - * 5 "&#13;
UNION HIDE.&#13;
For More Than a Quarter of a Century&#13;
The reputation of W. L. Douglas 934X1&#13;
and 83.50 shoes for style, comfort and&#13;
wear has excelled all other makes sold at&#13;
these prices. This excellent reputation has.&#13;
been won by merit alone, w . I* Doualssu&#13;
shoes have to give better satisfaction thaxs.&#13;
other $3.00 and S3.50 shoes because his*.&#13;
reputation for the best $3.00 and S3£0»&#13;
shoes must be maintained. The standard&#13;
has always been placed so high that thewearer&#13;
receives more value for bis money&#13;
in the W. L. Douglas $3.00 and S3.Sa&#13;
shoes thr.n he can get elsewhere. __&#13;
~W.Ii. Douglas sella more $3.00 and $3.50 &lt;&#13;
shoes than any other two manufacturers.&#13;
W, L Douglas $4.00 Gilt Edge Lint&#13;
cannot b« equalled at any price.&#13;
w ^^my^-^^Mir:^^^'&#13;
Buy of the Maker&#13;
such economies.—London Chronicle.&#13;
i you i&#13;
THE H. D . FOLSOM A R M S&#13;
314 Broadway, NEW YORK.&#13;
CO..&#13;
ST.JURY'S ACADEMY&#13;
Notre Dame, Indiana.&#13;
Conducted by the Sisters of the Holy&#13;
Cross. Chartered 1855. Thorough&#13;
English and Classical education. Regular&#13;
Collegiate Degrees.&#13;
In Preparatory Department students&#13;
carefully prepared for Collegiate course.&#13;
Physical and Chemical Laboratories&#13;
well equipped. Conservatory of Music&#13;
and School of Art. Gymnasium under&#13;
direction of graduate of Boston Normal&#13;
Ja*tfhmmmBmmmd In * 5 amdJS&#13;
mmt m*m Juat mm good*&#13;
Sold by the best shoe dealers everywhersv&#13;
Insist upon having W. I* Douglas shoe*&#13;
??ith name and price stamped on bottssn.&#13;
How to Order by M a i l . - If \Y. L. Doactas *&#13;
shoes ars net sold tn -- — gent a nyoytwtrh teorwe no,n t ernecde ioprtd oefr pdrirteecsta ato* 8cfto sett*o.m a dddepitaiorntmale fnotr weailrlr mUgaek. eKyeaja . ptaorirn t hmaatd wei lMl ebqouesa, lI fnft s atynlde, fMi tes ass&gt;s? wefaoro.t aT* ashkoow mne oausu mreomdeenl;ts s teaCte' &lt; stylous dueaslilrye dw; osrizne; apnldawinfc Mata • toue ;o rb lelasTnyl ,t otDiOe*S&gt;. ABtgnTaryr aam psaetoe..&#13;
^ ^ w o a - H f ^ M U J d ^ a o M ot the i M t - w r t w y ^ g ^ ^ ^ , , ^ ^&#13;
But life 1. . c r c e * long enough f o . ^ 0 1 R V C T R £ S S 0 F THE *C»0E«Y, - ^ ^ ~ "&#13;
At.Mary'iAcaosasy, Not*&#13;
»ke&amp; aasuerisg Adv^itlseaetta&#13;
Mention This v aper.'&#13;
taat Calee ByeMs&#13;
t n&gt;ee» w . KM&#13;
. • ' * ; ; • " • ' '&#13;
\&#13;
- -. i_V„.'-...: -' h^jLiS.;'.'**! . Jt.iJ |&#13;
&gt; • ' ' ' ' ' • ' • ' i f . • Y, ' '&#13;
•-.' '• • :'' • y ' / ' W V&#13;
. . ' . . • • ; ' " ' "•:''.•'''&lt;•!,/.• V » | Y&#13;
. - • &lt; • ' ,&#13;
•**:* n&#13;
n;tam&#13;
•••m ft&#13;
h&#13;
w&#13;
is;&#13;
I t is rumored that early next&#13;
year the Michigan Central people&#13;
will begin the construction of an&#13;
electric road to parallel their&#13;
steam road between Detroit and&#13;
Chicago. I t will do a purely local&#13;
business and will be built to&#13;
compete with the numerous electric&#13;
roads now being constructed.&#13;
In a neighboring county has&#13;
been established what the old ladies&#13;
term a "new fangled cemetery."&#13;
I n making the rounds you&#13;
pass the last resting place of a&#13;
man who blew iuto an empty shotgun.&#13;
The grass carpeted mound&#13;
which covers the remains of the&#13;
man who took the mule by the&#13;
tail. The tall monument of the&#13;
man who didn't kuow it was loaded&#13;
overshadows the man who&#13;
jumped from the car to save a ten&#13;
minutes' walk. Side by side lie&#13;
the etheral creature who kept her&#13;
corset laced to the last hole, and&#13;
Soms people contrive to get j the intelligent idiot who rode a&#13;
hold of the prickly sid e of every-; bicycle nine miles in ten minutes.&#13;
thing, to run against all the&#13;
sharp corners and find out all the&#13;
disagreeoble things. Half the&#13;
strength spent in growling wonld&#13;
often set things straight.&#13;
Site fittdttwtj JHspatcb.&#13;
F. L. ANDREWS &amp; CO. PROPRIETORS.&#13;
THURSDAY, SEPT. 5,1901.&#13;
i i i i 1 - -&#13;
The United States pays enough&#13;
in the way of "fool tax" for various&#13;
absurdities from time to&#13;
time, without buying powder for&#13;
cranks and visionaries to rend the&#13;
blue dome of heaven with. " F o r&#13;
it raineth alike on the just and unjust,"&#13;
but tons of rack-a-rock will&#13;
not hasten the rain in the smallest&#13;
degree.&#13;
Working Night and Day.&#13;
The busiest and mightiest little&#13;
thinf? that ever was make is Dr.&#13;
King's New Life Pills. These pills&#13;
change weakness into strength, listlessness&#13;
into energy, brain-fpg into&#13;
mental power. They're wonderful in&#13;
buildinar up the health. Only 25c per&#13;
box. Sold by F. A. Sigler.&#13;
t&#13;
*&#13;
A teacher, refined in manners,&#13;
in dress, in sympathies, is sure to&#13;
obtain an influence that will work&#13;
for good loug after the pupil has ) W. C- 7. UA&#13;
Edited by theW. C. T H.of PtneVo^y A , - ? . , . , . t&#13;
[ ^ ^ ^ J ^ f [passed from his or her immediate&#13;
charge. The favorite study of a&#13;
pupil, and often times the profession&#13;
in life, is determined, not so&#13;
much by the attractive character1&#13;
of the study itself, as by the subtle,&#13;
magnetic pcwer of the teacher.&#13;
On the other hand, the cold, indifferent&#13;
mauner of teachers; their&#13;
impatieLt temper, have sent mauy&#13;
a pupil from school iu utter disgust&#13;
with anything pertaining to&#13;
study.&#13;
Qrest ion Answered.&#13;
Ws, August Flower still has the&#13;
lavpest sale of any mfdicin* in the&#13;
civtfized world, your mothers' and&#13;
grandmothers' never thought ofusincr&#13;
anything else for Indigestion or Biliousness.&#13;
Doctors were scarce, and&#13;
they seldom beard of Appendicitis,&#13;
Nervous Prostration or heart failure,&#13;
etc. They used August Flower to&#13;
dean out the system and stop fermentation&#13;
ot'undiceastd food, reflate the&#13;
action of fie liver, stimulate the ner-&#13;
TOUS and organic action of the system,&#13;
aod that, is all they took when feeling&#13;
dull and bad with headaches and other&#13;
aches. You only need a few doses&#13;
of green's August Flowor, in form, to&#13;
make you satisfied there is nothing&#13;
serious the matter with you. Get&#13;
Green's Prixe Almanac. Sold by F.&#13;
A; Sig 1 er, Pinckney.&#13;
Here reposes a doctor who took a&#13;
dose of his own medicine and the&#13;
old man who married a young&#13;
wife.&#13;
A Shock hi £ Calamity.&#13;
"lately befell a railroad laborer,"&#13;
writes Dr. A. Kellet, of Willi ford,&#13;
Ark.. "His foot WHS hadlv crushed,&#13;
but Bucklen's Arnica Salve quickly&#13;
mired him. Its simplv wonderful for&#13;
Burns. Poil?.. Piles and all s.Jn etuptions.&#13;
It's the world's champion healer.&#13;
Cure guaranteed. 25c. Sold bv&#13;
F. A. Si.cler.&#13;
sure to have&#13;
you that be-&#13;
You will be very&#13;
burdens laid upon&#13;
longs to others unless you are a&#13;
shirk yourself; if the work needs&#13;
doing, and you can do it, never&#13;
mind the person who&#13;
have done it but didn't&#13;
ought to&#13;
TO C U I C U I C O I I I i n One D a y&#13;
Take Laxative Hronio Quinine Tabi&#13;
lets. All drupgitts refund the money&#13;
if it fails to cute. E W\ Grove's signature&#13;
is on each box. 25c.&#13;
The English house of commons&#13;
has a bill, which is said to be assured&#13;
of enactment, forbidding&#13;
the sale of malt and spirituous&#13;
liquors to children who are sent&#13;
by their parents to purchase. An&#13;
attempt made to exempt the rural&#13;
districts,failed. Such a law ought&#13;
to be passed in this country.&#13;
Children carrying home pails of&#13;
beei Boon learn to drink it on the&#13;
way, and are brought up to lives&#13;
of drinking and intoxication.&#13;
John Arbuckle, of New York,&#13;
maintains a floating temperance&#13;
inn, where the charge is $2.50 a&#13;
day for a flip out to gea, resting&#13;
on t h e sea all night, including&#13;
dinner and breakfast aud return&#13;
wharf in time for business. This&#13;
means a trip of not less than fifty&#13;
miles in all, and refreshing rest&#13;
for families in days of sti fling&#13;
heat, with the whiffs oc salt breezes&#13;
through the open window, making&#13;
the whole occasion one of restfull&#13;
enjoyment. No liquors are&#13;
sold or permitted in the floating&#13;
hotels of which, including two&#13;
yachts, th^re are three. ,&#13;
The WCTU training school and&#13;
settlement, in New York city, of&#13;
which Mrs. Jennie Fowler Willing&#13;
is principal, carries on openair&#13;
and indoor services, kindergartens,&#13;
kitchengardens, childrens&#13;
meetings, evangelistic work,, readiu^-&#13;
rooms for boys and girls, Sunday&#13;
schools—everything that opens&#13;
providentially. They are at&#13;
work among Catholic and rrovestaut,&#13;
aud the only requisites to&#13;
undertaking such activity are a&#13;
olpfti' Chrifitiflr p y p p r i n n r n , n p n r - t'll'C.&#13;
pose to do good in tho world,&#13;
common sense and a common&#13;
schooled u cation.&#13;
Rush!!&#13;
Rush! Rush! Everybody is in a hurry.&#13;
Just now you are in great haste for&#13;
Job&#13;
work. We can supply you with what&#13;
you want, b e t h e y l ^ e t t e r h e a d N&#13;
B i l l h e a d s , S t a t e m e n t s ,&#13;
E n v e l o p e s ,&#13;
C a r d s , and&#13;
S t a t i o n a r y .&#13;
prices and&#13;
usiness&#13;
Wedding-&#13;
You will find our&#13;
Work&#13;
satisfactom _^_Tr^i:£jxii(Lse&amp;^-^&#13;
DISPATCH OFFICE,&#13;
Those who take the Detroit&#13;
"To-Day" will notice that the paper&#13;
is have considerable to say&#13;
about the recent state encampment&#13;
and the lawlessness that*&#13;
follows the annual meeting of the&#13;
state troops . It will be remembered&#13;
that the DISPATCH started a&#13;
crusade against the state encampment&#13;
doings in 1890 and stirred&#13;
up considerable interest in the&#13;
matter. The DISPATCH was seconded&#13;
in ijts efforts by the Ann&#13;
Arbor Courier and it is a source&#13;
of much satisfaction now to know&#13;
that others are finding out that&#13;
we were right in our articles and&#13;
that, the matter is brought up to&#13;
the governor, and it now rests&#13;
with him whether t h e fair name&#13;
of our state shall be draged in&#13;
the dust or vindicated. We trust&#13;
he will do his duty a n d ^ - " Q t i -&#13;
the -Janister affair.&#13;
T h e Dairy ( t a l c k s t e p .&#13;
Time Is an element of great importance&#13;
in dairy work. Milk, cream and&#13;
batter are of exceeding perishable natures,&#13;
and, like nil quick decaying.articles&#13;
of food, they are hotbeds for&#13;
breeding all kinds of destructive bacteria.&#13;
The only way to fight this enemy&#13;
is by celerity of action. Hurry&#13;
the milk from the cow and out of the&#13;
stable. Hurry the cream from the&#13;
milk and spare as little time as possible&#13;
In getting the cream into the churn&#13;
and the butter to the customer. To&#13;
carry out this idea clean the stable,&#13;
clean the cow, milk Into covered pails,&#13;
use a separator, use a cream starter,&#13;
use a swing churn and start the butter&#13;
to the customer the night of the day it&#13;
Is made.&#13;
This, says L. S. Hardin in Home and&#13;
Farm, is a strict business principle and&#13;
should be pushed for all It is worth,&#13;
and that means large profits for the&#13;
trouble taken, for it may be safely&#13;
stated that you will lose 2 to 3 cents a&#13;
pound on your butter for every day&#13;
you linger past the SO hours necessary&#13;
to carry out the plan outlined above.&#13;
• « * » • _ _ . .&#13;
•:re much more brilliant&#13;
'j coming than at other&#13;
Stop t b e Couffb ttn&lt;1 t v o r k a o f f t b e&#13;
Coltl.&#13;
Lpxatire Bromo-Quinine Tablets cure&#13;
a cold in oue day. No * ure, no pay.&#13;
Price 25 cunts.&#13;
Cleveland, Ohio. Grand Army En*&#13;
cauipiuent. Oue cent per mile,&#13;
Pere Marquette agents in Michigan&#13;
at stations from which rates&#13;
will apply will sell September 8th&#13;
to 12th, inclusive, at above rate&#13;
Return limit Sept. 15. Limit will&#13;
be extended to October 8 under&#13;
certain conditions.&#13;
Tickets will be sold via Detroit&#13;
and Toledo all rail routes, and via&#13;
Detroit and D. &amp; C. N. Co steamers.&#13;
BUFFALO N..Y.&#13;
Pan American Exposition.&#13;
Very low rates with various limits&#13;
Every Tuesday one cent per mile,&#13;
good to return leaving Buffalo&#13;
following Sunday.&#13;
NORFOLK, VA.&#13;
Hoo-Hoo Convention. One&#13;
way foro for round trip. Sell'&#13;
Sept. 7 and 8. Return 15.&#13;
LABOR DAY.&#13;
Ann Arbor, Detroit, Grand&#13;
I R ipicls, Kalamazoo, Saginaw, and&#13;
Traverse City. Otie way f&#13;
Sell Sept. 2. Return 3.&#13;
Tickets will be sold only at&#13;
stations within fifty miles of each&#13;
place named. Ask agents for full&#13;
information. t-86&#13;
Fred Hartman of Hamburg has&#13;
on his place a cat with a few&#13;
young kittens and also a hen.&#13;
There is nothing peculiar about&#13;
that but what-is out of the ordinary&#13;
is that the hen is determined&#13;
to mother the kittens. The cat&#13;
mother holds sway while she is&#13;
there, and the hen awaits patientoutside&#13;
the box in which the feline&#13;
family lives and the moment&#13;
the real mother leaves, the self&#13;
adopted one takes possesion aud&#13;
hovers tenderly as if they were&#13;
really her own family.—Brighton&#13;
Argus.&#13;
Stood Death off.&#13;
E. B. Munday, a lawyer of Henrietta,&#13;
Tex., once foiled a grave digger.&#13;
He says: '" My brother was very low&#13;
witii malarial fever and jaundice. I&#13;
persuaded him to try Electric Hitters,&#13;
and he was soon much better, hut&#13;
continued their nv* until he was&#13;
wholly o.nr d. I am sure Electric Bitters&#13;
vivfd his live." This remedy expels&#13;
niiilrt*'ia, kills disease verms and&#13;
purifies tlm blood; aids dif?e&gt;tion, regulates&#13;
the liver, Kidneys and Bowels,&#13;
eniv* conetipotion, dvspepsia, nervous&#13;
diseases, ki Jney troubles, female • ,mplain's:&#13;
drives perfect health. Only&#13;
50c at F. A Siglerts drupr store.&#13;
A.night of Terror.&#13;
"Awful anxiety was felt for the&#13;
widow of the brave General Burnham&#13;
of Machias, Me., when tbe doctors said&#13;
she would die from pneumonia before&#13;
morning" w-ites Mrs. S. H. Lincoln,&#13;
who art »nded her that fearful night,&#13;
hut she begged for Dr. Kinur'd New&#13;
Discovery, which bad saved ber Jife,&#13;
and cured he.t of consumption. Aftar&#13;
taking, she slept all night. Further&#13;
use entirely cured her." This marvellous&#13;
medicine is guaranteed to cure&#13;
all Tbroa\ L'h^sf, and Lnnjj Diseases.&#13;
Only Wis and a $1.00. Trial bottles,&#13;
fr*e At F. A, Sigl^r'* drug store!&#13;
When the students return to&#13;
Ann Arbor this fall they will be&#13;
confronted by a boarding house&#13;
keepers' trust, a coal dealers' trust&#13;
aud a wood dealers' trust. The&#13;
firBt is in process of formation!&#13;
the second was perfected a few&#13;
weeks since and the last made its&#13;
scale of prices public Monday.—&#13;
Chelsea Standard.&#13;
STATE of MICHIGAN; County cf LUiigatoa&#13;
S. S. AtasedBiun of t i e Probate Court for&#13;
eald County, bald a^ tbe Probate Cfflce in tho&#13;
Village of Howell, on Saturday thu 17th day of&#13;
August In the year &lt;&gt;n» fionaa-i'l nine hundred&#13;
and one. Present, Kii^'mie A. St owe, JuJga of&#13;
Probate. In tbe matter of ui" "State of&#13;
ELIAS W. MAR i IN. Deceased&#13;
Nowcouee Chas. Lovo, K h u t o r of the e«t&gt;te&#13;
ot said &lt;ecfca*ed and reoraa-.it* to this court Hut&#13;
he is really to reader hii dual aocoiMt ip slid estate.&#13;
Thereupon it is ordered t h at Saturday the 14th&#13;
cuy of September next, it t J o'clouK In the forenoon,&#13;
at said Probate OfHc*, hj aatl^ued for tue&#13;
hearing of said account.&#13;
And \t is further ordered tha». a copy of this'&#13;
order be published in tlm Pluckney DISPATCH,&#13;
a ueweuaper printed and circulating In Bald&#13;
county, 3 successive weeks previous to auid day of&#13;
hearing. t-37&#13;
EUGENE A.STOWE,&#13;
Judge of Probate.&#13;
COMMISSIONER'S NOTICE.-Stale ot Michi&#13;
gan, County of Livingston, S3.—Probate Court&#13;
for eaid county. Estate of&#13;
ELTZAUETII E. CAMPBKLL, Decea-ed.&#13;
The utuiersipued having been appointed, by the&#13;
Judj;e of Probate of snid county, commissioners&#13;
on claims in the matter of said estate, and six&#13;
months from the 7th &lt;hy of Ate,'. A. D. 1901, having&#13;
been allowed by said Judge of Probate to all&#13;
persons huldint: clf#m? against eaid estate in&#13;
which to present their clahr9 to us for examination&#13;
and adjustment;&#13;
Notice is hereby given that we will meat on&#13;
the seventh dny of "ovember—A. D., 1901,&#13;
and ou the seventh day of February, A. D.&#13;
11HJ1, at oue o'clock p. in. of each day, At the&#13;
1-inckney. fcxehautre Hank in the village of&#13;
Pinckney in said county, to receive aud examine&#13;
such claims.&#13;
Uatcd: ilowell, Mich , Aug. 7, A. 1). 1901.&#13;
&lt;J W TIJKPLK ^Commissioner*&#13;
GKO ii MowKits V&#13;
ilAVIU H. MOWUKS ) on Claims.&#13;
A FREE PAtfTERN&#13;
4ronr ow« aelecii,on) to eTery inbscr&#13;
iber. Only SO rtnis a ye»r.&#13;
MS CALLS&#13;
MAGAZINE&#13;
A WOKS' MAGAZWYf.&#13;
A pern; beautiful colored njatei; latest&#13;
fashions; droMmarkinjf eccnuijife* ; fancy&#13;
work; household hints; fiction, etc. Subicrfbe.&#13;
t'tvijaiy, or, ser»d jc. for latest copy.&#13;
Lady agents wanwd, bend fur termi.&#13;
StjlishL Rf liable^-SIrapie. Up-to»&#13;
date, Economical and Absolutely&#13;
Perfect-Fitting P*aper Patterns.&#13;
MS CALL&#13;
PATTERNS&#13;
m Allowed and Perioral tons show&#13;
tnc BntlAfl Mid Sewtou LHes.&#13;
Only io krid 15 cent* •ach-sjnone higher.&#13;
A»k" for them.' Sold In n'aaTIy «v«ry*eity&#13;
and town, or by.mail.from w&#13;
T H E M / i C A L L C O : ,&#13;
113-I15-117"West 3Hr*St, NEW YORK.&#13;
Pay your Subscription this month&#13;
Railroad Guide.&#13;
&gt; A/Y0 STEAMSHIP LINB9,&#13;
Popular route tor Ann AM»&gt;r. Toletk&gt;&#13;
and points East, South, &gt;m&lt;i for&#13;
Howell, Uwi;-'.si\ AIMIH, Alt l'!ea&gt;ant&#13;
Cadillac, Manistee, Traverse City and&#13;
points in North vy»tei n iJichi^an.&#13;
W. H . liKNKKTT,&#13;
G. P. A.Toledo&#13;
Jue on the DISPATCH.&#13;
UETTE&#13;
K a i l r s a a , T a n . X, 1 3 3 1 .&#13;
Trains leave S'outli Lyon as follows:&#13;
Ft r Dt'trt)it nnd K 'bt.&#13;
1():3(5 a. m., oS04 p. m., S:oS j). ui.&#13;
For Ci.rantl RapitJs, Xorth an&lt;l W'st,&#13;
W:4o a. m., 2:(&gt;.S [&gt;. ru. ti:20 p. J I .&#13;
For Siiginny^and W*-iy Oity,&#13;
10:3() a. ra., 3:04 p. ro., 8:08 p. ra.&#13;
For Toledo and South, 10 :36 a. ru,&#13;
FRANK n&gt;v, II. F. MOELLEI:&#13;
Atfent, South r,70&lt;'. ti. P. A., Detroit.&#13;
»Jr«ndTrnHk itallwar System.&#13;
?&#13;
•«&#13;
i'.H'! «. m. 1 ine«hoij. Itetrot* Hml,.&gt;. .h H. ID&#13;
8:45 p. i»,UaUsrmcdiai«ijtiitioi«,,j:i.,i p. m j " mall and exp.&#13;
I f«ckMn, Lenox, and' 2*&#13;
4::{U, n, Intftrnmllttm»ution» 7HAM.m. S&#13;
l rat^«i. I&#13;
coach b*tW6fa J«cki«»Ji and Dotroit.&#13;
W. J.Eask, A PinsltMy&#13;
; „ ' • ' , / ' ^ ' • ' ^ " V ? ^ ' V i ^ ; ' , . ' . f ".'Tu .'•":•' ~, '^i.-':~:'t-'-"-l* •*'•.' '•r'*-.- '•'•'".'••.v-".'/':- 'J: ", ; '''* &gt;'-;•••&gt;'.'/•'''' • , ' ' • / , ' v , •' ••'*•*"*'.'. • • ' ' " ' M ' '.'"•*.'&gt;•*•': * • ' • V / . &gt;\.: ''"', f ''' '•". ••••"—;' ' . • • ' ' • . •""".'*' • / ' • ' . " - ' ' "'i'; ; ; - ^ ' , . , ' ' • ' ' "'' ' ' • " .••. - ' • " ;'••&lt; • ' &lt;; '. ' ' * •• ' ' ' " ' ' '••' •'-,&lt; ' ; ; ' , i ' ' v ' ' / . y *• *';,"•' ' " V ; .-:^.&#13;
9W&#13;
.: ^ v ' •..&#13;
JEWEL&#13;
STOVES&#13;
^ A N D , .&#13;
A&#13;
5¾^¾^^^¾¾^&#13;
The leading stoves and ranges in the world. Unequalled&#13;
for perfect construction, economy of fuel, handsome appearance,&#13;
Over 3,000,000 in use. Famous for 35 years.&#13;
For sale by leadimg dealers everywhere. Look for the&#13;
trade-mark, and insist on seeing the genuine JEWELS.&#13;
J*&gt;w«4 Stores are aoM by&#13;
TEEPLE jP CAD WELL.&#13;
THE.CORN HARVestEB.&#13;
Cora Cut t i n * Made Easier a w l F a s t -&#13;
e r - ^ h r adding; and Huaklng.&#13;
Three ordinary horsos will r u a ' t k e&#13;
binder,- and the work is not haad., It&#13;
requiresVour men to make a full set of&#13;
hands to keep all the corn shocked up&#13;
in good shape as fast as it is cut. It is&#13;
not very hard work on the men, nothing&#13;
like so hard as 4to cut either by&#13;
hand or with a'sled cutter, and it is evident&#13;
to my mind tha* we will be compelled&#13;
to adept the binder as the system&#13;
of corn eutting, for it is almost impossible'to&#13;
hire men to go into the tornfield&#13;
and cut corn by hand at any price,&#13;
and we have had to pay more for cutting&#13;
the fodder than the feed was&#13;
worth after it was cut.&#13;
With the harvester tae work is much&#13;
easier and faster. One can commenco&#13;
several days earlier, as the shock;*&#13;
stand'moro open and will dry owt better&#13;
than when putvup without binding,&#13;
and one can make the shocks much&#13;
larger if desired, and tliey will st:ind&#13;
up bettvr than when loose. It is much&#13;
easier to husk, as it is not necessary to&#13;
untie the bundles, but turn thom so as&#13;
to get all the corn. The fodder can&#13;
then bo set up uscain and hauled as fed&#13;
or to the.'i'ard and ricHf."!. ~&#13;
A letter v. ay is k) ^hm-cl. Kight a-', re.s&#13;
of liwtv.v i\vu make a fair "day's work.&#13;
and the machine will not leave more c:i&#13;
the ground than the average hired man.&#13;
In henyy rorn we found vlrat tlu- h:.r&#13;
venter w(u»!d km&gt;rk eft a bent tjVrce or&#13;
four lrK;s!,ol* to the.at re. . Thw KCC^IS t,o&#13;
be unavoic'-aule wkii.the pivsoMt fl.vkof&#13;
lnaehine. but it may be oycrct'n.e-by&#13;
future improvement. I trust so, as this&#13;
is the only objection I see to ti&lt;e hurvester,&#13;
.says a Trakk1 Fawner corri\&#13;
sj HXH If n t .&#13;
It will cut from WO to Id) acres in&#13;
one season. tfu? length of the srasen dependin.'.&#13;
r on the weather and tl.e data&#13;
of planning the ctwni. As soon as dry 1&#13;
would advise shredding the fodder «:&gt;d&#13;
husking tlie coru, as there iw.aJways&#13;
more or less waste while it standstill&#13;
the hold.&#13;
We paid $10 per day lor shredder, engine&#13;
«*nd three men and could hus-k and&#13;
shred live acres per day of average&#13;
good corn. It to#ok live men and teams&#13;
to get the fodder, to the machine aivd&#13;
draw tl'ie shredded fodder away and&#13;
crib the'corn.&#13;
.*. {-.-111.:-. .&#13;
AM o r e a . : • . . . . - i *. .: ;: vera:&#13;
i;V&gt;' - i 11L;r:- !. -i '.»\*. :i tu:.-:::lgc ia t h e&#13;
i.-oarsw o f a vt ;:;&#13;
_ . -&#13;
If a!eo!iol \:i ns: «t '.) c l e a n g i ' ( ! e d i&gt;ietui'o&#13;
f r a m e s , a n d tio?;iii:g is b e t t e r for&#13;
a-jo p u r p o s e , it s h o u l d lit- a p p l i e d v e r y&#13;
Unduly w i t h a e a t a e i ' s h-nr b r u s h .&#13;
C o l o r e d C o t t o n .&#13;
CoMon of 12 different colors grows in&#13;
IHru.&#13;
Y o u r W i n d p i p e .&#13;
The human windpipe is composed.of&#13;
16 er 18 cartilaginous rings united by&#13;
exceedingly flexible ligaments.&#13;
W J± T E D 99&#13;
Weak men, weak women, pale&#13;
men, pale women, n s r . o u s men, nervous&#13;
woniMi, debilitated men, debilitated&#13;
women, to take KnillV R«d Pill*&#13;
t„r Wan EVopU-. Tbey restore Health,&#13;
feirength ami Itavuty. NVake up,&#13;
brace up by taking them before the&#13;
hot weah&gt;«r. Th*y ar« the great body&#13;
builder and d. v-..per, Spring Tonic&#13;
and Hloud m»-di. uie, 25c a box.&#13;
Knills While Liver Pills are the&#13;
great. Liver U v i r " r a i o r , Bowel Re«ulatt'r.&#13;
*«r&gt; do&gt;es 25c.&#13;
Knills Bla« Kidney Pilis cure&#13;
Backache and Kidney troubles. 25c&#13;
a box.&#13;
P i a n o L e a t h e r .&#13;
Tfee most costly leather in the world&#13;
is known as piano leather.&#13;
D u l l e d h,y D e a t h .&#13;
Like the benito. the kingfisher's colors&#13;
dull after death. No one who has&#13;
Been only the stuffed bird can form any&#13;
idea of the brilliance of its plumage&#13;
when alive.&#13;
The Aim Arhor R. It. Reduces l'asseitgf&#13;
r Fares on its Car Ferry.&#13;
CouTiiiencTng Ali^ust list, tlie&#13;
siiiyl.o t r i p p a s s o n ^ e r fare b e t w e e n&#13;
F r a n k f o r t a n d M e n o m i n e e will b e&#13;
r e d u c e d to $1.(10 a n d t h e r o u u d&#13;
t r i p fcto 5?2.O0. H e r e t o f o r e t h e&#13;
(?ompnny h a s c l m i y e d !*'3.00 t'oi&#13;
nop wfiy and *5.'1Q for r o u n d t r i p .&#13;
A g e n e r a l r e d u c t i o n in f a r e s for&#13;
tlu'ou^h t i c k e t s to p o i n t s b e y o n d&#13;
F r a n k f o r t will nls»o b e m a d e&#13;
which w i l l . I M of ^ r e a t benefit to&#13;
p r o s p e c t i v e t r a v e l e r s . F o r furt&#13;
h e r i n f o r m a t i o n , call o n nearest-&#13;
A n n A r b o r R R. A ^ e n t . t-f&#13;
PEN, CHISEL AND BRUSH.&#13;
Everett Shinn. the New York artist,&#13;
has just completed a largw full .ength&#13;
portrait of Mark Twain, which hs said&#13;
to be the best ever made of the humorist.&#13;
Thomas Hall, the sculptor, painicr&#13;
and author, celebrated the eighty-second&#13;
anniversary of his birth at his&#13;
home^n South Mountain avenue. Montclair.&#13;
N. J.&#13;
Richard Le Gnlllenne, thD poet and&#13;
novelist, will probably make this cpuntry&#13;
his permanent home. Me said recently&#13;
that he had grown very fond of&#13;
it and had seen few lauds so full of literary&#13;
material,&#13;
Steinlen. whose cartoons.in Gil Bias&#13;
have made him well known, has joined&#13;
the staff of L'Assiette au Beurre bt*&#13;
cause it allows him more freedom in&#13;
th« propaganda in favor of poverty&#13;
which has become a passion with him.&#13;
Eugene Field's flrst poem, or the original&#13;
draft of it, was recently discovered&#13;
in the possession of Edgar White, a&#13;
court stenographer of Macon, Mo., who&#13;
was a student with Field at the Mobile&#13;
State university. The.title is "Bucephalus;&#13;
A Tail," and the date 1S7L&#13;
60 YEAR8*&#13;
EXPERIENCE&#13;
«^S^^w^.».rs't*«n&lt;&#13;
• 0 9 T A L 4 MOMV.&#13;
The »nortticTo*s.&#13;
Griswold&#13;
House&#13;
A&#13;
•trictly&#13;
dr«V&#13;
claM.&#13;
mo&lt;)vn&gt;&#13;
np-to-d4U&#13;
Hot*!, located&#13;
In the beart of&#13;
DETROIT. thtCit&gt;&#13;
Rites, $2, $2S*&gt; $3 per Day.&#13;
V M W M U M M *&#13;
Tr.ADC Mr.RKS&#13;
DCStONS&#13;
COPVRIQHTS A C .&#13;
Anron* sending A sketch »nd d«»crtpt»on may&#13;
quick)? uwwtAin onr opinion trte wnethtr *n&#13;
iiiventlon 1» prohnbly pat«nt«b1e. Comiuunte*.&#13;
tlon» rtrtctly confldontlal. H«ndbook on Patent!&#13;
•ent free. Olrteat airencr forsecnrtiMrpatanta.&#13;
Patents taken through Munn &amp; Co. recelrt&#13;
tpteial notice, without chnnje. In the Scientific JUnerkatu A handeomoly Wnvtrated weekly.&#13;
culatton of any fckentille lournaL - . , -&#13;
ear: four norths, | L 8oM by ail newedaalera.&#13;
aL»«"~*^NBW Ycrt&#13;
im W 8U WaaBtaftoa, D. C.&#13;
I^nrast dr*&#13;
Terms, 93 a&#13;
THE REVIEWER.&#13;
By taking $10 worth of trouble yon&#13;
can now nave 12 worth of unused revenue&#13;
stamps redeemed.—Philadelphia&#13;
Ledger.&#13;
The connection between sardty and&#13;
red hair deserves investigation. Out&#13;
of 200 patients in one asylum only one&#13;
is red haired and only four are blondes.&#13;
—Providence Journal.&#13;
American macaroni made from American&#13;
wheat by Americans and by an&#13;
Ameriean process is to be one of .the&#13;
slogans of the Industrial battle upon&#13;
which the United States is now entering.—&#13;
Chicago Record-Herald.&#13;
We never hear of hazing at an Indian&#13;
school. The Indian pupils are&#13;
savages who are striving to become civilized.&#13;
The white students, many of&#13;
them, are civilized humans who are&#13;
striving tb become savages.—Denver&#13;
Post.&#13;
About $000,000,000 has been collected&#13;
in the last two years by the special&#13;
war taxes. They were a41 little bits of&#13;
taxes, but 1 and 2 cent collections from&#13;
Uncle Sam's big family of 76.030,000&#13;
count up fast and large.—New York&#13;
World.&#13;
This is the age of electricity. But&#13;
w.b\&gt; Js'tbe inventor whose genius will&#13;
discover a way to prevent the occasional&#13;
breaks and Interruptions in the&#13;
currents which are now at the fronttof&#13;
modern progress and are changing the&#13;
face of the world?-^New York'Tribune.&#13;
TROTTER AND PACER.&#13;
Lady Pipes. 2:07¼ pacing, has broken&#13;
down.&#13;
Oeers has given The Abbet a mile in&#13;
2:00½ at Glenville.&#13;
Tommy Wilton. 2:12¾ pacing, is&#13;
sweeping all before him in the west&#13;
Lantana, 2:09¾ pacing, by Cohannet,&#13;
took a trotttag record of 2:28¾ at Hoiyoke,&#13;
Mass.&#13;
Jim Kennedy, 2:09¾ pacing, has had&#13;
a let up for a year, but will be raced&#13;
again this season.&#13;
Directum Kelly seems to be all right,&#13;
as he has negotiated a, mile at Cleveland&#13;
in 2:11%; last quarter in 0:31%.&#13;
Goodness Gracious, 2:29¼. by Mc-&#13;
Vera—Belle S.. by Billy, Lyle, is the&#13;
first 3-year-old to enter the list this season.&#13;
S. Toomey. the veteran sulky builder,&#13;
will race Annie Dudley, 2:29¾. this&#13;
season. She is by Guilford Dudley,&#13;
dam by Simmons.&#13;
George Leavitt offers to bet $1,000&#13;
that hi-s 2-year-old coltTodd will beat&#13;
the much toUked 2-year-old Farringtoo :&#13;
the tirst time they meet. j&#13;
Equity, 2:U, owned by A. E. Perren, I&#13;
who won a matinee race at Syracuse!&#13;
with him, has gone lame as a result anc&#13;
will not be trotted again this season*—&#13;
Turf. Field and Farm.&#13;
THE PICKLE WORM.&#13;
Snmfcner Sqnnidi a G o o d T r a p Crop.&#13;
(Clean Cnltirre a P r e v e n t i v e .&#13;
Tile-pickle worm is destructive mainly&#13;
to the-fruit of the cantaloupe, squash&#13;
aivi cucumber by eating cavities or&#13;
channels in the rind or by boring quite&#13;
to the interior. The first crop of cucurbits,&#13;
as a rule, escapes its ravages,&#13;
but late cucurbits are usually badly'infested.&#13;
In the north the pickle worm may be&#13;
Injurious only during occasional years,&#13;
hat in'the south, particularly the Caro-&#13;
CA&gt;TALOUPE AND PICKLE WOBitS.&#13;
linas, Georgia and Florida, cucurbit&#13;
fields are rarely free from it during&#13;
late summer and fall.&#13;
The pickle worm feeds ou most varieties&#13;
of cucurbits, but it has a decided&#13;
preference for tke squash; therefore&#13;
trap plants of summer squash are used&#13;
as a protection, and as the trap crop&#13;
must be kept growing as long as protection&#13;
Is necessary seed is planted ever?'&#13;
two weeks or so.&#13;
The Georgia station in their advising&#13;
in regard to tWs worm snys:&#13;
As with most other insects, clean culture&#13;
will bore be of value. Collect and&#13;
burn the old cuourblt vines. Trash In&#13;
fence comers should be carefully raked&#13;
»ut and burned during the winter.&#13;
Cold C u r l n * T a k e s t h e C b e e a e .&#13;
Experiments In cheese curing which&#13;
have been conducted for two years at&#13;
the Geneva (X. Y.) experiment station&#13;
have results of the highest importance&#13;
from the commercial standpoint&#13;
Cheeses have been cured at temperatures&#13;
varying from 55 degrees F. to 80&#13;
degrees F.. the higher temperatures&#13;
representing the common factory conditions.&#13;
**&#13;
Of the cheeses made^Jn 1889 those&#13;
eared at 60 degrees - F. and below&#13;
scored on the average almost five&#13;
points higher on flavor and 2.5 points&#13;
higher on texture than those cured at&#13;
65 degrees F. and above. In 1900 the&#13;
average difference in flavor of tfee&#13;
lower temperature was 5.3 points on&#13;
flavor and 2.7 points on texture.&#13;
This is a matter well worth the attention&#13;
of all cheese factory managers,&#13;
because these differences in commercial&#13;
quality are sufficient to cause important&#13;
differences in the selling price.&#13;
iitff.4.,."l&#13;
C p w y e f t s .&#13;
Cowpea hay Is nearly equal to alfalfa&#13;
in feeding value and contains&#13;
nearly one-half more ifiesb and milk&#13;
making material than clover hay. It is&#13;
rich-In the mineral matter that is needed&#13;
in forming bone, blood, flesh and&#13;
milk. These qualities make it especially&#13;
valuable for feeding growing cattle&#13;
and pigs, dairy cows and fattening&#13;
steers and hogs. The cewpea enriches&#13;
the land on which it grows the same as&#13;
alfalfa, crover and soy beans. It makes&#13;
hard soils mellow and aids in holding&#13;
loose soils together and stands drought&#13;
well. Cowpeas can eften be grown as&#13;
a second crop after wheat and oats.&#13;
STRAWBERRIES OF WORTH.&#13;
T a r i e t l e a T e s t e d a n d F o n n d V a l u a -&#13;
b l e at. t h e M i c h i g a n S t a t i o n .&#13;
The Michigan station has devoted&#13;
mftch attention to the testing of strawberries,&#13;
new and old, through a nuuiber&#13;
of. seasons. In strawberry notes&#13;
for 1901 it reports that several varieties&#13;
which have stood at the kead of&#13;
t h e list for, a number of years still&#13;
maintaki their position. Excelsior.&#13;
We the "fdaeraigmed, \4o tars**&#13;
agree to refund the money on • Bi&#13;
cent bottle of Down's Elixir if it do*&#13;
not core anj ccugb, cola, whoopiigr&#13;
cough, or throat trouble. We also&#13;
guarantee Down's Elixir to care con.&#13;
sumption, when used according to directions,&#13;
or money back. A foJl dot*&#13;
on going to bed and small doses during&#13;
tbe day will onre the most Severn&#13;
cold, and stop the mo3t distressing&#13;
cough.&#13;
P. *. Sigler,&#13;
W, B. Darrow,&#13;
She fmrttug IHspatcb.&#13;
PUBLISHED SVKST THUUS4 Y MOBXIKe 8T&#13;
FRANK L. ANDREWS&#13;
Editor and Proprietor.&#13;
Subscription Price $1 l a Advance&#13;
Watered at tbs Postofilce at Pinckaey, Michigan&#13;
as second-class matter.&#13;
Advertising rates made known on application.&#13;
Business Cards, $4.00 per year. •&#13;
I^eath and marriage notices published tree.&#13;
Announcements of entertainments may oe paid&#13;
for, if desired, of yr )senting the office with tickets&#13;
of admission. Xa case tickets are not brought&#13;
to the office, regular iateB will be charged*&#13;
All m a t t e r i n l o c a l n o t i c e c o l a m n w i l l b e c h a r t -&#13;
ed at 5 cents per line or fraction thereof, for each&#13;
Insertion. Where no time is specified, all notice*&#13;
will be inserted until ordered discontinued, and&#13;
wUl be charged for accordingly, t w All changes&#13;
of adTertiaemeota MUST reach this office as earl*&#13;
as TUXSDAY morning to insure an insertion t h e&#13;
same week.&#13;
JOS P8IJV2IJV G /&#13;
In all Its branches, a specialty. We h a v e a l kind*&#13;
and the latest Btyles of Type, etc., which eaable*&#13;
us to execute all kinds of work, such as Book*,&#13;
Paiaplets, Posters, Programmes, Bill Heads, Note&#13;
Heads, Statements, Cards, Auetion Bills, etc.. In&#13;
superior styles, upon the shortest notice. Prices as&#13;
o*v as good work can b* done.&#13;
»LL BILL3 fATABLf flO.IT Of *Vi&amp;Y KOXrH.&#13;
THE VILLAGE DIRECTORY.&#13;
UliEEXVILLH. UANDY.&#13;
GLEN MAI«\ MAlfeskALL.&#13;
Haver!n*ul. YVarfield, Clyde. Bubach&#13;
and Brand^jrwine can be roiied *pon to&#13;
give poed crop* under fairly favorable&#13;
conditions, alYhenyih the best results&#13;
canoot be secured with the last three&#13;
varieties oxcept in rk'h, moist soils.&#13;
Glen Mary,-William Belt. Marshall and&#13;
Nick ©hinpr also are quite sattefactory&#13;
under hi^li culture.&#13;
Sample in pi*u* and fruit compares*&#13;
well with any other variety. Morgan,&#13;
Pouderosa. lildgevray and liitby have&#13;
also been quite satisfactory.&#13;
Of the newer sorts that fruited In&#13;
1900 II. and H., Echo, Emma. Gamage.&#13;
Gladstone. Stouffer. .Telinsou Early and&#13;
Wooll are most promising.&#13;
Particularizing, in regard to some of&#13;
the varieties, the station says:&#13;
Greenville.—Plants good in vigor of&#13;
growth and productiveness. Berries&#13;
are large in size, but not of sufficient&#13;
firmness. In other points is very good.&#13;
Gandy.—Vinos are fairly vigorous&#13;
and hardy. Fruit is large, of high&#13;
quality and firmness. Season late.&#13;
Only moderately productive, but tho&#13;
variety holds out well.&#13;
Glen Mary.—Plants* of good growth&#13;
and healthy. Fruit is borne in abundance,&#13;
is of large size, of good quality&#13;
ami rrrr.iiH'.-s. One of the best market&#13;
varieties u:;rVr high cr.lrmv.&#13;
.Marsha!!.—Th:* var^iy is a stronc&#13;
grower and quite proliiir. Pvrvos lar;:;4.&#13;
dark ted a:;.l nnifon::. (.Jnallty and&#13;
•texture .•!'.' • ry : •••,-.•]&#13;
&gt;•&lt;&gt;•! t ! ; - 1 :&lt;;':.• • • i s &gt;[\&#13;
I ' l l - : ! ' : . ':". '-• •«: « . : v -&#13;
h t : • : • - - : • : : • ' • • : . • ••&#13;
A Card.&#13;
I tbe undersigned, do hereby agree&#13;
to r ' f u n d the money on a 50 cent, bot&#13;
tie of Green's Warranted Syrup of&#13;
Tar if it failes ro cure your couffh or&#13;
cold. I also guarantee a 25-cent bottle&#13;
to prove satisfactory or money refunded.&#13;
t23&#13;
Will B. Darrow.&#13;
Subscribe (or Dispatch.&#13;
MM&#13;
&lt;SfrA This sigaatare i* on every box »the geonine&#13;
Laxative Brotro-QuiiiiAe Tabi*t*&#13;
thai e n « i&#13;
VILLAGE OFFIOERS.&#13;
PBKsmBNT...— _ . . . ; . . . . C . L , S i g i e r&#13;
TUU8TJSE8 R. Baker, K. H. firwia,&#13;
F. G, Jackson, Geo. iteason Jr.&#13;
CbaS. Lure, Malachy Roche.&#13;
O L E K K , . . . ..«M« ..M. .....,,.aliia S. Brown&#13;
TUUASCKUH J. A. CadWdll&#13;
ABCEBSOH ^ . . J a s . A.Greene&#13;
SiauKT CoMMissroNKt; J. Parker&#13;
HEALTH OFFICEU Dr. H. r*. Sigler&#13;
ATTORNBY „.. ...,^. VV. A. Csrr&#13;
MAHaiiiiLL, Ma. .„...», ^. Broken&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
MS r H O D l S T EPISCOPAL CaUHCH.&#13;
Kev. fl. W . Hicku, pastor. Services every&#13;
Sunday morning at I0:3o, and every i a a d a y&#13;
evening at TiOOo'clock, Prayer meeting Thursday&#13;
evenings, banday school at close of morning&#13;
service. CHAS. ilENKY SUpt.&#13;
CONUttlfiGAriONAL CI1UKCH.&#13;
kev. o. W. Kice pastor. Service every&#13;
Sunday rooming at 10:30 and every Sunday&#13;
evening at T:0C o'clock. Prayer meetingThurs&#13;
day evenings. Stinday schoul at close of morn&#13;
ioir service. iJrs. TSo». Heat, .Supt,, Mocce&#13;
1 eep'e Sec.&#13;
ST. MAltX,\SlJAl,H(»L.lC CHUKCU.&#13;
Kev. M. J. Coiniaerl'onJ, factor. Services&#13;
every Sanday. Low mass at7:3U o'clock&#13;
higli mass with sermon at 9;fli/a. m. Catechism&#13;
at 3 ;0U p. ui., vespers ana beuediction at 7 :»u u. ;a&#13;
SOCIETIES;&#13;
The A. o. 11. docfetv &gt;E this triace, &gt;n4ets every&#13;
Chlrri S n i i i v iutn? Kr. Mit'.a* v ilill&#13;
John Tuomey ;uiU VI. T. Iv-Mly, &gt;ly i-jtr ()&lt;l^j|ites&#13;
L^PVVoill'il ' LEAGUJ5. M-jets' every Sunday&#13;
Unevenin« at 6:00 ociock In tae St. E. Church. A&#13;
cordial invitation ia exteu I.J.I Co everyooe* especially&#13;
youug people. F. Li. Andrews, I're?^&#13;
C-uiisrivN' B^i)Ev\*.)ii s)ciscv::-»id(i&#13;
iniji every -Suaday eveaia^ st »5:41. Prasi laat&#13;
''Mss li. M. 'to*; Seor'nary, Vliaj .1 itt'.e CArprfata''&#13;
I&#13;
I^HE VV. C. T. L*. meets tha first Friday of eaol&#13;
month at ^:¾ p. m. at tue home of Dr. H. »&#13;
sigler. Everyone iaterested ia temperauc*&#13;
coadially iuvited. Mrs. '..eal Siller, Pres; Mr»&#13;
Ktta Purfee, Secretary.&#13;
I^Le C. T. A. and K. »o&lt;.ve*y of this place, n»&lt;»«&#13;
. every tuird Saturaay evening in the Fr. &amp;*&lt;•&#13;
thew Hall. John Donohue, President,&#13;
NIGUTSOF MACCABEES.&#13;
Meet every Friday evening on er before foil&#13;
of the moon at their hall in the Swarthout bldg.&#13;
Visitinp brothers are cordiallvinvited.&#13;
CHAS. U A K P B K U ^ Sir knight Commandei&#13;
Livingston Lodge, No.7¾. ? A A. il. Regalar&#13;
Comoiunication Tuesday evening, on or before&#13;
the lull ot the moon. Kirk Van Winkle, W. M&#13;
ORDER OP EASTERN STAR meets each month&#13;
the Friday evening following the regular F.&#13;
1A.M. meeting, MRS. MARY RSAO, W. M.&#13;
RDER OF MODERN WOODMEN' Meet the&#13;
tirat Taur^day evening ofeaoh Mocth in the&#13;
M.icoabee hall. C. L. Grimes V. C&#13;
LADIES OF THE MACCABEES. Meet every l s t and 3rd Saturday of eachinooth at 2:30 p m. a&#13;
K.o. T. M. hall. Visitinif sisters cordially in*&#13;
vited. JULIA SIGLEII, Lady Com.&#13;
KNIGHTS o r THE LOYAL GUARD &gt;&#13;
meet every second Wednesday&#13;
evening of every mooth in the K. O.&#13;
T. M. Hall at 7:30 o'clock. AU visiting&#13;
Guards welcome.&#13;
F. L. Andrews P. M.&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
J. W. MONKS.&#13;
DOCTOR OF DENTAL SURGERY&#13;
P ' N C K N E V , MICH.&#13;
OFFICE OVER SIGIEA-S DKUfi STORE.&#13;
H. F. SIQLER M. D- C. L, S1QLER M, D&#13;
DRS. SiGLER &amp; SIGLER,&#13;
Physicians and Surgeons. All calls prompt!&#13;
attended to day or night. Office on Mainstr&#13;
Hackney, Mich.&#13;
J. F. JtlLJfB.&#13;
. VETE-RINARY-SURQEDN&#13;
Graduate of Oat trio Vstdir1 nary Cnlle^e, also&#13;
the Veterinary Dentistry College&#13;
Toronto Canada.&#13;
Will promptly attend to all dlseisa* otjthe, d t&#13;
mesticated animal at a reasonable pile*.&#13;
Horses teeth examloedJFree.&#13;
nrricriat ^ L L . Pi?*cmiC\.&#13;
1&#13;
.3*^^raDHrtti»rt*ii»*i^&#13;
P,'-';".'\.'"?;^^^,)"'&gt;&#13;
&amp;vr:&gt;^':''.''v''. '"''• •&#13;
f\" V:v"^:^T'r;'" "—V':- . •" ' ' , ' •': '•'• ". . ; "'; ,f ' ' " • ' - • • . • • ' ' '' '' • ' . • ' ' ' • ' , ' ' . " ' ' ' " " . " . ' -r : "•• *,","'• ' '' ', "" '-T "**''"-.''••'''•'•'. '*.' ' ''•' ''V ^ . •..'&lt;'•. ' ' . ' . " /'' ' ' '"-, ' •'.."'."'' " . . . l\-f'^i^%;ij*,!J- H'1 :*'V'^''.'.'.'" •"-"'•''.?&#13;
*&#13;
• * - . 1&#13;
§Uicktinj gifigatth.&#13;
m&#13;
F R A N K L. ASUUUWB, Publisher.&#13;
P I N C K K E Y , • " • MICHIGAN.&#13;
J a p a n e s e florists have succeeded in&#13;
cultivating a rose which looks red in&#13;
t h e sunlight and white in t h e shade.&#13;
During the last century Belgium&#13;
added a n average of 3,000 acres a year&#13;
t o h e r area simply by careful drainage.&#13;
T h e r e a r e three varieties of the dog&#13;
t h a t never bark—the Australian dingo,&#13;
the E g y p t i a n shepherd dog, and the&#13;
"lion-headed" dog of Tibet.&#13;
About 360,000 geese a r e annually&#13;
brought from Russia to Saxony. A carload&#13;
consists of 1,700, a n d they have&#13;
n o food or drink during t h e journey.&#13;
••*' ••• i i muom&#13;
A Detroit Man Goes Without Food&#13;
Forty-One Days.&#13;
FOUR CONVICTS OUT OF PRISON&#13;
Many Thine* Have Happened In the State&#13;
In the Ii««t Few Day* and They are&#13;
Briefly Given In Condensed Form far&#13;
Busy Readers.&#13;
At the request of the consistory of&#13;
t h e Alexander University a t Helsingfors,&#13;
the czar has decreed t h a t women&#13;
shall be granted the same rights as&#13;
men as regards admission to t h a t university.&#13;
T h e main staircase in "William C.&#13;
W h i t n e y ' s New York residence, Fifth&#13;
a v e n u e and Sixty-eighth street, is of&#13;
w h i t e marble, and Is carved after a&#13;
staircase in the Doge's palace in&#13;
Venice. Mr. Whitney brought the design&#13;
to this country and the work took&#13;
six months for completion.&#13;
A machine that will do the work of&#13;
t h i r t y expert mathematicians is being&#13;
constructed by the government in its&#13;
scientific instrument shop on Capitol&#13;
Hill in Washington. It Is to be an improvement&#13;
on an i n s t r u m e n t in use in&#13;
t h e bureau Of the coast survey, which&#13;
h a s charge of calculating the tides.&#13;
T h e council of the University of Birmingham,&#13;
recently founded, with Joseph&#13;
Chamberlain as its chancellor,&#13;
appointed William James Ashley, professor&#13;
of economics at Harvard University,&#13;
to the first organized chair of&#13;
the faculty of commerce, which is to&#13;
be one of the chief features of the university.&#13;
T h e Belle l a l e Suicide.&#13;
T h e man who committed suicide on&#13;
Belle Isle Park, Detroit, by shooting&#13;
himself is undoubtedly F r a n k Woodward,&#13;
of Grand Rapids. Chief of Police&#13;
Harvey O. Carr. of t h a t city, telegraphed&#13;
t h a t W o o d w a r d h a d been&#13;
missing since Sunday. Carr's description&#13;
tallies exactly with t h e body of&#13;
the suicide. Woodward left Grand Rapids&#13;
on an excursion Suuday. t a k i n g&#13;
with him his Rambler wheel. Near t h e&#13;
suicide's body was a Rambler bicycle.&#13;
Woodward wore a light suit, as did t h e&#13;
suicide, and also weighed about 120&#13;
pounds. P u t the point which seems&#13;
to make the m a t t e r conclusive is the&#13;
fact that F r a n k Woodward, of Grand&#13;
Rapids, had a linger nail missing from&#13;
t h e little finger of his right hand. So&#13;
h a s the unknown.&#13;
F r a n k B. W o o d w a r d w a s a farmer&#13;
and fruit grower residing with his&#13;
brother a few miles north. H e w a s a&#13;
bachelor, aged 41 y e a r s -mid had for&#13;
some time been in \pov health, which&#13;
caused despondency. He left home&#13;
Sunday morning about 4 o'clock with&#13;
his wheel and w h e n night came, and&#13;
he did not return, examination of his&#13;
room was made. A paper was found&#13;
upon which w a s w r i t t e n a farewell to&#13;
his brother and family.&#13;
Let Oat or P r i s o n .&#13;
Governor Bliss h a s directed t h e release&#13;
from t h e s t a t e prison at Jackson&#13;
and the branch prison at Marquette&#13;
of the following convicts:&#13;
Brainard Nelson, a convict in t h e&#13;
s t a t e prison at Jackson, convicted in&#13;
the Circuit Court of Gratiot county of&#13;
manslaughter, and sentenced J u n e 2.&#13;
1900. to two years and six m o n t h s ;&#13;
Pardoned.&#13;
George L. Green, convict in t h e&#13;
state's prison at Jackson.'convicted in&#13;
| t ] l e circuit Court of St. Joseph county&#13;
T h e convention of colored bankers | of criminal assault and sentenced&#13;
Oct. 1"». ISsrj, to imprisonment for 20&#13;
years: sentence commuted to 12 years.&#13;
J o h n W. Hall, convict in the s t a t e s&#13;
in the&#13;
held a t Buffalo will be the first of its&#13;
kind in America, J o h n Clinton, Jr.,&#13;
who is organizing it, is the president&#13;
of the First Colored Bank, North of&#13;
Philadelphia. -Mr. -Clinton _ i n 1890 4&#13;
published the first negro daily paper.&#13;
Later he became a lawyer, and invested&#13;
his large savings in the insurance&#13;
business.&#13;
William Jerome, the song writer, is&#13;
negotiating for the lease of the&#13;
Comlque theater, on Broadway, New&#13;
York, and if he secures it will establish&#13;
there a permanent company, composed&#13;
entirely of negroes. The best&#13;
colored actors and actresses obtainable&#13;
will be engaged, and Jerome expects&#13;
the enterprise to prove a big&#13;
money maker, catering wholly to colored&#13;
people.&#13;
prison at Jackson, convicted&#13;
Kalamazoo county Circuit Court of attempted&#13;
criminal -assault _-ami sentenced&#13;
Oct. liM, lSJHi, to imprisonment&#13;
for 10 years; sentence commuted to&#13;
six years and two months.&#13;
Leonard Lutonskl, a convict in the&#13;
branch prison at Marquette w a s&#13;
paroled.&#13;
a&#13;
B r u t a l a n d D i s g r a c e f u l ,&#13;
I t is alleged t h a t some of the s t a t e&#13;
troops in cump a t M a n i s t e e acted in&#13;
a very reprehensible m a n n e r , in fact&#13;
c o m m i t t e d acts of b r u t a l i t y t h a t a r e&#13;
a l m o s t beyond belief. T h e r e h a s been&#13;
a n official Investigation on a n alleged&#13;
o u t r a g e said to h a v e been committed&#13;
on a helpless w o m a n d u r i n g t h e s t a t e&#13;
e n c a m p m e n t by dissipated soldiers.&#13;
T h e governor's secretary is reported&#13;
t o h a v e said t h a t : " T h e facts a p p e a r&#13;
t o b e t h a t one night d u r i n g t h e enc&#13;
a m p m e n t several soldiers raided u&#13;
b a d house and took one of t h e inmates&#13;
out for a little fun. H e r clothing&#13;
w a s stripped off, a n d s h e w a s handled&#13;
r a t h e r roughly. E a c h of the boys&#13;
took some of t h e r e m n a n t s as a souvenir,&#13;
and beyond t h e few bruises t h e&#13;
w o m a n sustained t h e r e w a s nothing&#13;
m o r e w e could find out. I t w a s a bad&#13;
e a s e a n d w e h a v e investigated It thoroughly&#13;
from t h e very beginning. T h e&#13;
soldiers did not Intend t o do a n y&#13;
harm, but in their frenzy or delight&#13;
for t h a t kind of sport, t h e y went too&#13;
far, and would h a v e been severely&#13;
punished if a n y t h i n g very serious&#13;
could be established a g a i n s t them."&#13;
A R e m a r k a b l e C a s e .&#13;
T h e case of Dr. Sheeder. of Saline,&#13;
Mich., who has been ill in Springfield,&#13;
Ohio, since April, Is exciting widespread&#13;
interest among m e m b e r s of the&#13;
medical profession. After lying unconscious&#13;
for five months, he is now able&#13;
to speak. Soon after ho w a s brought&#13;
here he became paralyzed on his right&#13;
side and speechless. Since then he lias&#13;
been given milk and ice cream. P a r t of&#13;
the time his ,1aws had to be pried open&#13;
to a d m i t the nourishment. At times he&#13;
would revive sufficiently t o motion his&#13;
w a n t s . T h e doctors say b e does not&#13;
r e m e m b e r anything. H e can talk Intelligently&#13;
and move his limbs. H i s&#13;
condition has battled t h e best physicians&#13;
who seemed powerless to do&#13;
a n y t h i n g for him.&#13;
C h a r g e d W i t h A r i q n , v&#13;
I s a a c Wheeler, of Lapeer, w a s arrested&#13;
Thursday morning charged with&#13;
b u r n i n g a house and household goods&#13;
In Rich township. T h e property belonged&#13;
to his wife. Wheeler and his&#13;
wife quarreled recently and Mrs.&#13;
Wheeler went to live with her father.&#13;
Richard Kelch, while Wheeler boarded&#13;
with Flam Johnson. Mrs. Wheeler secured&#13;
a house where she Intended to&#13;
live with her brothers, a n d moved her&#13;
household&gt;goods into it. Wheeler says&#13;
he w a s at Johnson's at the time of the&#13;
fire, but Johnson says he w a s not.&#13;
B e n t o n H a r b o r ' a Bip F a c t o r y .&#13;
The great sugar beet factory at St.&#13;
Joseph, which cost complete $320,000.&#13;
is the cause of one of the biggest chancery&#13;
cases ever tried in Berrien county.&#13;
The defendants are the Wolverine&#13;
Sugar Co.. the F a r m e r s ' &amp; Merchants'&#13;
bank of Benton Harbor, and t h e&#13;
Northern T r u s t Co.. of Chicago. T h e&#13;
plant was built by the Dyer Co., of&#13;
Detroit, and equipped for business.&#13;
The Wolverine Co. gave plaintiffs&#13;
notes and mortgages for §107.700,&#13;
upon which the interest lias never&#13;
been paid, and they now ask the court&#13;
Smallpox He Hn*.&#13;
F r a n k Vinton, a t r a v e l i n g salesman&#13;
for t h e W e r n e r Grocery Co., is sick&#13;
w i t h smallpox at his home at Wil&#13;
•liamsbunr. Grand T r a v e r s e county. H "&#13;
broke out on Monday w h e n he made&#13;
a trip to Rapid City a n d Kalkaska,&#13;
4H*H+iti^-4o-THiVHM,st*-Clty-iTr-the even&#13;
ing and being driven to Williamsburg&#13;
by a livery. T h u r s d a y night a physician&#13;
diagnosed t h e case a s smallpox.&#13;
Vinton is quarantined in his house&#13;
w i t h his wife and eight children. H e&#13;
t h i n k s he was exposed a t Mancelona.&#13;
M I N O R M I C H I G A N M A T T E R S .&#13;
Many fish can produce musical&#13;
sounds. The trigla can produce longd&#13;
r a w n notes ranging over nearly an&#13;
octave. Others, notably two species of j to sell the big plant to satisfy their&#13;
ophidium, have sound-producing ap- claim. For the last t w o years the operparatus,&#13;
consisting of small movable | ators have failed to secure enough&#13;
bone*, which can be made t o produce! 1 &gt; ( , , ^s t 0 r u n t h o factory, as the beets&#13;
a sharp rattle. The curious "drum- J * " " 1 * 0 n ^ u r o . and the growers rot&#13;
,. 1_ ^ v. 4U t ti - turned to the fruit industry. As a last&#13;
m i n g " made by the species called urn- ^ ^ t n p o w n o r s w p i u t 0 ^luAhy I m l&#13;
brinas can be heard from a depth of; W h e r e they contracted for 4.000 acres&#13;
thirty fathoms. | 0 f beets for this season's run. Hopes&#13;
! were entertained that the factory&#13;
would resume operations under satisfactory&#13;
conditions in a few weeks.&#13;
-There are now in London and its immediate&#13;
neighborhood 360 public recreation&#13;
grounds, varying in size from&#13;
Epping Forst, which, with Wanstead&#13;
Flats, is over 5,000 acres in extent, to&#13;
little city gardens and playgrounds&#13;
measuring an eighth or a tenth of an&#13;
Trenpnsner» in t h e Toll*.&#13;
T*. S. officials w h o have been examining&#13;
t h e alleged trespass on lands in&#13;
towns 2.'». six east and 2o. seven east.&#13;
_ . . r J * Iosco county, found a lot of trespass&#13;
acre. These include 100 plots of | timber cutting on section 17. town 2:*.&#13;
ground which have bee* used for interment,&#13;
parish churchyards, and other&#13;
seven, about oS.000 feet of tine Norway&#13;
logs there on skids marked IL S.. Hardisused&#13;
burial grounds, of which t h e ' ry Solomon." cut in the winter of 1!«)0.&#13;
largest is eleven acres and the smallest&#13;
a few yards square.&#13;
Vacation does not mean vacancy,&#13;
a n d is ever t h e more effective for a&#13;
t h i n s t r a t u m of work r u n n i n g through&#13;
indicating that the logs were cut under&#13;
direction of Selig Solomon. A, thorough&#13;
investigation will be made of all t h e&#13;
United States lauds in Iosco, Alcona&#13;
and Oscoda counties. There is probably&#13;
2."Vt.O|K) feet of logs lying on skids,&#13;
in streams or s t r e w n about the plains&#13;
t h a it. A notable example of vacation t are deteriorating and will soon bo&#13;
courses and summer classes is.the free! useless. It has developed that parties&#13;
who have taken up homesteads have&#13;
not lived upon them, but havo sold off&#13;
normal school at Manila, which held&#13;
i t s preliminary term last May. Its&#13;
purpose is to teach modern methods of! g j 0 umW\v- i l s * l l o w n „ b v t]r "'cord*.&#13;
instruction to the native school t e a c h . ; ^ X ^ ^ n ^ 0 ^ - ^ 0 ^ ¾&#13;
ers, who Without exception, wish to • follow.&#13;
prepare themselves to educate their j *&#13;
race. Forty-five resident American | Fn*tert F o r t y n a y * .&#13;
teachers, under t h e direction of Dr.! Charles L. Klein, of Detroit, stiffer-&#13;
David Barrows of California, constl-,"1 '- f r o m {l stomach trouble and tired&#13;
tuted the faculty, and by the middle o f taking medicine on the advice and&#13;
of the first week over six hundred Fil- " : i ( l e i ; t]L0 ^ ^ ' t i o n of a physician&#13;
ipino men and women teacher,, mostly | £ £ &amp; £ ^ ^ of X ? I n ^&#13;
of m a t u r e age, had gathered from t h e t t i n o s &gt; F r o m t U P H l .s t t h e ( l m . t m .&#13;
various islands. One American, in; trlotl to persuade his patient to fast.&#13;
charge of Zambales Province, Captain \ but succeeded in doing so only n little&#13;
O'Neill, learning t h a t twenty teachers; over six weeks ago. T h e fast l&gt;egan&#13;
of his district could not reach Manila! July 5 and ended August 1."». T h e&#13;
for lack of funds, generously sent t h e m 1 physician says t h a t he h a s a n u m b e r&#13;
t h i t h e r a t his own expense. F o r the 1 o f .other patients w h o a r e fasting. Inm&#13;
o n t h in which the school was open | &lt;-lw*11iifc a consumptive. This last c a s e&#13;
t h i r t y - t h r e e classes were held daily, in I If J h ? n^st opportunity t h e doctor h a s&#13;
*w&lt;h.»i&gt;c.*h *tuh&gt;e- »a&lt;t»t,e+ndance averaged ninety-1 £ j ? ! ° Z l t i L " n « , l a l ° f ^ m e t h " eight per c e n t aS„ur«ewly *t huTe AAm—e-riIc«a„n °*™ o n diseased lungs, and he s ays t h n t t h e r e 8 U , t a f t k , •&#13;
occupation of t h e Philippine Islands conraging. H e uses very little medipresents,&#13;
even to t h e w a n n e s t oppon- cine, confining bis t r e a t m e n t almost&#13;
e n t of t h e movement, some bright entirely to water.&#13;
T h e Standard Vehicle Company h a s&#13;
broken ground for its building a t Pontine.&#13;
T h e yield of hickory n u t s In t h e s t a t e&#13;
this year, it is said, will be unusually&#13;
large.&#13;
Capt. W. S. Logan, t h e first w h i t e&#13;
boy born in Kalamazoo county, is dead&#13;
at Mitchell, S. D.&#13;
Standish school expenditures for the&#13;
pa si year have been $8,043 4:.: receipts.&#13;
S4.J71 04.&#13;
T h e state military board has purchased&#13;
a six-Inch breech-loading rifle&#13;
of modern design.&#13;
A hot spring has been discovered at&#13;
Mackinac Island near the w a t e r works,&#13;
104 degrees Fahrenheit.&#13;
J o h n O. I'.eldler, an lS-year-old Detroit&#13;
boy. is under a r r e s t for setting&#13;
his father's house on tire.&#13;
A new company has t a k e n ' c h a r g e of&#13;
t h e Adrian gas works a m i the price of&#13;
g a s has been reduced to $1 Ob.&#13;
L e w i s Sperry. of Borville. has just&#13;
discovered t h a t five head of cattle&#13;
w e r e killed by lightning Monday.&#13;
J o h n T. Vernor__ of Marshall, has a&#13;
t o m a t o vine which s t a n d s over nine&#13;
feet high and is four feet across.&#13;
Paul WesitorY and H e n r y l l a h n , of&#13;
the Flats, are under arrest 'charged&#13;
with selling liquor w i t h o u t a license.&#13;
T h e board of s t a t e auditors h a s&#13;
caused it to be understood t h a t junkets&#13;
will not be paid for by t h e state.&#13;
Lloyd Van Wagoner, of Owosso.&#13;
axed l:'.. may lose his eyesight from&#13;
,1 powder explosion. H e will be disfigured&#13;
for life.&#13;
F r a n k Woodard. a well-to-do farmer&#13;
of Walker township. K e n t county, is&#13;
missing, and 't is believed he ..has committed&#13;
suicide.-'&#13;
A thief stole a M-year-old unbroken&#13;
cojt from the farm of J o h n Redmond,&#13;
n e a r Duraud. and got a w a y safely&#13;
with the animal.&#13;
Mary Stewart a n d D.m W h i t m a n ,&#13;
fearing arrest Cor illegal cohabitation,&#13;
walked from Lansing to .la.-kson, and&#13;
eluded the officers.&#13;
The 8-year-old d a u g h t e r of Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. Ralph Osborti. of Hamilton, township,&#13;
ate ten medicinal tablets and&#13;
died within 20 minutes.&#13;
T h e hearing of Dr. Prohcrt. o/-NUeM.&#13;
for whom a requisition from Indiana&#13;
h a s .been sent to Gov. Bliss, has been&#13;
postiKUiod to September 0.&#13;
Mrs. Charles S h e r m a n , of Benton&#13;
H a r l w r . has fallen heir to a share,&#13;
which she estimates nt $100,000. in a&#13;
million dollar e s t a t e in Cleveland.&#13;
T h e secretary of s t a t e has sent to&#13;
t h e T o u n t y clerks 10.000 hunters' licenses&#13;
to be issued this fall. Figuring on&#13;
past experlenceg t h a t n u m b e r will be&#13;
needed. , ~&#13;
E. Buclenian, o n e of t h e well-known&#13;
m e r c h a n t s of Gladstone, a t t e m p t e d to&#13;
commit suioWe by hanging, H e recently&#13;
failed i n business a n d became despondent*&#13;
'&#13;
Charles W a r n e r , a prosperous f i r m -&#13;
er near Galien, left home last Wednesday&#13;
with $ U 0 in his pocket. H e h a s&#13;
not been seen since and his family feur&#13;
foul play.&#13;
At u special election held a t J a c k s o n&#13;
it w a s voted' to bond t h e city for $15,-&#13;
000 to p u r e h a s e a site for a free public&#13;
library, for which Andrew Carnegie&#13;
has donated $70,000.&#13;
T h e worst hail a n d w i n d s t o r m Ksennaba&#13;
1ms ever had visited it T h u r s -&#13;
day, breaking plate glass fronts, overt&#13;
u r n i n g trees, fences and doing m u c h&#13;
d a m a g e to t h e farmers.&#13;
A big raft of pine logs h a s reached&#13;
Saginaw from Canada, which finishes&#13;
the importation of Indian reserve land&#13;
timber, as t h e Canadian g o v e r n m e n t&#13;
h a s forbidden any more.&#13;
Mrs. Ada Uundell has caused t h e arrest&#13;
of Conrad Mehlenbachen. t h e&#13;
Owosso saloon man who escaped t h e&#13;
charge of Detroit detectives, for selling&#13;
liquor to her minor son.&#13;
A beet: sugar factory for Lapeer is&#13;
all hut assured. At a mass meeting&#13;
Monday night $50,000 of the remaining&#13;
¥100.000 w a s pledged. The factory&#13;
will be the largest in Michigan.&#13;
Because t h e new law is not operative&#13;
before Sept. 5, duck-hunters m a y&#13;
shoot four d a y s under the old law.&#13;
when the open season began Sept. 1.&#13;
T h e new law prohibits shooting until&#13;
Oct. 1.&#13;
H e n r y Vanncss; an Indian from the,&#13;
Sarnia reservation, says he w a s enticed&#13;
into a Port Huron alley and robbed&#13;
of $40. J o e H e n r y Is under a r r e s t&#13;
charged w i t h purloining R e u b e n ' s&#13;
money.&#13;
T h e Detroit &amp; Toledo Shore line Is&#13;
being pushed north from Monroe at&#13;
t h e rate of a mile a day. Believers In&#13;
j t h e steam road theory point to t h e absence&#13;
of any signs of overhead construction.&#13;
J o h n Morrison, a Grand T r u n k passenger&#13;
conductor, while examining an&#13;
air b r a k e coupling at New H a m b u r g ,&#13;
w a s crushed between the coaches, and&#13;
died from his injuries later in the d a y&#13;
at Toronto.&#13;
Bernard Hawkin*. a tramp, arrested&#13;
on suspicion and jailed at Mason, w a s&#13;
released Monday and came To Lansing&#13;
and demanded from the chief of police&#13;
the money taken front him when arrested.&#13;
It amounted to $104.&#13;
A special election will bo held Sept.&#13;
10 to decide upon t h e question of bonding&#13;
for $8,000 for building a g a r b a g e&#13;
crematory and additional stone walks.&#13;
and laying surface pipe for sprinkling&#13;
t h e principal park drives on Mackinac&#13;
island. •&#13;
-4 Dr. X-1.L_Hlcliardson has commenced&#13;
suit against t h e defunct Ciflzens",~-National&#13;
bank at Niles for $2,000. Dr.&#13;
Richardson says he loaned t h e b a n k&#13;
$1.-400 on J u l y S, 1K1M). the day of the&#13;
failure, and t h a t his claim was rejected&#13;
by. the comptroller. *&#13;
T h e young man found dead on the&#13;
Michigan Central track at Grass L a k e&#13;
Saturday morning proves to have been&#13;
E d w a r d Thompson, of Brooklyn, who&#13;
missed the excursion train from Detroit,&#13;
and tried to alight from the fast&#13;
train, which does not stop.&#13;
I Selig Solomon, of Alcona county,&#13;
lias sent S t a t e Land Commissioner&#13;
Wildey a check for $700 in p a y m e n t&#13;
for lumber taken from Agricultural&#13;
college lands in t h a t county. H e says&#13;
the trespassing w a s not done by his&#13;
order, and an effort will bo m a d e to&#13;
locate the guilty parties and prosecute&#13;
them.&#13;
On several occasions a s u b s t a n c e&#13;
resembling blue vitriol has been found&#13;
in the yard of F r a n k Pieszak. of B a y&#13;
City, and once one of his children w a s&#13;
caught In t h e act of placing some of&#13;
the stuff in its mouth. It has been&#13;
proved to be poisonous, and the police&#13;
are trying to rind out .who placed It&#13;
there.&#13;
F r a n k M. Jones, formerly an engineer&#13;
on t h " Michigan Central, is dead&#13;
at the Michigan asylum, Kalamazoo.&#13;
Some years ago he lost his evesight&#13;
in an accident. At -that time lie was&#13;
encaged to be married, and t h e engagement&#13;
w a s "broken off. He became&#13;
insane brooding over his misfortune&#13;
and attempted suicide several times.&#13;
It is estimated t h a t the semi-annual&#13;
apportionment of primary school&#13;
money to be made Nov. 10. will distribute&#13;
about $1.:550,000 among the&#13;
counties of the state, t h e r a t e being&#13;
about $1.0() per child of school age.&#13;
This will be the largest sum ever distributed,&#13;
the largest previous r a t e being&#13;
$U&gt;5 per capita, in November,&#13;
1000.&#13;
Miss F r a n c e s Hartel. of Menominee,&#13;
the 'eldest of the four children thought&#13;
to have bpon poisoned from eating&#13;
sausage of canned meat, died Monday.&#13;
The other three children, the e-ldesf&#13;
of whom is I t years of age. a r e still in&#13;
a critical condition at the hospital and&#13;
not expected to live, while the mother&#13;
and youngest child are very ill at&#13;
home.&#13;
Victor Toskkilla. was shot through&#13;
the heart, and the arm of a follow&#13;
named Saakari was shattered, a s the&#13;
result of a row early Wednesday&#13;
at the Halfway saloon, between&#13;
Hou&amp;hton and Atlantic. The parties&#13;
are Philanders, one of whom became&#13;
involved in a drunken quarrel. Toskkllla's&#13;
assnilant w a s Matto Saakari, 11&#13;
brother of the wounded man.&#13;
Henry Hill, of Monroe, has been in&#13;
poor health for some time and recently&#13;
signed w h a t pnriwrted to be an&#13;
agreement between himself and a&#13;
medical company by which t h e latter&#13;
agreed to cure him for $70 nnd&#13;
bis wife for $40. T h e contract&#13;
turned u p in t h e form of n note&#13;
for $110 !n t h e hands of A. L. Beard,&#13;
w h o h a s brought j;n!t to enforce Its&#13;
payment.&#13;
HEWS M M I H .&#13;
Philadelphia Reports a; Steamboat&#13;
Horror,&#13;
COLUMBIAINATERRIBLE STATE&#13;
A Colored Blahop O I VM Startling AdWee&#13;
—Coftl Mine on F l r e - F s e t*. Fan?lea nn*&#13;
Happening* From Various Parts of t h e&#13;
Country Briefly Told.&#13;
Advises B r a n d i n g A s s a u l t e r s .&#13;
Bishop Turner, of t h e African Methodist&#13;
church, so report from A t l a n t a ,&#13;
Ga., states, gives as his view of t h e&#13;
method to stop assaults on w h i t e women&#13;
the followiugTbeThort? :&#13;
"African emigration would be best&#13;
for the negro a n d best for t h e w h i t e&#13;
man. There Is an irresistible conflict&#13;
between whites and blacks t h a t nothing&#13;
but separation can put an end to.&#13;
Our children are generated a n d nurtured&#13;
under a malignant and misanthropic&#13;
spirit t h a t will wreck t h e&#13;
country and m a k e our civilization a&#13;
hissing and a byword.&#13;
"If it is a fact t h a t the negro will&#13;
not let the white women alone, then&#13;
white men owe it to their manhood*&#13;
and honor to get rid of h i m ; a n d if&#13;
they will open up a highway to Africa&#13;
millions of the black race will go.&#13;
R a t h e r t h a n shed so much blood, a n d&#13;
possibly some innocent blood, you h a d&#13;
better enact l a w s to brand these fools&#13;
and scoundiels and crop their ears a n d&#13;
banish them to Africa.&#13;
"if t h e country will turn over all&#13;
these criminals t h a t they are burning,&#13;
hanging and shooting, to me, a n d&#13;
brand their cheeks and curry t h e m t o&#13;
Africa, I will give t h e world a n o t h e r&#13;
Rome, or establish a country like Australia,&#13;
which w a s founded a n d built&#13;
up by English c u t t h r o a t s a n d penal&#13;
convicts."&#13;
T h e C o l o m b i a n R e v o l u t i o n .&#13;
A P a n a m a dispatch s a y s : " P l o t s&#13;
and counter-plots till t h e air. T h e r e&#13;
is Avar here of t h e most hideous kind&#13;
and strife t h a t t e a r s the country&#13;
asunder, in which brother is pitted&#13;
against brother, friend against friend&#13;
and neighbor against neighbor. Fertile&#13;
fields h a v e been devastated. Once&#13;
thriving t o w n s h a v e been decimated&#13;
in ]K&gt;pulntlon and villages h a v e been&#13;
wiped out of existence. Bands of&#13;
armed men occupy every highway a n d&#13;
traffic Is practically at a standstill,&#13;
while frantic women mourn their dead&#13;
and hungry babes clamor for food.&#13;
Croat battles m u s t soon be fought,&#13;
and upon the results will depend not&#13;
alone the supremacy of the clashing&#13;
partieK_iii Colombia, but also, p e r h a p s ,&#13;
the integrity of t h e territory of t h r e e&#13;
neighboring republics—Venezuela, 'Ecuador&#13;
and Nicaragua.&#13;
A Colon report states t h a t t h e government&#13;
is alleged to h a v e already&#13;
siKMit not less t h a n $120,000,000 in&#13;
silver to suppress the rebellion, and&#13;
the Liberals are said to have expended&#13;
an even larger amount, although their&#13;
volunteers a r e supposed to serve solely&#13;
for patriotism a n d to receive no&#13;
pay. *&#13;
T h e C o n t i n e n t A l n r m e d .&#13;
Senator Chauneey M. Depew. speaking&#13;
of the inroads made upon European&#13;
commercial life by American competition&#13;
and energy, said: "There is a&#13;
genuine scare on t h e continent about&#13;
the eompynuon of American manufacturers&#13;
in their markets, and cabinets&#13;
are consulting if any', combination is&#13;
practical which will prevent the importation&#13;
of American goods and check&#13;
our invasion pf t h e east, which h a s&#13;
been opened at such vast expense and&#13;
effort by European governments. I&#13;
heard n R u s s i a n \ s t a t e s m a n say, 'Concert&#13;
of action may be Impossible, but&#13;
Russia, in response to discriminating&#13;
duties, has shown hhw each country in&#13;
its own way can stop this competition.'&#13;
This unfriendliness is not likely to result&#13;
in war. T h e relations of European&#13;
governments are too intricate and uncertain&#13;
a hiving themselves for anyone&#13;
to take t h a t risk, and combination is&#13;
impossible." \&#13;
T h i r t y W e r e K i l l e d .&#13;
The net result of t h e explosion of&#13;
t h e boilers of t h e steamboat cHty of&#13;
Trenton on the Delaware river Wednesday&#13;
will be probably "0 deaths.&#13;
T h e steamer m a d e trips daily between&#13;
Philadelphia a n d Trenton, stopping nt&#13;
Burlington. N. J.; Bristol. Pa.. an\l&#13;
other points on t h e w a y . T h e scenes&#13;
in the house of correction hospital&#13;
were pitiable. Men and women wit;'&#13;
the flesh hanging from their limbs and&#13;
bodies bore their suffering like stoics,&#13;
and some even smiled while the doctors&#13;
laved the r a w and bleeding flesh&#13;
with cooling lotions. None, of the injured&#13;
w a s able to give an account of&#13;
the disaster. Chief Engineer Murphy,&#13;
who w a s on w a t c h when t h e accident&#13;
happened, reported to t h e officials t h a t&#13;
the boiler which exploded carrlexl only&#13;
150 pounds of steam.&#13;
Conl Mine on F i r e .&#13;
A fierce fire Is burning In t h e Ocean&#13;
mine a t Herminie, Pa., and the flames&#13;
cannot lie controlled. T h e Are w a s discovered&#13;
early Sunday morning,&#13;
through dense volumes of smoke coming&#13;
out of t h e shaft. The a l a r m w a s&#13;
given and t h e men organized t o fight&#13;
the flames, it w a s soon learned t h a t&#13;
the tire w a s burning in several entries&#13;
and nothing v a n le&lt;ft to do but flood&#13;
the mine. W a t e r w n s t u r n e d in. hut&#13;
without avail. I t Is expected it will require&#13;
several d a y s to extinguish t h e&#13;
fire. No o n e w n s in&lt;tho mine w h e n it&#13;
took fire. T h e Ooenn mine is owned&#13;
by the Berwick-White Company nnd is&#13;
one of t h e be*.* equipped in t h e bituminous&#13;
region. I t is filled with electric&#13;
machinery and the loss will be large.&#13;
* *&#13;
*&#13;
- 4.'' -'. if J •»?'•',' i;Jw' V'S*ji* ' " M ^ • ..^' .,&#13;
¥• .&#13;
; " » ' * ; 1 ;S,V *•'&#13;
'W J'lftTJ1.1 W W J M&#13;
« M * I • *&#13;
• w &lt; APT&#13;
The national encampment of the&#13;
•Grand Army of the Republic, at Cleveland,&#13;
will undoubtedly mark the clim&#13;
a x In gatherings of the bronzed, aged&#13;
and battle-scarred veterans of the civil&#13;
•war,—It brlnga together. Mores ojLold&#13;
•soldiers, many of whom will not be on&#13;
hand for another encampment. Those&#13;
who have outlived the awful vicissitudes&#13;
of their campaigns, however, and&#13;
have enjoyed the calm of industrial&#13;
and business life since their campaigns&#13;
closed, will be there in surprising&#13;
numbers. Those whose means or&#13;
opportunities do not permit them to&#13;
attend the gathering of their comrades&#13;
will be there in spirit and sympathy.&#13;
Depleted numbers, the advanced age&#13;
. and accumulating infirmities of those&#13;
who survive, tb.3 disappearances of&#13;
| readers of history fully comprehend&#13;
the magnitude of the civil war, the&#13;
wonderful courage it revealed and the&#13;
intensity of thejeeling which gave&#13;
thousands of men year after year to&#13;
the battlefield. The veterans alone&#13;
perfectlug a veterans' organization.&#13;
The first pest, was formed at Decatur,&#13;
111., on the evening of April *6, 1866,&#13;
and this, with two pests established at&#13;
Springfield, adopted the principles&#13;
which have been the cardinal doctrines&#13;
of the organization. Ever since the&#13;
first national conyention in 1866—the&#13;
annual gatherings were not officially&#13;
styled "encampments" until the following&#13;
year—the Grand Army has played&#13;
an important role in the history of&#13;
the nation. It has done much for the&#13;
relief of its own members. It has done&#13;
much for charity, and it should not&#13;
be forgotten that in several instances&#13;
this charity—notably during the times&#13;
of the Mississippi valley yellow fever&#13;
outbreaks and the Charlestown earthquake—&#13;
was directed to the relief of&#13;
former enemies. But most of all it&#13;
has been a beneficial factor in keeping&#13;
alive the sentiments of loyalty and&#13;
patriotism.&#13;
Such an organization is' without&#13;
parallel among the societies of war&#13;
tient courage and endurance were necessary&#13;
to live through the years of the&#13;
rebellion. Considering the nature of&#13;
that experience it is not surprising&#13;
that the bond among the veterans&#13;
should be strong. Their reunions commemorate&#13;
events which loom large in&#13;
the world's history. It is the memory&#13;
XU9 6 r e e t S t r i k e .&#13;
The steel company official* announce&#13;
that in every instance where they have&#13;
attempted to start one of their plants&#13;
they have succeeded, anil that they&#13;
can get all the men they want. That&#13;
success has attended their efforts* is&#13;
evident at Wellesville, Painter's mills,&#13;
Clark's and Lindsay &amp; McCutebeon's.&#13;
The first three named are running&#13;
practically full and new men are being&#13;
taken on every day.&#13;
The striking machinists of the National&#13;
Tube CompnDy have, it is said,&#13;
been asked to return to work In order&#13;
to wake extensive repairs to the machinery.&#13;
This move was received by&#13;
the merchants of McKeesport &gt;\ith Joy.&#13;
The machinists are considering the request&#13;
and will act definitely in a couple&#13;
of days.&#13;
Probable peace for the striking steel&#13;
worker* within 10 days, as outlined In&#13;
dispatches from Wheeling, is the topic&#13;
are~gbte~to~ appreciate Just wtatt ^a— 4n strike-vircleH 1» Pittsburg. I-resi- this -pact-haa-ao far endured without&#13;
dent Shaffer was averse to talking on&#13;
the subject. Finally he said that while&#13;
the report may be true, he bad no&#13;
knowledge of it. Ho did not see* how&#13;
a settlement could be effected without&#13;
the Amalgamated Association, and&#13;
while some may hope for such good&#13;
luck, yet in the face of gains made&#13;
by The strikers, he would not back&#13;
down from his original i&gt;osition. The&#13;
steel officials reiterated their previous&#13;
statements that no overtures for peace&#13;
had.come from the strikers and that&#13;
the strike could only be settled by the&#13;
return of the men to their places.&#13;
SOLDIER MONUMENT,&#13;
of these things, and in the reflection&#13;
that the Grand Army must dwindle&#13;
with saddening rapidity, that the people&#13;
take pleasure in doing honor to the&#13;
old soldiers.&#13;
A Splendid Selection.&#13;
Cleveland has been making ample&#13;
PERRY STATUE.&#13;
posts by the death of members, will&#13;
end in the not distant future the history&#13;
of the grand army—an organization&#13;
that has had a career that stamps&#13;
it as unique in itself, without reference&#13;
to the exceptional nature of the&#13;
great events from which it took Its&#13;
rise. Held together entirely by community&#13;
of sentiment and a spirit of&#13;
mutual helpfulness, its existence has&#13;
been a perpetual reminder of the&#13;
strength of the bonds and the intensity&#13;
of the patriotic spirit which united the&#13;
men engaged in the war.&#13;
F i r s t O. A. B. P o t t .&#13;
The Grand Army of the Republic has&#13;
had a life of about thirty-five years.&#13;
The war was over and the re-unlted&#13;
nation was just beginning to take up&#13;
the work of peace when the first pest&#13;
was formed. The origin of the order&#13;
is traced to a meeting of veterans at&#13;
Springfield, 111., during the winter of&#13;
1865-66, when Dr. F. B. Stephenson&#13;
who was a surgeon in the Fourteenth&#13;
Illinois Infantry, tcok the initiative in&#13;
S a n p n o n I'nMonnd M e n t a l l y .&#13;
The attorneys for Admiral Schley&#13;
have been privately informed by the&#13;
"riends of Admiral Sampson that his&#13;
jealth is such that he will not be able&#13;
to appear as a witness before the court&#13;
)f inquiry. A news dispatch from Adniral&#13;
Sampson's home guardedly intimated&#13;
the real situation. It said:&#13;
"He is gaining in physical strength,&#13;
but his mental health continues to&#13;
steadily fail."&#13;
In other words, it is suggested that&#13;
Ills mental state is such that he is not&#13;
•ompetent to give testimony. For&#13;
more than a year rumors have been&#13;
?oming from Boston concerning SanTpson's&#13;
mental indisposition. Recent reports&#13;
seem to give substantial corroboration:&#13;
for instance, friends are now&#13;
raying that he cannot remember in the&#13;
ifternoon what he said or did hi the&#13;
morning.&#13;
Schley's attorneys, discussing this&#13;
levelopment. say they will insist upon&#13;
the certificates of naval surgeons to&#13;
the effect that he is unable to come to&#13;
Washington.&#13;
PICJUffO T H » TVBIUBT. **&#13;
F e a r . Thnt the Svltaa'e C»nnt*T&#13;
Will Be DWided.&#13;
It Is feared In official circlet of&#13;
Washington that the withdrawal of&#13;
the French ambassador from Constantinople&#13;
marks the dissolution of the&#13;
concert of European powers under&#13;
which the intergrity of Turkey wat&#13;
guaranteed. J&#13;
By the Treaty of Berlin all the great&#13;
powers of Europe subscribed to' an&#13;
agreement to refrain from any act that&#13;
would tend to the destruction of~the&#13;
Ottoman empire.&#13;
This action was taken to forestall&#13;
what were conceived to be the designs&#13;
of Russia to seize on Turkish territory,&#13;
and Russia was led to subscribe to the&#13;
agreement by force of circumstances.&#13;
Although several times severely&#13;
strained, notably by such events as the&#13;
last war between Turkey and Greece,&#13;
amendment, but it is apprehended that&#13;
if the action of France is carried out&#13;
to the extreme indicated in dispatches,&#13;
each of the other signatory powers will&#13;
feel obliged in self-protection to disregard&#13;
the agreement and press on Turkey&#13;
vast financial and other claims&#13;
that have accumulated in the last&#13;
quarter of a century, with a result of&#13;
disrupting the present Turkish government.&#13;
Like Hawaii. Alaska comes forward&#13;
with a petition for the removal of a&#13;
United States Judge. Fifty-two lawyers&#13;
of the Nome bar petitioned the&#13;
president' to sever Judge Arthur H.&#13;
Xoyes from hi* job.&#13;
Herman Deilim. alias Charles Meyers,&#13;
the diamond thief who made an&#13;
unsuccessful attempt to rob a Detroit&#13;
jewelry store of diamond rings valued&#13;
at $4,000. Is wanted in Hamilton, Oon&#13;
a similar charge.&#13;
T r i e d t o K i l l P o p e L e o .&#13;
A dispatch; from Rome reports that&#13;
an anarchist, whose identity is concealed&#13;
by the police, was captured in&#13;
the Vatican garden Monday. The man&#13;
carried a revolver and a dirk and lias&#13;
ndmitted that he intended to assassinate&#13;
the pope. The prisoner denounces&#13;
Leo as ,-A spiritual.giant, keeping millions&#13;
of men in thralldom."&#13;
NEWS IN BRIEF.&#13;
BASE BALL.&#13;
Below we pnblisn tb.3 standing of&#13;
the American and National league clubs&#13;
up to and including tha game3 played&#13;
on Friday, August 30:&#13;
AMEItlCAX L S A G U i&#13;
Wort List. Pero*,.&#13;
Chicago— 65 42 .607&#13;
Boston t51 44 .563&#13;
Baltimore 56 43 ,541»&#13;
Detroit 57 51 .528&#13;
Pniladelphla 50 51 .523&#13;
Washington 45 56 .451&#13;
Cleveland 4:} x_ GJ .40 J&#13;
Milwaukee 37 71 .£43&#13;
NATIONAL L 3 AG CI.&#13;
Wox Lo*\ Per ct.&#13;
Pittsbur? 6:} 4! .r&lt;94&#13;
Brooklyn 61 47 .509&#13;
Philadelphia 6&gt; 47 ,5C8&#13;
St. Louis .. 59 5) .541&#13;
Boston o'l 55 .48i&gt;&#13;
Cincinnati 43 59 ,t?i&#13;
New York 4 J 6) .41¾&#13;
Chicago 4) 6J .iJj&#13;
Over 10) insurgents surrendered in&#13;
the Philippines last week.&#13;
Homesteaders at Lawton. I. T.. are&#13;
A311SEMKXTS IX DKTROIT.&#13;
WEEK ENDING SEPT. 7.&#13;
A V E N U E THEATRE—Vaudeville—Prices: afternoon.&#13;
10. 15. &amp; 25: evening. 10, 20, 2&gt;c; reserv. 50c.&#13;
\VONDERL.\NI&gt;-Vaudeville—Prices: afternoon&#13;
10c, 15c. &amp;. .'Uc: evening, li;c. -.1) &amp; 2.'&gt;c_: box duo&#13;
W H I T N E Y GRAND—"The Gam"Ue.»pe^.,• Mat&#13;
11V, 15 and 2.'c: evenings, !0c* ,vc and 30oj&#13;
T H E M A R K E T .&#13;
Detroit^Cattle—Chcice b a t c h e r steers&#13;
i II 60 to $.5; light to good. 13 73 to |4 50; light&#13;
„ . . , . , - I to good but. her stfers and heifers, 13 25 to&#13;
sweltering in a temperature of 112. j 14.50; mixed bufhors" and fat .rows, $2 85&#13;
THE OARFIELD MONUMENT,&#13;
CENTRAL ARMORY, CLEVELAND.&#13;
veterans the world over. It has no ! preparations for the entertainment of&#13;
predecessor and it cannot have a sue- i the old soldiers, and as they arrive&#13;
cessor. It sprung from conditions j they will find the latch-string out and&#13;
which are not likely to repeat them- j the glad hand of welcome extended,&#13;
selves in any country or at any time. [More than 300,000 visitors are expect-&#13;
It is doubtful if many of the casual ; ed to be in the encampment city during&#13;
the week, and it is the aim of the&#13;
citizens of Cleveland to make it a redletter&#13;
event in the history of the town.&#13;
Free quarters have been provided for&#13;
from 25,000 to 30,000 veterans In school&#13;
houses and halls, similar to the plan&#13;
adopted by Chicago, and which worked&#13;
so successfully last year.&#13;
The Forest City is a place of armories&#13;
and monuments, and has many&#13;
points of historic interest. Foremost&#13;
among these is the tomb of the late&#13;
President Garfield, whose home was In&#13;
Mentor, only twenty-four miles from&#13;
Cleveland. The mausoleum Is located&#13;
in Lake View cemetery, on a high&#13;
piece of ground, and is the Mecca o'&#13;
many visitors to the city. The statue&#13;
of Commodore Oliver Hazard Perry,&#13;
the hero of the battle of Lake Erie in&#13;
the war of 1812, was dedicated September&#13;
10, 1860, the anniversary of&#13;
Perry's great victory. Some years ago&#13;
it was removed from the public square,&#13;
where it had been originally placed,&#13;
and taken to a beautiful spot in Wade&#13;
park, where it now stands.&#13;
In the very heart of the business section&#13;
of the city stands one of the&#13;
grandest soldiers' monuments in the&#13;
United States. Within its walls are&#13;
relics of wars and the names of departed&#13;
heroes chiseled in the marble&#13;
surroundings. This monument will no&#13;
doubt be one of the greatest attractions&#13;
at the encampment and will doubtles3&#13;
be visited by every veteran in-attendance.&#13;
Located but two blocks from the&#13;
public square Is the Central armory, a&#13;
large and magnificent building, where&#13;
campftres by the veterans will be held.&#13;
It will also be a principal headquarters&#13;
for the Qrand Army.&#13;
Alpine Pass, Colorado, justified its&#13;
name Tliui'sdny by producing a fall of&#13;
&gt;now.&#13;
Sen-itrv (Joo. F. Hoar, of Massachusetts.&#13;
Thursday celebrated his 75th&#13;
birthday.&#13;
Hi. i Midas' yellow fever serum, as&#13;
•i preventive, is a dead failure. A "prolected"&#13;
patient has died in Havana.&#13;
Another contribution from Nome to&#13;
the San Francisco gold supply—$500,-&#13;
000—arrived on the steamer St. Paul.&#13;
Sampson may have to* face a courtmartial&#13;
because of his peculiar connection&#13;
with _ Mac-lay's venomous attack&#13;
on Schley.&#13;
Richards, the Columbus, Mo., murderer&#13;
and assaulter, has not been&#13;
can slit and The posse pursuing him is&#13;
becoming discouraged and returning&#13;
homo.&#13;
The- transport Buford will sail front&#13;
Maniia September ." with troops to be&#13;
stationed at military j&gt;osrs in the east.&#13;
She will come by way of the Suez to&#13;
New York.&#13;
Representatives of the various Catholic&#13;
societies of the United States win&#13;
meet at Cincinnati December 10 for&#13;
th&gt;» purni&gt;!-e of forming a permanent&#13;
federation.&#13;
t*uitort States Collector of Customs&#13;
Hocy has been re-arretted at Tucson,&#13;
An;., on additional counts in connection&#13;
with the Chinese conspiracy case.&#13;
His bond w:*s raised to $5,000.&#13;
Cap;. Forsyth, the United States naval&#13;
officer who talked so freely tos a&#13;
Kansas City reporter about the Schley&#13;
case, will be given a chance to explain&#13;
at headquarters in Washington.&#13;
Of the eight persons bitten by infected&#13;
mosquitoes at Havana in the&#13;
course of the experiments to learn&#13;
whether the insects carry .yellow fever&#13;
contagion three subjects have died.&#13;
President Richardson and Secretary&#13;
Crilmour. of the United Mine Workers,&#13;
predict that at least 00 per cent of&#13;
the 4.000 coal miners in the Pittsburg.&#13;
Kas . district will o&gt;bey the strike order&#13;
on September 1.&#13;
Famine in Seablta county, Texas,&#13;
continues. A pitiable case is reported&#13;
from Carrteo. the county seat, wjiere a&#13;
mother and three children were d««d&#13;
from starvation. In Jacal a mother's&#13;
body was discovered in the road two&#13;
miles from her home, partially eaten&#13;
by wolves.&#13;
Marguerite Lylcr. of Chicago, aged X&#13;
is heiress to $100,000 and a lot of trouble.&#13;
Her mother is dead and the woman&#13;
who had her In care has lost her.&#13;
Kidnapers have, got her., Her father,&#13;
who lmd been divorced from the mother.&#13;
!« living and may know something&#13;
about the case.&#13;
to $3 L'5. Sheep and lambs, best lambs, $4 21&#13;
to $» 40; light to good a n d good mixed lots,&#13;
$.)75 to $115; fair to good mixed and butcher&#13;
sheep, S2 50 to $3 »0; culls and common.&#13;
$150 to $"40. Hog-;, mixed and butchers,&#13;
$5 S5 to $5 95; one Dunch, choice av 245 lbs,&#13;
brought $6; bulk sales, at &amp; SO to $595;&#13;
s t a g s . 1-:) off; loughs, $5 to $5.15.&#13;
Buffalo—Cattle—Veals In fair supply&#13;
and steady at Vi 751-7.M)- a few up to $7 75.&#13;
Kog?. medium heavy. $G30; cr-oice'heavy.&#13;
li'.SOtfSSo; prassy and dairy fed hogs. $6@&#13;
6 10. Pips, pood to choice, ?5 70-&amp;5 30; skips&#13;
t i fair. $5^75 60; roughs, common to pood,&#13;
$5 £.•)''• 5 50. Sheep and lambs—Sprtng lambs,&#13;
choice to f.incy. $5 50¾5 75; do fair to good.&#13;
$4 S5^5 40: common f&gt; good culls. $2 25®4 75;&#13;
native sheep, hamiy wethers. $3 60^3 90;&#13;
choice to extra mixed sheep, $3 15*{?3 50; fair&#13;
to arood do. $2 25t?3 00.&#13;
Cincinnati.—Heavy steers, choice to extra.&#13;
$£3"T?J5 .*0; fair to good. $4 85@5 25.&#13;
Ox"n. S2£4 3."; butchers. e h o W to extra.&#13;
$4 85115 15; fair to good. $3 50^4 80. Heifers,&#13;
eood to choice. $4^4 50; common to fair,&#13;
tl 50*?3 90. Cows, -fiood to choice. $3 6V£4 25;&#13;
common, to fair, $1 S5fi3 60. Hogs, selected&#13;
heavy shippers, ?6 15; choice packers and&#13;
butchers. $6^6 10: mixed packers. $580®6;&#13;
s t a g s and heavy fat .sows. $3 o@5 40: light&#13;
shippers. $5 25^t5S5; pigs. 110 lbs. and less,&#13;
f'»5. Shetp. extra $3rfi3 10. good to choice&#13;
*2 2.VFT2 90. common $1 25*22; lambs, extra&#13;
$."» 40fi5 w. good to choice $4^85 25, common&#13;
lo ' a i r ^2^3 73.&#13;
Pi'tst&gt;urg. - C a t t l e . choic« $n 40&lt;5?5 6*.&#13;
i^rime $^ 20*T5 40. good $4 9C*?5 10. tl.-ly $4 75**&#13;
5 00. Trod jr?.ss cnttle $3 75^4 4:. h-?if°rs&#13;
$3^4 25, oxen $2 50^4 50. fat cows. $214.&#13;
H o g s , prime heavies $615tfi$ 22 1-2, best&#13;
mediums $610@&lt;512 1-2. heavy Yorkers&#13;
$3 07 1-23610. good light Yorkers $6@&lt;$05.&#13;
common to fair Yorkers and grassers. $5 90&#13;
G:, f&lt;". oigs $5 801?5 90. Sheep, best wethers&#13;
$3 70f?3 SO. good ?3 40«?3 65 mixed $3&lt;R3 30.&#13;
culls r»r.d comr.;on, ?125*J2 25, yearlings&#13;
$2 507?4.&#13;
Chicago.—Good to,prime steers $5 2Ti@6 30.&#13;
po^r to medium $3 60^i5 20. s t a c k e r s and&#13;
feeders about s t / a d v at $2 25@4 25. cow«&#13;
$2 50^4 25. heifers C 50#5. Hogs and butchers&#13;
$5 65^6 25. &lt;iood to choice heavy $5 75**&#13;
6 35. rou*h heavv *5 60-35 73. light 15 65«6.10,&#13;
bulk $5 8Mi6 15. Sheep, good to choice wethers&#13;
$3 25/§3 90. fair to choice mixed. $3&lt;Jr3 35.&#13;
W e s t e r n sheep. $3 10fft3 90. yearlings. S3 25^&#13;
4: native lambs. $2 7335 13; western lambs,&#13;
$3 75^5.&#13;
Grain. Etc.&#13;
DetroU— Wheat—No. 1 white, 74c, closing&#13;
73 1-2 .c No. 2 red. 72 3-4c. closing 72 l-2c;&#13;
September. 73 l-4c. closing 72 3-4c; December.&#13;
75 3-4c. closing nominal at 75 l-4c; No.&#13;
Z red. t» l-2c; mixed winter, 72 l-2c per bu.&#13;
Corn—Market neglected and nominal a t&#13;
56656 l-2c per bu. a cent lower for the day.&#13;
Oats—No. 2 white, 38c; No. 3 do, 37 l-2c&#13;
p e r bu&#13;
Chicago, wheat, cash No. 3 spring&#13;
w h e a t . 69 l-2c; No. 2 red. 70 l-2c; No. 2&#13;
corn. 55 l-2c; No 2 yellow, 55 l-2c; No. 3&#13;
o a t s , 31 l-2c and 25 l-4c: No. 2 white. 3* l-4c&#13;
and 37 5-8c; No. 3 white. 37c and 37 l-2c.&#13;
N e w York, wheat No. 2 red, 77 3-4c f o b&#13;
afloat: No. 2 red. 75 7-Sc elevator: No. 1&#13;
n o r t h e r n Duluth 78 7-Sc f o b afloat; No. 1&#13;
h a r d Da'.uth. 85 l-8c f o b afloat; option*&#13;
were steady and quiet; corn No. 2 60 l-2o&#13;
elevator and 61 l-3e f o b afloat; oats. No.&#13;
2 3S l-2c; No. 3. 38c; No. 2 white. 41 l-4o&#13;
a n d 41 I-2e; No. 3 white. 40 3-4c; track&#13;
mixed western, 38 and 40c; t r a c k white, -¾&#13;
find »**c&#13;
Cincinnati, wheat, small sales of prima&#13;
w i n t e r red at 7i l-2c, a t t h e hiver. Straight&#13;
c a r loads or No. 2 winter red a r e quotabto&#13;
at 74c. C o m No. 2 while is quotable a t Me,&#13;
No. 2 yellow a t ^2c a n d No. 2 mixed a t fie.&#13;
O a t s 37 3-4c, on t r a c k ; No. 2 while&#13;
\ u o t a b U a t 39c.&#13;
&lt;''.&#13;
.&#13;
'.&#13;
(&#13;
• • •&#13;
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• " 1&#13;
M- 1&#13;
&lt; », ^ t . . 4 : v : " " M - , 1&#13;
' ' • • • . • . ' H . - . ^ f . . ; . : !&#13;
'• ":^#*k^;v&#13;
'*•' .. -, &gt; J&#13;
•%--&#13;
• • •&#13;
" • • • - &amp; ' •&#13;
• #&#13;
r-" :.'"'&#13;
5 1 '&#13;
,*&#13;
P?fF"P&#13;
&gt;,&#13;
• ^ i * , ; , , .&#13;
«•:••$•;.• ^ S # i , - -&gt;fi;I'-KW#': :-- *&gt;' .v&lt;:1¾¾ [-'^^&lt;&gt;J* &lt;&#13;
"•"r .:'.-'&#13;
^jfr •"' m* « r&#13;
WEST PUTNAM.&#13;
D. Ooste and family visited at&#13;
G. W. Bates' Sunday.&#13;
Gyrus Gardner goes on crutches&#13;
aow-a-days as a result of a badly&#13;
cut foot&#13;
Grace Gardner is assisting Mrs.&#13;
O. B. Jackson in housework lor a&#13;
few weeks.&#13;
Edith Burden of Fowlerville&#13;
-"irvisiting her grandparents E/B.&#13;
White and wife.&#13;
«"" Alice MoGinnis of Dexter was a&#13;
guest at the home of D. M. Monks&#13;
the first of the week.&#13;
The neighborhood was well&#13;
represented at the picnio at North&#13;
Lake last Wednesday.&#13;
W. E. Murphy and family of&#13;
Pinckney visited at H. B. Gardners'&#13;
the first of the week.&#13;
The Misses Nellie Gardner and&#13;
Fannie Monks visited Dexter&#13;
friends Saturday and Sunday.&#13;
PETTYSVIU-E&#13;
School commenced here Monday&#13;
with Nettie Hall as teacher.&#13;
Floyd Randall of Lansing is the&#13;
guest of P. \f. Coniway this week.&#13;
Rey and Jay Reed of Oceola&#13;
spent Monday night at J. W.&#13;
Placeway's.&#13;
Berton Hicks of Jackson visited&#13;
at H. H. Swarthouts a part of&#13;
the pasc week.&#13;
Nearly everone in this vicinity&#13;
attended the farmers picnic at&#13;
Whitmore last Saturday.&#13;
Frank Crandal and nephew of&#13;
Howell were in this place on business&#13;
the first of the week.&#13;
Fred Blades commenced drawing&#13;
milk to Howell this week.&#13;
He has taken the route by way of&#13;
Chubbs' corners.&#13;
Iva Placeway entertained a&#13;
party of her friends at her home&#13;
last Friday night. Ice cream and&#13;
cake was served and a very enjoyable&#13;
evening was spent Iva left&#13;
for Oceola the first of the week&#13;
where she will teach the coming&#13;
school year in district No. 1.&#13;
Kittie Hoff was the guest of&#13;
Mrs. Kirk Van Winkle Tuesday.&#13;
Mrs Will Durkee returned Monday&#13;
from a weeks vist in Detroit.&#13;
Mrs. E. J. Durkee is expected&#13;
home from her visit in Chieago,&#13;
Wednesday.&#13;
Miss Margaret Greiner left here&#13;
Tuesday to resume her school&#13;
work at Mt Clemens.&#13;
Seth Perry and wife entertained&#13;
her brother Mr. Fuester from&#13;
Conway over Sunday.&#13;
flan, Phftlrw and wife of Stockbridge&#13;
visited their daughter Mrs.&#13;
Eugene Smith Saturday.&#13;
Mesdames Arthur and Ben&#13;
Montague visited- their mother&#13;
Mrs. Jas. Bullis the first of this&#13;
week.&#13;
School began nearly everywhere&#13;
in these parts Monday. Will&#13;
Roche will teach at the Eaman,&#13;
Lee Carr at the Sprout, Lucius&#13;
Wilson in Genoa, and Dillivan&#13;
Durkee in UD ad ilia.&#13;
A number Irora here attended&#13;
the Grange picnio at North Lake&#13;
last week. From all reports the&#13;
ball game between Chelsea and&#13;
Unadilla was an exciting one the&#13;
score being 9 to 5 in favor of Unadilla.&#13;
from&#13;
NORTH LAKE.&#13;
Agnes Hinkley was home&#13;
Anderson Sunday.&#13;
Some farmers have commeuced&#13;
their bean harvest.&#13;
Geo. Hinkley and wife were at&#13;
Ann Arbor the first of the week.&#13;
Our pastor, Rev. A. T. Camburn&#13;
is attending conference this week.&#13;
There are five threshing machines&#13;
at work within hearing&#13;
distance of here this week.&#13;
Josephine Day who has attended&#13;
the Conservatory of Music at&#13;
Boston the past year is the guest&#13;
•f the Misses Williams.&#13;
Wm Secor and Fred Stowe of&#13;
Unadilla are handling the Crawford&#13;
and Barnard varieties of&#13;
peaches for Wm. Stevenson.&#13;
The Grange picnic was well attended&#13;
and a pleasant day was&#13;
spent The program was good&#13;
and well carried out. The order&#13;
is flourishing here and has nearly&#13;
doubled in numbers the past year.&#13;
The school meeting was largely&#13;
attended Monday night and E.&#13;
Brown was re-elected moderator&#13;
for the fourth term. School commences&#13;
the first Monday in November.&#13;
ANDERSON&#13;
Orla Haynes is the owner of a&#13;
fine hosse.&#13;
Born to Fred Mackinder and&#13;
wife a daughter.&#13;
A few from here attended the&#13;
picnic at Whitmore Lake.&#13;
Samt*i\Wilson expects to - take&#13;
It oourse ofiairat the U. of M. ,&#13;
UNADILLA.&#13;
Levi Palmer of Jackson visited&#13;
at Ada Hills last wtek.&#13;
School opened Monday with&#13;
Dillivan Durkee as teacher.&#13;
Kate and Grace Collins began&#13;
school at Chelsea Tuesday.&#13;
Rev. Hicks of Pinckney visited&#13;
at Wm. Pyper's last Friday.&#13;
Bessie Lane began teaching&#13;
school in Sharp district Monday.&#13;
lone Wood of Chelsea was the&#13;
guest of Inez Marshall last week.&#13;
Mrs. Wm. Livermore is vibiting&#13;
her daughter Mrs. Fred Douglas&#13;
of Ionia.&#13;
J. D. Coulton and wife of Chelsea&#13;
visited A. C. Watson and wife&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Adam Paul and wife of Lansing&#13;
visited her mother Mrs. Seigrist&#13;
last week.&#13;
Fay Hartsuff of Lyndon Bpent&#13;
the first of the week with his&#13;
grand parents.&#13;
Homer Ives and daughter Edna&#13;
of Chelsea called on friends at&#13;
this place Friday.&#13;
Ina Smith was the guest of Jessie&#13;
Abb ott of White Oak last Saturday&#13;
and Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. Nancy May spent last&#13;
week visiting her niece Mrs, Belle&#13;
Cherry of Chicago.&#13;
. Kate Collins after spending the&#13;
summer working near Eaton Rapids&#13;
returned'home last week.&#13;
Louis Reopcke moved his wife&#13;
and family to Detroit last week&#13;
where he will work at the carpenter&#13;
trade.&#13;
Phil McKinder, wife and daughter&#13;
who have been visiting his&#13;
parents Jas. McKinder and wife,&#13;
returned to their home in Toledo,&#13;
Ohio, last week.&#13;
Cecil and Lloyd Rainy after&#13;
spending their summer vacation&#13;
with their grandparents Dr. Du&#13;
Bois and wife will return to their&#13;
home in Mansfield, Ohio, this&#13;
week.&#13;
A large number from here attended&#13;
the Grange picnic at&#13;
North Lake last week and it was&#13;
a success from beginning to end&#13;
The Ball same between Chelsea&#13;
and Unadilla ended is the score&#13;
of 9 to 5 in favor of Unadilla.&#13;
Little Lucile Howlet daughter&#13;
of Henry Howlett died at the&#13;
home of her grandparents Ben&#13;
Westfall and wife of Stockbridge&#13;
last Saturday, age about £ years.&#13;
She leaves a father and one little&#13;
sister to mourn their loss.&#13;
. Bell Preston of Detroit was the&#13;
guest of her friend Kate Barn urn&#13;
last week and the£rst of this.&#13;
Jean Pyper attended the family&#13;
reunion at Britton last week&#13;
Wednesday and is now visiting&#13;
relatives in Lenawee county.&#13;
Fannie Laverock who has been&#13;
spending her vacation with her&#13;
parents here returned to Owosso&#13;
Saturday where she is attending&#13;
school.&#13;
Willie Douglass who has been&#13;
spending seyeral weeks with his&#13;
grandparents Wm. Livermore and&#13;
wife, returned to his home in Ionia&#13;
last week.&#13;
Mrs. Maggie May and children&#13;
who have been visiting relatives&#13;
and friends at this place for several&#13;
weeks returned to their home&#13;
in Bellaire Tuesday. Her mother&#13;
Mrs. Ellen Marshall returned&#13;
home with her and will spend the&#13;
winter there.&#13;
Mrs. Ryal Barnam an old and&#13;
respected resident of this place&#13;
died at her home last week Wednesday&#13;
after being confined to her&#13;
bed for nearly eighteen months,&#13;
age 58 years. She leaves a husband,&#13;
one daighter and two sons,&#13;
to mourn the loss of a kind and&#13;
affectionate wife and mother.&#13;
The BaddaUt Pcleataao*.&#13;
The Buddhist .priesthood In Slam Is&#13;
divided into two sects. The one knows&#13;
as the Maha Nekaia (the Large Body) Is&#13;
the older and more conservative order&#13;
and represents the great mass of the&#13;
people, while the one known as the&#13;
Hama Yuta Nekaiaa (the Body Who&#13;
Follows Righteousness) is the new and&#13;
more arletdcratic order.&#13;
H r M i ' s L a n d .&#13;
Only about 1¼ pe* cent of the total&#13;
area of Ireland is under woods, while&#13;
there is over 23 per cent of uncultivated&#13;
land in the country.&#13;
Up la a Balloon*&#13;
The first balloon ascent took place in&#13;
3*83.&#13;
LIT* on Tips.&#13;
Only about 20 per cent of the waiters&#13;
la German hotels and restaurants re*&#13;
oelve a n j wages, as they are expected&#13;
to Hve on their fees.&#13;
-What Oae Doein't Know,&#13;
If you should tell all you know, the&#13;
reckal might not require any great&#13;
length of time, but If you attempt to&#13;
toll all you do not know one lifetime&#13;
would not suffice.&#13;
G r e a t B r t t a i a ' a D « b t .&#13;
Tbe national debt of the United&#13;
Kingdom is "&gt; per ceat of its wealth.&#13;
V a c a a t I s l a n d s .&#13;
Of the 16,000 islands between Madagascar&#13;
and India, in the Indian ocean,&#13;
only 000 are inhabited.&#13;
The Oldest Map.&#13;
The oldest map in existence is a piece&#13;
of mosaJc In a Byzantine church at&#13;
Malabo, lu Palestine. It represents&#13;
part of the Holy Land and is 1,700&#13;
years old.&#13;
Ta.a S e w e r P i p e .&#13;
To determine whether the joint of a&#13;
sewer pipe leaks or not wrap it with a&#13;
piece of white cloth saturated with a&#13;
solution of acetate of lead. If It leaks,&#13;
the cloth will become black.&#13;
Bard to Proaanaee.&#13;
There are three short aad simple&#13;
words, the hardest of all to pronounce&#13;
in any language (and I suspect they&#13;
were no easier before the confusion of&#13;
tongues), but which no man or nation&#13;
that cannot utter can claim to have arrived&#13;
at manhood. These words are, ' i&#13;
was wrong."—LowelL&#13;
B e a e e s F r o a i t a e Pi&#13;
The man. who trusts in the Lord and&#13;
goes a-flahlng, leaving his plants to&#13;
tare for themselves, will And that they&#13;
are unable to fight the battle alone.&#13;
If some enterprising queen breeder&#13;
will get up a "nonswarming" strain, a&#13;
greater benefit will be conferred upon&#13;
the beekeeping fraternity than tongue&#13;
reach. By this improvement all of us,&#13;
from the red clover fields to the orange&#13;
blossoms and from buckwheat to sage&#13;
of the west, will Jump for joy.&#13;
There are always kickers against the&#13;
silo. They are two legged kickers. I&#13;
never have had a cow or steer or horse&#13;
or mule or bog to be on anything but&#13;
the most friendly relations with my&#13;
•Ik*.&#13;
The average hired man has an antipethy&#13;
for an oil can and will run a&#13;
machine till its groans can be heard at&#13;
rdlstance before he will look Into the&#13;
matter.&#13;
»&#13;
Subscribe for the DISPATCH I&#13;
THE GAME CHICKEN.&#13;
r*o Latest Caadldate Po* Para* Wit a&#13;
P a &gt; a w Mmmj Goo4 amalltftaa.&#13;
The game chicken as a farmer's fowl&#13;
Is among the new departures. Many&#13;
good things are told of the games. The&#13;
true games are very vigorous. They&#13;
are good foragers, pushing boldly xmt&#13;
m search of Insect food, and it is even&#13;
said that a mother hen has been known&#13;
to put up a fight against a hawk hr de.&#13;
fense of her brood. All these qualities&#13;
adapt them to farm coaditlons.&#13;
The true old English game Is of medium&#13;
else and fills the alll as to poultry&#13;
and ess production.&#13;
Indian games, which are divided Into&#13;
Cornish and White varieties, are popular&#13;
in England on account of their value&#13;
as market fowls a*d for the same&#13;
reason are finding favor on this side of&#13;
Taa atort «4 Isslsjatl—•&#13;
I find that I want a-whole Jot ©I water-&#13;
five or sis times as much as I supposed&#13;
I did—and you want.a laigs water&#13;
supply back of you. . Willie. Irritation&#13;
is a grand thing to the east and&#13;
the time is coming when all our streams&#13;
will be used for irrigation, ytt the one&#13;
great thing needed is the cultivation of&#13;
the soil. If you cultivate enough. wit*t&#13;
the right sort of tools, you will ge&#13;
through wondrous droughts. D e n t for-i&#13;
get that cultivation Is the best of all Irrigation,&#13;
and if you are going to irrigate&#13;
wkh water prepare to featis a'&#13;
whole bunch of r t - H . B. Hate.&#13;
F a r S a l e&#13;
Uaw&amp;on's Golden Chuff wheat for&#13;
seed, clean and nica.&#13;
Z. A. HARTSUFF,&#13;
Unadilla, Mich.&#13;
C0BNI8H INDIAN OAMBS.&#13;
the Atlantic. They are extensively&#13;
used in England and ki many instances&#13;
in this country for crossing purposes.&#13;
The hens are reported fairly good layers&#13;
vf an egg of medium sice. Chickens&#13;
are fairly hardy and make satisfactory&#13;
development.&#13;
Some authorities claim that, while&#13;
the Cornish arc a variation en the original&#13;
type in the direction of blocky&#13;
buHd and development of flesh, they&#13;
also mark a great departure from the&#13;
original hardiness and egg producing&#13;
merits of the type.&#13;
The Duckwing Leghorns, which are&#13;
newcomers and comparatively Wtt\%&#13;
known, are said to contain both game&#13;
and Dorking blood and to approximate&#13;
closely the good points in the typical&#13;
games,&#13;
Bta PROFtT IN CHERRIES.&#13;
Dark Varieties the Money Mmhtfi,&#13;
'With Wlndiur In the Lead.&#13;
The best sweet cherries I have men&#13;
south of central New York are, along&#13;
the fences where the cultivator has not&#13;
disturbed them. In northern Delaware&#13;
there ore several famous sweet cherries&#13;
in the fence rows and corners, bat&#13;
neatly all of the orchards that I have&#13;
seen la wW&lt;* joadern cultivation Methods&#13;
are attempted have been failures.&#13;
In central and eastern New York the&#13;
sweet cherry has to be kept on medium&#13;
thin land. My father has a young, orchard&#13;
that is booming on land that&#13;
would be considered poor for foftni&amp;g&#13;
purposes, but the trees respond there to j&#13;
tillage.&#13;
The sour cherries will probably do&#13;
best under high culture. While they&#13;
grow well along the fences, they need&#13;
more moisture than the sweet varieties&#13;
and pay well under the best treatment.&#13;
The dark^kiads are the money makers.&#13;
Black Tartarian, Black Eagle,&#13;
"Windsor and Dikemaa are the leading&#13;
sorts at home. There is big moneg in&#13;
Windsor, and if Dikeman turns out as&#13;
we expect it there ought to be more in&#13;
it.&#13;
Sometimes the sweet cherry needs&#13;
Ikne and dies for waut of it. Some&#13;
kinds need it more than others. Tartarian,&#13;
I believe, is one of them. Thus&#13;
writes Professor G. H. Powell to Rural&#13;
New Yorker. .&lt;&#13;
ft a r S a l e .&#13;
Short horn ball 1J yrs. old, not registered&#13;
but eligibis. Full blood Hol&gt;&#13;
stein cow 4 yPS. old. Graue Durham&#13;
cow 4 yrs. old, both cows will be freak&#13;
milkers in a ew weeks. 2 &gt;eat canopy&#13;
top Surrey in good condition.&#13;
Will exchange surfer tor Shropshire&#13;
sheep or young cattle. 1(X&gt; bu. ear&#13;
corn at 80c.&#13;
J. G. SAYLES,&#13;
t-36 Plaintkld.&#13;
The DISPATCH Job Departraea&#13;
would like to print your envelopes.&#13;
For Sale.&#13;
Anyone in need of a well pump will&#13;
do well to call on as. Desiriftg to&#13;
put in a force pamp we have a Rood&#13;
second band pump in good running&#13;
order. It was working well in a 58&#13;
foot veil when changed for the force.&#13;
The pump may be seen at Teeple k&#13;
Cad wells.&#13;
ftottee.&#13;
A good Top buggy and oae horse&#13;
wauon for sale cheap. My own make.&#13;
S. STKES.&#13;
Special 15 Day Excursion to Frankfort&#13;
Crystal Lake and Traverse City.&#13;
The Ann Arbor R. R. will give iU&#13;
ananal Fall Excursion to the above&#13;
resorts Thursday Sept. 5. Train will&#13;
leave Lakeland at 9:26 a m. Fare for&#13;
round trip 94 50. Tickets will be&#13;
good for return on any regular train&#13;
until Tharsday Sept. 19 inclusive.&#13;
September is really tbe nicest month&#13;
in tbe year to travel and a vacation&#13;
spent at these charming resorts can&#13;
not fail to be enjoyable. For further&#13;
information call on nearest agent, t h e&#13;
Ann Arbor R. R. or write.&#13;
.1. J.Kirby,G. ?.A..&#13;
t-36 Toledo, 0 .&#13;
STATE FAIR&#13;
A L a b o * S a v l a * D e v i c e .&#13;
The illustration shows a truck used&#13;
around tbe markets to move barrels,&#13;
boxes, etc. It is simply a triangular&#13;
frame of two inch stuff cut two and&#13;
one-half feet long. Bolt the pieces&#13;
firmly together at the ends, screw a&#13;
bail bearing caster wheel under each&#13;
Tha\ C r e a t Pair&#13;
w i l l be held at&#13;
PONTIAC SBPT. 2 3 - 2 7&#13;
New Grounds. New Buildings.&#13;
Goodr Transportation.&#13;
Large Show. Fine Races.&#13;
Splendid attractions. Half&#13;
fare and excursion rates. Ask&#13;
your R. R. agent. We want&#13;
you to attend this year. You&#13;
will Bee a great fair.&#13;
I. H. Bu*tei-fie!d,&#13;
Secretary.&#13;
~ A XARKXT TRUCK.&#13;
end, and you have a truck which will&#13;
carry a barrel of produce or fosr bushel&#13;
boxes over any smooth surfaoe with a&#13;
slight outlay of strength. It can be&#13;
used on a barn floor and In many places&#13;
nround n farm. By laying a board&#13;
track it can be used to roll barrels of&#13;
|H&gt;tfttoe«. etc., from the wagon to bin&#13;
In etHlnr. About all the cost of this&#13;
-nwrtil truck will be thnt of the three&#13;
e*)iH;en«. whlc 1) will l.e \\\ to (JOrents, aceor.&#13;
iuj; to aizc— Ohio Farmer.&#13;
JUST&#13;
What You Want&#13;
Dust Proof&#13;
Letter Pile&#13;
a&#13;
For Sale at&#13;
THE DISPATCH OFF/Cl"&#13;
« 4&#13;
^ '&#13;
daaai aaaa ^mm^^hiOmim</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 05, 1901</text>
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                <text>September 05, 1901 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>No Copyright - United States</text>
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                <text>1901-09-05</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="7012">
                <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>6Utt fair Sept 28-27.&#13;
BanCTOtt Uir Oct 1-2-84:&#13;
;&gt;-A&#13;
•:t&#13;
i&amp;v&#13;
&gt; . ; ; * :&#13;
&gt; . ; '•&#13;
••?••&#13;
* '&#13;
Bri«htoo fair Oct 16-1748.&#13;
: Ami Arbor fair Oct. 12 84.&#13;
/ 8eaeral school district is this v&gt;&#13;
•gnity are as yet without teachers for&#13;
tbe coming year, the supply of teachers&#13;
bein« unequal to the demand—at&#13;
the prevailing wages. The re quiremeats&#13;
for teachers have been steadily&#13;
J8cr»a*iffff the lasttew years and the&#13;
district schools are finding that wages&#13;
will have to asoend the scale to correspond.—&#13;
Mil ford Times.&#13;
Edward A. Bowman,&#13;
DEPARTMENT&#13;
STORE . . . .&#13;
HOWELL. MICHIGAN&#13;
BOWMAN'S&#13;
Special Sale of:&#13;
Battenberg and Art Needle&#13;
Gopds.&#13;
ALSO&#13;
Big New Stock of China.&#13;
bower Prices than elsewhere&#13;
Trade at B O W m a n ' * It Pay.&#13;
T h e B u s y S t o r e ,&#13;
H o w e l l , M i c h .&#13;
Dan Murty was in Lansing the past&#13;
waek on bnttness.&#13;
# n . H. A. *iik of Ore gory *as in&#13;
to wn the last of last week.&#13;
Dexter expect* two PHD .routes to&#13;
•tart from that place Oct. 1.&#13;
8everalUdi«s in Fowlerriile have&#13;
bad ofcrbes stolen from tbe;1ine recently;&#13;
Jeff Parker and wife attended the&#13;
funeral of an unole at Nortfcfield the&#13;
past week.&#13;
Postmaster Swarthout enjoyed the&#13;
meeting of postmasters at Port Huron&#13;
last week.&#13;
A corn roast was indulged in at&#13;
Howell one evening last week by a&#13;
party of friends.&#13;
Already over 80,000 bushels of onions&#13;
have been contracted for from&#13;
Chelsea farmers. Whew!&#13;
Monday Oct. 7 is. the date of the&#13;
regular annual meeting of the board&#13;
of supervisors for this county.&#13;
J. L. Roche went to Dayton. Ohio,&#13;
with bis horse the Fast of last week,&#13;
where be will enter the races.&#13;
We hear many compliments on our&#13;
new signs. Thanks, friends, but you&#13;
see we believe in advertising.'&#13;
The company season will soon be&#13;
over and the "broke through the ice"&#13;
will take the place ot "couldn't swim."&#13;
Honey seems to be plenty this year.&#13;
W. A. Carr has taken seveial hundred&#13;
pounds from his few swarms&#13;
here in the village.&#13;
Owing the scarcity of other small&#13;
fruit the ladies of this vicinity are&#13;
busy putting up elder berries. They&#13;
make excellent pie timber.&#13;
Overcoats were m evidence the past&#13;
week.&#13;
Mrs. S. Walker of Detroit spent&#13;
Sunday with friends here«"~~&#13;
Who said m y ad. w a s not O K ?&#13;
Who said my work was not O K?&#13;
Who said my prices were not O K?&#13;
Nobody!&#13;
Nobody!&#13;
Nobody t&#13;
Then why not have all of your&#13;
work done where everything is&#13;
done on the square and everybody&#13;
is satisfied.&#13;
Black The Blacksmith,&#13;
Anderson, Mich.&#13;
The "Fitch" A qua tie Cream Separator*&#13;
If you're running a dairy,—be there one cow or one hundred—&#13;
your profit dedendfi upon the quality of cream you're&#13;
getting.&#13;
If you aren't getting all the cream there is in your milk,&#13;
you're losing just that much money.&#13;
By the old system of milk-setting you lose from ten to twenty&#13;
per cent, of the cream, besides doing a lot of unnecssary work.&#13;
Cold water is added to the warm milk and the sudden&#13;
change in temperture aud consistency causes the cream and&#13;
milk to separate: and because of the cream being the lighter it&#13;
is forced to the top.&#13;
You get all the oream in an hour after milking, your skimmilk&#13;
is sweet and clean, the cream is smooth, sweet, firm and&#13;
olean, and requires lees than half the time formerly required&#13;
to chum it.&#13;
The butter is better, sweeter, and you get from ten to twenty&#13;
per cent, more of it.&#13;
No pans, crocks or milk cans, needed, no extra labor, no&#13;
waste cream.&#13;
Yon can wash it in two minutes and have ready for the next&#13;
milking.&#13;
Taking it ail in all, it tares the women's work, costs lees&#13;
than one.half as much as a full equipment of pans, skimmers,&#13;
jars, crocks, cans, etc., besides saying enough cream in one&#13;
year to pay for itself tenfold.&#13;
Here are our prices:&#13;
No.1. Capacity, 10 gala.. $8.50»&#13;
No. 2. Capacity, 16 gals., 4.50.. M&#13;
No, 8. Capacity, 5W gala., 6.00.&#13;
Sold on trial and warranted by&#13;
Construction.&#13;
Soteuttlflc&#13;
rVktoljoTe* •&#13;
Ho&#13;
Lo»t&#13;
Cream* TEEPLE &amp; CAD WELL&#13;
Mrs. Laura Bennett of Saginaw&#13;
the goest of Mr*. H. D. Grieve.&#13;
Mrs. D. Howard of Hamburg visitad&#13;
M^s* A. .uGlntyre oyer Bonds;,.&#13;
Mrs. D. W. Mann of Detroit spent&#13;
Sunday with her sister Mrs. E. A. Signer.&#13;
Ed. T. Kearney of Jackson, Nebraska&#13;
was the guest of bis mother the&#13;
first of the week.&#13;
The Anderson farmers club will&#13;
meet next Saturday, Sept 14, at the&#13;
home of R. Clinton.&#13;
Miss Lottie Walker of Piainfield&#13;
was the guest of Miss Kittle Grieve&#13;
the last ot last week.&#13;
The Misses Qaigley and Collins of&#13;
Waterloo were tin guests of Mrs. E.&#13;
R. Brown the past week.&#13;
Will Daley ot Anderson was a caller&#13;
at this office on Friday last. We&#13;
are glad to note that he has so far recoved&#13;
as to be around.&#13;
Bro. Wright of the Bancroft Commercial&#13;
partook of a 1-os of cakes left&#13;
him by the cooking club of that village&#13;
—at last reports he was still allive.&#13;
We were in error last week in our&#13;
item in regard to Miss Belle Kennedy.&#13;
Her position was principal instead of&#13;
preceptess. Her address is Boyd Wis.&#13;
The Livingston Democrat of last&#13;
week contained the speech of W. H. S.&#13;
Wood before the state board of legislation&#13;
and tax commissioners. It was&#13;
certainly a great effort to benefit the&#13;
tax-payers of this county.&#13;
There is considerable interest being&#13;
aroused in the northwestern part of&#13;
tbis county over the tact that coal and&#13;
oil bavo been found. There will&#13;
probably be au investigation as several&#13;
wealthy men have been interested.&#13;
The Ann Arbor railroad went down&#13;
in the sinkhole north ot Lakeland&#13;
Friday last aud passengers had to&#13;
walk across the stretch where another&#13;
train met them. Several car* loaded&#13;
with gravel went down witn the roai&#13;
but no further damage was done than&#13;
delay traffic.&#13;
There is some talk of the state troop&#13;
meeting at Mackinac Island next year.&#13;
We have our doubts about its being a&#13;
very acceptable proposition to the&#13;
many cottagers and tourists unless a&#13;
wonderful change takes place in the&#13;
general state of things at these annual&#13;
encampments.&#13;
Here is another puzzle. A man&#13;
with seventy-tive cents in his pocket&#13;
was cooipeled to raise $1.00. So he&#13;
pawned his seventy-tive cents for titty&#13;
cents and then sold his pawn ticket to&#13;
a friend for titty cents, thus securing&#13;
the dollar needed. Who lost t.e&#13;
money by the transaction?&#13;
The weather bureau is short of me*-&#13;
engers. The position pays $360 a&#13;
year, and applicants with a grammar&#13;
school education can pass the civil&#13;
service examination, whicu will be&#13;
held in October. In specter Conger says&#13;
it is a good opening for young men&#13;
who wish to enter the weather service&#13;
as advancements to assistant observers&#13;
are generally made from messengers.&#13;
The rural delivery department of&#13;
the postofflce at Washington is making&#13;
inquiries in regard to the condition&#13;
ot the roads over which the free&#13;
delivery service extends. The depart*&#13;
meats want to know not the preeent&#13;
conditions of the roads, but what it&#13;
was during the winter as well. Inquiry&#13;
is also made as to how many&#13;
trips were lost on account of anow&#13;
drift and just exactly who was responsible&#13;
tor lot impassable condition ot&#13;
the roads, if such was the case. It behooves&#13;
the patrons of rural delivery&#13;
routes to see to it that roada are ia&#13;
good conditio* aH the time *ad that&#13;
if heavy tattt of anow occur faring&#13;
the aeasott, the roads be tot only opened&#13;
once but kept opvn.&#13;
On Friday Sept. 6,1901, in the aboye building at Buffalo, N. Y., a most&#13;
dastardly attempt was made on the iite of President McKinley. when one,&#13;
Czolgosz a young anarchist at 20 years of aae, shot him twice while in the&#13;
act of shaking his band at an informal reception. The fiend was overpowered&#13;
and is languishing in a cell awaiting the outcome of his fiendish act. it it&#13;
a wonder, also a pity, that Czolgosz was not killed on the spot and an example&#13;
made of one who would even tna«e an attempt on the life ot the Chief Executive&#13;
of the U. S. If McKinley Uves, ten years would be the extent of the&#13;
penalty which could be reduced to seven by good behavior.&#13;
At las? reports Pres. McKinley was on the wav to recovery and unless&#13;
something sets in to complicate the wounds he will be able to attend his duties&#13;
in a few months. In the meantime Vice Pres. Rossefelt has assumed the&#13;
duties encumbent upon him in a case of this kind, and although not a coward&#13;
duty to the people deraandsjthat be be protected by a body guard.&#13;
It is thought that Czolgosz belongs to a fyand of anarchists and every art&#13;
is being used to make him implicate others in the plot.&#13;
v$9&#13;
: • ( * :&#13;
W. W. Barnard was in Howell&#13;
first of the wees.&#13;
the W. S. Uaviland of Plainfield was a&#13;
caller at tbis office Tuesday. He waa&#13;
Mrs. W. W. Barn ard spent the past j d o w n *'*«r a load of feed at the mill.&#13;
Call again Mr. H.&#13;
H. E. Finch, E. C. Ort, Gns Smith,&#13;
Perry Blunt and Almond Greene attended&#13;
the G. A. R. encampment at&#13;
Cleveland this week.&#13;
Wm. Hemming way who has been&#13;
visiting relatives here for the.past two&#13;
months, returned to bis home in Howell&#13;
the first of the week.&#13;
The society of church workers will&#13;
hold their monthly tea with Mrs. Flora&#13;
Grimes next Wednesday, Sept 18th,&#13;
from 5 until all.are seived. All are&#13;
cordially invited.&#13;
Teeple &amp; Cad well have secured, the&#13;
contract tor painting the St. Marys&#13;
parsonage. They are using the Acme&#13;
New Era Pure Paint, the best paint&#13;
it is possible to mix.&#13;
Saturday afternoon last at their regular&#13;
review, the Lady Maccabees&#13;
served light relreshraents and had a&#13;
go&lt;x1 time generally. Before retiring&#13;
the members presented Mr3. A. Fran*.&#13;
cis a chair and Mrs. 0. V. Van Winkle&#13;
a fine picture in t^ken of esteem and.&#13;
faithful work as officers.&#13;
w&#13;
week with her mother in Howell.&#13;
Rosa Read returned to the Ann Arbor&#13;
High School to resume his studies&#13;
Monday, t&#13;
Dr. Harry Haze ot Lansing was the&#13;
guest of the Drs. Sialer and other relatives&#13;
the first ot the week.&#13;
Genevieve Boyle of-Leslie was mar&#13;
ried Wednesday. She is a sister of&#13;
Lillian Boyle of this place.&#13;
H. G. Briggs and wife and Mrs. F.&#13;
L. Andrews attended a birthday surprise&#13;
at'be home of Joseph Briggs,&#13;
north of Howell, Tuesday.&#13;
Rev. C. W. Rice h&amp;a accepted a call&#13;
to the Cong'l church at Grand Blanc,&#13;
the pastorate to begin Sept. 22. Mr.&#13;
Rice and family expect to leave for a&#13;
visit in Cleveland next week.&#13;
Saturday afternoon at one o'clock&#13;
there will be an auction of household&#13;
goods at the home of R. Baker in the&#13;
Dan Richards house. As Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
Baker leave for Richmond, Va., the&#13;
Monday following they wish to dis&#13;
pose of their personal property.&#13;
&lt;x/*&#13;
• ' • ' : # •&#13;
. \ ' '• •• . • ' . ' • &lt; » • •&#13;
.: fi&#13;
School Books&#13;
SJ&#13;
• v &gt; J&#13;
and School supplies of all kinds at prices&#13;
that defy competition.&#13;
Before&#13;
you buy get our PRICES on supplies.&#13;
A F e w Groceries&#13;
yet to close out at less than COST.&#13;
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^ittfttur-o^*©•** LAST SUN-&#13;
: $ $ M r s SUBJECT.&#13;
V » t » tbe Day I s the&#13;
XI{ 8 4 — T h e&#13;
f r o m the&#13;
E T U&#13;
B T U&#13;
' i : *&#13;
. lOetirrlsht t t t t ^ Lottla Klopsch, If. Y.]&#13;
S ^Washington, Sept a\—In this dieootuee&#13;
Br. Talmage shows the folly of&#13;
allowing forebodings to Influence us&#13;
and how expectation of evil weakens&#13;
aaddeetroys; text, Matthew vl, 34,&#13;
^SaHeieai unto the day is the evil&#13;
•thereof."&#13;
The life el every man, woman and&#13;
•ehtld is as closely under the divine&#13;
4jara as though such person were the&#13;
•only man, woman or child. There are&#13;
no accidents. As there is a law of&#13;
ti^ldiiff oji MW-raMons or„e aaiior&#13;
en short allowance; that a man should&#13;
stand neck; deep In harvests looking&#13;
forward* to famine;, that one should&#13;
feel the strong pulses of health inarch*&#13;
Ing with regular tread through all the&#13;
avenues of life and yet tremble at the&#13;
expected assault of sickness; that a&#13;
man should sit in bis pleasant home&#13;
fearful that ruthless want will some&#13;
day rattle the broken , window sash&#13;
with tempest and sweep the coals&#13;
from the hearth and pour hunger into&#13;
the bread tray; that a man fed by him&#13;
who own* all the harvests should expect&#13;
to starve; that one whom JBod&#13;
loves and surrounds with benediction&#13;
and attends with angelic escort and&#13;
hovers over with more than motherly&#13;
fondnests should be looking for a heritage&#13;
of tears! Has God been hard&#13;
with thee that thou shouldst be foreboding?&#13;
Has he stinted thy board?&#13;
Has he covered thee with rags? Has&#13;
he spread traps for thy feet, and galled&#13;
in the natural world, so there thy cup, and rasped thy soul, and&#13;
ft a law of trouble, a law of disaster, a wrecked thee with storm, and thunderlaw&#13;
of misfortune; but the majority en upon thee with, a life full of caot&#13;
the troubles of life are imaginary, 4amity?&#13;
^ . ^ _ . _* ^, *,-, * - J «-»_ Work of 8elf-Ex»mlo»tloa.&#13;
Many Christians think it a bad sign&#13;
to be jubilant, and their work of selfexamination&#13;
is a hewing down of their&#13;
brighter experiences. Like a boy with&#13;
a new jockknife, hacking everything he&#13;
comes across, so their self-examination&#13;
is a religious cutting to pieces of the&#13;
greenest things they can lay their&#13;
hands on. They imagine they are doing&#13;
God's service when they are going&#13;
about borrowing trouble, and borrowing&#13;
it at 30 per cent, which is always&#13;
a sure precursor of bankruptcy.&#13;
Again, the habit of borrowing&#13;
trouble is wrong because the present&#13;
is sufficiently taxed with trial. God&#13;
sees that we all need a certain amount&#13;
of trouble, and so he apportions it for&#13;
all the days and years of our life.&#13;
Alas for the policy of gathering it all&#13;
up for one day or year! Cruel thing to&#13;
put upon the back of one camel all&#13;
the cargo intended for the entire caravan.&#13;
I never look at my memorandum&#13;
book to see what engagements&#13;
and duties are far ahead. Let every&#13;
week bear its own burdens. The&#13;
shadows of today are thick enough.&#13;
Why implore the presence of other&#13;
shadows? The -cup is already distasteful.&#13;
Why halloo to disasters far&#13;
distant to come and wring out more&#13;
gall in the bitterness? Are we such&#13;
champions that, having won the best&#13;
the mttt of those anticipated nev&#13;
cr come. At any rate, there is no&#13;
cause of complaint against God. See&#13;
how much he has done to make you&#13;
nappy, bis sunshine filling the earth&#13;
with glory, making rainbow for the&#13;
storm and halo for the mountain,&#13;
greenness for the moss, saffron for the&#13;
caaud and crystal for the billow and&#13;
procession of bannered flame through&#13;
the opening gates of the morning,&#13;
chaffinches to sing, rivers to glitter,&#13;
none to chant and springs to blossom,&#13;
and overpowering all otyrer sounds&#13;
with its song and overarching all&#13;
•other splendor with its triumph, covering&#13;
up all other beauty with its garlands&#13;
and tutflashing all thrones with&#13;
its dominion—deliverance for a lost&#13;
world through the Great Redeemer.&#13;
Borrowing' Trouble.&#13;
I discourse of the sin of borrowing&#13;
trouble.&#13;
First, such a habit of mind and heart&#13;
la wrong, because it puts one into a&#13;
•despondency that ill fits him for duty.&#13;
I planted two rosebushes in my garden;&#13;
the one thrived beautifully, the&#13;
other perished. I found the dead one&#13;
on the shady side of the house. Our&#13;
•dispositions, like our plants, need sunshine.&#13;
Expectancy of repulse is the&#13;
cause of many secular and religious&#13;
failures. Fear of the bankruptcy has&#13;
nntorn -many a line business and sent&#13;
the man dodging among the note&#13;
shavers. Fear of slander and abuse&#13;
often invited all the long-beaked&#13;
"I do not think I&#13;
If he gives, he&#13;
BSiwfff?&#13;
wr&#13;
vultures of scorn and backbiting. Many&#13;
of the misfortunes of life, like hy-&#13;
«nas, flee if you courageously meet&#13;
them.&#13;
How poorly prepared for religious&#13;
duty ia a man who sits down under&#13;
the gloom of expected misfortune! If&#13;
he prays, he says,&#13;
shall be answered."&#13;
says, 'T expect they will steal the&#13;
money." Helen Chalmers told me&#13;
that her father, Thomas Chalmers, in&#13;
the darkest hour of the history of&#13;
the Free Church of Scotland and when&#13;
the woes of the land seemed to weigh&#13;
open his heart said to his children.&#13;
"Come, let us go out and play ball&#13;
or fly kite," and the only difficulty in&#13;
the piay was that the children could&#13;
not keep tip with their father. The&#13;
HfcCheynes and the Summerfields of&#13;
the church Who did the most good&#13;
tolled in the sunlight. Away with the&#13;
horrors! They distill poison; they dig&#13;
graves, and if they could climb so high&#13;
they would drown the rejoicings of&#13;
heaven with sobs and wailing.&#13;
Watching for Misfortune.&#13;
"You will have nothing but misfortune&#13;
In the future if you sedulously&#13;
watch for i t How shall a man catch&#13;
the right kind of fish if he arranges&#13;
'his fine and hook and bait to catch&#13;
lizards and water serpents? Hunt&#13;
Cor bats and hawks, and bats and&#13;
hawks you will find. Hunt for robin&#13;
redbreasts, and you will find robin redbreasts.&#13;
One night an eagle and an&#13;
owl got Into fierce battle. The eagle,&#13;
unused to the night, was no match for&#13;
^he owl, which is most at home in the&#13;
darkness, and the king of the air fell&#13;
helpless. But the morning rose, and&#13;
with it rose the eagle, and the owls&#13;
and the night hawks and . the bats&#13;
came a second time to the combat.&#13;
Now, the eagle in the sunlight, with a&#13;
stroke of his talons and a great cry&#13;
cleared the air, and his enemies, with&#13;
torn feathers and splashed with blood,&#13;
tumbled into the thickets. Ye are the&#13;
'Children of light. In the night of despondency&#13;
yon will have no chanco&#13;
-against your enemies that flock up&#13;
from beneath; but, trusting in God&#13;
-and *rt*nd*f in the sunshine of the&#13;
• promises, yon than "renew your youth&#13;
Utke the eagle."&#13;
Again, the habit of borrowing trou-&#13;
We Is wrong because it has a tendency&#13;
to make as overlook present blessing.&#13;
;To slake man's thirst the rock is cleft,&#13;
m&amp;6 cool waters leap into his brim-&#13;
*adng eup. To feed his hunger the&#13;
.Holds bow down with bending wheat,&#13;
sand the cattle come down from the&#13;
*• stover pastures to give him milk, and&#13;
the orchards yellow and ripen, casting&#13;
their jntay traits into *1* Up. Alas,&#13;
that amid such exuberance of blessing&#13;
jean should growl as though he were&#13;
in former encounters, we can go forth&#13;
to challenge all the future?&#13;
Do Not Worry.&#13;
Here are business men just able to&#13;
manage affairs as they now are. They&#13;
can pay their rent and meet their&#13;
notes and manage affair3 as they now&#13;
are, but how if a panic should come&#13;
and my investments should fail? Go&#13;
tomorrow and write on your daybook&#13;
or on your ledger, on your money safe,&#13;
"Sufficient unto the day is the evil&#13;
thereof." Do not worry about notes&#13;
that are far from due. Do not pile up&#13;
on your counting desk the financial&#13;
anxieties of the next 20 years. The&#13;
God who has taken care of your worldly&#13;
occupation, guarding your store&#13;
from the torch of the incendiary and&#13;
the key of the burglar, will be as faithful&#13;
in 1910 as in 1901. God's hand is&#13;
mightier than the machinations of&#13;
stock gamblers or the plots of political&#13;
demagogues or the red right arm of&#13;
revolution, and the darkness will fly&#13;
and the storm faH dead at his feet.&#13;
So there are persons in feeble health,&#13;
and they are worried about the future.&#13;
They make out very well now, but&#13;
they are bothering themselves about&#13;
future pleurisies and rheumatisms and&#13;
neuralgias and fevers. Their eyesight&#13;
is feeble, and they are worried lest&#13;
they entirely lose it. The*r hearing Is&#13;
indistinct, and they are alarmed lest&#13;
they become entirely deaf. They felt&#13;
chilly today and are expecting an attack&#13;
of typhoid. They have been&#13;
troubled for weeks with some perplexing&#13;
malady and dread becoming lifelong&#13;
invalids. Take care of your&#13;
health now and trust God for the future.&#13;
Be not guilty of the blasphemy&#13;
of asking him to take care of you while&#13;
you sleep with your windows tight&#13;
down or eat chicken salad at 11 o'clock&#13;
at night or sit down on a cake of ice&#13;
to cool off. Be prudent, and then be&#13;
confident. Some of the sickest people&#13;
have been the most useful. It was&#13;
so with Payson, who died deaths daily,&#13;
and Robert Hall, who used to stop in&#13;
the midst of his sermon and lie down&#13;
on the pulpit sofa to rest and then go&#13;
on again. Theodore Frelinghuysen had&#13;
a great horror of dying till the time&#13;
came and then went peacefully. Take&#13;
care of the present, and let the future&#13;
look out for itself. "Sufficient unto the&#13;
day Is the evil thereof."&#13;
Borrowing Mlsfortose.&#13;
Again, the habit of borrowing misfortune&#13;
is wrong because it unfits us&#13;
for it when it actually does come. We&#13;
cannot always have smooth sailing.&#13;
Life's path will sometimes tumble&#13;
among declivities and mount a steep&#13;
and be thorn pierced. Judas will kiss&#13;
our cheek and then sell us for 80&#13;
pieces of silver. Human scorn will try&#13;
to crucify us between two thieves. We&#13;
will hear the iron gate of the eepulchtr&#13;
creak and grind as it shuts in&#13;
tor these things br fwshedtngai They&#13;
who light imaginary woes will comi&#13;
out of breath into conflict with tb4&#13;
armed disasters of the future. They&#13;
ammunition will have been wastes'&#13;
long before they come under the gum&#13;
of real misfortune. Boys in attempt*&#13;
ting to jump a wall sometimes go so&#13;
'far back in order to get impetus that&#13;
when they come up. they are exhausted,&#13;
and these long races in order&#13;
to get spring enough to vault trouble&#13;
bring us up at last to the dreadful&#13;
realisation with our strength gone.&#13;
Finally, the habit of borrowing&#13;
trouble is wrong because it is unbelief.&#13;
God has promised to take care of us.&#13;
The Bible blooms with assurances.&#13;
Tour hunger will be fed; your sickness&#13;
wilt be alleviated; your sorrows will&#13;
be healed. God will sandal your feet&#13;
and smooth your path, and along by&#13;
frowning crag and opening grave&#13;
sound the voices of victory and good&#13;
cheer. The summer clouds that seem&#13;
thunder charged really carry in their&#13;
bosom harvests of wheat and shocks&#13;
of corn and vineyards purpling for the&#13;
winepress. The wrathful wave Will&#13;
klBs the feet of the great Storm Walker.&#13;
Our great Joshua will command,&#13;
and above your soul the sun of prosperity&#13;
will stand still. Bleak and&#13;
wave struck Patmos shall have apocalyptic&#13;
vision, and you shall hear the&#13;
cry of elders and the sweep of wings&#13;
and trumpets of salvation and the&#13;
voice of hallelujah unto God forever.&#13;
Dangerous Bridle Paths.&#13;
Your way may wind along dangerous&#13;
bridle paths and amid wolf's howl&#13;
and the scream of the vulture, but the&#13;
way still winds upward till angels&#13;
guard it, and trees of life overarch it,&#13;
and thrones line it, and crystalline&#13;
fountains leap on it, and the pathway&#13;
ends at gates that are pearl and streets&#13;
that are gold and temples that are always&#13;
open and hills that quake with&#13;
perpetual song and a city mingling forever&#13;
Sabbath and jubilee and triumph&#13;
and coronation.&#13;
Let pleasure chant her siren song;&#13;
'Tis not the song for me.&#13;
To weeping it will turn ere long.&#13;
For this is heaven's decree.&#13;
But there's a song the ransomed sing&#13;
To Jesus, their exalted King,&#13;
With joyful heart and tongue.&#13;
Oh, that's the song for me!&#13;
Courage, my brother! The father&#13;
does not give to his son at school&#13;
enough money to last him several&#13;
years, but, as the bills for tuition and&#13;
board and clothing and books come in,&#13;
pays them. So God will not give you;&#13;
grace all at once for the future, but&#13;
will meet all your exigencies as they&#13;
come. Through earnest prayer trust&#13;
him. People ascribe the success of a&#13;
certain line of steamers to business&#13;
skill and know not the fact that when&#13;
that line of steamers started the wife&#13;
of the proprietor passed the whole of&#13;
each day when a steamer started in&#13;
prayer to God for Its safety and the&#13;
success of the line. Put everything In&#13;
Gous hands and leave it there. Large&#13;
interest money to pay will soon eat up&#13;
a iarm, a store, an estate, and the interest&#13;
on borrowed troubles will&#13;
swamp anybody. "Sufficient unto the&#13;
day is the evil thereof."&#13;
LANG ON AMERICAN HrSTORTHe&#13;
8ay» It H i » Little. If Anr, of the&#13;
"OMnrro" Element.&#13;
American history, as far as I know&#13;
it, has not mystery enough for a really&#13;
exciting romance. Nobody of the highest&#13;
importance ever vanished away,&#13;
disappeared; nobody except a certain&#13;
regicide, and he was of English importation.&#13;
The amiable and beautiful&#13;
wife of none of your Presidents was&#13;
ever accused of plotting, with an Admiral&#13;
of your fleet, to blow up the&#13;
President in the White House, the&#13;
question of her guilt remaining deliciously&#13;
obscure. Not one of your&#13;
Presidents, after fighting his way to&#13;
within a lance's length of a hostile&#13;
general, ever vanished away, leaving&#13;
public opinion uncertain as to whether&#13;
he had gone, literally, to Jericho, or&#13;
been put down a well. No occupant&#13;
of the White House ever had two&#13;
nephews who disappeared from the&#13;
state prison, nor did any sane citizen&#13;
ever torn up who claimed to be&#13;
one of these missing children. Finally,&#13;
your republic never kept a captive&#13;
in a black velvet mask, concerning&#13;
whom it was disputed whether he was&#13;
a European diplomatist, a valet, s&#13;
royal duke, a distinguished actor, a&#13;
member of the Bonaparte family, a&#13;
high-class Irish patriot or—the rightful&#13;
President, whose place was being&#13;
occupied by an impostor. The chronicles&#13;
of Europe, especially of France,&#13;
Scotland, and England, are rich in this&#13;
kind of Rembrandtlike effects. We&#13;
have plenty of chiaroscuro, especially&#13;
of oscuro, and you have little, if any,&#13;
of this element Hawthorne felt the&#13;
want; he had to Invent his own mysteries."&#13;
All your many historical novelists&#13;
feel the want—Andrew Lang,&#13;
in New York Independent&#13;
* &gt; • • BIVESPE MUfMMi^MWrttiM'unmmMnimiimi i i n r&#13;
E BISHOP GRANT, OF INDIANAPOLIS. \&#13;
Bishop A. Grant of Indianapolis,&#13;
Ind., writes the following letter:&#13;
ladtoaapolis, Indiana, &gt;&#13;
3349 N. Pennsylvania Street \&#13;
Parana Medicine Co*, Columbus, 0./&#13;
Qenitemen—^i have been using Pe»&#13;
run* tor catarrh and can cheerfully recommend&#13;
your remedy to anyone who&#13;
wants a good medicine. "—A* Qrant&#13;
Prominent members of the clergy are&#13;
giving Peruna their unqualified endorsement&#13;
These men find Peruna especially&#13;
adapted to preserve them from&#13;
catarrh of the vocal organs which has&#13;
always been the bane of public speakers,&#13;
and general catarrhal debility incident&#13;
to the sedentary life of the&#13;
clergyman. Among the recent utter&#13;
Writes His Jtecommefldatio&amp;&#13;
fpr # e Pampas Catarrfe •&#13;
Rcmedyrl^P^^Ba* ,&#13;
The day was when men of prominence&#13;
hesiuted to give their testimonials&#13;
to proprietary medieinee for pub*&#13;
lieatton. This remains true today of&#13;
most proprietary medicines, But Peruna&#13;
has become so justly famous, its&#13;
merits are known to so many people of&#13;
high and low station that none heal*&#13;
j j tst^s to ssft hla name in print reoomxnendlug&#13;
Peruna.&#13;
The following letters from pastore&#13;
who use Peruna speak for thema«rret:&#13;
Rev. E. G. Smith, pastor of the Presbyterian&#13;
Church, of Greensboro, Oft*&#13;
writes:&#13;
"My little boy had been suffering for&#13;
some time with catarrh of the tower&#13;
bowels. Other remedies had failed, but&#13;
after taking two bottles of Peruna the&#13;
trouble almost entirely disappeared. FOt,&#13;
this special malady I consider it well&#13;
nigh a specific."—Rev. B. G. .Smith.&#13;
Rev. A. S. Vaughn, Eureka Springey&#13;
Ark., says: "I had been prostrated bf&#13;
congestive chills and was almost dead;&#13;
as soon as able to be about, I com*&#13;
menced tho use of Peruna. I $ook flvei&#13;
bottles; my strength returned rapidly:&#13;
and I am now enjoying my usual&#13;
health."—Rev. A.. S. Vauhgn.&#13;
If you do not derive prompt ajntt sat*&#13;
isfactory results from the nee of Peruna,&#13;
write at once to&gt; Br. Hartmany&#13;
giving a full statement of your caseand&#13;
he will be pleased to- give you hie&#13;
A. '&#13;
•«'f&#13;
ances of noted clergymen on the cura- valuable advice gratis,&#13;
tive virtues of Peruna is the above one Address Dr. Hartman, Freeldent of&#13;
from BUhlp Grant * The Hartman. Sanitarium, C o l u m b i a&#13;
CARNEGIE PAYS OLD DEBT.&#13;
Gives Gencroaa Interest on • Small Loan&#13;
of Loo*. Ago.&#13;
Who would not be a creditor of Mr.&#13;
Andrew Carnegie? An American firm&#13;
doing business in London recently asked&#13;
Its patrons to suggest ideas for the&#13;
distribution of Mr. Andrew Carnegie's&#13;
wealth. Mr. Henry D. Lennox of Glasgow&#13;
advised that the millionaire repay&#13;
a loan of 11 shillings made by his aunt&#13;
to aid the Carnegies to emigrate from&#13;
Dunfermline in 1847. Mr. Lennox computed&#13;
that at compound interest £$&#13;
was due. Mr. Carnegie has investigated&#13;
the matter and found that Mr.&#13;
Lennox was quite right in bis claim.&#13;
The debt will not only-be paid, but the&#13;
children of Mrs. Lennox will be endowed&#13;
with a sum sufficient to keep&#13;
them in comfort as long as they live.&#13;
Mr. Lennox said in his letter: "When&#13;
the Carnegies left Dunfermline they&#13;
were so poor that the mother had to&#13;
borrow money to take them to the&#13;
United States. My aunt, though a&#13;
poor woman herself, helped them-out&#13;
to the extent of 11 shillings, but the&#13;
promise to return the loan evidently&#13;
escaped the memory of the beneficiaries,&#13;
because they never repaid the&#13;
sum borrowed. My aunt is dead, but&#13;
she left two daughters, one of whom&#13;
is the wife of a humble joiner in Dunfermline,&#13;
while the other is a maiden&#13;
lady engaged in a small drapery business&#13;
In Edinburgh. Don't you think&#13;
that if Mr. Carnegie knew this he&#13;
would be willing to do handsomely by&#13;
his mother's friends?" Mr. Carnegie&#13;
called in person on the children of his&#13;
benefactor, and thanked them for tho&#13;
generosity of their mother. Prom&#13;
minus 11 shillings to plus £70,000,000&#13;
is a financial transformation that&#13;
would have stagered the good genie of&#13;
Aladdin's lamp, but Mr. Carnegie&#13;
found it not overhard.—London Express.&#13;
Reasons&#13;
WOMEN AS READERS,&#13;
'Bead' Vja*&#13;
It is one thing to wish to have&#13;
truth on our side, and another thing&#13;
to wish to be on the side of truth,—&#13;
Archbishop Whateley,&#13;
"Mission Style" Furniture.&#13;
The very newest thing in the way of&#13;
furniture is called the "mission style,"&#13;
and was first suggested to the inventor&#13;
by seeing an old Spanish mission chair&#13;
brought from California in 1894. Its&#13;
quaint outlines and interesting construction&#13;
indicate the possibility of a&#13;
scheme of handmade furniture built&#13;
on the old early English architectural&#13;
lines. Its name, "mission furniture,"&#13;
is aptly applied. There ia a restfulness&#13;
to the eye and hand in the different&#13;
pieces, and, though generally&#13;
straight in line, there is nothing angular&#13;
in effect Persons accustomed to&#13;
Icvlshly carved framework might not&#13;
approve of its unconventional and simple&#13;
structure. Built of native ash,&#13;
stained in browns, grays and greens; it&#13;
Is guiltless of ornament, and no carving,&#13;
not even a molding, diverts attention&#13;
from the severely straight&#13;
lines. There are solid-looking chain*&#13;
for the dining-room with rush and&#13;
leather bottoms, quaintly shaped writing&#13;
tables for the library, cabinets for&#13;
china, and all sorts of comfortable&#13;
rockers in which to indulge in an af&gt;&#13;
ternoon siesta.&#13;
Why They Do Not&#13;
on Polities*. Vij&#13;
The criticism often has been made* f&#13;
that in railroad trains, waiting, rooms*&#13;
dining rooms, street cars, everywhere,&#13;
men are absorbed in the daily papers&#13;
while women either do not read-them&#13;
or merely skim the fashion and society&#13;
columns. Women, it 1B said,, take no.&#13;
interest in current events; and. hence&#13;
are not fitted to participate in public&#13;
affairs. A philosophical explanation&#13;
may be found in the old adage; 'They&#13;
have no need of keys who have no doors&#13;
to unlock." Men of all classes scan the&#13;
dally paper to learn the latest develop*&#13;
ment in politics with as much, avidity&#13;
as the average school girl seizes upon&#13;
the next chapter in the serial story.&#13;
They observe the political situation in&#13;
other countries, because, in a measure^&#13;
it is interwoven with their own. They&#13;
feel the keen interest because they&#13;
themselves can help in the making of&#13;
this history. It is natural that men&#13;
should be deeply Interested ih. matters&#13;
which they themselves have power to&#13;
shape and control. Why should women&#13;
give that close attention to public af- .&#13;
fairs? Who cares for their opinion&#13;
after it is formed? For how much&#13;
does it Count in influencing government?&#13;
It is said that the next year&#13;
after the women of Colorado were en&gt;&#13;
franchised more works on political eeo^sj;&#13;
nomy were sold than In ail Its previous,&#13;
history. The women of that state are&#13;
today as careful readers of. the newspapers&#13;
as are the men. Give women&#13;
everywhere the same incentive and&#13;
they will become as well, informed; IX&#13;
id true that the masses of' women do&#13;
not keep so closely in touch srith current&#13;
events as do the masses of men,&#13;
and yet thousands of thi» generation&#13;
have an Intelligent understanding: off&#13;
them where ten of the past had' no&gt;&#13;
knowledge whatever. There is not one&#13;
of the vital questions crowding upon us&#13;
so closely and rapidly at the present&#13;
time which affects women as deeply as&#13;
it does men.—Susan R, Anthony/ in&#13;
Chicago Chronicle.&#13;
The- Canning of Yrnltai.&#13;
Pn- tile early work of excavation at&#13;
Pompeii, in the pantry of one ot the&#13;
old and mostly destroyed palaces, an&#13;
earthen vessel was found,, which, when&#13;
opened, showed a quantity of well preserved&#13;
figs. Examination proved thjfaf&#13;
they- had been eooked and pot into t S b *&#13;
vessel whffe hot The cover had a&#13;
smalt aperture through which the&#13;
steam escaped and drove out the air&#13;
alsov The aperture was then securely&#13;
closed with wax, and the fruit&#13;
mafned sweet for twenty centui&#13;
From this arose the modern practice&#13;
canning fruits, vegetables end meats.&#13;
A woman always has her suspicions&#13;
of a man who never lies to her.&#13;
NOME MADE PHILOSOPHY.&#13;
A boy and a cat never forget a deception&#13;
or an injury.&#13;
It is the early worm that catches&#13;
the eye of the hungry bird.&#13;
The blue laws are for the poor, the&#13;
Is/og green are for the wealthy.&#13;
8000* statesmen make better eitlsens _ _&#13;
on the eooiing board than they do ia j t 0 tee him softer wltt" tooXhachi.&#13;
Hoarding up wealth is like building&#13;
up a pyramid of sand along the tnrle&gt;&#13;
lent river; when the flood comes H It&#13;
soon washed away.&#13;
Some people abed too many political&#13;
tears over oppressed humanity, and&#13;
shed too little truth in regard to the&#13;
process of oppression.&#13;
It the day never comet when men&#13;
will divulge their secrets to each&#13;
other, the day of perfect civilisation&#13;
will never dawn on earth.&#13;
The vainest nan I ever saw, wag&#13;
the fellow who would call his wile at&#13;
midnight and make her light the hung&#13;
/&#13;
I * ' " I ' » » • • : W'^tfS&#13;
•;•• w&#13;
lisnw) II /-1.111,1 sss&#13;
- * * % •&#13;
I f&#13;
CHAPTER XIV.&#13;
A* hs spoke U s irab gave a loud,&#13;
-ehriB whistiev at the same time leaping&#13;
across the spring and striking the&#13;
star* in the face. But Shubal was aot&#13;
to be Overcome so easily by one man.&#13;
The wbUtlo ha4 alarmed him, and&#13;
when he saw the fellow leap, he whs&#13;
not wholly unprepared, The blow in&#13;
the fao» blinded btiia f:r a moment, bui&#13;
fX soon as hbv eyes served him, he&#13;
caught his assailant by the throat and&#13;
* hurled him to the ground.&#13;
*What sort of a man are you?" the&#13;
slave eried, as he held the .rascal&#13;
down. **&#13;
'•'1 am a juggler," replied the Arab,&#13;
holding fast upon ShubaVs tunic.&#13;
"Let go my clothing, or HI kill you."&#13;
The slave might have carried out&#13;
his threat, but before he could make&#13;
any decided movement to that end he&#13;
found himself surrounded by a body&#13;
of armed men. Quick as thought he&#13;
leaped to his feet, leaving a pieca of&#13;
his tunic behind him, and made a&#13;
movement toward his horse; but he&#13;
was too late to reach the saddle. Hal"&#13;
a dozen strong hands were laid upon&#13;
him, while as many more were busy&#13;
with the horses of the females. The&#13;
princess cried aloud for help, and&#13;
would have leaped from her saddle had&#13;
she not been held back.&#13;
'^Fair lady," spoke a rough voice, in&#13;
a harsh, strange dialect, "you must&#13;
keep still, and give us as little trouble&#13;
as possible."&#13;
"But you will not harm me; good&#13;
sirs."&#13;
"You have no occasion for fear,&#13;
lady. But tell me—who are you?"&#13;
"I am the daughter of Aboul Cassem,&#13;
the prime minister of Damascus."&#13;
Could .'Albia have moved quickly&#13;
enough, she would have prevented her&#13;
mistress from answering this question,&#13;
but the story had b?en told.&#13;
Ulin innocently thought that the&#13;
name of her father would strike the&#13;
marauders with awe, and that they&#13;
would fear to molest her further, but&#13;
In this she was somewhat mistaken,-&#13;
as subsequent eventvpfoved. — "&#13;
''By my life, comrades," cried he,&#13;
who seemed to be the leader of the&#13;
party, "we have found a rich prize.&#13;
Hold still, noble lady. We will'not&#13;
harm you. Let us look to this unruly&#13;
slave of yours, and then you shall&#13;
be properly cared for. You might have&#13;
fallen into wor»e hands than ours."&#13;
When Ulin had collected her senses,&#13;
so that she could observe and compre-&#13;
. hend things about her, she looked to&#13;
see her real situation. She counted&#13;
eight of the Arabs, and she had no&#13;
doubt that they were robbers. Four&#13;
of them were securing the slave, while&#13;
the other four were watching the&#13;
horses. Shubal was very soon pinioned,&#13;
and restored to his feet, after&#13;
which she and Albia were lifted from&#13;
• their saddles.&#13;
"Don't be alarmed," said the leader,&#13;
as the princess cried out for mercy.&#13;
"You shall be restored to your horses&#13;
very soon. We have horses close at&#13;
hand, and when they are brought, you&#13;
shall be on your way again."&#13;
"You will set Shubal free?"&#13;
"He shall be free soon enough. Rest&#13;
easy a few moments, lady. One of&#13;
my men has gene after our animals.&#13;
We left them upon the other side of&#13;
the wood.**&#13;
"But why have you taken us from&#13;
our horses?" asked our heroine.&#13;
**You will see that anon, fair lady.&#13;
Ah—here comes my man. Now, my&#13;
fair damsels, you shall understand the&#13;
whole matter. These horses of yours&#13;
are not such ones as I would have you&#13;
ride. I have some here much better."&#13;
"What does' he mean?" asked Ulin,&#13;
speaking In a low tone to her bondmaiden.&#13;
"Wait," replied Albia. trying td conceal&#13;
her real suspicions. "They may inform&#13;
us."&#13;
Before Ulin could ask another question&#13;
the Arab leader came forward&#13;
with two horses, upon which he directed&#13;
his companion to fix the ladies' saddles;&#13;
and when this had been done he&#13;
turned to the princess, and informed&#13;
her that she might take her seat again.&#13;
She would have opposed the movement,&#13;
but a strong hand was laid upon&#13;
her, and, almost before she knew it,:&#13;
she was once more upon her saddle.&#13;
"You will excuse me," the fellow&#13;
said, "but as this horse will not carry&#13;
you quite so easily as your own, I will&#13;
secure yon in your place."&#13;
As he spoke he passad a strong cord&#13;
about Ulin's body, and fastened it to&#13;
the girth upon either side. The same&#13;
thing was done for Albia, and then&#13;
Attention was directed to Shubal, who&#13;
was seated upon another strange&#13;
horse, and likewise hound in his place,&#13;
"Whit can they mean?" asked the&#13;
princess* gaining Another opportunity&#13;
to speak to her atteadant&#13;
"I daft aot gue.s," said Albia.&#13;
"JUja Apt speak in, that way," urged&#13;
Win.:*Tell me wheiydtt"tnink^r&#13;
command yon." &gt; • '&#13;
"Mir, dear, mistress,", replied the&#13;
trcnd^aldeny reluctantly, 'their meaning&#13;
is # l # * t Aftoulb; • Th^s*v-hors«3&#13;
will followthehr maStl*!*^ *-&#13;
'/Ha^Tj^Bd aj» we t. prisoners?" yL'^&amp;\;pfc:to4&amp;]wpf:tor the&#13;
b«t,. s.We m»y not be harmed."&#13;
At this juncrure the Arabs had&#13;
mounted 'their horses, three of them&#13;
taking the animals which belonged to&#13;
their prisoners, and at a word from the&#13;
leader they tfcere^on the move. Ulin&#13;
instinctively clung to the rein to hold&#13;
herself steady, but her horse noticed&#13;
not the guiding of her hand. The leader&#13;
of the Farty rode ia advance; then&#13;
followed two more of the gang; then&#13;
came two females; and behind them&#13;
followed the others, with the slaves&#13;
under charge. Through the wood they&#13;
rode at an easy pace, and when they&#13;
had gained the open plain beyond they&#13;
struck into a swift gallop. Ulin had&#13;
discovered to her satisfaction that the&#13;
strange horse paid no attention to the&#13;
rein, so she only sought to keep an&#13;
easy seat. She was weak with fear&#13;
and alarm, and all sorts of dreadful&#13;
pictures arose to her Imagination as&#13;
she sped on. She could not speak with&#13;
Albia, for the clattering of hoafs&#13;
drowned her voice. What did it&#13;
mean? Where would it end? "&#13;
On they sped, straight over the plain&#13;
—on, on, on—without halting or turning—&#13;
on through the darkness of the&#13;
night—on, league after league—until&#13;
the gray streaks of morning appeared&#13;
In the eastern horizon. Another wood&#13;
was before them, and when it was&#13;
reached, the party stopped. Not far&#13;
distant, where a clump of noble palms&#13;
reared aloft their plaited foliage, a&#13;
crystal spring burst forth from the&#13;
green earth, and the Arabs held their&#13;
panting horses back from the tempting&#13;
beverage.&#13;
"Now, lady, you may find repose,"&#13;
said the leader, as he .came and lifted&#13;
Ulin from her seat. "We shall remain&#13;
here a few hours. ~X-wiU h?. with&#13;
you again presently."&#13;
He turned and handed Albia to the&#13;
ground, and then went to where his&#13;
followers were taking care of Shubal.&#13;
"Albia, what will they do with us?"&#13;
cried the princess, clasping her hands&#13;
in terror.&#13;
But the bondmaiden could not answer.&#13;
If she held suspicions, she&#13;
dared not speak them.&#13;
"O. I wish I had not taken this false&#13;
step! It Is a punishment for my sin!"&#13;
"Hush, dear mistress. It is our fate.&#13;
It is no punishment. Wait until we&#13;
know what this Arab means to do&#13;
with us."&#13;
"What can he mean?" It must be&#13;
something dreadful. Why has he&#13;
taken us away so far? 0, Albia, I am&#13;
frightened."&#13;
"No, no, sweet lady.&#13;
They will not kill us."&#13;
"Ah," murmured the princess, with&#13;
folded hands, "there may be a fate&#13;
from which death would be a happy&#13;
escape!"&#13;
The bondmaiden shuddered, and&#13;
from her thoughts at thai moment&#13;
she 'could frame no reply which she&#13;
dared to speak .aloud.&#13;
CHAPTER~XV.&#13;
The Arab's Purpose.&#13;
As Ulin sat upon the greansward&#13;
with her back against a palm tree,&#13;
and one hand resting upon Albia's&#13;
arm, she could take a clear view of hsr&#13;
captors. The sun was Just tinging the&#13;
distant mountain tops with its golden&#13;
light, and the last shadow of the night&#13;
had gone. The Arabs had watered the&#13;
horses and left them where they could&#13;
crop the green grass, and were now&#13;
gathered together, listening to the&#13;
words of their chief.&#13;
They were rough, dark looking men,&#13;
these Arabs. Their clothing was&#13;
sparse and poor, and their skin swart&#13;
and dirty: but their weapons were&#13;
bright and keen and their horses in&#13;
most perfect condition, both as to&#13;
health and cleanliness. A little while&#13;
they conversed together, and then one&#13;
of them brought forth the bundle&#13;
which had been taken from Shubal. It&#13;
was opened by the leader, and the articles&#13;
of clothing which it contained&#13;
were spread out upon the ground.&#13;
Folded up in a silken scarf was found&#13;
a purse, from which fell a score or&#13;
more of broad gold piece3; whereupon&#13;
the marauders gave utterance to various&#13;
exclamations of satisfaction.&#13;
"They are robbers," said Ulin, as&#13;
she saw them dividing the gold.&#13;
"Certainly." responded Atbia. "I&#13;
have suspected that from the first"&#13;
"Can they belong to Julian's band?"&#13;
"Why should you ask such a question,&#13;
my mistress? Yon know that&#13;
Julian would - never have such men&#13;
. about him."&#13;
J As she spoke, the Arab leader cams&#13;
^^^&#13;
Have a hops.&#13;
t 0 * a r d f t j f t * ^ ^ A , £ ^&#13;
them fey » tew moments, he paid, ad* ^JT*.&#13;
d r e s j t M ^ ittinc***: :'% -V. .&lt; **•*•&#13;
"I hope yon tod yourself none the&#13;
worse for this little deviation frost&#13;
your* original course; for, let me assure&#13;
you, the meeting has AJtorded&#13;
me much pleasure Doss the princess&#13;
Ulin know who is speaking to her?"&#13;
"No, sir." replied UHn.&#13;
"Then she shall know into whose&#13;
protecting hand she has had the fortune&#13;
of falling. I am Al Abbas, Does&#13;
the name sound familiar?'"&#13;
"No, sir,"&#13;
'.'It is familiar enough to me," said&#13;
Albia.&#13;
• "Ah, pretty one—and what know&#13;
you of it?"&#13;
"I have heard the name, sir, when&#13;
speech has been made touching a cer-&#13;
]4A4B Arab robber,' whose deeds had&#13;
caused* him to be feared by honest&#13;
travelers."&#13;
The rascal seemed pleased with this&#13;
remark, and smilingly returned:&#13;
"You have hit the truth, my fair&#13;
damsel. I am the robber, Al Abbas;&#13;
and I am a terror to those who fear&#13;
to lose their money. But, my dear&#13;
lady," he continued, turning to the&#13;
princess, "you cannot have any such&#13;
fears. We have found some little&#13;
money belonging to you, and I take&#13;
the liberty of asking you if you have&#13;
any Jewels about you."&#13;
He approached nearer as he spoke,&#13;
and held out his hand. Ulin knew not&#13;
how to refuse, and she furthermore&#13;
saw that refusal would be useless; so&#13;
she drew forth from, her bosom a casket&#13;
of chamois skin, bound with bands&#13;
of gold, and handed it over. The robber&#13;
took it, and opened it; and as his&#13;
eyes rested upon the sparkling Jewelspearl,&#13;
diamond, emerald, topaz and&#13;
opal—he gave utterance to an exclamation&#13;
of delight&#13;
"By my life, lady, you came -well&#13;
provided. I will take care of these&#13;
gemB for you. They will be much&#13;
safer in my custody."&#13;
"I understand you," said the princess,&#13;
as she saw the fellow close the&#13;
casket and place it in his own bosom.&#13;
"You mean to keep those jewels, as&#13;
you do the gold which you have&#13;
found."&#13;
"You are shrewd at guessing, lady."&#13;
"I think I have good grounds for my&#13;
opinion, sir. Take them if you want&#13;
them; and in return I only ask that&#13;
you let us go free. You are welcome&#13;
to all that you have if you will give&#13;
us our liberty."&#13;
j " Y n n w?ll rrnt Ytntnrn y n n g o "&#13;
"I do not wish to rest long."&#13;
"Nor would I have you. But for the&#13;
present you had better lie down upon&#13;
this soft grass, and find some slight&#13;
repose. I will- call you when we&#13;
move." And as be thus spoke, he turned&#13;
away and joined bis companions.&#13;
"Will they let us go?" murmured&#13;
Ulin, letting her head fall upon hei&#13;
companion's shoulder.&#13;
"I hope so, my mistress. But come&#13;
—we cannot learn their intent until&#13;
they plesse to tell us; and In the meantime&#13;
you bad better seek some rest&#13;
You are tired and worn. Lay youi&#13;
head upon my lap—so. And we wilJ&#13;
hope for the best."&#13;
Albia drew the head of her mistresgently&#13;
down, and in a little while the&#13;
weary princess was asleep. And the&#13;
bondmaiden did not long remain upon&#13;
the watch. Her own lids were heavy&#13;
and very soon her senses were locked&#13;
In slumber.&#13;
Al Abbas moved noiselessly to the&#13;
spot where the worn maidens slept,&#13;
and presently others of his band joined&#13;
him.&#13;
"By the blood of Cu3h," muttered&#13;
the robber chief, "they are beautiful&#13;
enough! The lady Ulin is the fairest&#13;
maiden I ever saw."&#13;
"They are both of them far too beautiful&#13;
to be roaming at large," said another&#13;
of the gang.&#13;
"They are worth more than jewels,*&#13;
added a third.&#13;
"You are right," responded the leader.&#13;
"This princess would sell for a&#13;
diadem, beyond the Syrian desert&#13;
But let them sleep, and when they arc&#13;
rested we will call them. If wc&#13;
would turn the prize Into gold, wc&#13;
must not suffer it to fade from neglect."&#13;
After this the robbers sat down tc&#13;
their morning's meal; and when they&#13;
had done eating some of them went tc&#13;
sleep upon the grass.&#13;
At the expiration of two hours Ulin&#13;
awoke with a sharp cry, and caugh!&#13;
her companion convulsively by the&#13;
arm, and cried:&#13;
"O!—and it was only a dream. How&#13;
frightful it was."&#13;
"Only a dream, dear mistress. Wc&#13;
are safe and well."&#13;
"Thank heaven!"&#13;
Al Abbas, as soon as he saw thai&#13;
the girls were awake, gave a shrili&#13;
whistle, such as he had sounded on a&#13;
previous occasion, and in an instant&#13;
his men were upon their feet The&#13;
horses, also, noticed the signal, foi&#13;
they lifted their heads and moved ur&#13;
together, as though ready to serve&#13;
their masters. ' • » , - .&#13;
(To be continued.)&#13;
mww&gt;»u'' • ii 5*&#13;
vOBjaa, • ;SJeSJT.' oe*&#13;
,_ who creeps along beat&#13;
... with his, spinal cdfuranReeling in&#13;
a condition to snap Jtke a phjsetem at&#13;
any minute, would readily give ft treat&#13;
deal to get out of his dilemma, and yet&#13;
this is only the commonest form by&#13;
which lumbago seises on and twists&#13;
out of shape the muscles of the beck.&#13;
This is commonly known as backache,&#13;
a crick in the hack, but by whatever&#13;
name H may he known, and however&#13;
bad it may be. 10 minutes vigorous&#13;
rubbing with St Jacob's Oil on the afflicted&#13;
part will drive out the trouble&#13;
and completely restore. It is a thing&#13;
so easily caught, it may be wondered&#13;
at why there is sot more of | t but&#13;
[hecause it is so easily cored by St. Jacobs&#13;
Oil may be the very reason that&#13;
we hear so little of i t&#13;
iii m&gt;;mn|mi(im&lt;iminmSiim JP AIJJT SipKS&#13;
i "Tte'rttk. m pacing az*&#13;
tlutaK materials* wSoox^u wfc*&#13;
ting on. ~ Wstb best k&amp;d and&#13;
oil you take twos with #rdinary&#13;
mixed paint three; irf^St&#13;
Devoe ready paint noneeach&#13;
package is this label:&#13;
iV-&#13;
, . , [ ' • • • » ' :&#13;
1 lis&#13;
' ' • &gt; . &gt; . . &gt;&#13;
'•ymi^&#13;
It %-wtrange h&lt;w forgetful fffrtn?&#13;
raortals are.&#13;
ladle* Can Wear Shot*&#13;
One size smaller after using Allen's&#13;
Foot-Ease, a powder. It makes tight&#13;
or new shoes easy. Cures swollen, hot,&#13;
sweating, aching feet, ingrowing nails,&#13;
corns and bunions. All druggists and&#13;
shoe stores, *J5c Trial package FREE&#13;
by mail. Address Allen S. Olmsted,&#13;
Le Roy, N. Y.&#13;
It doesn't always pay or a gtrl to have too&#13;
many strings to her beau&#13;
"""""""THE BEST LAUNOBY WORK Igsr odcoenres .b y1 0thc.e Guseet othf eB guesnsu Binleea. ching Blue, All&#13;
Even in a civil suit the lawyers can be rery&#13;
uncivil to each other.&#13;
thIifs ypoattin ht aavte a annyy tifsaMat^te tkof cfear* m awmi thla y , ypeaainrt diaega loerr aafbtoera tl af tt.h eW wae aaraitease, ftteat*f '*w ' obaiari etxo pdeon sweh. at i„a rifht abeat U at --*-&#13;
toB toetU doow y Ionustrrsueclft! ©aa*d* ,a s , the jeatlet F. W. Drvoa A CO*PA*T. - *&#13;
Paint-safety for f6ii -'fis&#13;
Devoe as in no other.&#13;
Pamphlet on painting ixtt if y e *&#13;
mentkm this paper.&#13;
. • t . i &lt; ' '&lt;V •*'' • j : - - " f V ) , '.Ii*&#13;
', •; , • ' • ' '. \ ••, . . " * :t • '&#13;
-• . - . , ' , : . • • : • . • • • • • • - &gt; • ^&#13;
• : - „ • • • ' . . . , . : ^ r ; r : ; " : , . • , , , • , « •&#13;
GOOD-PAINT * DEVOB. CHICAT^&#13;
'SSSS *£iTh*s*»rtIfi Wat*&#13;
n Q O D f i V "tw MtcovftTi flies&#13;
• a f f C w l ^ O ¥ quick reflef aad cam&#13;
eases. Book of tettlneatoisaa4«e S»1S»^~&#13;
rsss. ss»s^e*sss*s»s*.a«a&amp;a«M&#13;
~~fr-&#13;
-•••'/•.;: : T ' %&#13;
• ' • • &gt; : . ; • . . ; # * &amp; &amp; .&#13;
.••./-mm&#13;
, " . * !&gt;)r. y„"&#13;
•••WM&#13;
&lt; «&#13;
W.N.U.—DETROIT—NO.37—lOOt&#13;
Whei ansasrine Ads. kiarflf Mssttas thJt sssfr W&#13;
Little minds are tamed and subdued&#13;
by misfortune; but great minds rhw&#13;
above It—Washington Irving.&#13;
FALLING ..-if- • ti••••.••.••;&#13;
.Y.-/U*&#13;
Prevented by Shampoos of CUTICURA-SOAR&#13;
and light dressings of CUTICURA, purest of&#13;
emollient skin cures. This treatment at once&#13;
stops falling hair, removes crusts, scales, and&#13;
dandruff, soothes irritated, itching surfaces,&#13;
stimulates the hair follicles, supplies the roots&#13;
with energy and nourishment, and makes the&#13;
hair grow upon a sweet, wholesome, healthy&#13;
scalp when all else fails.&#13;
MILLIONS USE CUTICURA SOAP Assisted by CUTICUBA QINTUENT, for preserving, purifying, and beautifying&#13;
the skin, for cleansing the scalp of .crusts, scales, and dandruff, and the&gt;&#13;
stopping of falling hair, for softening, whitening, and soothing red, rough,,&#13;
and sore hands, for baby rashes, itchings, and chafings, and for all the purposes&#13;
of the toilet, bath, and nursery. Millions of Women use CunqoLk&#13;
SOAP in the form of baths for annoying irritations, iiiflimunstione, tnd\~&#13;
excoriations, for too free or offensive perspiration, in the form of washes for -&#13;
ulcerative weaknesses, and for many antiseptic purposes which readily sug- •&#13;
gest themselves to women and mothers. No amount of persuasion csau&#13;
induce those who have once used these great skin purifiers and heauUflerato&#13;
use say others. CUTICUBA SOAP combines delicate emollient ptopeiUes&#13;
derived from CUTICURA, the great skin cure, with the purest of ***•»«««*;&#13;
ingredients, and the most refreshing of flower odours. No other wudkmttd&#13;
soap is to be compared with it for preserving, purifying, and beautify lag:&#13;
the skin, scalp, hair, and hands. No other foreign or domestic toOH soap,,&#13;
however expensive, is to be compared with it for all the jmrposes of the&gt;&#13;
toilet, bath, and nursery. Thus it combines, In O K I SOAP at O n Pwcav&#13;
the BEST skin and complexion soap, and the BEST toilet and baby soap bathe&#13;
world.&#13;
Complete Kxtorn«l and Internal Treatment for Every Humoyrv&#13;
J &gt; « i f ConaiatiB* of Ccncuaa SOAT, to steanse the skla of eraata aaar&#13;
n i a f l a f h l 1 1 * t t scales and soften the tUekanad enttetej&#13;
t U l a l l t a l l l a f l lastaatlv allay Hehlag, tnaawinartoa, a ^kTS&gt;r iJa? sierY ^ «A«Sxtr haeeault; SancdrC latm ofctvenK Asn fKsdueonLtv tosj crortroet • flat e&gt;atl m\ag,ttrtriac,barning,and sealr ski wn,va c«a.«ip••.a«a d 1 iWstobralds.i iaBilriltu«Jia« hl•)wepltoiti:lrli.NilUKiWiis,B wmtRtaTloSsiSaO ofN h^at7irC, lwwbireta* ia*lilo aesk«e8 afa^l]l e. 8oat Dwoii ASX&gt; CBMM3GAS. CoaruaATiuK, Sole Pn»pa^ Bossao, V. 8. A. mwraj ywr Teas 25*&#13;
::/i'r.&#13;
yy.m&#13;
'-PJ&#13;
•sr&gt;&#13;
'PI&#13;
AI«lttom,»rsiKalfwfta»riH. ULL1 SSSfB.S» TsaV&#13;
*M&#13;
. . _ ' u . ^ - - &gt; . _ : J - —&#13;
i \&#13;
• • H P&#13;
t'fV*-' .-sv-&#13;
.;iiitV,4&#13;
• . • * * . •&#13;
5K mm *' ."&gt;'»».'&#13;
mtmimu&#13;
• • ' * • ' .&#13;
* " *&#13;
tfr&#13;
^ • * &amp; .&#13;
« * * • 33=&#13;
Pvl. ANDREWS 4b CO. MOVMITOM.&#13;
I I THU*8DAYt SEPT. 12,1901.&#13;
i 1..-. :• . ..;•'&#13;
m&#13;
m&#13;
fwt:&#13;
a**.&#13;
a: it&#13;
f On the morning of August 28,&#13;
the su?faoe of the water in the&#13;
mill pond at Nor veil, Jackson&#13;
county, was found covered wUh&#13;
dead and dying fish of various&#13;
kinds and sizes. They were&#13;
scooped top by the hundreds and&#13;
carted away for fertilizing parposes&#13;
and to avoid the stench.&#13;
*Wi.&#13;
sV&#13;
Pickerel weighing Tiveand six&#13;
pounds and bass weighing 5 and 6&#13;
pounds,alflo fine perch and blue&#13;
gills were among them. Over&#13;
800 fine pickeral and bass which&#13;
were not dead were taken to&#13;
Sweezey'e lake near by, where&#13;
they revived. The mill pond is a&#13;
large one but it was not supposed&#13;
it containedso many rand such&#13;
fine fish. The cause of the epidemic&#13;
is attributed to the poisoning&#13;
of the water by dead and rotting&#13;
weeds. The water was drawn&#13;
down to enable a new bridge to&#13;
be builtand when it was again rais&#13;
ed, this was the result.—Stockbridge&#13;
Brief.&#13;
Question Answered.&#13;
Yes, August Flower still has the&#13;
larpest sale of any mefieine in the&#13;
civilized world. Your mothers' and&#13;
grandmothers1 never thought of nsing&#13;
anything else for Indigestion or Biliousness.&#13;
Doctors were scarce, and&#13;
they seldom beard of Appendicitis,&#13;
Nervous Prostration or heart failure*&#13;
etc. They used Anguet Flower to&#13;
clean out the system and stop fermentation&#13;
of nndigeestd food, regal ate the&#13;
action of the liver, stimulate the nervous&#13;
and organic action of the system,&#13;
and that is all they took when feeling&#13;
dull and bad with headaches and other&#13;
aches. Yon only need a few doses&#13;
jj£ | h '•: Stats Pair a t Foattas, ''&#13;
The Jfinci annual b i t of the&#13;
State Agricultural Socity will be&#13;
held atPontiacvSept. 28-27. New&#13;
building have been, erected on the&#13;
grounds of the Oakland County&#13;
Agricultural Society which are&#13;
ample to recommendate the state&#13;
fair. The main building has 40,&#13;
000 square feet of floor and the&#13;
grand stand seats 5,000. The&#13;
speed purses aggregate 14,400 in&#13;
eleven classes. • The premium list&#13;
has been greatly enlarged and&#13;
there is a special list for live stock&#13;
-ownedm-Michigan; HPheman*-&#13;
agement has. arranged for a large&#13;
number of special attractions&#13;
among which are the famous diving&#13;
horses which leap from a platform&#13;
B0 feet in height into a tank&#13;
of water 12 feet deep. We think&#13;
that all our readers will enjoy the&#13;
fair, if they attend this year. See&#13;
ad in this issue.&#13;
85&#13;
• * &gt; ^ '&#13;
MM&#13;
?#*'&#13;
' ; , • &gt; ' - • • ' • . '&#13;
: - # &gt; ; •&#13;
• = \&#13;
% • &lt; &amp;&#13;
H- w V.!Km •&#13;
^•"•"W'*' HiUfRIEiilJ mmmmm mfm&#13;
A Shocking Calamity.&#13;
"Lately befell a railroad laborer,"&#13;
writes Dr. A. Kellet, of Williford,&#13;
Ark., "His foot WBS badly crushed,&#13;
bat Backlen's Arnica Salve quickly&#13;
cured bim. Its simply wonderful for&#13;
Burns. Boils, Piles and all skin eruptions.&#13;
It's the world's champion healt-&#13;
r. Gove guaranteed. 25c Sold hv&#13;
P A. Sigler. , -&#13;
of Greens Augnst Flower, in form, to&#13;
make you satisfied there is nothing&#13;
serious the matter with you. Get&#13;
Green's Prize Almanac. Sold by F.&#13;
A. Sigler, Pinckney.&#13;
Cheap Excursions to San Francisco and&#13;
,t-88 Return.&#13;
The Grand Trunk Railway system&#13;
will have on sale at all its&#13;
ticket offices tickete at extremely&#13;
low rates to San Francisco- Dates&#13;
of sale being from Sept. 18 to the&#13;
26 with privilige of stop overs,&#13;
side trips, etc. The final limit of&#13;
the ticket will be Nov. 15 1901.&#13;
For information^ rates, conditions&#13;
of tickets, inquire of all&#13;
agents of the Grand Trunk Railway&#13;
system and its connections.&#13;
Twenty years ago twenty per&#13;
cent of the employes of the New&#13;
York Central railroad were discharged&#13;
yearly for drinking. Now&#13;
only about one per cent, yearly&#13;
are so dismissed. This registers&#13;
a decided advance in public opinon&#13;
on the temperence question, at&#13;
least where it comes to th* em?&#13;
ploy meat of men in responsible&#13;
engeering or commercial positions.&#13;
The distinguising feature of the&#13;
eighth international temperance&#13;
congress, recently held in Vienna&#13;
was the general aggreement that&#13;
the use of alcohol could be dispensed&#13;
with in medicine and wise&#13;
ly omicted from ordinary life. The&#13;
congress was composed of representatives&#13;
of all the leading countries&#13;
of Europe, including officials&#13;
from France and Busia. Celebrated&#13;
phsicians and directors of inebriate&#13;
institutions and insane asylums&#13;
made addresses agreeing&#13;
that the results of their experiments&#13;
and experience showed that&#13;
alcohol was neither a food, a source&#13;
of strength, nor even the best of&#13;
stimulants, from a medical standpoint.&#13;
They declared that instead&#13;
of alcohol diminishing the dangers&#13;
from infectious diseases, it reduced&#13;
considerably the power of resistance&#13;
to them. A distinguished&#13;
Vienna doctor, Professer Max&#13;
Kassowitz, who is regarded as the&#13;
leading authority on children's&#13;
diseases, warned parents against&#13;
the extremly injurious effects of&#13;
even the smallests quantity of alcohol&#13;
.upon children, saying it led&#13;
frequently to the severest functional&#13;
derangement and sowed the&#13;
* * * • mm **V •"&gt; •wams mamm mmm*&#13;
ortland Prats has&#13;
erally to eoal consumers. In an&#13;
advertisement published in a $fc&#13;
Soon, New Brunswick, newspaper&#13;
Lthiegh coal is quoted at *6 a ton&#13;
for broken; 15.20 for egg and $5.89&#13;
for stove and chestnut "The&#13;
price of Lehiegh coal in this oity&#13;
is 16.25/1 says the Piess, "St.&#13;
John is SOD miles further from the&#13;
American coal fields than Portland,&#13;
and the dominion government&#13;
imposes a duty of 60 cents&#13;
a ton on American coal. One&#13;
would like to know why Ameriean&#13;
coal costs so much more in&#13;
Portland than in S t John." In&#13;
view of the prevailing prices of&#13;
coal, the people of Detroit are as&#13;
much concerned as the ipeople of&#13;
Portland in this puzzle, which&#13;
only the coal trust itself oan unravel.&#13;
Slop tbe Cooffb and works off tb«&#13;
Col*.&#13;
Lsxative BromoQuioine 'tablets cure&#13;
a cold in one day. No'ore, ao pay.&#13;
Price 25 cents.&#13;
mmmm*. mn*&#13;
er&#13;
'' Miohigan has taken one step te&#13;
W g M t o i ^ a ^ ; ^ f i e r t 4 j P f c e r » i ^&#13;
ohildreo under 16, while «ider&#13;
are to be eonfined witt p « -&#13;
criminals or allowed in the.&#13;
courtroom wheh trWt ol older&#13;
persons are in progress.' The law&#13;
was passed as tberesultof the efforts&#13;
of the society for the Prevention&#13;
of Cruelty to Chidren.&#13;
OS. a. M a NMios of' u» PA&gt;^|« vSajTS&#13;
Mid County, htld at tin Prob»M CflUe la 16«&#13;
VUUf#of Bow*U, on ijatarttftr th« ITtlv &lt;Uy o l&#13;
AagMl In to* ye»r OM thnostpii nlae &gt;QBdif4&#13;
aid one. fumal, Enjpiae A. stow*, Ja*f» ot&#13;
Ptobtlt. Jn tt» m»tur ofthp M U U of&#13;
— BUA8W, MARTIN, D#OM«#&lt;t&#13;
Jfowooo#« emu. Uvt, Exeeator oi tat uimy&#13;
of wtd^coMitd Md rvprot'ttti to this court thai&#13;
h* 1« ready to roador oti fliul «oopant lo «*td MUte.&#13;
Thor^aponlt It ordtrad that S»tur&lt;Uf the iuk&#13;
&lt; aj of September ant. *t 10 o'aiooit la the torn-&#13;
DooD,at Mid Prohato Office, Sw aft*lxa«dfor tht&#13;
lMKiog o( Mid acoouat.&#13;
Aad U li fartbar ordarad that a oopy of tola&#13;
order be published ia the Plnekaay DISPATCH,&#13;
a aewepepar printed aad clroutallnK la aald&#13;
county, 8 iuooeaaive weake pravloue to Mid darof&#13;
hearinf. w&#13;
EUGENE A. STO WE.&#13;
Jad«e of Probate.&#13;
W&#13;
TOCaieaCoia inOacDay&#13;
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tab-*&#13;
lets. All druggists refund ibe raoney&#13;
Kit fails to cure. E. W. Grove's signature&#13;
is on each box. 25c.&#13;
Rush!!&#13;
seeds of epilepsy, liver affections&#13;
and dropsy*&#13;
Working Night and Day.&#13;
The busiest and mightiest little&#13;
tbinff that ever was make is Dr.&#13;
King's New Life Pills. These pills&#13;
change weakness into' strength, listlessnpss&#13;
into energy, brain-fag into&#13;
mental power. They're wonderful in&#13;
building up the health. Only 25c per&#13;
box. Sold hy F. A. Sigler.&#13;
The Jackson citizen thinks that&#13;
the whole system of the encampment&#13;
of our state troops is in need&#13;
of reorginization and renovation.&#13;
"It shonld be discussed by the&#13;
press and the people, and a pnblic&#13;
sentiment shonld be stimulated&#13;
that will compel a complete overhauling&#13;
of onr state militia system.&#13;
The present method of state&#13;
encampments have became an expensive&#13;
and really useless means&#13;
of both military dicipline and instruction.&#13;
The state is paying up&#13;
wards of a hundred thousand dollars&#13;
a year for a farce and a fizzle.&#13;
If this disgrace cannot be remidied&#13;
it should be abolished. As a&#13;
means of dicipline it is of little&#13;
good.&#13;
COMMISSIONER'S NOTICE,-HUrt© at Mlehi&#13;
gao. Coooty of Lfviagetoa, SS,— Probate Court&#13;
for eaid oouatjr. Eat&amp;teof&#13;
ELIZAWCTB E. CAXPBKLL, Deoeated.&#13;
The underelgned having been appointed, by the&#13;
Judge of Probate of taid county, commlnioMai&#13;
on claku in the matter of eaid eetate, and tax&#13;
montbe from the 7th day of Aug. A. D. 1901, bav.&#13;
ing been allowed by aald Judge of Probate to all&#13;
persons holding claims against said estate la&#13;
which to present their olaincs to as for examination&#13;
and adjustment;&#13;
Notice 1B hereby gtren that we will meet oa&#13;
the seventh day of November A. D., 1801,&#13;
anid on the seventh day of February, A. D.&#13;
190*, atone o'clock p. m. of each day, at the&#13;
Pinckney -Exchange Bank In the village of&#13;
Pinckney io said county, to,receive and examine&#13;
such claims.&#13;
Dated: Howell, Mich., Aug. 7, A. D. 1901.&#13;
DAVID H. Mowaaa&#13;
on Claims.&#13;
In giving effect to the new interpretation&#13;
of the rule, as to second&#13;
class mail matter, the postoffice&#13;
authorities have decided&#13;
that so-called newspapers and&#13;
publications which advertise&#13;
guessing contests, ond offer si mi-&#13;
R u s h ! R u s h ! Everybody is in a hurry&#13;
J u s t noW you are in great h a s t e for&#13;
Job&#13;
work. W e can s u p p l y you with w h a t&#13;
you w a n t , be they&#13;
»* a n d T V e d d i n g -&#13;
S t a t i o n a r y . Y o u will find our&#13;
prices and&#13;
lar returns of doubtfnl beneficence&#13;
to their subscribers, shall be&#13;
deprived of the privilfge of the&#13;
mails after October 1, unless they&#13;
ceas* to instill interest in their&#13;
colums by catering to people who&#13;
take a chance on anything. The&#13;
decision of the authorities will relieve&#13;
the mails of tons of newspapers&#13;
which can only be classed&#13;
as frieght, and will force their&#13;
publishers either to suspend publication&#13;
or resort to the more difficult&#13;
task of printing newspapers&#13;
of quality instead of sending junk&#13;
through the mails.—Editorial in&#13;
the Evening News, August 5.&#13;
Work&#13;
" • *&#13;
satisfactory. Try us aad see.&#13;
A night of Terror.&#13;
"Awful anxiety was felt for the&#13;
widow of the brave General Bnrnbam&#13;
of Machias, Me., wben tbe doctors said&#13;
she wonld die from pneumonia before&#13;
morning14 writes Mrs. S. H. Lincoln,&#13;
wbo attended her that fearful ni?bt,&#13;
bat she begged fbr Dr. King's New&#13;
Discovery, which had saved her life,&#13;
and cared he* of contraption. After&#13;
takiug, she slept all niybt. Farther&#13;
use entirely eared her." This mar-&#13;
•ttlloua medicine is guaranteed to care&#13;
all Throat, Cheat and Lang Diseases.&#13;
Only *0.! and a $1 00 Trial bottl »»*&#13;
frt-e at b\ A, Hi^lir'* dru/ *tore.&#13;
Stood Death off.&#13;
E. B. Munday, a lawyer of Henrietta,&#13;
Tex., once foiled a grave dipper.&#13;
He says: *• My brother was very low&#13;
with malarial fever and jaundice. I&#13;
persuaded bim to try Electric Bitters,&#13;
and he was soon roach better, but&#13;
continued their ase until he was&#13;
wholly cur d. I am sure Electric Bitters&#13;
saved his live." This remedy expels&#13;
malaria, kills disease germs and&#13;
purifies the blood; aids digestion, regulates&#13;
tbe liver, Kidneys and Bowels,&#13;
cures constipation, dyspepsia, nervous&#13;
diseases, kidney troubles, female complaints;&#13;
gives perfect health. OnJy&#13;
50c at F. A. Sigler,* drag store.&#13;
The ab'e bodied tramp who applies&#13;
your door for /nod should be told&#13;
there is plenty of work for those wbo&#13;
are -willing to work.—Tell him to&#13;
earn his bread or go hungry. To con&#13;
tinOB to Feed lazy tramps at a time&#13;
when farmers are offering $1.50 a day&#13;
and board, is to place a premium on&#13;
idleness. Don't do it, unless be is sick&#13;
and unable to work.—Cnesaning&#13;
gas. Yoa may get ;ooled if you feed&#13;
him even then.&#13;
Clint (nba.&#13;
L'litU ;• i!ic Katiu« of "clinttalM" a kind&#13;
of ;;ii'l;rc:i.i imror snusbnilo isju.itle.in&#13;
hi:II» »f t!:c Irnvrs of a pnlm or of tlie&#13;
p:;uii;:hi I.::,*, ("hurrahs nri? worn by&#13;
ti.v p l o w u n a . cuwkt'epers a n d coolies&#13;
of Bonjr.'il mid Assam.&#13;
A FREE PATTERN&#13;
(joar own aalectioa) to •••ry aaoacriber.&#13;
e a l j SO eenta a year.&#13;
MS CALLS,&#13;
MAGAZINE1 TEAR&#13;
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Lady ac«au wanted. Send l*r terms.&#13;
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A B A Z A R L finJTERNS&#13;
^ ^ ^ ^ W W M M rWIWIWlmm M i l&#13;
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Oatjr M and 15 cents tech—none higher,&#13;
Aak'far the*. Sold in nearly mmy city&#13;
end town, or By nail froei&#13;
THE Mo CALL C^..&#13;
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Pay your Subscription this month&#13;
Railroad Guide.&#13;
DISPATCH OPFICB, | &lt;tae &lt;» t|» DISPATCH.&#13;
»ipti©»&#13;
/»&#13;
Salt Valanl&gt;!«&gt; on Harler.&#13;
Comt:;ou snlt. wliiob has long bad u&#13;
reputation with many farmers for Its&#13;
value as a fertilizer for barley, while&#13;
others disbelieved in Its efficacy, bna&#13;
been shown at tbe Canadian experiment&#13;
farms to be a most valuable agent&#13;
tor producing an Increased crop of that&#13;
graln^a#hile it la of much less use wben&#13;
applied to crops of spring wheat or&#13;
oat*, tend plaster or gypsum has also&#13;
proved to be of some value as'a fertilizer&#13;
for barley, while of very little&#13;
terries for wheat or oats.&#13;
fowta* ike Torot*.&#13;
For the fall and winter crop In the&#13;
north,&#13;
Oa tbe ro4tatatb day ef Jul?&#13;
Sow your ffaraipa, wet or dry.&#13;
In many parts of the northern and&#13;
middle states tradition fixes the 25th of&#13;
July as the proper time for sowing flat&#13;
tnmlps for wtnti&#13;
&gt; MO 9TKAH9MI* UMK9*&#13;
Popular route tor Ann Arbor, Toledo&#13;
ADCI points East, Sooth, and for&#13;
Howell, Owo»so, Alma, Mt Pleasant&#13;
Cadillac, Manistee, Traverse City and&#13;
points in Northwestern Michigan.&#13;
W. H . BXNNKTT,&#13;
G. P. A. Toledo&#13;
states turnips are sometuaes sown ee&#13;
the end of Augnst&#13;
PEPJB MARQUETTE&#13;
Ra&amp;Lxoad., 7 a a . 1 . 1 9 3 1 .&#13;
Trains leave South Lyon as follow*:&#13;
Ft r Detroit and Eest,&#13;
10:36 a. m., S:04 p. m., 8:58 p. m.&#13;
For Grand Rapids, North aud West,&#13;
9:45 a. m., 2:08 p. m. 6:20 p. &lt;sw&#13;
For Saginan and Bay City,&#13;
10:3« a. m., 3:04 p.m., 8:58 p.m.&#13;
For Toledo and South, 10:36 a. m,&#13;
FaaMKBiT, H. P. MOBLLEU,&#13;
Agant,8ootti Lroa. i*. p. A., UairoU.&#13;
HraadTmak Ballwar ttysttss.&#13;
6»:.4454 pa.. mm,.| Jiaaetakrma&gt;wad. luaat*tr totaitt.i naanUa »r :i»a, ai.&#13;
ft 4:45 p.m.&#13;
mail aa&lt;l ***. _&#13;
^ Laaox, F&#13;
at»x»ttoea|7asa.m. I&#13;
Jaekaoa. Lmox, aod&#13;
latenMfUi&#13;
5:1%p.m. f&#13;
esseh Bttweea iwekmrn aa« Pttfsit.&#13;
-^-..½&#13;
•••%f^.fy " . i . M H 1 )&#13;
"V..&#13;
• ••f&#13;
y:&#13;
wa.&#13;
- ^&#13;
.i^ij^^iMAiL^ii.-i.M3.^mi^ .^. ii M j . j .&#13;
p - f f " ^5¾¾&#13;
m&#13;
. f ' V &lt; " * ' •&#13;
••• • / i . ' . • &gt; • &lt; - • ; . • ' • • • : • • • • : ± y * \ • " • ' ' • • • ' • • &gt; - • ; : ' " ' - •• ' ' ' ; &gt; ' " -&#13;
.1 . . ; &gt; . , r-T-TTS;&#13;
s&#13;
I C»*lljtowa&gt;v Q r e w a I n B l u e s t Pe&gt;f&gt;&#13;
f e o t l o * (feeler Iarlgratloa.&#13;
Cauliflower )s a favorite vegetable all&#13;
| over the civilised world, and where 4t&#13;
can be grown successfully and by men&#13;
who know what the plant requires it&#13;
is a very profitable product The chief&#13;
requirements are a very rich soil, well&#13;
prepared, and an abundance of moisture.&#13;
Where irrigation is practicable&#13;
there the highest measure of success is&#13;
*""»l W«"»g' mmm * • T&#13;
rr- -:1.&#13;
V&#13;
m&#13;
K i&#13;
TEEPLE &amp; C ID WELL.&#13;
ALL ABOUT M I L L ^ .',&#13;
W h e n t o S o w / a n d Whzt Va*ie*y.&#13;
Hsiril o n t h e L a n d aneYIVcoUa 5Iu.a.^.-c.&#13;
I ani a s k e d a n u m b e r of q u e s t i o n s ref&#13;
a r d i n g millet, say? L. W*. Ltglity of&#13;
P e n n s y l v a n i a in Tlie N a t i o n a l Stockm&#13;
a n a n d Farmer. TVhea.shall I s o w ?&#13;
Millet c a n be s o w n a n y t i m e after cotn&#13;
planting u p to'Augur-1 in o u r latitude.'&#13;
L a s t s e a s o n w e w e r e in t h e rainless&#13;
district, a n d t h e ground w a s a s dry as&#13;
p o w d e r for a f e w uioaths, until t h e beg&#13;
i n n i n g of August, w h e n w e and a&#13;
shower. I then seeded t w o and onehalf&#13;
acres, and iu about 45 or 1)0 d a y s&#13;
it cut o v e r s e v e n tons of e x c e l l e n t hay,&#13;
. a n d it m a d e t h e g r o w t h w i t h t h e aid&#13;
of only t w o very light Showers. "With&#13;
plenty of heat and m o i s t u r e It g r o w s&#13;
very rabidly.&#13;
W h a t variety? I tried a n u m b e r cf&#13;
varieties, but t h e G e r m a n or Golden&#13;
millet g a v e me the, m o s t s a t i s f a c t o r y&#13;
results. H o w much seed t o t h e acre?&#13;
If corded rather thick. It m a k e s a finer&#13;
g r o w t h a n d better quality of hay. It&#13;
a l s o is—more likely to smother—tbew&#13;
e o d s . But the w e e d s of ton m a k e us&#13;
trouble In the early s o w n millet.&#13;
T h e ideal method to get a h e a d of the&#13;
w e e d s is to prepare the land In the&#13;
spring a n d then allow the w e e d s to germinate&#13;
a n d . h a r r o w l i t thoroughly, a l l o w&#13;
another germination and t h e n , about&#13;
t h e middle of July, m a k e a very flue&#13;
?cod bed uml s o w , and very f e w w e e d s&#13;
will s r o w . But m a n y t i m e s w e w a n t&#13;
to use t h e land for other purposes or&#13;
tiie w e a t h e r will not a l l o w .&#13;
I often g r o w n crop of Canada peas&#13;
or o a t s before millet, a q j j t w h c n tha-t is&#13;
off disk the ground thoroughly and&#13;
seed t o millet, t h u s t a k i n g t w o crops in&#13;
• n e seasou. I s o w the seed broadcast.&#13;
S o w only clean;seed.&#13;
I s it hard on the land? Should I use&#13;
stable m a n u r e or fertilizer?. Yes, It is&#13;
hard on the land. Like t i m o t h y , it&#13;
t a k e s all its food from near 'the sur*&#13;
face. B e i n g a quick grower, It needs&#13;
plenty of readily a v a i l a b l e plant food,&#13;
so I prefer to p l o w or work in w e l l rojt-&#13;
. ted s t a b l e m a n u r e and use a quick aet-&#13;
— Gig fertilizer. A - g ^ e d fertilizer on my&#13;
soil I found to be 150 p o u n d s of S. C;&#13;
cock phosphate, 50 p o u n d s nitrate of&#13;
soda and 50 pounds m u r i a t e of potash.&#13;
It m a k e s a good soiling crop. * For&#13;
h a y I like to cut It w h e n t h e earliest&#13;
h e a d s h a v e m a d e seed, b u t t h e a v e r a g e&#13;
h e a d s a r e j u s t In blossom. If properly&#13;
cured, t h i s m u t e s a very palatable hay.&#13;
T W I N S I L O S .&#13;
Of L a r v e C a p a c i t y a n d B u i l t t o L a s t&#13;
a L i f e t i m e .&#13;
I a m moved to send y o u a little&#13;
s k e t c h of t w i n silos recently put up*by&#13;
a large dairy c o m p a n y in N e w Jersey.&#13;
T h e s e silos are of large capacity, being&#13;
22 feet in diameter a n d 30 f e e t ' h l g h ins4de.&#13;
and m a d e of brick and stone&#13;
throughout.&#13;
T h e plan is t h a t g i v e n b y Professor&#13;
K i n g in the W i s c o n s i n bulletin on silos,&#13;
' w i t h one n o t a b l e exception. T h e d o o ^&#13;
•WANTED 99&#13;
Weak men, weak women, pale&#13;
men, jale women, nenous men, nervous&#13;
women, debilitated men, debilitated&#13;
women, to take Knill's* Red Pills&#13;
ior Wan People. They restore Health,&#13;
Strength and Bftnuty. Wake up,&#13;
eraoe up by taking them before the&#13;
hoi weather. They are the great body&#13;
builder and developer, Spring Tonic&#13;
and Blood medicine, 25c a box.&#13;
Koills While Liver Pills are the&#13;
great Liver In via orator, Bowel Regu*&#13;
later. 25 doses 25c.&#13;
Knill's Blue Kidney Pills cure&#13;
Backache and Kidney troubles. 25c&#13;
a box.&#13;
DOUBLE BARRELED NEW JERSEY SILO.&#13;
w a y h a s no w o o d e n frame, a s g i v e n in&#13;
the bulletin, but the door is clamped&#13;
tq t h e inside of the opening by strong&#13;
rods, w h i c h p a s s to a timber a c r o s s the&#13;
outside. There Is thus no w o o d w o r k&#13;
to decay that cannot be e a s i l y replaced.&#13;
Those silos cost about $800 e a c h and&#13;
are calculated to last a lifetime, w r i t e s&#13;
a correspondent to Rural N e w Yorker.&#13;
assured.&#13;
No land In a state of nature is sufficiently&#13;
fertile to grow cauliflower to a&#13;
high degree of perfection. As so much&#13;
manure is required, it matters less&#13;
what the quality of the land may be&#13;
PINE CAULIFLOWERS.&#13;
t h a n w h a t the w a t e r supply. Thirty&#13;
or forty thousand p o u n d s per acre of&#13;
barnyard manure suffice to m a k e the&#13;
soil conform to requirements, no matter&#13;
w h a t Its previous condition m a y&#13;
h a v e been.&#13;
Cultivation requirements are about&#13;
the s a m e a s those of c a b b a g e , t h o u g h a&#13;
little more exacting. A t the T e x a s e x -&#13;
periment station, w h e r e t h e soil 4s&#13;
about as unfavorable as possible, a s&#13;
liigh a s $703.50 w o r t h per acre has been&#13;
g r o w n , and it is c l a i m e d t h a t t h e land&#13;
on w h i c h t h i s crop w a s g r o w n w a s not&#13;
sufficiently manured.&#13;
Cauliflower has been successfully&#13;
g r o w n at the B e e v i l l e substation by&#13;
Irrigation, and it is a specialty with&#13;
m a n y truck g r o w e r s in that section.&#13;
T h e c u t is a photo of three s p e c i m e n s&#13;
g r o w n by a successful truck farmer of&#13;
Beeville. T e x .&#13;
J o h n s o n Grasa.&#13;
J o h n s o n g r a s s lias received considerable&#13;
attention in K a u s a s - l a t e l y . It is&#13;
e x c e e d i n g l y difficult to eradicate the&#13;
g r a s s on land w h e r e it h a s obtained a&#13;
foothold, and for this reason it m a y bec&#13;
o m e a pestiferous w e e d . H o g s are&#13;
rather fond of the root s t o c k s and&#13;
w h e n confined upon a plot of t h e g r a s s&#13;
will destroy it. But on soil a d a p t e d to&#13;
Its g r o w t h It requires g r e a t • c a r e t o&#13;
eradicate it. I f one w i s h e s t o grow&#13;
J o h n s o n grass, t h e best p l a n i s t o devote&#13;
a field to t h e purpose w i t h o u t exp&#13;
e c t i n g to s u b s e q u e n t l y p u t t h e field in&#13;
cultivation. W i t h care it can be con- j&#13;
fined to this Held. A f t e T a f e w y e a r s j&#13;
t h e ground b e c o m e s so full of root&#13;
s t o c k s that_tii£ d e v e l o p m e n t is hlndered.&#13;
T o rejuvenate, a field it should be&#13;
p l o w e d and harrowed in t h e spring or&#13;
else thoroughly disked.&#13;
V a l u a b l e F o r t h e W e s t .&#13;
Hairy vetch (Vicia villosa) promises&#13;
te be one of the best winter growing&#13;
plants, both for forage and green ma*&#13;
nure purposes, in California. Besides&#13;
hardiness against frost, it has a mark*&#13;
ed drought resistance.&#13;
The mealy saltbush (Atriplex halimoldes)&#13;
gives promise of surpassing in&#13;
value even the Australian saltbush (A.&#13;
8emlbaccata) on dry lands and gives&#13;
indications of being of value in so called&#13;
desert situations.&#13;
&lt;§&amp;A&#13;
Thia signature la on every box » the genuine&#13;
Laxative Bromo^Juinitie Tablet*&#13;
the remedy that cores a eoatft I n CHM day&#13;
&lt; ^ ^ &gt; M W M W ^ ^ A ^ ^ % « V&#13;
POSTAL 4 MONEY,&#13;
The aftopmrroft*.&#13;
Griswold&#13;
House &amp;&#13;
DETROIT. tktCh*&#13;
A&#13;
etrtotly&#13;
flrev&#13;
class*&#13;
Biouem,&#13;
to-date&#13;
toetted&#13;
i n t o * heart el&#13;
Subscrilic- ior Dispitch.&#13;
80 YEARS'&#13;
e&amp;PERlKNCE&#13;
x * * ; $3, $3J0&gt; $3 v* Day.&#13;
\m0mmm***Nt!j**NN*M&amp;*&#13;
P O I N T S ON T O B A C C O .&#13;
C u l t i v a t i o n , W o r n i , T o p p i n g , S n c k -&#13;
erlnsr a n d H a r v e s t i n g .&#13;
I a i m to cultivate t h e crop about five&#13;
t i m e s , not so much h o w I plow, but&#13;
w h e n 1 plow, s a y s an Ohio Farmer&#13;
w r i t e r ; first stirring, ten d a y s after&#13;
planting; last plowing, ten d a y s after&#13;
topping.&#13;
A s t o worms, they are sure to come.&#13;
I a l w a y s aim to be ready for t h e m . U p&#13;
to t h i s crop I have used poison in liquid&#13;
form, and it has a l w a y s g i v e n satisfaction.&#13;
I shall also try One pound af paris&#13;
green to one bushel of air slacked lime&#13;
and put it on by u s i n g tin can or basket&#13;
by perforating bottom w i t h holes. I&#13;
shall begin to use this at the second&#13;
plewing. One or t w o applications w i l l&#13;
be all that is needed. At the third cultivation&#13;
w e aim to cut out all grass,&#13;
m i l k w e e d s , pea vines or a n y t h i n g of&#13;
Ukfi_naiunutbat m a y h a v e escaped thfi&#13;
s h o v e l s .&#13;
A s to hoeing, that is out of t h e question.&#13;
Our hoeing is done w i t h a riding&#13;
cultivator.&#13;
T o p p i n g is the s t a g g e r i n g point to a&#13;
great m a n y g r o w e r s of the w e e d . Generally&#13;
w h e n the t i m e c o m e s to top t h e&#13;
w e a t h e r Is dry, and w e w o u l d like t o&#13;
top after a good rain, for then it will&#13;
c o m m e n c e to spread at once, and t h a t&#13;
Is w h a t w e top for. On Tobacco Leaf&#13;
farm w e a i m to top a s near clean a s&#13;
possible, for a s it is topped s o will it&#13;
ripen.&#13;
Suckering should be c o m m e n c e d in&#13;
about ten d a y s after t h e t o p s h a v e been&#13;
t a k e n out. Then t h e y will h a v e become&#13;
about t w o i n c h e s long. T h e crop&#13;
should be c l e a n e d - t w i c e before cutting.&#13;
T h i s is one of the back a c h e s of the&#13;
grower, but it m u s t b e done, or you will&#13;
repent w h e n the crop is being stripped&#13;
and packed. We generally begin t o&#13;
harvest the latter part of A u g u s t .&#13;
Iter tbe celrrj ar Iwrow wa* opened&#13;
with tfc* ope horse plow, and tbe plants,&#13;
which, bad been grown in a feed bed.&#13;
were set in the bottom of the furraw.&#13;
A few days after tbe plants were set&#13;
a heavy rain washed the dirt into tbe&#13;
furrow and nearly burled them. The&#13;
earth bad to be loosened around eaeb&#13;
plant by means of a knife. Not many&#13;
days later another Jjeavy, rain necessitated&#13;
a repetition of the operation. As&#13;
tbe celery grew tbe furrow was gradually&#13;
filled up by means of the cultivator&#13;
and boe. When the plants were about&#13;
a foot high, they were "bandied" and&#13;
earthed up fpr blanching. Tbe stalks&#13;
of each plant were drawn close together&#13;
and held with one hand while earth&#13;
was packed about the base of tbe plant&#13;
with tbe other hand. Then earth was&#13;
flrntgn lip in rh« plant w i t h p. fope nntfl&#13;
"i^fjj^^wpr^ 3¾&#13;
only tbe tops of tbe leaves were left&#13;
exposed. Two weeks later it was nee*&#13;
essary te again bank up the plants,&#13;
since tbey bad grown considerably in&#13;
that time. It was then past the middle&#13;
of October, and no further banking&#13;
was necessaryto blanch the stalks.&#13;
The spinach and lettuce planted July&#13;
23 failed to grow. The turnips did well&#13;
until about the 1st of September, when&#13;
the hot weather caused tbe leaves to&#13;
turn yellow at the tips and finally die.&#13;
The crop was almost an entire failure.&#13;
A few peas planted Aug. 18 on the&#13;
land previously occupied by early cabbage&#13;
made a very dwarf but healthy&#13;
growth and. produced a small crep early&#13;
in October.&#13;
Of the late planted vegetables tbe&#13;
celery, winter radishes, beans and cucumbers&#13;
produced satisfactory crops,&#13;
so that, although some of the crops&#13;
failed, the late planting as a whole was&#13;
not unprofitable.&#13;
Mt fiwdttwjr gup a tcli.&#13;
COMFORT FOR CATTLE.&#13;
A Biff F l y B r o a h F o r Cowa I n t h e&#13;
M l d t a m m e r P a e t n r e .&#13;
B e l i e f from t h e fly torment Is j u s t&#13;
a s necessary to comfort and thrift of&#13;
c a t t l e in s u m m e r p a s t u r e a s are shade,&#13;
drink a n d food. A place w h e r e they&#13;
m a y brush off their persecutors Is easi&#13;
l y provided b y utilizing a d e v i c e illustrated&#13;
in American Agriculturist. According&#13;
to the description given, four&#13;
p o s t s are set In a rectangle 12 by 8&#13;
feet, p o s t s 5 ½ feet high at o n e end of&#13;
t h e rectangle and 3 at the other.&#13;
Across e a c h end of t h e rectangle an&#13;
IN A G A R D E N .&#13;
TRAOC MARKS Dc*toN«&#13;
COPVRIOMTS A C&#13;
Anyone aen&lt;t!ns a aketeh and deeoHpUoa mar&#13;
qalekt? aeeemun oar opinion free whether an&#13;
invention ta probably patentable. Oommonlea.&#13;
ttona atrtctlT confidential. Handbook on Patent*&#13;
tent free. Oldest aaeney for seeartnffpatent*.&#13;
Patent* taken throne ta Mann ATfc. reoetre&#13;
ajMWtnette*, without enarte* In the lacnflficHattrkm&#13;
S o m a L a t e r i a a t i n j r a a n d T h e i r Ovtcome—&#13;
Celery* K a d i s h e a a n d B e a n s .&#13;
After the early peas were^plcked arid&#13;
the potatoes dug the land on which&#13;
they were grown, was cleared of vines,&#13;
plowed with a one horse plow and pulverized&#13;
by means of the narrow tooth&#13;
cultivator and a one horse plapker. It&#13;
was then planted to late crops, as follows:&#13;
One-half row celery, ane and&#13;
one-half rows turnips, one-half row&#13;
winter radish, one-quarter row spinach&#13;
and one-quarter row lettuce. This was&#13;
on July 23. On tbe same day string&#13;
beans were planted in the space previously&#13;
occupied by the early planting&#13;
of the same crop. This half row was&#13;
toot reptowed. The old vinea were aimply&#13;
hoe6 off and the ground~&amp;oe4 over.&#13;
BRUSHING SHED FOB CATTLE.&#13;
e i g h t inch board is nailed a t the top&#13;
of the posts. In t h e upper edge of these&#13;
boards are cut n o t c h e s about four inche&#13;
s deep and t w o and a half inches&#13;
wide.&#13;
N o w take boards 4 inches wide. 13&#13;
feet long and 1 inch thick. Arrange&#13;
t h e s e in a s many pairs a s there are&#13;
notches in each end board and bore&#13;
holes through them a t intervals of one&#13;
foot preparatory to belfctaig t h e m together.&#13;
Br^ush is n o w placed b e t w e e n&#13;
these boards and c l a m p e d fast. Only&#13;
one of t h e s e brush is s h o w n in the illustration.&#13;
T h e c l a m p s t h u s formed&#13;
are n o w placed in the notches in t h e&#13;
e n d boards, with t h e brush h a n g i n g&#13;
d o w n . T h e y are held d o w n by narrow&#13;
boards nailed across t h e tops of t h e&#13;
posts.&#13;
"The difference I n height a t the t w o&#13;
e n d s m a k e s it suitable for cattle of vall&#13;
sizes. T h e brush w i l l last for a long&#13;
t i m e .&#13;
Asrrlcvltnral Brevltlsja. %&#13;
"The queen of t h e m o n e y m a k e r s " i s&#13;
the latest* and proud title b e s t o w e d b y&#13;
the poultry press upon the A m e r i c a n&#13;
hen. Cotton, corn a n d w h e a t * a r e said&#13;
to be t h e only f a r m staples t h a t exceed&#13;
her output in value.&#13;
B o n e Is t h e thing to use on peach&#13;
trees every time, s a y s one grower.&#13;
D i g out the peach tree borers a n d j a r&#13;
the turculio.&#13;
Tho causo of f o a m rising on extracted&#13;
honey is eaul to be unripe honey.&#13;
Minnesota beekeepers In convention&#13;
seer.icd to favor s w e e t and alsike clov&#13;
e r s as good to s e w for bee pasture.&#13;
T h e B a r o m e t e r .&#13;
The barometer drops almost exactly&#13;
an inch for 1,000 feet of ascent&#13;
Tfce Larajeet V i n e y a r d .&#13;
Sunny Slope, Cal.. enjoys the distinction&#13;
of being the largest vineyard in&#13;
tbe world* It is situated amid the most&#13;
beautiful scenery of that favored land,&#13;
two miles from San Gabriel. Of a total&#13;
of 1,000 acres 735 are devoted to grapevine,&#13;
the remainder being distributed&#13;
among orange trees, of which there are&#13;
12.000;-lemon and olive trees.&#13;
A few cucuFobers for pickles were also&#13;
planted in tbe vacant spaces among&#13;
th* eajjy aicjajabecsw ^/&#13;
A Card.&#13;
I. tbe undersigned, do hereby agree&#13;
(o refund the money on a 50 eent hot*&#13;
tie of Green's Warranted Syrnp of&#13;
Tar if it failea ro en re your coagb or&#13;
cold, halso guarantee a 25-cent hot*&#13;
t*a to prora aatiataatory or money&#13;
(Haded; ' • •' : * 2 *&#13;
Will a Dtrrow.&#13;
&lt;*r*1&#13;
We the ttBdewimai 4o karat?&#13;
aorta toretond tba moaey on ft I t&#13;
eent bottle of Dowat'f Witir if it &lt;*•*•&#13;
not tnre anj ccugb, co4$* wboopi**&#13;
coagb, or throat troobla. f?e afca&#13;
guarantee Dowft'a WixiV to cor* oo*&gt;&#13;
sumption, when oae4 aooordJBsT to 4nV&#13;
rectiona, or money back. AfpJldot* .&#13;
on going to bod and small dotta dar*&#13;
ing the day will euro tbe mart save**&#13;
cold, and stop the most dbtreaeisif&#13;
congb.&#13;
P. A. Sigter,&#13;
W, B, Darrow,&#13;
• w »&#13;
,,'.;',ji'V«:*!**.'v,; *t':&#13;
' !-"•• .'•t-tf'.Av&#13;
• ,,;• 'T tin ,fc&#13;
• ; • ' . v ''•'&amp;•&amp;••&#13;
rosuauD SVSHT nroasDAT aoaxnt • ar&#13;
FRANK L. ANDREWS&#13;
Edii*r and Proprietor.&#13;
ttDbeerlptlon Price $1 la AdTanoe&#13;
Watered at tbe Postofflce at Ploekaey, Xiettaa*&#13;
aa aeeond-cUae master.&#13;
•drertlsiag ratee otade knows on application.&#13;
Baalneee Cards, $4.00 per. year.&#13;
I^estn and marriage notices publfeaed tree. &gt;&#13;
Announcements of entertain tnente may oe paid&#13;
for, if desired, by pr teeaUog the oftlce with tidk*&#13;
ete of admission. In case tickets are not broagat&#13;
to tbe office, regular rates will be charged.&#13;
All matter in local notice column will be eaarbed&#13;
at 5 cents per line or fraction thereof, for eaeb&#13;
Insertion. Where no time is speciAed, ail aotkee&#13;
will be Inserted until ordered discontinued, ana&#13;
vUi be charged for accordingly. £av*Allchaage«&#13;
at adrerttsemeau MUtiT reach this office asearly&#13;
as TUBSDAT morning to insure aa insertion the&#13;
same week.&#13;
JOS ?&gt;£lJV2IJVGf&#13;
l a all Its branches, a specialty. We nareallkmaa&#13;
and the iateet itylee o( Type, etc., which enables&#13;
us to execute all kinds of work, such as Books.&#13;
Pempleta, Posters, Programmes, Bill Heads. Note&#13;
Heads, Statements, Cards, Auction Bill., eic.Jtn&#13;
superior styles, upon the shortest notice. Prices as&#13;
o v as good work can b* done.&#13;
« L t BILLS PAXABLt riR*X OF SVKBT 11)31*.&#13;
THE VILLAGE DIRECTORY.&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICERS.&#13;
PacsroBMT....~. ^. C. Ji,Slgler&#13;
TuusTjtns R. Baker, R. H. Erwin,&#13;
P. 6, Jackaoo, Geo. Reason Jr.&#13;
Chas. Love, Malacur Roche.&#13;
vLSRK....- ........ ..M.M -«-••..«M«-».••• . , « • £ . R. RfOWa&#13;
1 n S A S u l a k i i . I . . . . . M . . . . . « . . . « * M » « . . . . M . . . . v . A . i^adW^ll&#13;
AM»S*SOH ..„.. _.Jtts. A.&lt;£reene&#13;
dTBBrr CoMxitsroNsa ..J, Parker&#13;
HEALTH orriosM Or. H. P. Sigler&#13;
ATTORXET „. MH ^ . . . . . ^ M W. A. Carr&#13;
MiiuuiLL, M«......inM ....^M. ..J3. Brogaa&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
MflTHODlST EPISCOPAL CHURCH.&#13;
Rev. H. W . Hicks, pastor. Services every&#13;
Sunday morning at 10:3u, and every Sunday&#13;
evening at 7:00 o'clock. Prayer meeting Thursday&#13;
evenings. Sunday school at close of-moralng&#13;
service. CHAS. HXNBY Supt.&#13;
CONUrtfiQAl'IONAL 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 Thure&#13;
day evenings. Sunday school at cJoee of raoro&#13;
ing service. Mrs. Thos. Read, Supt,, Mocco&#13;
Ttep!oSec.&#13;
QT. MAR^S CATHOLIC CHURCH.&#13;
O Rev. M. J. Commerford, Pastor. iDervlcea&#13;
every Sunday. Low mass at 7:80 o'clock&#13;
high mass with sermon at 9:3Ua. no. Catechism&#13;
at 3:0U p. m., vespers ana benediction at 7 :ao p. m&#13;
SOCIETIES;&#13;
Tbe A. U. H. Socletv of tnia ^l%';e, meets every&#13;
third S.ii&lt;U/ i.itne H*r. vlktta-*v titll.&#13;
John Tuomey and &gt;£. T. K^lly, Covitr n Ungates&#13;
J^PWOftTH LEAGUE. Meets every Sunday&#13;
JCieveniutf at 6:00 oclock in tae M. E. Oaurch. A&#13;
cordial invitation is extendei to everyone, especially&#13;
yuun^ people. F. LI. Andrews, Pre*.&#13;
CHRISTIAN EVDEWOK SO J tS TV:-viae*&#13;
i a » every Sunday ev^ain^ at 6:1). Preii teur MissL. M. &lt;:od; Seordtai-j", Mi« UtttU Cirpsut9&#13;
. Lin . _ _' i • - - - ^ ^ M W M M i M - r t r m — *&#13;
rtiHK W. C. T. l?.^aeetethe-6r»t-FrlJay ot eaoi—&#13;
I month at 2:3u p, m. at trie home of Dr. B. »&#13;
sigler. £veryone interested in temperance&#13;
coadially invited. Mrs. Val Siller, Pres; Mn&#13;
Ktta Durfee, Secretary.&#13;
The C. T. A. and li. Society of this place, D&gt;&lt;M»&#13;
every third Saturday evening In the fp. Saat«&#13;
thew Hall. John Doaohue^PresideatT&#13;
NIGHTS OP MACCABEBS.&#13;
Heeteverr Friday evening on or before (all&#13;
of tbe moos at their hall in the Swarthout btdg.&#13;
Visiting brothers *xv cordisJlvinvited.&#13;
CHAS. CAMPBSU^ Sir Knight Commandsi&#13;
• Livingston Lodge, No. 7«, P 4 A. M. Regular&#13;
Communication Tuesday evening, on or before)&#13;
the full of the moon. Kirk Van Winkle, W. M&#13;
0RDBR OF EASTERN STAR meets each month&#13;
the Friday evening following the regular F.&#13;
A A.M. meeting, MOD. MABY RBAO, W. M.&#13;
ORDER OF MODERN WOODMEN' sleet the&#13;
tint Thursday evening of each Xonth in the&#13;
Jiaccabeetiall. C. L. Grimes V. C.&#13;
LADIES OF THE MACCABEES. Meet every Is*&#13;
sad 3rd Saturday of eachmonth at 9:30 p m. a.&#13;
K. o. T. M. hall. Visiting sisters cordially in&#13;
vlted. JvLrA SioLEu. Lady Com.&#13;
Tt&#13;
TT NIGHTS or THK LOYAL QCARD&#13;
,Guards welcome.&#13;
F L. Andrews P. M.&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
J. W. MONKS.&#13;
DOCTOR OF DENTAL SURGERY&#13;
PINCKNEY, MICH.&#13;
OFfict ovtw ttOLtn't oeuo stoat,&#13;
H. F. SIGLER M. D- C. L, SKM.gR M, O&#13;
DRS. SIGLER &amp; SIGLER,&#13;
Physideue and Surgeon*. Ail calls proapil&#13;
attended today or night. Office oa MaUetr&#13;
Pinckney, Mioh.&#13;
V E T E R I N A R Y S U R Q S O N .&#13;
Gradoata of Ontario Veterinary Cotletev asea&#13;
the Veterinary DenUstry r ^ ^&#13;
ToroaMo Oaaad*.&#13;
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FftAKK L. Ax uitKWtv Publisher.&#13;
FINCKXBY,- """• * •" MICHIGAN.&#13;
A roed Is belatf built in the high&#13;
AJpsYtrhich passes the grest S t Bernard&#13;
and also the hospice of that&#13;
name. This great engineering feat&#13;
will he finished, and opened to the traffic&#13;
in July ef next year.&#13;
The biggest gorilla on record has&#13;
been bagged by a German commercial&#13;
traveler in West Africa and is now on&#13;
exhibition in the Umlauff museum at&#13;
Hamburg. The animal measures 6&#13;
feet 1 0 \ inches in height and its&#13;
spread of arms is 9 feet ^% torches.&#13;
A Mysterious Death Excites the&#13;
People of Saginaw,&#13;
K COUNTY AGENT'S TROUBLE.&#13;
riM Qovrnot Isaus* More- Pardons — An&#13;
*Knsiae*r*a r a t a l Mistake-Krsata s a d&#13;
Gossip From All Parte of the State&#13;
Staved Oowa'for Beady Readlatf.&#13;
The day of the week to be selected&#13;
for the coronation of Edward VII, in&#13;
the coming year, is a subject of speculation.&#13;
No sovereign of that realm has&#13;
been crowned on Sunday since the&#13;
time of Queen Elizabeth, and only one&#13;
coronation in English history took&#13;
place on Friday^ It is safe, therefore,&#13;
to exclude those two days from any&#13;
prediction concerning the stately ceremonial.&#13;
"The Paris Messenger" says that an&#13;
attempt to resuscitate the old Roman&#13;
amphitheater near the Jardln des&#13;
Plantes, Paris, is about to be made.&#13;
This ancient arena, which is now used&#13;
partly as a playground for poor children&#13;
and partly for omnibus stables,&#13;
has a remarkable history. It is one&#13;
of the largest known Roman arenas,&#13;
and dates back to the first century.&#13;
There is evidence that the Emperor&#13;
Julian held sports there.&#13;
Woo-Tong, a Chinese merchant of&#13;
New York, left New York the other&#13;
day for the Pan-American^ Exposition.&#13;
Soon after the train started he saw&#13;
Grace Bradshaw, of New York, a&#13;
pretty American girl, paid her some&#13;
slight attention,- rapidly became acquainted&#13;
and finally asked her to be&#13;
his wife, and after two hours of argument&#13;
won her consent. They alighted&#13;
at Wilkesbarre, Pa., to be married, but&#13;
being unable to obtain a license went&#13;
to New York state and were wedded.&#13;
The sword, which has had so long&#13;
and so distinguished a military record,&#13;
has been placed nn thp rpHrpd Mat.&#13;
British army authorities have decided&#13;
that in the future unmounted officers&#13;
ehall carry carbines instead of swords&#13;
during manoeuvers and in active service.&#13;
The decision is the result of experience&#13;
gained in the war in South&#13;
Africa. The sword is not only useless&#13;
as a weapon, except in close&#13;
quarters, but it serves as a mark to&#13;
distinguish the officer from his men.&#13;
He thus becomes a target for the enemy's&#13;
sharpshooters, and when • the&#13;
private soldiers have small power of&#13;
Initiative, as is the case in most European&#13;
armies, the^ loss of a large number&#13;
of officers may mean^disaBter. The&#13;
passing of the sword is one of the&#13;
signs of the changed conditions of&#13;
war.&#13;
An automobile savings- bank is the&#13;
latestyFrench novelty. The authorities&#13;
of Mezieres, wishing to encourage&#13;
thrift among the peasants, have had&#13;
it built to specifications. It is an electric&#13;
motor-car containing four seats,&#13;
"one"T6r""the~ driver"and "three""in" the&#13;
rear arranged arouna a small table.&#13;
Folding shelves make a convenient&#13;
desk for a person standing beside the&#13;
vehicle. Under the table is a small&#13;
safe. The passengers are two clerks&#13;
from the local treasury department&#13;
and a cashier. The car travels about&#13;
the country, making short stops in the&#13;
villages on prearranged days, and receiving&#13;
such sums as the citizens or&#13;
farmers of the neighborhood may wish&#13;
to deposit. So far, however, the innovation&#13;
uas met little encouragement&#13;
The peasants seem distrustful of the&#13;
agility of the bank, and disinclined to&#13;
draw out the old Btocking from its hiding-&#13;
place under the hearthstone.&#13;
Cash B—l» B « « * M a « t l o » .&#13;
Attorney-General Oren has given an&#13;
opinion ou the powers and duties of&#13;
the state board of equalization in the&#13;
matter of equalizing the valuations of&#13;
the various counties of the stare, l i e&#13;
holds that anything short of an equalization&#13;
on the basis of cash valuations&#13;
would be unconstitutional, the board&#13;
having no authority to depart from&#13;
what they believe to be actual cash&#13;
values. This means that no percentage&#13;
less than cash value can legally be&#13;
made the basis of the equalization,&#13;
but, of course, leaves the board to determine&#13;
what sucli cash value Is. The&#13;
opinion disposes of ex-Couiniisslrnior&#13;
Campbell's proposition that the board&#13;
determine what the cash value is, and&#13;
then equalize on a basis of 75 per cent&#13;
of such valuation in order to keep the&#13;
local assessors in line and not unduly&#13;
Increase tho annual revenue of thu&#13;
Michigan university.&#13;
A n o t h e r S t a r v e R e p o r t e d .&#13;
Anton Gurchke, a well-to-do Gorman,&#13;
of Detroit, concluded a fast of 4'2&#13;
days Sunday noon •when he ute thr-v&#13;
lamb chops, two potatoes and a tomato.&#13;
*He said that the food tasted&#13;
better than any he had ever eaten. At&#13;
night he ate some oatmeal wi*h fresh&#13;
milk and a baked apple. He avers that&#13;
he felt no inconvenience from tlu» im d&#13;
and he Is satisfied thnt ids .on? fafet&#13;
has entirely cured him from the&#13;
trouble In his stomach, which the best&#13;
physicians could not &lt;*ur»&gt; wit), nu*Vtcines.&#13;
The doctor who treated hi;u&#13;
says that he will eat but Lv\ J meals a&#13;
day for a month, and then he can eat&#13;
any time and anything he pleases. Mr.&#13;
Gurchke and his wife are very earnest&#13;
in the statement that he • had not eaten&#13;
a morsel of food in six weeks prior to&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
A ^ B o i l e r - C o u n t e r V i c t i m .&#13;
Clarence D. Miller, aged 34, was&#13;
killed on the roller-coaster, near the&#13;
approach to the Belle Isle bridge, Detroit,&#13;
Monday evening. Miller's death&#13;
was tragic, and-pccuUarly sad in view&#13;
Was » K i f l M CoMMlttedt&#13;
The Haginaw police * have secured&#13;
evidence .that either a murder, sufclde&#13;
or accidental drowning occurred there&#13;
within tho tost week. On the 3d inst&#13;
a man's complete outfit, hat clothes',&#13;
underclothes, shoes, etc., were found&#13;
on the tank of the river, and at the&#13;
time of the discovery appeared t *&#13;
have been there about a week. The&#13;
pockets were turned inside oat. Next&#13;
Cu.pt. James Walsh, of the police force*&#13;
found near the same spot small hits of.&#13;
paper that when put together proved&#13;
to bo an insurance certificate. It was&#13;
issued by the Loyal Guard to John&#13;
Charles Kunert, nged 20 years; at Plymouth.&#13;
Mich., and bears the date of&#13;
July 18, 1001,,and was for $2,000, payable&#13;
to a sister of the holder, Maggie&#13;
M. Kunert. A receipt for the July assessment,&#13;
amounting to $1.58, and&#13;
bearing date of July 16, was found&#13;
with the certificate. John Kunert left&#13;
Plymouth Ang. 20 for Saginaw, intend&#13;
mm&#13;
ing to stop at Coleman. Relatives at&#13;
Coleman report that he left there for&#13;
Saginaw to secure employment on the&#13;
Perc Marquette as a fireman. His&#13;
name is not ou the books of the company&#13;
either as an employe* or applicant,&#13;
and no one has been found who&#13;
remembers seeing him in Saginaw.&#13;
D e a d l y D y n a m i t e .&#13;
John Elchman, engineer at the Ajax&#13;
dynamite works of Henry H. Thomas&#13;
on the Kawkawlin road, near Bay City&#13;
met with a shocking death in a peculiar&#13;
manner Friday morning. Between&#13;
the nltro-glycerlne factory and&#13;
the dynamite packing house there was&#13;
nn old iron pipe through which the&#13;
nitro-fflycerine was conveyed from the&#13;
former to the latter prior to the explosion&#13;
last season. This pipe has not&#13;
been in use since. Elchman went to&#13;
remove it and in making the uncoupling&#13;
of a joint used hammer and&#13;
chisel. While he was at work the pipe&#13;
exploded, crashing the top of his head,&#13;
tearing off all his clothing and blowing&#13;
hJs body 15 feet. There must hav«&#13;
been some nitre-glycerine in the pipe.&#13;
The explosion tore the side off the&#13;
nltro-glycerlne factory, but otherwise&#13;
did not disturb it. In the factory was&#13;
1,200 pounds of the explosive.&#13;
of the fact that he was to have been&#13;
married this month to Mamie Burr.s,&#13;
a pretty and attractive young lady&#13;
whose home is at Mt. Morris, Mich.&#13;
He had gone v to the roller-coastsr a&#13;
little after 8 o'clock and was seen to&#13;
rise In his seat when the car reached&#13;
the top round. He was whirled out&#13;
and fell to the inclined plane below,&#13;
striking in such a position that he lay&#13;
across the tracks. An ascending car&#13;
struck him there, and he doubled up,&#13;
falling between the tracks to the&#13;
ground fifteen feet below. The injured&#13;
man was taken to a hospital, where&#13;
he died early next morning.&#13;
Ttvo W r a t h y W o m e n of ft'tlel.&#13;
Henry W. Grover, a printer employed'at&#13;
the office of the Niles Daily&#13;
Sun, was terribly horsewhipped Monday&#13;
morning at tne omce of the Sun&#13;
by Mrs. John Copp and Mrs. W. Scott.&#13;
The women were furious^ at a scurrilous&#13;
newspaper article which they&#13;
attribute to Grover, and they used&#13;
their rawhides with telling effect.&#13;
People who noticed the set determination&#13;
in the faces of the ladies as they&#13;
Trassed" through the streets on their&#13;
way to the Sun office, followed them,&#13;
and the crowd cheered them as they&#13;
rained blow after blow upon Grover's&#13;
coatless form. The ladies were accompanied&#13;
also by their brothers, who&#13;
looked on until the former had exhausted&#13;
their strength. The police&#13;
then put in an appearance but no arrests&#13;
were made.&#13;
K i l l e d hr a B e e r B o t t l e ,&#13;
Howard Burchfield threw a pop bottle&#13;
at Dan Hlckey, a Charlotte saloonkeeper,&#13;
in front of the Williams&#13;
House. The missile missed Mickey&#13;
and struck a boy named Leonard&#13;
Green, of Eaton Rapids, on the head&#13;
and he died from the injury inflicted.&#13;
A coroner's Jury has found a verdict&#13;
to the effect that Burchfield committed&#13;
the act willfully and maliciously&#13;
and he will have to answer to the&#13;
charge of murder. Green's funeral&#13;
took place at Eaton Rapids yesterday.&#13;
The W i w k on Huron,&#13;
A total of thirteen vessels were&#13;
driven ashore, above Port Huron by a&#13;
terrific gale Saturday night and the&#13;
greatest disaster for many years was&#13;
threatened. The barge Amaranth was&#13;
distroyed but tho other vessels will be&#13;
saved. The life saving station did&#13;
heroic service and no lives were lost.&#13;
MINOR MICHIGAN MATTERS.&#13;
There is a reverse side to the semblance&#13;
of luxury expressed by the mirrors,&#13;
the gilding, the velvet carpets of&#13;
many apartment and boarding houses.&#13;
The head of the lace department in a&#13;
great store recently spent her two&#13;
weeks' vacation 'in a hospital. She&#13;
laughed at the idea of being ill or even&#13;
nervous; but she was tired, and for&#13;
ten yea,rs had not slept in a real bed.&#13;
fn one apartment house, in order to&#13;
keep her room fitted to receive callers,&#13;
she slept on a sofa that opened in the&#13;
middle, and had neither sides nor foothoard.&#13;
Six out of seven nights the&#13;
covers pulled off her feet. At another&#13;
place her folding bed fell on her and&#13;
nearly killed her, so she traded it for&#13;
* narrow divan, from which pillows&#13;
and blankets slipped off nightly. At&#13;
the hospital she finally found a bed&#13;
wide enough to sleep in crosswise, a&#13;
bed by day as well as by night, a bod&#13;
tuckable, with a bolster and counterpane;&#13;
and she stayed in it for two&#13;
^eekt.—Iacountlesa cases the makt»&#13;
believe bed ibol of a sham&#13;
and comfortless existence for which&#13;
apartment life is largely responsible.&#13;
T h r e e M n r d e - Cane*.&#13;
The docket for the September term&#13;
of the Circuit Court in Jackson contains&#13;
three cases of more than ordinary&#13;
interest The defendants are&#13;
Prank Daniels, of Sandusky, 0.,&#13;
charged with the murder of Ira Lugar&#13;
in Jackson city, the conclusion of&#13;
a drunken row; Frank Biery, of Tompkins,&#13;
charged with the murder of Arthur&#13;
Whitehouse, who died from a bullet',&#13;
wound received at the occasion of&#13;
a charivari party visiting Biery and&#13;
his bride, and David H. Creech,&#13;
charged with intent to kill a divorced&#13;
wife. He shot her but not fatally.&#13;
A b l e t o P a y a n d M n i t ,&#13;
Deputy Attorney-General Chnse ha*&#13;
just recovered for the state $93&lt;S from&#13;
the guardian of Jane Fox, an inmate&#13;
of the Pontiac asylum from Oakland&#13;
county. The woman has been supported&#13;
In the asylum for several yearn&#13;
at state expense, although she had&#13;
property worth about $2,500 and a&#13;
pension. The attorney-general's department&#13;
has a number of similar&#13;
cases under Investigation. In each&#13;
case the patient is made to reimburse&#13;
the state for maintenance.&#13;
The postottice at Duck Lake, Cnlhoun&#13;
county, hns been 'discontinued.&#13;
Mail to SpHncrfleld.&#13;
The scarlet fever epidemic has&#13;
proved expensive for Delray, between&#13;
$700 and $800 having been expended&#13;
already.&#13;
Eighty big school and church bells&#13;
wereplaced by the Kortfivffle foundry&#13;
during Aug"»f /&#13;
The potato rot has put in its appearance&#13;
in Prescott.&#13;
A Prescott farmer reports 10 bushels&#13;
of wheat to the acre.&#13;
Thousands of gypsies are holding aj&#13;
convention in Detroit.&#13;
Giles Grice, a wealthy Niles farmer,&#13;
died from heart »Vsense.&#13;
B. C. Jones has been appointed postmaster&#13;
at Belmont, Kent county, vice&#13;
G. N. Reynolds, resigned.&#13;
The reports to the sugar beet companies&#13;
indicate that Michigan will produce&#13;
a fine crop of these roots this season.&#13;
The oxeffl-.sion boats of Detroit were&#13;
delayed Saturday night T&gt;y"smolce~and&#13;
did not land their passengers till 3&#13;
o'clock Sunday morning. .&#13;
The Detroit. Pontiac, Lwpeer &amp;&#13;
Northern Electric Railway Co., capital&#13;
$1.000.00(), has filed articles of incor-&#13;
| poration with the secretary of state.&#13;
The home of R. Summers, of Howard&#13;
City, was burned to the ground,&#13;
caused by a small son trying to light&#13;
a fire in stove. Loss $700; no insurance.&#13;
J. C. Post, attorney of Holland, with&#13;
County Register of Deed* Peter&#13;
Puehe, find other capitalists, will&#13;
build and open a bank at Grand&#13;
Haven.&#13;
Supply of late fruits in Kalamazoo&#13;
county is enormous. Peaches almost go&#13;
begging at 50 cents per bushel, while&#13;
plums, melons and tomatoes are equally&#13;
plentiful.&#13;
Bertha Reynolds, of Owosso, has&#13;
brought suit against her ex-husband,&#13;
Charles Anderson, for damages for&#13;
securing a divorce in another state unknown&#13;
to her.&#13;
George Smith's portable sawmill&#13;
near the Grand Trunk tracks. Lapeer,&#13;
caught, fire and was burned to the&#13;
ground. The loss is estimated at $1,-&#13;
500; no insurance.&#13;
J, T. Pearce and Alfred Cameron,&#13;
two young business men of Lake Llnrifii.&#13;
Were.drowned. 1« Portage lake by&#13;
the overturning of a rowboat in which&#13;
they were racing.&#13;
Exports inform the state board of&#13;
auditors that a few repairs to the roof&#13;
and stone work, which can be made at&#13;
slight expense, will make the state&#13;
capltol as good as new.&#13;
Lincoln J. Carter, the playwright and&#13;
theatrical manager, has secured an option&#13;
on a *20-acre tract on the lake&#13;
shore, near Benton Harbor, and will&#13;
erect a summer cottage.&#13;
Patrick Burns, In the employ of the&#13;
Teplnsular Cedar &amp; Lumber Co., Menominee,&#13;
was accidentally sfuft by "hTs&#13;
" i * " I H i * ! * ! ! Il&gt;&#13;
companion, Edward Johnson, while out&#13;
hooting near Trout Creek.&#13;
i , \&#13;
French county points to the fact&#13;
that, 5H&gt; colored children of school aae&#13;
r e s W l h ~ t h e county/Oil tft^aptfls*&#13;
Beariy 100 per cent i a l O year* v •;&#13;
A, B. Cummins, of Hillsdale, exregister&#13;
of deeds, pleaded guilty to a&#13;
charge of false pretenses,, and will be&#13;
the principal witness against Swaney,&#13;
his . hrother-in-law, . charged with&#13;
forgery.&#13;
Silas FtnkelL an employe of the&#13;
Church . Manufacturing Company/&#13;
Adrian, was badly -wounded Wednesday&#13;
while testing a haodfire extinguisher.&#13;
Acid burned his clothing off&#13;
and he may lose hhualght&#13;
The wood works plant of McGraft ft&#13;
don, Muskegon, was destroyed by fire&#13;
Monday. The loss is $75,000 end the&#13;
insurance $28,000. One hundred;.men&#13;
are thrown out of employment The&#13;
origin of the fire is not known.&#13;
' Jacob Mortenson. of the •OarthXumber.&#13;
Co., Garth, Mich., and Wausau,&#13;
Wis., has closed a deal for the purchase&#13;
of 30,000 acres of redwood timber&#13;
land In Oregon; consideration&#13;
$500,000.&#13;
Company F, Fourth^ Michigan Infantry,&#13;
met iu reunion, at Clayton,&#13;
about 30 of the veterans being present.&#13;
They were royally entertnlned by the&#13;
Rowley post, G. A. It., and the Ladies'&#13;
Relief corps.&#13;
The law to prohibit tho sale of* colored&#13;
oleomargarine went into effect&#13;
Friday, but there Is no Indication from&#13;
the Detroit retail or wholesale dealers&#13;
that they pror»ose to make any change&#13;
in their trade.&#13;
The iiO.000,000 feet log drive, which&#13;
has l&gt;eeu on the way from Houghton&#13;
lake since la«t May, has arrived at&#13;
Muskegon. The drive has been bard&#13;
and long because of the low water in&#13;
the Muskegon river.&#13;
Charles Crowhurst escaped frbm the&#13;
Kalamazoo asylum Monday, and walked&#13;
to his home near Benton Harbor,&#13;
arriving there ahead of n telegram&#13;
sent from the asylum notifying the&#13;
sheriff of his escape.&#13;
D. S. Etherldge, of Qulncy township,&#13;
sold to a Detroit firm $'247.85 worth&#13;
of butter in 12 weeks. Ills farm consists&#13;
cf only 40 acres. This amount&#13;
exceeds that usually produced on a&#13;
furm double that size.&#13;
Two rural mail delivery "routes have&#13;
boen planned for Richmond township,&#13;
covering routes 25 miles in length and&#13;
extending' northeast and northwest.&#13;
Three others are being inspected with&#13;
good chances of being established.&#13;
Before the eyes of his mother little&#13;
Arthur Barz, the 7-year-old son of&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. John Barz, of Detroit,&#13;
was caught on the fender of a swiftly&#13;
moving Michigan nveiiue oar and then&#13;
ground to death under the wheels.&#13;
—The Association of M4c4Uga-n—&#13;
masters closed their session at Port&#13;
Huron Thursday. The discussion at&#13;
the meeting, developed that the postmasters&#13;
are not a unit on the question&#13;
of parcels post and penny postage.&#13;
James McCoumber, of Richland,&#13;
while driving home from Galesburg&#13;
was struck by an express train on the&#13;
road crossing. McCoumber and his&#13;
horse were both killed Instantly. He&#13;
was deaf and did not hear the train.&#13;
The law of the last legislature creating&#13;
the thirty-eighth judicial district&#13;
of tho county of Monroe.went into effect&#13;
Friday, and Gov. Bliss promptly&#13;
ni'ide it operative by appointing Harry&#13;
A. Lock wood, of Monroe, as the&#13;
first circuit judge.&#13;
Joseph McGraw, a Michigan Central&#13;
gate tender, was run down by an interurban&#13;
car near Michigan Center,&#13;
and so badly Injured that he died.&#13;
John McGraw, a farmer, was on the&#13;
car and was shocked to find that the&#13;
injured man was his brother.&#13;
State Oil Inspector Judson reports&#13;
that the receipts of his office for the&#13;
quarter ending June 30, were $7,413.03,&#13;
and the expenses, ineludittg salartea&#13;
and traveling expenses, were $7,321.53,&#13;
leaving a balance of $92.40 to be covered&#13;
In to the state treasury.&#13;
Pickpockets were busy during the&#13;
Monroe regatta and several persons&#13;
reported the loss of their pocketbooks.&#13;
Four men were arrested as suspects.&#13;
They gave their names as Charles&#13;
Johnson, Detroit, and Charles Roy,&#13;
Edward Standish and Wm. Thompson,&#13;
of Toledo.&#13;
As an evidence of the scarcity of&#13;
labor in southern Michigan, it is&#13;
worthy^f note that a train runs from&#13;
Jackson to Union City every day, a&#13;
distance of 45 mites, to pick up men to&#13;
work on the railroad. The train makes&#13;
the trip night and morning, and has&#13;
done so for a month.&#13;
Judge Josiah Turner, of Owosso, Is&#13;
00 years old. and he celebrated the&#13;
event in fitting style. In 1857 he&#13;
served on the supreme bench, and&#13;
later was elected judge of the seventh&#13;
district, serving 25 years on the bench.&#13;
He wasalso consul at Amherstburg&#13;
under President Harrison.&#13;
Will Lorenz, a farmer living near&#13;
the shore of Lake Michigan, not far&#13;
from Whitehall, was attacked while at&#13;
work In the field by a fair-sized wildcat.&#13;
He succeeded in csonping from It&#13;
nnd went to the house and got a gun.&#13;
With the aid of-a large dog he finally&#13;
treed the animal and shot it.&#13;
Edward Glgnere, of Gladstone,&#13;
caused a panic on the principal street&#13;
of the city Wednesday night by shooting&#13;
right and left with a revolver. Before&#13;
he coukl be stopped he had seriously&#13;
wounded one man. He was&#13;
drunk when he did the shooting, and&#13;
is now in jail awaiting a hearing.&#13;
Investigation shows that the alleged&#13;
ill treatment of a girl in Manistee by&#13;
soldiers at the recent encampment is&#13;
hardly true. It is said the girl denies&#13;
being brutally treated, and the doctor&#13;
wloTwaa called to attend her h\id \h*&#13;
girl had been drinking and that was&#13;
about the only troubU with her.&#13;
Who is it that does not wish to be-&#13;
4 oat Ja, the open sir oi\ ahte Jn tome&#13;
fleM of sport, whether U be with the*&#13;
bat rod or gnn; whether we go coasting&#13;
over the hills a*4 rales 00 the&#13;
wheel or sailing oveMrough waves or&#13;
into serene coves, it It all sport* and&#13;
the springing muscles seem to need it&#13;
It is bound to happen that some mishap&#13;
will occur. Thus it is thai wehave&#13;
sprains in abundance, Light,&#13;
sprains, sprains that cripple, sprains&#13;
that give great pain, sprains that rob'&#13;
us of sleep, hut sportsmen ot all kindahave&#13;
come to know- that there is Both*&#13;
ing better than the old reliable 8 t&#13;
Jacob's Oil. Have it with you ter use;&#13;
you may rely on its cure ot the worst&#13;
sprain and restoration to the com*&#13;
forts of life.&#13;
4&#13;
lu?—iuieat nnd B y t i l a t l n o .&#13;
When any one is buying a coat or a.&#13;
fishing rod, or a rose tree, or laying;&#13;
down a cellar, or setting up a library,&#13;
either he knows what he wants, where&#13;
to get it, and what to pay for it, or&#13;
else he takes earnest counsel with his&#13;
friends and with the most trustworthy&#13;
professional advisers that he dan find,&#13;
and uses all the wits that he and&#13;
others can bring to bear on tho subject&#13;
in order to make sure that his purchase&#13;
is prudently conducted. He attends&#13;
sales, rummages in shops, and&#13;
discusses the matter in his club until&#13;
he and it are voted a nuisance. If&#13;
only half as much time and trouble&#13;
were devoted to the careful selection of&#13;
investments there would be fewer bad&#13;
companies, unscrupulous promoters,&#13;
and ornamental directors, the world&#13;
would he very much richer, and the&#13;
riches would show less tendency to&#13;
gravitate into Questionable hand*.—&#13;
CornhilL&#13;
i i f » , y w » y f&#13;
A w You Uiloar Allen'* Foot-EateT&#13;
It is the only cure for Swollen,&#13;
Smarting. Burning,1 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 tT1&#13;
Stores, 25c. Sample sent FREE. Address&#13;
Allen S, Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y. •.&#13;
Naval officials at Washington say&#13;
Americans in Venezuela are not menaced.&#13;
Had a situation existed which&#13;
was dangerous to American interests. '&#13;
the Mayflower would not have left&#13;
Venezuelan waters.&#13;
HftU'fl Catarrh C a m&#13;
Is a cc&amp;stitudonal cure. Price, 75a&#13;
MisfoTtrmeis something- that is liable&#13;
to seize us at any time.&#13;
Deeds of kindness are never out of&#13;
anyone's line.&#13;
For frost-bite, chilblains, sore and&#13;
lame joints, stiffness of muscles, try&#13;
Wizard Oil. It won't disappoint you.&#13;
Comfort and good cheer are worthy&#13;
to be desired.&#13;
Dropsy treated free by Dr. H. H. Green's&#13;
Bona, of Atlanta, Ga. The greatest dropsy&#13;
specialists in the world. Read their advertisement&#13;
in another column of this paper,&#13;
Physic beats prayer la curing sickness because&#13;
it has the inside track.&#13;
A R E YOCK CLOTHES F A 0 Z P f ^&#13;
Use R U M Bleaching Blue and make then:&#13;
white again. 10c At all good grocers.&#13;
The talent of success is nothing more than&#13;
doing what you can do well.&#13;
Mrs. Wlnslow'i Soothing' Syrafc.&#13;
For children teeth In*, noreen* the gums, reduce* la&#13;
flMumiiiUoa, allay* pain, cure* wind collo. 85c abottlo&#13;
A fellow who wears glasses doesn't always&#13;
make a spectacle of himself.&#13;
Piso's Cure for Consumption is an infallible&#13;
medicine for coughs and colds—N. \V. SAMUEL,&#13;
Ocean Grove, N. J., Feb. 17, 190(1&#13;
The woman who does not yearn for a pew&#13;
dress has nor yet appeared.&#13;
Hot Weather Health.&#13;
During tbe heated terra of July and&#13;
August one should be careful to keep a 11&#13;
the organs of the system in free work*&#13;
ing condition.&#13;
Baxter's Mandrake Bitters taken be*&#13;
fore meals will ward off diseases incident&#13;
to this trying season.&#13;
SHEEP AND RANCH •iattrnrof 4.*A&gt; good&#13;
breedlnc owes and their Iwnt*. 4,&lt;ttu aero* deeded&#13;
land, corrals, sbedt. wind mill*. 3,000 fruit true*, Kientjr of wa'er and rtuwe, x&amp; bead oat He, 60 head&#13;
orta*. Thi» is one of tbe mutt complete ranch**&#13;
In C' lorado and a good paring ioTestment. **eIHng&#13;
to clow up an estate, ror fall particular* addresa&#13;
L. K. WaiUns, Denver, Colorado,&#13;
EDUCATIONAL.&#13;
ST. MARY'S ACADEMY&#13;
Notre Dame, Indiana.&#13;
Conducted by the Sisters of the Holy&#13;
Cross. Chartered 1855. Thorough&#13;
English and Classical education. Regular&#13;
Collegiate Degrees.&#13;
In Preparatory Department students&#13;
carefully prepared for Collegiate course.&#13;
Physical and Chemical Laboratories&#13;
well equipped. Conservatory of Music&#13;
and School of Art Gymnasium under&#13;
direction of graduate of Boston Normal&#13;
School of Gymnastics. Catalogue free*&#13;
The 47th year will open Sept 5,1901.&#13;
MfrtM DIRECTRESS OF THE ACADEMY.&#13;
5C Mary's Acsdemy, Notrs&#13;
.„•„'.fry,,1,!, U&lt; .Ll'll, {^Wt^.mXJ ..'J.W.f.lUi.'.i'AM . i.JX'M'. .II.H.'-'IHiftl.^i'ji'tmJm1 ' . ^ . X ^ V c . ' R W w i ' A ' i v&#13;
SHOT THE PRESIDENT&#13;
A Story of Grime Which&#13;
Shocks the World.&#13;
The Wounded Executive's Condition&#13;
is Growing More&#13;
Encouraging.&#13;
The Sheeting Was Done on the Pan American&#13;
Exposition Grounds—-The World Stands&#13;
Aghast at the Horrible and Cowardly Crime.&#13;
T h e Buffalo V i s i t .&#13;
"President McKinley left Washington&#13;
for the Pan-American exposition on&#13;
Wednesday, arriving at Buffalo the&#13;
same evening, where he was received j&#13;
with n grand ovation. He was taken&#13;
to the residence of President John G.&#13;
Milhurn, who entertained Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
MeKinley as his personal guests. The\&#13;
president visited the exposition Thursday&#13;
And there delivered the address&#13;
upon the future of the nation that has i&#13;
already excited world-wide interest as;&#13;
the declaration of a new policy for his j&#13;
country. Friday morning he visited!&#13;
Niagara Falls, and had returned to the |&#13;
4~ exposition grounds at 3:30 o'clock.!&#13;
where he was receiving visitors, when'&#13;
the assassin took advantage of the occasion&#13;
to tire the shots that put the&#13;
president's life in jeopardy.&#13;
' T h e A s s a s s i n a t i o n .&#13;
He went to the grounds to attend a&#13;
pwblle reception In his honor in the&#13;
Temple of Music. A long line of people&#13;
had passed, each receiving a smile&#13;
and a hearty hand clasp. When Assassin&#13;
C«olgos» approached, he grasped&#13;
the president's hand nnd as quick as&#13;
thought fired twice from n revolver&#13;
-which was In his free hand, concealed&#13;
from view by a large white handkerchief.&#13;
The stricken man was given&#13;
*• fcnajMhite assistance and the assassin&#13;
w*» trtnioned and disarmed after quite&#13;
n struggle, being removed to a city police&#13;
gtntion under a heavy guard.&#13;
T h e C o w a r d l y A s s a s s i n .&#13;
The birthplace of Cxolgosa was at&#13;
first given as Detroit, then ns Clevcs&#13;
f land, Ohio, and finally Alpena, Mich.,*&#13;
k from which place the family removed&#13;
to Cleveland nine years ago. There&#13;
were nine cnlldren in the family. The&#13;
• stepmother of Leon when told of his&#13;
cm-line *aW: "I wn't believe Leon is&#13;
the one; He was such a timid boy, so&#13;
" ~wfratrt-*it, everathiPK, Why, he wo*&#13;
the bJajkeaVcewavd you ever saw in&#13;
your lifo. Everybody .knew he had no&#13;
courage. He was afraid of his shadow.&#13;
A boy could scare him by threatening&#13;
him. Truly. Leon would not. dare to do&#13;
tilings other boys did, so timid was ho.&#13;
Ho was backward when other people&#13;
were around, and I don't see how he&#13;
found courage to go in- the great&#13;
crowd."&#13;
E m m a G o l d m n n IIin I n s p i r a t i o n .&#13;
The assassin lias signed a confession&#13;
covering six pages of foolscap, which&#13;
states that lie is an anarchist, and&#13;
that ho became an enthusiastic memln&gt;&#13;
r of I hat body through the influence&#13;
of Emma Coidman. whose writings he&#13;
had read and whoso lectures he had&#13;
listened to. He denies having any&#13;
confederate and says he decided on&#13;
the act three days before and bought&#13;
the revolver with which the act was&#13;
committed in Buffalo. He professes no&#13;
regrets, says he is an anarchist and did&#13;
his duty. He sleeps and eats well and&#13;
under the process of '*s wen ting" to secure&#13;
information as to his accomplices,&#13;
if he had any, he remains cool and collected.&#13;
-*&#13;
T h e P r e s i d e n t ' s W o v s f d a .&#13;
The attending physicians/give this&#13;
description of thfc president's wounds:&#13;
"One bullet struck on the upper portion&#13;
of the breast bone, glancing and not&#13;
penetrating; fae second bullet penetrated&#13;
the abdomen five Inches below&#13;
the left nipple and OIM? and a half&#13;
inches to the left of the median line.&#13;
The abdomen was opened through the&#13;
line of the bullet wound. It was found&#13;
that the bullet had penetrated the&#13;
stomach. The opening In the front&#13;
of the stomach was carefully closed&#13;
with silk stitches, after which a&#13;
search was made for a hole in the&#13;
back wall of the stomach. This was&#13;
found and closed In the same way. The&#13;
further course of the bullet conM not&#13;
be discovered, although careful search&#13;
was made. The abdominal wound, was&#13;
closed without drainage. No Injury to&#13;
the intestines or other abdominal organs&#13;
was discovered. The patlent&#13;
stood the operation well."&#13;
R e m o v e d F r o m t h e G r o a n d n .&#13;
An automobile ambulance conveyed,&#13;
under strong guard, the wounded president&#13;
to the home of Mr. Milburn on&#13;
Delaware avenue, where he and Mrs.&#13;
McKinley were being entertained, and&#13;
where she was resting during her husband's&#13;
reception on the grounds. Here&#13;
watched over by the best physicians&#13;
and trained nurses the couutry can&#13;
produce, the chief executive of the&#13;
United Stales is battling for his life,&#13;
which is at this time of more importance&#13;
to the country and the world than&#13;
human foresight can determine.&#13;
Mm. M c K i n l e y A n x i o u s .&#13;
Director-General W. I. Buchanan&#13;
prevented the news of the crime reaching&#13;
Mrs. McKinley until the physicians&#13;
had operated on her husband and&#13;
dressed the wounds. The Niagara&#13;
Falhs trip had tired Mrs. McKinley.&#13;
and 011 returning to the Milburn residence&#13;
she took leave of her nieces, the&#13;
Misses Barber, and the president's&#13;
niece, Miss Duncan, as well as their&#13;
hostess. Mrs. Milburn, and went to her&#13;
room to rest. Mr. Buchanan broke'the&#13;
j news as gehtlyas"p6SSibto to the nieces&#13;
j and consulted with them and Mrs. Milj&#13;
burn as to the best course to pursue in&#13;
i hreakiiigTtho news to Mrs. McKinley.&#13;
j Ir was finally decided that on her&#13;
1 awakening, or shortly thereafter. Mr.&#13;
] Buchanan should break the news to&#13;
! li#r. it", in the meantime her physician.,&#13;
I Dr. Hixey. approved. Mrs. McKinley&#13;
I awoke from her sleep at Kbout- r»:30&#13;
I o'clock. She was reeling splendidly,&#13;
j she said, and at once took up her&#13;
j crocheting, which is one of her favorj&#13;
ite diversions. Whije the light of day&#13;
j remained she continued with her&#13;
j crocheting, keeping to her room. When&#13;
it became dusk, and the president had&#13;
not arrived, she began to feel anxious&#13;
concerning him.&#13;
"I ponder why he does not come,"&#13;
she asfced one of her nieces.&#13;
H o w She R e c e i v e d t h e Nevr».&#13;
Dr. Rixey visited Mrs. McKinley&#13;
just before 7 o'clock and shortly after&#13;
told her the news in the most gentle&#13;
manner. She stood it bravely, though&#13;
considerably affected. With the exception&#13;
of (he physicians ami attendants,&#13;
Mrs. McKinley was the only persou&#13;
who crossed the threshold. The president&#13;
asked to see her, and his physicians&#13;
did not have the heart to refuse&#13;
his request. She was there but a few&#13;
minutes, seated at his bedside, as he in&#13;
his devotion to her in her illness has so&#13;
often been at hers. Mrs, McKinley had&#13;
been warned not to talk, and the president&#13;
and his wife exchanged only a&#13;
few words. It was only when lie asked&#13;
her to be brave for both their sakes&#13;
that she faltered- and almost broke&#13;
dowu. With choking throat and brimmius&#13;
eyes she promised with a bow of&#13;
her head. Almost Immediately thereafter&#13;
she was led from the room by&#13;
Pi*. Rlxey.&#13;
T i l * P h y s i c i a n s ' P e a r s *&#13;
The n 1 tending physicians fear Inf.&#13;
ammailon and at the first sign in that&#13;
direction the country must steel itself&#13;
for the blow. For the time being the&#13;
tAfa&amp;HP*1 t ^ bodr! % ZjttM!'H•"* &amp;$%&gt; &amp;l« m«tlHm Iwr&#13;
Wl&amp;e it b4urkd€J been tfb»oWteIy W&#13;
cared, they all nctee that after passmg&#13;
through the abdominal cavity and&#13;
perforating both wall* of the stomach&#13;
porhHpg'it lodged m the fleshy muscles&#13;
of the back, and if necessity required&#13;
It eould be easily located with the Roentgen&#13;
ray and extracted. They agree&#13;
that It Is now of more importance that&#13;
the president should recover from the&#13;
shock of the first operation than that&#13;
the bullet should be removed.&#13;
•Peritonitis Is what they dread, and&#13;
after that septic po&gt;enlng and suppuration&#13;
of the wound.&#13;
The Aaavehlsto Bejolee,&#13;
The anarchist group of Paterson, N.&#13;
J., express no regret at the shooting of&#13;
President McKinley. On the contrary,&#13;
there was a great gathering of the&#13;
members in that city and Czolgosz who&#13;
shot the president was toasted in beer,&#13;
time and time again.&#13;
In Pittsburg an unknown man yelled&#13;
"Hnrrnh tnr tho mnn, whft shot Mc-&#13;
Kinley." In an instant he was knocked&#13;
downv and with a hundred men trying&#13;
to get a kick at him. he was in a fair&#13;
way to be killed. He finally escaped.&#13;
Shouting his joy over the attempted&#13;
assassination of President McKinley,&#13;
Fred Gardner precipitated a riot In&#13;
front of the newspaix»r offices in Washington&#13;
street. Chicago. He narrowly&#13;
escaped being killed by the infuriated&#13;
crowd.&#13;
When the Italian anarchists at Chicago,&#13;
near Pittsburg, heard of the attempted&#13;
assassination of President Mc-&#13;
Kinley they held a*big jubilation. A&#13;
mob went out from Pittsburg and&#13;
drove the anarchists out of town. A&#13;
number of shots were fired.&#13;
Sufferer's I*resent Condition.&#13;
Daring Sunday and up to this (Monday)&#13;
morning no unfavorable symptoms&#13;
have been noted and the distinguished&#13;
sufferer rested with fair comfort during&#13;
the day and night The prospects&#13;
of recovery are very cheering&#13;
Still at Laroje.&#13;
The six masked men who robbed the&#13;
south-bound Cotton Belt passenger&#13;
train four miles from Texarkana. Ark.,&#13;
are thought to be In that city. It has&#13;
been learned that the robbers secured&#13;
one bag of gold which required the&#13;
combined efforts of two men to carry&#13;
from the express car to the engine.&#13;
The through safe was blown open&#13;
with dynamite. It is believed the rrtbhers&#13;
are Texarkana men. The amount&#13;
of the booty it is now said will reach&#13;
nearlv $.10,()1)0. Pursuit is now confined&#13;
strictly to Texarkana.&#13;
Want It Stopped.&#13;
New York merchants whose business&#13;
has been affected by depredations&#13;
of guerrilla bands on the Isthmus&#13;
of Panama, suggest that it is&#13;
a+rmtlr-rmte-44t^-t4wted States landed&#13;
troops to put a stop to the disturbances,&#13;
which are injuring trade and&#13;
threatening American, property. They&#13;
say shutting off of military supplies to&#13;
the insurgents from this port would&#13;
do much toward ending existing trouble.&#13;
Ship captains who have visited&#13;
Venezuela say large supplies of arms&#13;
from Belgium and Germany are being&#13;
landed there.&#13;
CONDENSED NEWS.&#13;
A *viml storm demolished many&#13;
buildings, at Uenkelraan, Neb.&#13;
Prof. Baumgarten. of Tubingen, supports&#13;
Dr. Koch's theory that bovine&#13;
tuberculosis is not communicable to&#13;
human beings.&#13;
Leonidas Plaza, just inaugurated&#13;
president of Ecuador, is 4'2 years old.&#13;
A year ago he was an exile for mixing&#13;
in a revolution.&#13;
A masked cyclist held up the White&#13;
Cliffs-IIilcania (Australia) mail coach,&#13;
wounded a passenger, secured the&#13;
mails and opals valued at £1.-U». and&#13;
escaped.&#13;
Two-men were shot.muLseriously injured&#13;
in Walpole. Mass., as the outcome&#13;
of a quarrel between Fred L.&#13;
Jenks, a 'machinist, and Myra Belle&#13;
Spear, a young woman with whom he&#13;
had been keeping company. .lenks&#13;
though*. Miss Spear did not care for&#13;
him as much as formerly, and by way&#13;
of emphasizing a protest threatened to&#13;
shoot her. Charles Maiers grappled&#13;
with .leaks, and the latter shot him in&#13;
the body. Jenks then shot himself.&#13;
Consul-General Ho Yow. of San&#13;
Francisco, may be appointed to sneered&#13;
Wu Ting Fang if the minister&#13;
is transferred to London from Washington.&#13;
In Piketon. O., Israel McOollester&#13;
was stabbed to death while endeavor'&#13;
inc to till tiie role of peacemaker in a&#13;
quarrel at a dance. When McCollestcr&#13;
fell, knives and revolvers were&#13;
drawn all over the hall, which was&#13;
crowded with dancers. A panic ensued&#13;
among the women, many of&#13;
whom fainted. In the excitement&#13;
those who had felled MeCollester escaped.&#13;
Krauz, former governor of Johannesburg&#13;
and a popular official of the&#13;
Transvaal government, was arrested&#13;
in London Monday night on a charge&#13;
of high treason.&#13;
Charles W. Tanner, member of the&#13;
Richmond, Va., city council, who has&#13;
been nil ml for ^S years, claims to have&#13;
had his sight restored by Christian&#13;
Science. *•&#13;
Robert Graham, of Huntsville. Utah,&#13;
a prominent official in the Mormon&#13;
sect, was shot and almost Instantly&#13;
killed while returning home from&#13;
church.&#13;
Banks in Texas have been notified&#13;
that bills of two Montana banks to&#13;
the. amount of $300.0()0 are in circulation&#13;
lacking the signatures of presidents&#13;
and cashiers. The hills are sard&#13;
to have been stolen in the nvent train&#13;
robbery In Montana.&#13;
airiajr t# t » * fttvffceva.&#13;
crediUble labor demoastratfon would&#13;
give impetui to the ttoel strikers'&#13;
cause and straagthea them la thai* \&#13;
great fight, but the development* to&#13;
the strike situation Tuesday were al^&#13;
favorable to the masters. From ntar- ,\ »&#13;
ly every point in this district the *•» '•• '&#13;
ports were of a discouraging^ttatore V '&#13;
to the strikers. Thirty-two new workmen,&#13;
all said to be skilled, entered •&#13;
the Star tin plate plant without moksv&#13;
Ution; 1 » machinists returned t o&#13;
work In the Pennsylvania and Coat*;.;&#13;
nental tube plants and 12 imported&#13;
men went to work at the steel hoop&#13;
mill la Monessen. At DuQuesne no&#13;
further efforts were made to get the&#13;
men out and the works were m fult&#13;
operation. Painters' and Lindsay A&#13;
McCutcheon's mills are again running&#13;
with increased forces, while the conditions&#13;
at McKeesport were without&#13;
material change.&#13;
At a Labor Day picnic in Pittsburg&#13;
Monday, W. J. Brennan, counsel tor&#13;
the Amalgamated Association, said:&#13;
"Of the 6,107,000 depositors In the&#13;
banks, one-third of them, at least,&#13;
must be union men and friends of&#13;
labor. When labor commences a run&#13;
on the banks, Morgan will know that&#13;
there is something to arbitrate. Six&#13;
billions of dollars cannot be paid with&#13;
$1,000,000,000 of gold; ¢2,500,000,000 of&#13;
deposits cannot be paid with $1,000,-&#13;
000.000 of gold; $2,300,000,000 of loans&#13;
cannot be paid with $1,000,000,000 of&#13;
gold. Demand your money. Have&#13;
every friend of labor demand his. Deprive&#13;
the trust of its life—money. Be&#13;
united to a man. and the trust will&#13;
cry for quarter within a week."&#13;
There is a considerable demand for&#13;
bicycles in Japan.&#13;
BASE BALL.&#13;
B e l o w w e pnb.li.vi t h e standin-r o f&#13;
t h e America a and N a t i o n a l l e a g u e c l u b s&#13;
n p t o and i n c l u d i n g t h e g a m e s p l a y e J&#13;
o n Sunday, S e p t e m b e r 8:&#13;
Woo. LiV'. Pare**&#13;
Chicago 71 48 .813&#13;
Boston 67 uJ .MS&#13;
Detroit fit 5* J&amp;&#13;
Philadelphia.. 61 5J .521&#13;
Baltimore 68 57 .SOI&#13;
Washington.... 53 63 .07&#13;
CleveUnd 49 67 .42J&#13;
Milwaukee 44 75 .WJ&#13;
NATIONAL U2A3U8.&#13;
Wan. Lo &lt;-- Par o-..&#13;
Pittsbur? 71 ii .528&#13;
Philadelphia 63 47 .M&gt;i&#13;
Brooklyn 6* 50 2X6&#13;
St. Louis.. a; r&gt;o J&gt;2S&#13;
Boston..... 57 CJ " .i87&#13;
Cincinnati 44 67 .4(0&#13;
Chicago 43 7J .307&#13;
Sew York: 41 GJ .3W&#13;
'.V1!''- ' '•'• :.i&#13;
' ' • ' • f f - ' , * £&#13;
. * : j *, • • , . ' ' / ( i j * /Tn&#13;
.'_„ "• l : ' I ' '•'.'••*•' •'-(.&#13;
''''•'' ' r •• *&gt;: • ' v ' V ^&#13;
'./•,wr -&#13;
k-Mm&#13;
m&#13;
• • ; i * " - '&#13;
AMUSEMENTS IX DKTKOIT.&#13;
WEEK ENI&gt;IKCJ SEPT. 1*.&#13;
AVEXTJI THEATKE—Vaudeville— Prices: afternoon.&#13;
10.15, &amp; 25: evening, ID, A«,2 c; rcaerv. oOc.&#13;
W H I T S E Y GRAND—-Across the Pacific. "Mat.&#13;
li)c. 15 and u5c: evenings, loc, 4Vc anil 30c.&#13;
LYCEUM THEATEB—'Men «nd Women." Sat.&#13;
Mat. U'I. Summer Prices, 15, ?&gt; and 50 cents.&#13;
T H E M A R K E T S .&#13;
The cattle market in Detroit remain*&#13;
about the same in prices as those ruling&#13;
for the past two weeks. Good feeders&#13;
were In active demand. Milch cows active&#13;
at $&amp; to $45. Butcher stock ranged&#13;
In price from &amp;30&amp;3.50, some choice at&#13;
$4.50. Shelp—Best lambs, *4.83^6; light to&#13;
good and good mixed lots. J3.iXXti4.75; fair&#13;
to good mixed and butchers' sheep. $£7a4r&#13;
3.75; culls and common, $1.5&lt;Xn2.50. H o g s -&#13;
Prime mediums and fat Yorkers. $t&gt;.45&lt;£&#13;
6.50; light Yorkers and stubble hogs. I6.3W&#13;
6.40; pigs, I6.35S6.45; roughs, $5.2iiu5.7J per&#13;
cwt.&#13;
Buffalo—Cattle market steady to firm.&#13;
for durable grades; veals, $5.50@5.75; fed&#13;
Texas steers. $4.50; closed firm. H o g s -&#13;
Market active and higher for good&#13;
grades; pigs and light grades very dull,&#13;
with several loads left over; best heavy&#13;
grades, $7@7.'.5; mixed and mediums,&#13;
&lt;6.95@7; good w e i g h t Yorkers, $S.90@ti.96;&#13;
light do. *&gt;.S0&lt;S26.S5 to $6.90; pigs, $o.65@6.75.&#13;
Sheep—Best native lambs, $o.5tKfi5.60; few&#13;
fancy early. $5.75; culls to good, $3.2549&#13;
5.40; mixed shcepr tops;-$*50^3.7S; culls tofair,&#13;
$1.50.^3.40; handy wethers, $3.80#4;&#13;
fair to good. $3.50?j4.25.&#13;
New York—Steers. $4.50513.65; no prime&#13;
here; stockers. $3.S5; bulls, $2.85^4; cows.&#13;
S2*?4.15; sheep. $2.5033.75; choice and export&#13;
&lt;Jo. $4(a4.25; culls. $2; lambs, $4.25^6; one&#13;
deck. $6.25; mainly. $5@5.S7»B; culls, $34*4.&#13;
Hogs—Market firm; western hogs, $6.85;&#13;
state hogs. $7&lt;g7.10.&#13;
Chicago-Seattle, good to orime steers.&#13;
$5.75(36.50: poor to medium, $4(55.60; stockers&#13;
and feeders slow. $2.25¾4.25; cows,&#13;
$2.35??74.75; heifers, $2.40&lt;S5: canners. $1.50«&#13;
2.35; bulls, $2.75&lt;£4.75; calves, $&amp;ft6.35; Hogs&#13;
—Mixed and butchers. $605^78.95; good to&#13;
choice heavy, $6.45®7: rough heavy. $6.05©&#13;
6.40; light. $6.06¾ 6.S5. Sheep—Good to&#13;
choice wethers, $3.65*?4.25; fair to choice&#13;
mixed. $3.20&lt;ff3.70; western eheep. $3.25^3.90;&#13;
native lambs, $3@4.S5; western lambs, $4@&#13;
4.75.&#13;
Cincinnati—Heavy steers, choice $5,259&#13;
5.50 nominal; fair to good, $4.75555,15. oxen&#13;
$2^4.35: butchers, choice $4.75@5. fair to&#13;
good $3.50(84-65; heifers, good to choice&#13;
$3.75@4.35. common to fair $2.40^3.65: cows,&#13;
good to choice $3.60®4.10. Hogs—Sold on&#13;
prompt buying at $6.75®6.80. Sheep—Extra&#13;
$3.25^3,35. good to choice $2.5O@3.20.&#13;
common to fair $1.50^2.40. Lambs—Extra&#13;
$5:25@5.35, good to choice $4.35^5.25, common&#13;
to fair $£.75ft4.25.&#13;
Pittsburg—Choice cattle $5.65^5.80. prime&#13;
$5.45^6.¾). good $5.15^5.30. good gwlss cattle&#13;
$3.90^4.50. heifers $3^4.40. oxen $2.50«»&#13;
$4.50, fat cows *2@4.10. H o g s - H e a v y $ 6 . « ^&#13;
6.90, light Yorkers $6.S0([i*.S6. pigs $6-50t*&#13;
6.70 Sheep—Best wethers $4^4.15, «ood&#13;
$&amp;C0&lt;33.85, mUed $3.10g3.50.&#13;
G r a l a . E t c .&#13;
Cincinnati—Wheat—Light supply with&#13;
No. 2 winter red quotable at 72c. on track.&#13;
Corn—No. 2 white is held at 59tt@ti0c. No.&#13;
2 yellow sold at 58c. No. 2 mixed at 57%c.&#13;
Oats—No. 2 white are quoted at 39c and&#13;
No. 2 mixed at 37Hc.&#13;
Detroit—The wheat market Is lower. No.&#13;
2 red selling at 72c for cash, mixed winter&#13;
71%c. No. 1 white 72Hc. Corn—Cash No.&#13;
2. 57c; No. 2 yellow, 57%c; No. S yellow.&#13;
57Hc; No. 2 yellow, 57Hc; No. 3 yellow.&#13;
white. 37c cash; No. 3 white. 38%e.&#13;
Chicago—Wheat—Cash sales, spring.&#13;
frrs4@69c; No. 2 red, G9%!fr70%c. Corn—No. ; 2, 554c; No. 2 yellow. 56@5«^. Oats—No.&#13;
S. 34«34%c: No. 2 white, 36H$37c; No. t&#13;
white, $6@S7c.&#13;
New York—Wheat—No. 2 r«d, T8Hc f. o.&#13;
bv afloat: No. 2 red. 74*c elevator; No. t&#13;
northern Duluth. ?6^c f. o. b. afloat; No.&#13;
1 hard Duluth. ntc f. o. b. aflo»t. C o r n -&#13;
No. 2 ti%c elevator, and «2%c f. o. b.&#13;
afloat. Oatt—Market dull. N o material&#13;
chango In price.&#13;
( • • •&#13;
^ i f : U h1&#13;
r^-k"»\.'Ti&#13;
^ ¾&#13;
^ . , i *&#13;
M M i&#13;
:Wkiii:v". m A'1, 1&gt; .'*!&#13;
•.V '•' • v * , •&#13;
:..&gt;•• / - - , ^ -• w 1 ' . •... ...V- "••* . .&#13;
$ « ^ ^&#13;
• V , , Af.t&gt;f&#13;
fefc&#13;
2¾ ^ • • v&#13;
1¾^&#13;
^ -&#13;
F.l-&lt;&#13;
-&gt;;.^'&#13;
F*y&#13;
EAST PUTNAM.&#13;
Jay Stanton visited Grace Lake&#13;
the first of the week.&#13;
Mrs, Arthur Sohoenhala visited&#13;
in Bast Putnam Friday.&#13;
School opened here Monday&#13;
with Le'la Monks as teacher.&#13;
Mesdames Harriet and Sarah&#13;
Brown visited at Delhi Sunday,&#13;
W. H, ?laceway and son Clay-&#13;
Ion spent Saturday aTSamTPTace"&#13;
ways.&#13;
{ Geo. Wright of Marion called&#13;
on Anderson friends Sunday.&#13;
V. GfBinkle and family enter,&#13;
tainedjfr. D*t cousin from Detroit&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
The Misses Edith Wood and&#13;
Ethel Durjtee spent Wednesday&#13;
at the home of F. Merill in Iosco.&#13;
The Sept meeting of the Anderson&#13;
farmers club will be held at&#13;
the home of B. Clinton Saturday,&#13;
Sept 14.&#13;
Several from this place attendthe&#13;
ball game at Stockbridge be&#13;
STILL MOBE LOCAL.&#13;
IS.&#13;
tween the IJnmlilla and Btofik—)—Mist—Margaret terroH t&gt;f Detroit&#13;
PARSHALLVILLEThe&#13;
Jadies aid met with Mrs&#13;
Bryant Wednesday.&#13;
Warren Cole is quite sick—Dr.&#13;
Knapp of Fenton is attending&#13;
him.&#13;
Mrs. Chester VanCamp is under&#13;
the caro of Dr. Iugrahm of&#13;
Fenton.&#13;
Rev. Niles, a former pastnr,&#13;
occupied the pulpit in the Baptist&#13;
church last Sabbath.&#13;
The Sunday school workers of&#13;
Hartland met at the Baptist&#13;
ehurch Sunday afternoon and organized&#13;
a permanent township association.&#13;
NORTH LAKE.&#13;
B. C. Glenn is on the sick list.&#13;
O. P. Noah was in Ann Arbor&#13;
one day this week on business.&#13;
Eva Hudson is visiting her sister&#13;
Mrs. Hartley Bland at Hartland.&#13;
Mary Whaliau commenced&#13;
•cfcool in the Canfield district this&#13;
Week.&#13;
Amy Whalian will drive to&#13;
and from school at Chelsea during&#13;
the fall tern*.&#13;
Bose Murray is home from Ann&#13;
Arbor. It is reported that she&#13;
now h*as diptheria.&#13;
C. A. Simonds of Niles visited&#13;
his mother at N. P. Noah's from&#13;
Friday till Monday.&#13;
Mrs. Fannie Murphy and son&#13;
•iaited her parents Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
Jas. Beilly last week.&#13;
North Lake people should make&#13;
the acquaintance of Mr. B. H.&#13;
GleneW new daughter Saturday&#13;
51.&#13;
Most wkid mills in this vicinity&#13;
had a rest last week and their&#13;
owners ettber went dry or pumped&#13;
water by hand.&#13;
WEST PUTNAM.&#13;
The farmers of this vicinity are&#13;
cutting com these days.&#13;
Earnest White of Uarion spent&#13;
Sunday at L. B. Whites'.&#13;
School opened Monday with&#13;
Anna Belle Miller as teacher.&#13;
Andrew Bates wife and son&#13;
visited his parents here last Sunday.&#13;
Mr. Kelly is so mioh improved&#13;
im health as to be ab)e to ride out&#13;
the past week.&#13;
Georgia Gardner spent the&#13;
greater part of last week with&#13;
Marion friends.&#13;
The Misses Nellie Gardner and&#13;
Fannie Monks 'were in Detroit&#13;
one day last week.&#13;
M. Keily and son of Chicago&#13;
ate guests of his uncle Patrick&#13;
Kelly and family.&#13;
Alice and Lee Barton, Millie&#13;
and Glenn Gardner are attending&#13;
school in Pinckney.&#13;
Grandma Sweeney and granddaughter&#13;
Emma Gardner visited&#13;
at J. M. Conner's and wife last&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
bridge teams.&#13;
Mrs. N. M. Coleman and daughter&#13;
Nettie returned to their home&#13;
in Lansing Tuesday after a week's&#13;
visit with Mrs. C's mother, aud&#13;
other relatives here.&#13;
UNADILLA.&#13;
Wm. Pyper was in Pinckney&#13;
Tuesday.&#13;
Geo. May commenced work for&#13;
A. C. Watson Monday.&#13;
Geo. Shephard sold his house&#13;
and lot in town to Lyman Barton&#13;
last week.&#13;
Frank C. Ives of Mason is visiting&#13;
his uncle Frank Ives aud&#13;
other relatives here.&#13;
Mrs. Daniel Sullivan of Columbus&#13;
Ohio is visiting relatives and&#13;
friends at this place.&#13;
Tbe Unadilla farmers club will&#13;
meet at the home et Z. A. Hartsuff&#13;
on Saturday Sept 21. Program&#13;
next week.&#13;
Unadilla and Stockbridge played&#13;
ball at Stockbridge last Saturday,&#13;
the score ending in the score&#13;
of 13 to 8 in favcr of Stockbridge.&#13;
$2.00—10 * Day Excorsion—$2.00 to&#13;
Northern Michigan.&#13;
Tuesday S e p t 17 the Ann Arbor&#13;
Bailroad will give anotner&#13;
cheap excursion Fraukfort, Crystal&#13;
Lake, Traverse City and Manistee&#13;
at the remarkable rate of $2.00&#13;
for round trip. Tickets will be&#13;
sold for train leaving Lakeland at&#13;
9:26 a m and will be good to return&#13;
on any regular train until&#13;
Thursday Sept. 26. September is&#13;
the nicest month in the year to&#13;
travel aud the best for fishing in&#13;
the Northern Lakes.&#13;
We are sorry to report that Orla&#13;
Jackson is no better.&#13;
Chaa. Stickle, wife and daughter&#13;
are in Buffalo this week.&#13;
Mrp. L. M. Teeple and two eons of&#13;
Va&amp;sar are visiting relatives he re.&#13;
Mrs. H. W. Smiths of Marion has&#13;
our thanks for a tine water melon.&#13;
John O'Connor attended tbe funeral&#13;
of a brother in Jackson this week,&#13;
Peaches sell in Howell for 75 cents&#13;
to $1. We have to pay from $1.50 to&#13;
• * - « ! • •&#13;
^ • ' U . I " H * * * mm&#13;
raASCU* REPORT.&#13;
« *&#13;
.&lt;#»»•&#13;
Am East I n d i a n V e r d i c t .&#13;
In a ease in oae of our Indian courts&#13;
a jury bad before them evidence that&#13;
could no* be i* an? way shaken. When&#13;
the coMotaKHag stage bad been reached,&#13;
the"folleWiug interchange of conversation&#13;
took' place'between the judge and&#13;
his'colleagues in the administration of&#13;
justice:&#13;
"Gentleatea. *re you ready to give&#13;
your veBdio*'£! - —&#13;
"Yes."&#13;
"What is yew verdict?"&#13;
, "Our answer is, sir, that you ean do&#13;
as you like wiyi t-ke men that have confessed,&#13;
but we acquit all the rest."&#13;
"But is it possible* that you have&#13;
weighed the evidence?"&#13;
"Evidence like -this can always he&#13;
fabricated." » .&#13;
"Do you find that as regards these&#13;
prisoners it has bee©'fabricated?"&#13;
"Evidence can be fabricated."&#13;
"So the evidence is *B trustworthy?"&#13;
"Unless a man oonfesses who can tell&#13;
if he is guilty?"—Bombay Gazette.&#13;
Close to a Fool.&#13;
A farmer was working in his field&#13;
when a sewing machine man came&#13;
along.&#13;
"Good morning," said the sewing machine&#13;
barker.&#13;
"Mornin."&#13;
"Your com seems to be pretty yellow.*'&#13;
"Yaas; I planted yellow cawn."&#13;
"You don't seem to have more than&#13;
half a crop."&#13;
"Waal, I p!a-*"d it on tbe halves."&#13;
"You seem p:-. .;y close to a fooL"&#13;
"Yaas; there's only a fence between&#13;
us."&#13;
When the sewing machine man came&#13;
to, it required the services of two doetore&#13;
to get him into such shape that he&#13;
as able to make tbe next town.—New&#13;
rleans Times-Democrat&#13;
spent the past week with her parent*&#13;
at this place.&#13;
Messrs Orrie and George Moe of&#13;
Ann Arbor spent Sunday at the home&#13;
of Tbos. Carroll.&#13;
Mrs. P. £. Pearce and son Henry,&#13;
visited her irother R M. Glenn and&#13;
family part of last week.&#13;
I. S. Davis and wife of Howell returned&#13;
home "Saturday after a week's&#13;
visit with relatives here.&#13;
John F. Sraitb and mother, Mrs.&#13;
Hannah Smith of Polk Ohio are guests&#13;
of ber son 8. S. Smith and family.&#13;
Mr. Geo. Few las of Lansing made&#13;
H. W. Smith of Marion a verv pleasant&#13;
call, and is visiting Wm. Bland&#13;
ot Putnam.&#13;
The five months old child of John&#13;
Mortenson and wife will be burried&#13;
tbis afternoon from the home. Rev.&#13;
Hicks will officiate.&#13;
There will be regular preaching&#13;
service in tbe M. E. church here Sunday&#13;
mnrniog and at the Lakin ap*&#13;
pointment in the afternoon.&#13;
Sam Kennedy wbo his been spending&#13;
a couple of years in the far west&#13;
returned home the first of the week.&#13;
He says he likes the western country&#13;
very much.&#13;
All intsrested will be glad to learn&#13;
that Rev. H. W. Hicks has been returned-&#13;
to the work here tor another&#13;
year. Rev. E. E. Caster of Howell&#13;
goes to Obelspa.&#13;
We just learned this week that Tom&#13;
Clark bad the misfortune last week to&#13;
have his shoulder put out of joint&#13;
while putting a halter on a horse.&#13;
Sorry, Mr. Clark this is a bad time of&#13;
the year for a farmer to be laid np&#13;
and help scarce.&#13;
Wm. Hlack Sr. died at bis home in&#13;
tbis place Wednesday morning, aged&#13;
58 years. He has been a sufferer for&#13;
years from asthma and death was a&#13;
relief. He leaves a wife, one son and&#13;
a daughter. Funeral at the residence&#13;
Friday at 1 p. m.&#13;
Some from here are talking of going&#13;
to Frankfort Oil the $2 excursion&#13;
via the A. A. railroad on Tuesday&#13;
next, Sept. 17. Good board can be&#13;
bad for $1 per day and the trip will&#13;
certainly be a delightful one at this&#13;
time of the year.&#13;
Bert Rodgers the nursery salesman&#13;
for Inglefritz Sons was in town the&#13;
ptst week taking orders and looking&#13;
alter bis patrons. He will make1 a&#13;
more extended canvass fend try to call&#13;
on all during the winter. Bert is&#13;
able to sell goods where most agents&#13;
fail.&#13;
John Seibly who has been selling&#13;
the map of Michigan here for tbe&#13;
past two weeks finished op his delivery&#13;
here thin week and ha* gone to&#13;
Gregory to work from that place.&#13;
Mr. Seibly is a gentleman in every&#13;
way and has pnt a map in nearly&#13;
every house in his territory.&#13;
Detroit&#13;
"To-Day"&#13;
A Dailf Paper&#13;
and&#13;
Financial report of seuoei distrios&#13;
No. two for the foho4l year commencing&#13;
Sept. 2nd 1900 and ending Sept.&#13;
lit 1901:&#13;
JUCCSXPM. •*-"•&#13;
Cash on hand Sept. let 1900 $ 8004*&#13;
Primary money 867.86&#13;
One mill tax 2954$&#13;
Library money 9.93&#13;
Dog tax *. 79&#13;
Tuition from non-res. pupils 170.66"&#13;
Voted tax 1,700,00&#13;
Total receipts including&#13;
money on hand Sept. 1 '00 $3,139.90&#13;
IIX&amp;BOS&amp;SMBVTS.&#13;
Teachers' salaries:&#13;
Stephen Durfee $ 700.00&#13;
C. L. Gaimes SAO.00&#13;
Jessie Green 300.00&#13;
Edith Greene 300.00&#13;
Janitor's salary&#13;
Director's salary&#13;
Treasurer's salary&#13;
Truant officer's salary&#13;
1,650.09&#13;
$ 110.60&#13;
. 25 00&#13;
. 26.00&#13;
10.00&#13;
$170.09&#13;
Fuel&#13;
Printing $ 18.70&#13;
Alabastine 38.55&#13;
Work en school ground and bid 38.58&#13;
Insurance 78.30&#13;
Painting school beilding 156.92&#13;
Material for painting and repairing&#13;
school house 79.91&#13;
Incidentals 42.25&#13;
Cash on hand to balance Sept,&#13;
2 1901 866.69&#13;
1319.89&#13;
$3139.90&#13;
Dated this 10th day of Sept. 1901.&#13;
D. W. Mi7RTA, Director.&#13;
The&#13;
Pinckney&#13;
For Sale&#13;
Uawson's Goldon Chaff wbeaV&#13;
seed, i'lean and nice.&#13;
Z. A. HARTSUTF,&#13;
Unadilla, Micb.&#13;
For Nnle.&#13;
Ajiyone in n*ed-ol~a-weU pump will&#13;
Dispatch&#13;
do well to call on as. Desiring to&#13;
put in a force pump we have a good&#13;
second hand pump in good running&#13;
order. It was working well in a 58&#13;
foot veil when changed for the force.&#13;
The pump may be seen at Teeple &amp;&#13;
A Weekly Paper Cad wells.&#13;
Both&#13;
wc&#13;
Or&#13;
ANDERSON&#13;
, Farmer* affe busy with tkeir&#13;
vji/be*»»—tlie prospects are a very&#13;
poorcrofi. _&#13;
A Pound of Swallow*.&#13;
How ' many live swallow* so to a&#13;
pound? This question lately formed&#13;
tbe subject of a bet to tbe little town&#13;
of N——. In Baden. A swallow was&#13;
caught and its legs and wings tied up&#13;
with a piece of silk thread and placed&#13;
en the scale*. To everybody's surprise&#13;
it was found to weigh only ten&#13;
Beavers' Teeth.&#13;
Of the euttlng power of the beaver's&#13;
teeth Frank H. Risteen says in Rod&#13;
and Gun:&#13;
"The beaver is really a sort of portable&#13;
pnlp mill, grinding up most any&#13;
kind of wood that comes his way. I&#13;
once measured a white birch tree, 22&#13;
inches through, cut down by a beaver.&#13;
A single beaver generally, if not always,&#13;
amputates the tree, and when it&#13;
comes down the whole family fall to&#13;
and have a regular frolic with the bark&#13;
and branches. A big beaver will bring&#13;
down a fair sized snpling, say three&#13;
Inches through; in about two minutes&#13;
and a large tree in about an hour.&#13;
"One of the queerest facts about tbe&#13;
beaver is tbe rapidity with which his&#13;
long, chisel shaped teeth Tin recover&#13;
from an Injury. I have known beavers&#13;
to break their teeth in biting a trap,&#13;
and when I caught them again ten&#13;
days afterward yon couldn't see a sign&#13;
of the break. Tbe teeth bad grown out&#13;
One Year&#13;
For&#13;
Only&#13;
fVolfce.&#13;
A good Top bag£y and one borse&#13;
wagon for sale chea&gt;p. My own make.&#13;
S SYKBS.&#13;
STATE FAIR&#13;
- i : . . •'. •. A .&#13;
The Grant Pair&#13;
will be. held at&#13;
r O N T I A f c S E P T . 3 3 - 2 7&#13;
Xew Grounds. New Buildi&#13;
n g Grood Transportation.&#13;
Large Show. Fine Races.&#13;
Splendid attractions. Half&#13;
fare and excursion rates. Ask&#13;
yo*r R R. agent. We want&#13;
yon r» attend this year. Ton&#13;
wil set a great fair.&#13;
I. A. Butterfield,&#13;
Secretary.&#13;
3 =&#13;
JUST&#13;
What You Want&#13;
grains, so. that It takes SO of tbem to&#13;
make up a pouai-Karisruher Nacb-i to tbeir former perfection in thai short&#13;
- 1 ^ ^ period."&#13;
Dust Proof&#13;
better File&#13;
For Sale at&#13;
"THE DISPATCH OFFICE."&#13;
rlchten.&#13;
" • ' • • • - •&#13;
',» f '•&#13;
'r&#13;
- &lt;.J '',.&#13;
• .&gt; ..- &gt;&#13;
-•s \;iv&#13;
•i'ifl • • • ' • &gt; ' i&#13;
'.•':;• • • • • ' V •&#13;
•• : • - . ' . v i ••*&#13;
*&#13;
k&#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 12, 1901</text>
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                <text>September 12, 1901 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>1901-09-12</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>VOL. XIX. PINCKNEY, LIVINGSTON CO., MICH., THURSDAY, SEPT. 19, 1901. No. 38&#13;
x&#13;
LOCAL N E W S .&#13;
8ta»&lt;e fair Sept. 28.27.&#13;
Bancroft fa»f Oct. 1 2 8 4. ,&#13;
Briffktoa UirOjt. 16-17-18.&#13;
Ann Arbor fair Oet. 1 2 3 4 .&#13;
Fowlerville fair Oct. 8 9-10 11.&#13;
Cbas. Love was in Howell OB busiaees&#13;
Saturday last.&#13;
P. L. Andrews was in Ann Arbor&#13;
on business Thursday of last week.&#13;
A IOB was hauled into the So. Lyon&#13;
mill yard one day last week which&#13;
scored 3,C00 feet&#13;
B. K Pierce and wife of Chesaninur&#13;
visited tbeir patents and other friends&#13;
here the first of the week.&#13;
Geo. Pewlass of Lansing is visitinar&#13;
his cousin Mrs. Geo. Bland Sr. and&#13;
other relatives in West Putnam.&#13;
Mesdames Leal Sigler, Mary Teeple&#13;
and the .nisses Maude and Mocco Teeple&#13;
are enjoying the Pan Am. this&#13;
week.&#13;
Dan Howard of Hamburg was in&#13;
town Friday last with a load of water&#13;
melons which he sold quickly at two&#13;
for a dime.&#13;
Howell will probably have a suit on&#13;
for damage as a lady stepped off from&#13;
a bad side walk and received a sprained&#13;
ankle so that it had to be put in a&#13;
plaster cast.&#13;
Bishop ypley will begin his annual&#13;
autumn visit to the churches ol the&#13;
Detroit diocese on Sept. 15 and ^vvill&#13;
administer confirmation at most of&#13;
t e chinches. He will visit Pincknej&#13;
Sept 29. Exercises at 9 a. in.&#13;
Edward A. Bowman,&#13;
DEPARTMENT&#13;
STORE . . . . .&#13;
HOWELL MICHIGAN&#13;
BOWMAN'S&#13;
Special Sale of:&#13;
Battenberg and Art Needle&#13;
Goods.&#13;
ALSO&#13;
Stroday Morniou la»fc Rev. H. W.&#13;
Hicks delivered a tine eulogy on the&#13;
life of President McKinley. The&#13;
house was well nlled and the address&#13;
was very impressive.&#13;
Frank Mowers left at this office tha&#13;
past week a couple of stalks ot corn&#13;
that measured 11 feet and 6 inches,&#13;
bearing three ears of corn each. If&#13;
the whole crop of Michigan is as good&#13;
as these sample we shall not want tor&#13;
Johnnie cake this winter.&#13;
A farmer near Howard City harvested&#13;
1,975 bushels of Urge potatoes,&#13;
from 9 acres which -he sold tor 70&#13;
cents a bushel. This wi'h sixty live&#13;
bushels ot small tubers which he sold&#13;
for 50 cents, bring his total receipts&#13;
from the nine actes up to $1,415.&#13;
Pred Wyman of Dexter who built&#13;
the stone arches over the creek in this&#13;
village, has secured the job of building&#13;
a wall fo»* protecting the street&#13;
railway at Dexter. The wa I wiil be&#13;
103| ieet long, 5 feet thick at the base&#13;
2 feet thick at the top and from 6 to&#13;
10 feet high.&#13;
Last Priday while Mrs. S. Sykes&#13;
was getting supper the gasol.ne stove&#13;
failed to work well and in a short&#13;
time the eil caught fire and for a time&#13;
it looked as it there would be a disaster.&#13;
Win, Going however managed&#13;
to smother the blaze with a wet carpet&#13;
before much damage was done.&#13;
—The pusloffii'edgpartinetil has made&#13;
a ruling that-m ail carriers must not&#13;
accept unstamped letters and money&#13;
from the patrons with the understanding&#13;
thai they will buy and affix&#13;
the stamp. Hereafter you must place&#13;
a stamp upon your letters before you&#13;
offer them to carrier the same as&#13;
though you dropped them in the postoffice.&#13;
A resident of Venice township, Genjesee&#13;
Co says that the residents ot that&#13;
section have a new pest to contend&#13;
with, and one that, seems to put an&#13;
end to bean raising. Whatever tin&#13;
pest is it enters the stalk at the roots&#13;
and works up to the first joint where&#13;
it comes out cutting the stalk so bajly&#13;
that it drops over and dies. None of&#13;
the pests have been found, yet quite a&#13;
proportion of s."&gt;me fields in that sec&#13;
tion ar« practialy destroyed.&#13;
State Pair at Pontiac.&#13;
Big New Stock of China.&#13;
Lower Prices than elsewhere&#13;
Trade at B 0 W m a n V l t P a V »&#13;
The Busy Store,&#13;
Howell, Mich.&#13;
The 52nd annual State Pair will be&#13;
held at Pontiac Sept, 23 27. Thu&#13;
buildings are new and ample, having&#13;
been erected purposely to accomodate&#13;
the State Fair. Railroad trains and&#13;
electric cars run to the wates. One ot&#13;
the special davs is FrMav, ibe 27tb,&#13;
which has been designated Maceabee&#13;
| day, prizes being offered for KUTM&#13;
anrt LOTM team .irill.&#13;
J Mr*. L. C, Goodrich has been quite&#13;
siok the past week.&#13;
Miss May Hacket of Detroit is&#13;
spending a few weeks with the Monks&#13;
families.&#13;
Chaft. O'Connor of Howell was the&#13;
guest of bis daughters, Saturday and&#13;
Sunday,&#13;
Street commissioner Parker has&#13;
been facing up the cement walks tbis&#13;
week and taking up some of the posts.&#13;
M.J. Kelly stereotyper on the Chicago&#13;
American has been visiting bis&#13;
brother John Kelly and son Prank the&#13;
past two weeks.&#13;
Mrs J. Peterson and daughter Mrs.&#13;
Sawyer, of Brighton, assisted the past&#13;
week in the care of her niece, Mrs.&#13;
Ella Docking who is very ill.&#13;
. Richard Maker and family moved&#13;
Tuesday toRicbraond, Va , where Mrs.&#13;
Baker has a brother there, Phil Kelly,&#13;
also other relatives so they are not&#13;
among entire stranges. They will be&#13;
much missed here by a large circle ol&#13;
friends.&#13;
A gentleman is in the city who hab&#13;
some stock in tbe Mono-rail Electric&#13;
Railway System. Me has instruction&#13;
from the president ot his company to&#13;
investigate the feasibility ot an electric&#13;
road which would strike this&#13;
county in the vicinity of Fenton and&#13;
tun through Tyrone, Hartland, Oceola&#13;
and Howell, and thence south either&#13;
via Pinckney or Plainfield and connect&#13;
with the line from Dexter to Lansing.&#13;
No one here has any more definate&#13;
knowledge of the possible intentions&#13;
of the company. The company in&#13;
question owns the patents for that&#13;
svstam of electric roads which is one&#13;
of the latest for elactric road operations.—&#13;
Livincston Democrat.&#13;
ED.T. KEARNEY&#13;
Has Traveled Over 10,000 Miles this&#13;
Season for Pleasure.&#13;
The "Fitch" Aquatic Cream Separator.&#13;
If you're running a dairy,—be there one .cow or one hundred—&#13;
your profit dedends upon the quality of cream you're&#13;
getting.&#13;
If you aren't getting ajl the cream there is in your milk,&#13;
you're losing just that much money.&#13;
By the old system of milk-setting you lose from ten to twenty&#13;
iper cent, of the cream, besides doing a lot of unnecssary work.&#13;
Cold water is added to the warm milk and the sudden&#13;
change in temperture nud consistency causes the cream and&#13;
milk to separate: and because ot' the cream being the lighter it&#13;
is forced to the top.&#13;
Yon get all the cream in an hour after milking, your skimmilk&#13;
is sweet and clean, the cream is smooth, sweet, firm and&#13;
clean, and requires less than half the time formerly required&#13;
to churn it.&#13;
Tbe butter is better, sweeter, and you get from ten to twenty&#13;
per cent, more of it.&#13;
No pans, crocks or milk cans needed, no extra labor, no&#13;
waste cream.&#13;
Yon can wash it in twoUainutes and have ready for the next&#13;
{milking.&#13;
i Taking it all in all, il saves the women's work, costs less&#13;
than one.half as much as a full equipment of pans, skimmers,&#13;
jars, crocks, cans, etc., besides saving enough cream in one&#13;
year to pay for itself tenfold.&#13;
Here are our prices:&#13;
No. 1. Capacity, 10 gals.. $3.50.&#13;
No. 2. Capacity; 15 gals., 4.50.&#13;
No. 3. Capacity, 23 gals., 5.00.&#13;
Sold on trial and warranted by&#13;
TEEPLE &amp; CADWELL&#13;
Ed. T. Kearney ot Jackson Neb.,&#13;
who was shaking hand.-j with old&#13;
friends and school mates here last&#13;
week has enjoyed trips this season ag-&#13;
Kregating something over 10,000 miles&#13;
and seen some of the finest scenery in&#13;
the United States. Ed is a hustler in&#13;
business and can hustle as wull when&#13;
he takes a vacation. Mrs. K. was&#13;
with him on the first trip to the coast&#13;
which was a most enjoyable one and&#13;
embraced 7 500 triles of travel. They&#13;
went one route returning another one,&#13;
and veiled all the points ot interest.&#13;
Sto ps^WeT-eliiade "a't'Den veT," Color ad o&#13;
Springs. Manitou, Cripple Creek, Salt&#13;
Lake City. 0*den, S-m Erancisco, Lis&#13;
Angeles, Pasadena, Long Beach, San&#13;
Pedro, Santa Monica, tatahna Islands&#13;
San Diego, Tia Juara in old Mexico,&#13;
Coronado Reach, Shasta Springs, Portland,&#13;
Tacoma, Seattle, Big Timber,&#13;
Livingston, MaiuiDOth Hot Springs in&#13;
Yellowstone P-irk, and. at Hot Springs&#13;
S. D. They took many enjoyable ocean&#13;
bay and river trips; were aearly three&#13;
miles high on top of Pike's Perk and&#13;
800 feet below the earth in a gold mine&#13;
at Cripple Creek, and in the Wind&#13;
Cave near Hot Springs. They made&#13;
Toe entire tour of the coast from Old&#13;
Mexico to British Columbia, and Mr.&#13;
K s spirit of "get there" enabled&#13;
tbera to see about all worth seeing on&#13;
their trip. They brought back many&#13;
enrious mementoes including 125 photographs&#13;
taken by Mr. Kearney.&#13;
This summer was a fine time to visit&#13;
the coast, a first-class ticket covering&#13;
tbis route and allowing stopovers at&#13;
any point, costing but $62 50. All in&#13;
all it was a delightful journey, the&#13;
weather being from 56 to 72 degree*&#13;
at noon along the coast. A picture of&#13;
about 100 pounds of ocean rish attests&#13;
Mr, K$ skill w th tbe rod. Tbe fish&#13;
were caoubt at Catalina Island*, a&#13;
beautiful spot thirty miles off the coast&#13;
sear Los Angeles.&#13;
When Mr. Kearney nra* here be was&#13;
on his way to Buffalo end Niagara&#13;
Palls and when he returns be will&#13;
1 have covered f ally 10,000 miles.&#13;
The employees of tbe cement factories&#13;
near Fenton have built a bike path&#13;
from the factory to tbe village to help&#13;
tbem get back and forth to work.&#13;
The drying winds of Saturday. Suuday&#13;
and Monday assisted the farmers&#13;
in enring their beans after the rains.&#13;
The crop is nearly all gathered at this&#13;
writing. '&#13;
Prof. Pred Hicks, son of Rev. H. W.&#13;
Hicks of tbis place, who has ueen&#13;
spending several weeks at Portage&#13;
lake returned to his school work at&#13;
Cincrnat'i Ohio this week.&#13;
Tbe Hamburg and Putnam farmers&#13;
club will meet at the home of Jame*&#13;
Nash and wife on Saturday, S*»pt. 28&#13;
in the forenoon and dinner will'DA&#13;
served. It it expected that the library&#13;
will be ready at that time for&#13;
members to get books. The ladies are&#13;
Booms to rent.&#13;
. I . , , I I I I I ^&#13;
Enquire of&#13;
mmmm ' • * &gt; « : .&lt;»%,&#13;
A*.&#13;
D RieMrdav&#13;
• * ) * * ; M "&#13;
CardofThaaka.&#13;
We desire to thank tbe frienjg and&#13;
neighbors who so kindly assisted us in&#13;
bur recent bereavement in tbe death&#13;
of onr darling baby, also for the beantifal&#13;
flowers. May God ever blew&#13;
them.&#13;
Mr. aod Mrs. J. C. MORTEHSON.&#13;
requested&#13;
dishes.&#13;
to bring hip boards and&#13;
CARD OF THANKS.&#13;
We wi.,h to extent our heartfelt&#13;
thanks to the kind friends who assist'&#13;
ed us in our late bereavement of tbe&#13;
death of our husband and father.&#13;
Your kindness will ever be remembered.&#13;
MRS. WM. BLACK.&#13;
MRS. J. MABTIS.&#13;
W. J. BLACK.&#13;
A CHANCE FOR Y O U T O BUY&#13;
Mew Fall Clothing&#13;
Gapes, Jackets, PUP Scarfs and&#13;
Ladies' Tailor-made Suits at home.&#13;
We will be at W. W. Barnard's, Pinckney, with a full line of tbe&#13;
above mentioned from Fletcher &amp; Hall Co's. Department&#13;
Store, Stock bridge, from the&#13;
to 2 8 of S E P T E M B E R .&#13;
These goods are all new. bought for this falls trade, with exception of erne line of&#13;
Ladies' and Misses' Jackets, which we sell one hour of each day between one and two&#13;
o'clock at one, two and three dullard. These are garments that sold last year at from&#13;
five to fifteen dojlare. If you want one of these you be on hand, as they will go quick&#13;
and we postively will net sell these garments only at the above stated hoar. We will&#13;
be able-te-tfive you an all wool Man's Suit for five dollars, new and up-to-date, and&#13;
we will have equally as good bargain* from this price upward. They must be seen to&#13;
be appreciated. Ladies' Tailor made Suits at ten and twelve dollars only, but special&#13;
bargains. Ladies' Fur Scarfs at from one to ten dollars. Ladies' Jackets from five to&#13;
fifteen dollars. A large assortment of B &gt;ys' and Children's Suite. We are going to&#13;
show you that we have the right things aud at the right prices. One of our principle&#13;
objects in coming to Pinckney and making the prices we will is to do some advertising&#13;
as we feel there is a certain amount ot trade here we should have coming to Stockbridge&#13;
for yon have none of the above lines in Pinckney aud have to farther away than we&#13;
are. We are p u n - to do business while we are here and the price* we will make and&#13;
the styles we'will sh-..w will do it. G^ods all marked in plain figures and sold for cash&#13;
only.&#13;
^ b u r s for G a s H B a r g a i n s ,&#13;
F L E T C H E R 6* HALL CO„&#13;
R e p r e s e n t e d by A. W DURPEE.&#13;
"RAmsmbex \Ve daU *5u6S^a^ Se^\. %*t \o Saturday Sep\. 2ft,&#13;
School Books&#13;
and School supplies of all kinds at prices&#13;
that defy competition.&#13;
Before&#13;
you buy get our PRICES on supplies.&#13;
A F e w GPOCCPI^S&#13;
yet to close out at less than COST.&#13;
F. A. SIGLER.&#13;
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» ' • ' ' -&#13;
ft" V"&#13;
CHAPTER XV.—(Continued.)&#13;
T h o p e you hate rested well," said&#13;
th* chief; approaching the princess.&#13;
ml have slept, sir," she replied,&#13;
trembling as she looked Into his dark&#13;
T h e n you are ready to resume&#13;
•addle. We will ride before the&#13;
heat of the noonday sun 13 upon us."&#13;
**Tou will not claim us for compaa-&#13;
Iona further, I trust."&#13;
**Only while our roads lay together,&#13;
lady. Surely you cannot object to&#13;
ethat"&#13;
"But I wish to go to the bank of&#13;
the Pharaphar."&#13;
^Just as I expected; so I shall not&#13;
'be disappointed. Your horses are&#13;
ready. I will have them brought this&#13;
The guard had already been placed&#13;
upon a horse, and Ulin saw them&#13;
binding him to a saddle. What did&#13;
this mean?&#13;
Hardly knowing what sin did, Ulin&#13;
suffered herself to be lifted into the&#13;
•addle; and In a few moments more&#13;
Albia was by her side.&#13;
**Why have you bound Shubal to his&#13;
seat?" she asked.&#13;
•That he may ride safely. He is a&#13;
bungling fellow, and might tumble off&#13;
If he were not secured. But don't let&#13;
that worry you."&#13;
CHAPTER XVI.&#13;
The Strange Horseman.&#13;
At this moment the guard came&#13;
near to the place where his mistress&#13;
«at, bis horse having moved of his own&#13;
accord, and as she turned towards him&#13;
lie spoke to her:&#13;
"My dear good lady, they lie to you&#13;
When they tell you tbat they mean you&#13;
no harm. I have heard them talk and&#13;
. I know their plans. We are all to be&#13;
_ sold into slavery in the kingdom bejFOnd&#13;
the Syrian desert!"&#13;
"Mercy!" cried Ulin, turning pale a3&#13;
'death and clasping her hands in agony.&#13;
"O, my dream! my dream!"&#13;
"Easy, fair lady," said Al Abbas.&#13;
"This black rascal knows not wliat&#13;
he says. I allowed him to speak so&#13;
~~Ihat T~mIgEt see now~Eis mind ran."&#13;
"It is false," exclaimed Shubal. "I&#13;
heard them lay the plan. You, my&#13;
mistress, are to be sold for a—"&#13;
The guard's speech was stopped by&#13;
two of the robbers, who threw him&#13;
back upon his horse, and stopped his&#13;
mouth with their hands.&#13;
"Sir robber," cried Ulin, stretching&#13;
her hands out towards him, "deceive&#13;
me no more. I think my poor slave&#13;
has told me the truth."&#13;
"'A pest upon the slave, lady! His&#13;
tongue shall come out by the root3 if&#13;
he speaks again without my leave.&#13;
3Uck to your saddle, and keep up&#13;
yonr courage."&#13;
As the Arab spoke he leaped upon&#13;
the back of his horse, and ere the prin-&#13;
- cess could ask another question, the&#13;
party was upon the move, the order of&#13;
arrangements being the same as before.&#13;
J'We are not going towards the&#13;
Pharphar," said Ulin,&#13;
"No," replied Albia. "We are gotnythe-&#13;
other-way." —&#13;
"Then Shubal told us the truth."&#13;
"Alas, dear mistress, I dare not&#13;
say."&#13;
"But you think so?"&#13;
\ "I cannot deny It"&#13;
-"And you thought so before you&#13;
heard Shubal speak?"&#13;
"I feared something of the kind."&#13;
Al Abbas overheard the girls as they&#13;
thus conversed, and he was presently&#13;
by their side.&#13;
"'Lady Ulin," he siid, and he spoke&#13;
sternly and sharply; "you^are now on&#13;
the move, and when you stop again it&#13;
will be far away from Damascus. I&#13;
owe something to the officers of that&#13;
city, and I will repay a part of the&#13;
debt by taking you away from them.&#13;
You are to go just as far as I please&#13;
to take you; and the more quieLly&#13;
you go the better it will be for you;,&#13;
so you had better begin to accommodate&#13;
yourself to the circumstances."&#13;
He rode back to his place and Ulin&#13;
grasped the bow of her saddle for sup-&#13;
• port.&#13;
"Courage," said Albia, riding as near&#13;
a s she could. "There may ba some&#13;
way to escape. The good spirits will&#13;
not desert us."&#13;
T h e pri&amp;ceca heard the words, and&#13;
they had a marked effect upon her.&#13;
«be had naturally a strong resolution,&#13;
laad when she was once resolved to&#13;
\bear up, her strength was not long&#13;
1» coming to her assistance. On the&#13;
present occasion she knew that she&#13;
had heard the worst, In fact, she had&#13;
-reason to believe that her captor&#13;
radiant for her the most dreadful fate&#13;
rto which one in her station, eould be&#13;
tskrbject For a while she was completely&#13;
stunned by the fearful blow;&#13;
toft at she came to reason with herself,&#13;
she saw that her only hope wa?&#13;
y, AM escape. . Th« Arabs ware tow, brutal&#13;
and sordid, and would sell her&#13;
for gold. She could read in their&#13;
evil faces that they were not to be&#13;
touched by sympathy. What then&#13;
could she do? She must get away&#13;
from them. And if this was to be&#13;
done she must summon all her energies&#13;
to the work.&#13;
But, alas! the case looked hopeless&#13;
enough; what could two weak girls&#13;
do against such odds? Only some interposition&#13;
beyond their own efforts&#13;
could save them. So, after all. if help&#13;
was to come, it must come from some&#13;
unknown source. And could such help&#13;
be found? If fervent prayers could&#13;
be answered, and if the most holy need&#13;
could be met, it might be hoped for.&#13;
At the end of eome two or three&#13;
hours the party came to a thick grove&#13;
of palms; near which was a spring,&#13;
and here they stopped just long&#13;
enough to water the horses. They&#13;
had started on again, and were at&#13;
some little distance from the grove,&#13;
when one of the Arabs who rode in the&#13;
rear, came forward and Informed his&#13;
leader that a horseman was following&#13;
them. Al Abbas looked back and saw&#13;
that the stranger wac a black, and&#13;
that he rode f. swift and powerful&#13;
horse. J&#13;
"He wishes to overtake us," said&#13;
the fellow /who had come from the&#13;
rear.&#13;
"Then he must ride for it," returned&#13;
the chief. "I cannot stop. I wonder&#13;
where he came from."&#13;
"When I first saw him, he seemed&#13;
to have just emerged from the grove."&#13;
In a short time the strange horseman&#13;
had come so near that the light&#13;
of his eyes could be seen, and Al Abbas&#13;
saw that he must soon overtake&#13;
them; so he concluded to drop behind&#13;
and find out what was wanted, evidently&#13;
desiring that the men should&#13;
not see what manner of prizes he had&#13;
in charge, at least until his character&#13;
was known. The robbers were directed&#13;
to slacken their speed a little, but to&#13;
keep on their course, and having given&#13;
this order, the chief turned his horse's&#13;
head and rode back; and ere long he&#13;
was within speaking distance of the&#13;
stranger, who proved to be a stout,&#13;
well-made man, with a face as black&#13;
as night.&#13;
"Hallo!" cried Al Abbas, reining in&#13;
his horse. "Who are you?"&#13;
"I am king of this plain," replied&#13;
the African, at the same time reining&#13;
in his own horse; "and I have come&#13;
out to see who thus trespasses upon&#13;
my domain. Who are you "&#13;
The Arab hesitated in his answer,&#13;
as he supposed the black must be&#13;
crazy.&#13;
"Who are you, and what sort of&#13;
company do you lead?" cried the African.&#13;
"I lead my own company; and if&#13;
you want anything, come and get it,"&#13;
answered the Arab.&#13;
"I want nothing but to know who&#13;
you are; and the next time you come&#13;
this way, be sure and stop again at&#13;
the grove of the date-palms. I will&#13;
have a banquet prepared for you."&#13;
Thus speaking, the .stranger wheeled&#13;
his horjse in" a broad circlerancTparted&#13;
back towards the place whence he had&#13;
come.&#13;
Al Abbas rode back to his party,&#13;
and when they asked him what manner&#13;
of man he had met, he replied&#13;
that it was only a poor crazy fool, who&#13;
imagined that he owned the broad&#13;
plain upon which they were traveling.&#13;
"He is worth capturing," suggested&#13;
one of the robbers.&#13;
"We could not capture him if we&#13;
would," said the chief. "He rides a&#13;
better horse than we own."&#13;
While the Arabs were gazing back&#13;
after the retiring horseman Albia drew&#13;
close to the side of her mistress and&#13;
spoke, quickly and excitedly:&#13;
"Did you recognize him?"&#13;
-"Whom?"&#13;
"The crazy man who followed us."&#13;
"No."&#13;
"It was Osmir!"&#13;
"Osmir!"&#13;
"Hush! Not a word. As sure as I&#13;
live it was Osmir; and be assured we&#13;
have help at hand." /&#13;
"But he has gone."&#13;
"Aye, for he only came out to see&#13;
who we were. Be sure he has recognized&#13;
us."&#13;
Ulin felt her heart bound up with&#13;
springing hope; and her next prayer&#13;
was uttered with returning faith in&#13;
heaven's protecting power.&#13;
CHAPTER XVIT.&#13;
By the Banks of the Pharphar.&#13;
Half an hour after Al Abbas had&#13;
resumed his place at the head of his&#13;
troop, the same robber who had be*&#13;
fore come from the rear, again rode&#13;
to the front, this time bringing intelligence&#13;
that a number of horsemen) were&#13;
pursuing them.., The chief drew ,h&gt;&#13;
hosse aside and looked back, ana a*w&#13;
fo»£ ft** coniuj*., The* - w t n | waU&#13;
mrw'WB'wdiwww'-wf.1 Mm'ft'idHHu1 •!,&lt;»» H** ar * • »&#13;
What&#13;
mounted, andaeemed to be in *&gt;t*qn&gt;&#13;
aulC ' '„•?•&gt; "•' V * v* * • • ' W&#13;
"There if something mere than fte**f ***••**••• *&#13;
cident in this," said Al Abbas. "The&#13;
fellow is with them who followed n#&#13;
before."&#13;
"Two of those men are white," nv.&#13;
marked the robber who had ridden&#13;
up from the rear. "What can they&#13;
want of us?"&#13;
"Never mind/' returned the chief.&#13;
"If they want us, let them catch us.&#13;
And if, beyond that, they want mora,&#13;
let them make, their wants known."&#13;
Thus speaking, the Arab leader resumed&#13;
his place, and urged his horses&#13;
forward with increasing speed. Brer&#13;
and anon he cast his eyes behind him,&#13;
and it was ere long evident that the&#13;
strangers were rapidly gaining upon&#13;
him. -&#13;
"We may as well stop now as at any&#13;
time," said Al Abbas, addressing the&#13;
man who rode by his side. "I will&#13;
halt and ascertain what these fellows&#13;
want. It is about time our horses&#13;
had a breathing spell."&#13;
At a simple order from their chief,&#13;
the Arabs wheeled their horses in a&#13;
circle, bringing up In line, facing their&#13;
pursuers, with their prisoners in the&#13;
rear.&#13;
"Who are you that thus pursues and&#13;
stops me?" demanded Al Abbas.&#13;
"I am Julian, the Scourge of Damascus!"&#13;
replied the foremost of the&#13;
opposite party.&#13;
At the sound of that name the Arab&#13;
trembled, for he knew that no king's&#13;
officer had been more persistent in&#13;
driving petty robbers from the plains&#13;
of Damascus than had Julian. But&#13;
presently he recovered himself, seeming&#13;
to think that, were the man's assertion&#13;
true, the opposing force was&#13;
not strong enough to be feared.&#13;
"If you be Julian," he cried, "you&#13;
have come forth with a small retinue.&#13;
But what seek you?"&#13;
"I have come to take from you those&#13;
prisoners that you hold. Deliver them&#13;
up to me, and I will trouble you no&#13;
more."&#13;
"And suppose that I should refuse&#13;
to do any such thing?"&#13;
"Then I should be forced to take&#13;
them from you. As I address you, I&#13;
recognize who you are. If I am not&#13;
greatly mistaken, you are Al. Abbas,&#13;
the Arab—a villain who lives by robbing&#13;
women and old men."&#13;
"Now, by the blood of Cush!" exclaimed&#13;
Al Abbas, drawing his sword&#13;
and urging his horse forward, "I'll&#13;
make you feel another thing the Arab&#13;
robber can^-do4—Whaty ho, my ^ne&amp;j-&#13;
Down with these rascals!"&#13;
In a moment the Arabs were ready&#13;
for action, and hurried forward to&#13;
strike-with their leader.&#13;
As Soon as Shubal found his guard&#13;
gone, he called to Albia to come and&#13;
set him free.&#13;
"Cut these cords," he cried, "and I&#13;
may be of some help in this affair.&#13;
Merciful heaven, is not this the work&#13;
of a good spirit!"&#13;
The bondmaiden was not long in&#13;
setting him free from his saddle, and&#13;
as soon as he was clear he sprang forward&#13;
to where the ring of clashing&#13;
steel had already broke upon the air.&#13;
With something like a smile of disdain&#13;
upon his handsome features did&#13;
Julian behold the approach of the&#13;
Arabs, while Hobaddan, who sat close&#13;
by his side, looked grim and stern.&#13;
Osmir and Selim drew to the front as&#13;
the token of battle was given, and&#13;
their cool, determined bearing, plainly&#13;
showed that they were foemen not to&#13;
be despised. Al Abbas rode directly&#13;
for the youthful chieftain, with his&#13;
sword ready for the stroke; but he&#13;
had mistaken his man, if he thought&#13;
to touch any vulnerable point. Julian&#13;
knocked his weapon up, and quickly&#13;
drove him from his horse; and then,&#13;
seeking to make quick work of it, and&#13;
feeling no great sympathy for womanstealers,&#13;
he simply rode the Arab&#13;
leader down, cleaving open his head&#13;
as he fell.&#13;
Shubal was close at hand when Al&#13;
Abbas dropped, and quickly as possible&#13;
he possessed himself of the&#13;
fallen man's sword, and was just in&#13;
season to join In the conflict as three&#13;
of the Arabs had attacked Julian.&#13;
The young chieftain struck down one&#13;
of them by a winding blow across the&#13;
bare neck, but he might have had&#13;
severe work with the other two had&#13;
not help arrived; for the rascals were&#13;
strong, and the death of their leader&#13;
had given them new infpulse to conquer.&#13;
It was not the impulse of revenge.&#13;
No, no. The death of At Abbas&#13;
left more gold for those who survived.&#13;
But tlie unexpected arrival of&#13;
the freed slave upon the scene gave a&#13;
new turn to the tide. One of the Arabs&#13;
he struck down from behind, and the&#13;
other one alone proved no match for&#13;
the stalwart chieftain.&#13;
In the meantime Hobaddan, with&#13;
Osmir and Selim, had disposed of the&#13;
others. Two they had slain, and two&#13;
had taken to flight.&#13;
(To be continued.)&#13;
AN INDIANA MAN COMPARES WESTERN, CANADA&#13;
,*&lt;,-/'v WlTHjT^^NTTE^tTAIE^V,&#13;
Mr. Frank Plsher, a f^otnlBSflf DonkaroV rUat *&amp;\&#13;
Trip Throqftt Canada*&#13;
Say Altar m&#13;
The Department of the Interior at&#13;
OtUwa-has.just reoajyed fxom,J4r^ff.&#13;
T. Holmes, the agent of the government&#13;
stationed at Indianapolis, ln&lt;U&#13;
the following letter, which requires no&#13;
comment It is only necessary to state&#13;
that Mr. F. Fisher, the writer of the&#13;
letter is one of the most prominent of&#13;
the Dunkarda and a man upoa whose&#13;
word the utmost reliance can be&#13;
Placed. His home is at Mexico, Ind.,&#13;
and he will be pleased to substantiate&#13;
verbally or in any other way all that&#13;
he says in his letter.&#13;
Anyone desiring information apply&#13;
to nearest Canadian agent, whose addresses&#13;
are here given:&#13;
M. V. Mclnncs, t Avenue Theater block,&#13;
Detroit, Michigan.&#13;
James Grieve, dault Ste. Marie. Michigan.&#13;
J, S. Crawford, 214 W, Ninth street,&#13;
Kansas City, Mo.&#13;
Benjamin Da vies. 154½ East Third&#13;
street, St. Paul, Minn.&#13;
T. O. Currie, Room 12 B, Callahan's&#13;
block, 203 Grand avenue, Milwaukee, Wit.&#13;
C. J. Broughton, «27 Monadnock building,&#13;
Chicago, III.&#13;
VV. V. Bennett. SOI New tork Life building,&#13;
Omaha. Neb. *&#13;
W. H. Rogers, Watertown, South Dakota,&#13;
N. Bartholomew, 306 Fifth street. Dea&#13;
Moines, Iowa.&#13;
J. H. M. Parker, 530 Chamber of Commerce,&#13;
Duluth, Minn.&#13;
£. T. Holmes, Room 6, Big-Four building,&#13;
Indianapolis, lnd.&#13;
Joseph Young, 61½ State street, Columbus,&#13;
Ohio.&#13;
To My Many Friends—I am pleased&#13;
to make a report to you of the pleasant&#13;
visit my wife and I had in Western&#13;
Canada.&#13;
We visited tho territorties of Alberta,&#13;
Assinlboia, and Saskatchewan,&#13;
and found them far surpassing our Imagination,&#13;
but little did 1 expect to&#13;
And such rich, loamy soil, so much&#13;
of it, and so uniform in its level prairie&#13;
lay. I ao think the soil of Canada&#13;
as a rulo equals if not excels the finest&#13;
prairie farm lands of Indiana.&#13;
These lands are Immense in their&#13;
richness, nnd when once the sod ts rotted&#13;
and pulverized, it is as pliable and&#13;
na easily cultivated as Indiana sandy&#13;
soil.&#13;
"I have played a desperate game and&#13;
I have lost," remarked4he stage villain&#13;
just before his final disappearance.&#13;
"But you are a darn sight better off&#13;
than we are," murmured a tired looking&#13;
man In the front row; "wis jjajd&#13;
money to get In." ^&#13;
Western Canada, from" my poiBf~cT&#13;
view, offers as tine opportunities for&#13;
mixed farming as any place in my&#13;
knowledge. The long, sunshiny days,&#13;
together with the rich soil, produce&#13;
very fine wheat, oats, barley, flax and&#13;
other cereal products. There is scarcely&#13;
any attempt to raise corn, except&#13;
early varieties for table use. The season&#13;
is too short to depend upon maturing&#13;
field corn. From the standpoint&#13;
of getting this land ready for&#13;
the plow, I must say that I never saw&#13;
such a vast extent, practically all&#13;
ready so all that one has to do la to&#13;
hitch up the plow and go to work.&#13;
This is not the case with all the&#13;
Canadian land, however; some of it&#13;
has quite a bit or timber, much of it&#13;
may be called brush land, and some of&#13;
It has lovely forest groves, dotted here&#13;
JAPAN'S TRIBUTE TO PERRY.&#13;
Memorial to the M»n Who Opened Up&#13;
the Japan ClvUUatlon.&#13;
" T h e amity existing oetween Japan&#13;
and the United States was recently&#13;
emphasized at Kurlhama, whero a&#13;
monument, erected to Commodore Perry,&#13;
the American naval officer who first&#13;
opened Japan to the civilization of the&#13;
western world, was unveiled. The memorial&#13;
marks the place where Commodore&#13;
Perry landed, in 1853, preparatory&#13;
to signing the treaty which has&#13;
resulted in the phenomenal progress&#13;
made by Japan since that time.&#13;
/The monument is a simple though&#13;
enduring one. The shaft is a solid&#13;
block of stone weighing 19 tons and&#13;
the whole monument, the face of&#13;
which is suitably inscribed, is 33 feet&#13;
high. At the dedicatory exercises the&#13;
officialdom of Japan was generously&#13;
represented. The United States vessels&#13;
the New York, New Orleans and Yorktown,&#13;
were represented. One of those&#13;
taking part in the ceremonies was&#13;
Rear Admiral Beardslee who served&#13;
under Commodore Perry at the time&#13;
of the landing.&#13;
and there, thereby covering a hundred,&#13;
and aiaity aerea*&#13;
I have no doubt but that this country&#13;
excels as a gracing or ranchinf&#13;
country, because they have such rich&#13;
grass, having an abundance of rain t o&#13;
keep it fresh. They also have plenty&#13;
of water streams, and,as a rulo watar&#13;
may hfr reached at a depth of from »&#13;
to 10 feet. From this you can sao&#13;
there can be plenty of hay mown for&#13;
winter feeding, and I have had reliable&#13;
farmers to tell me that their&#13;
stock will feed on hay alone, and bo&#13;
ready for market in the spring. Upoa&#13;
Inquiring about the expense of raising&#13;
a steer, a farmer "replied that he did&#13;
not consider it would cost any more/&#13;
than $4 or $6 to develop a three-yearold&#13;
steer.&#13;
I truly think Canada offers a fine&#13;
opening for a young man or a man&#13;
who Is renting land in Indiana. One&#13;
hundred and sixty acres of good black&#13;
land will cost you on.y 910 at the time&#13;
you enter it, and by plowing and cultivating&#13;
five acres each year for threo&#13;
years, gives you one hundred and sixty&#13;
acres of good land for 110. This land&#13;
can be bought from the railroad companies,&#13;
private corporations or the government&#13;
for | 3 to S4 per acre.&#13;
From a financial standpoint, I believe&#13;
that for a series of years (five)&#13;
a young man can make $10 in Canada,&#13;
whereas he would only make $1 hero,&#13;
and I feel sure that I spent more&#13;
money to get my eighty acre farm in&#13;
White county, Indiana, cultivated than&#13;
it would cost me to cultivate eight&#13;
hundred acres in Canada. This may&#13;
seem a strong view to take of tho&#13;
matter, but when you take into consideration&#13;
the clearing, ditching, fencing&#13;
and the expensive breaking In of&#13;
the stumps, and then compare the expense&#13;
to that of land needing only the&#13;
breaking, you will conclude that it is&#13;
not such a wild or exaggerated statement&#13;
as you might at first think.&#13;
I enjoyed the balmy, breezy atmosphere,&#13;
which was bracing and refresh- "&#13;
ing, and the cool nights which made it&#13;
ao pleasant for sleep.&#13;
A NARROW ESCAPE.&#13;
Bath, N. Yu Sept. 10th.—There is&#13;
now at the Soldiers' and Sailors* Home&#13;
here an old soidie- who hasteon nearer&#13;
death than anyone who has livod to&#13;
tell the story.&#13;
^ i s name is A: K. Ayers, For many&#13;
years he lived in Minneapolis, Minn,&#13;
where he is well known.&#13;
Four physicians of that city once&#13;
told Mr. Ayers that he could not live&#13;
four days. l i e had Bright*' disease.&#13;
As a last resort h~ tried Dodd**'Kidney&#13;
Pills. He is strong and well today.&#13;
He says: "I was in the very presence&#13;
of death, but Dodd's Kidney PllUaaved&#13;
me. They are the greatest medicine in&#13;
tha world."&#13;
Tho new Mink is purely a money&#13;
making ache* e* .&#13;
On making inquiries regarding the&#13;
winters in this country, I learned that&#13;
the people never suffer from the cold,&#13;
as the weather is dry and invigorating,&#13;
and in a great many places farmers&#13;
and herders allow their stock to&#13;
rem outside the year round.&#13;
One great advantage to the settlers&#13;
in Western Canada is the free creameries&#13;
established by the government&#13;
and run exclusively in the interest&#13;
of the farmer.&#13;
I visited Thomas Daley, a farmer&#13;
near Edmonton, Alberta, who showed&#13;
r_e oats he had raised, some of which&#13;
took the first prize at the Paris Exposition&#13;
last year. The same yielded&#13;
110 bushels to the acre in 1899.&#13;
Yours truly,&#13;
FRANK FTSHER,&#13;
Mexico, Ind.&#13;
A good many people quote the golden&#13;
rule as if they were the author.&#13;
DonX't ache, use Hamlin's \VizarjLQU.&#13;
Rheumatism, neuralgia and all pain&#13;
banished by it. See your drtggist.&#13;
It takes a great deal of strength&#13;
sometimes to hold one's tongue.&#13;
AVOID FRAUDULENT IMITATIONS&#13;
Uso the genuine Iiuss Bleaching blue and&#13;
preserve your clothes*. All grocer*, 10c.&#13;
All the world's a stage—and most of the occupants&#13;
are supers who play thinking parts.&#13;
Men think they are playing the races when in&#13;
reality the races are working them.&#13;
"The aadle Rules the World"&#13;
and all wise mothers&#13;
make&#13;
St&#13;
Jacobs Oil&#13;
a houMhold remedy for the&#13;
limplertason that It always&#13;
Conquers Pain&#13;
4 « M M&#13;
SOZOOOflTfMite T E E T A U C&#13;
II lif 'iilj^HSil) frill tli giiitftiiiftTi -&#13;
wpzwifM&#13;
'., t&#13;
«•»•§;*•,, - W f i s . ^ ^ ' • r f ' « i n &gt; &gt; * * * ' ' " * ^ * * ' * ' * » ! * * " i—Ulii. »l4«w4fc^^&gt;ir»t»&lt;WlJ»»*&lt;i&gt;»'ip&gt;PW'l W W W p l p l ' ^ f f c ' ^ ^ W 'h ^ y » W r f ' *•"*-•**'" .L'IVM*"T"&lt;''&#13;
&gt;:**US^ • w&#13;
Theodore *Roose*c&gt;elt Is flobu&#13;
^ e JSfatio^^ Chief&#13;
Mi*£i*1r&amp;te.&#13;
By 4he death of William McKlxxley&#13;
«t tile bands o* the aasassm Csolgoes,&#13;
Theodore Roosevelt, the Vk*Pre«ldeot,&#13;
becomes President of t i e United&#13;
«4tfate*.&#13;
Theodore RooEeteH wa* bora In&#13;
New York Cfty October 27, 1858, of&#13;
Dutch and ScOtcVJrish ancestry.v By&#13;
- t U Uwg of heredity he is a natural&#13;
- leader, as his ancestry on both his&#13;
father's and his mother's side, who&#13;
x trace back beyond revolutionary days,&#13;
were conspicuous by reason of their&#13;
quality. His father was Theodore&#13;
was the investigation of the city government,&#13;
and particularly the, police&#13;
department, in the winter of 1884. Another&#13;
important service was securing&#13;
the passage of the civil service reform&#13;
law of 1884.&#13;
Boa* for Vayor /of New York.&#13;
In 1S86 Jdr.. Roosevelt was nominated&#13;
as an independent candidate for&#13;
mayor of New York, but, although indorsed&#13;
by the Republicans! was defeated.&#13;
In 18S4 he was chairman of the New&#13;
York delegation to the national Re-&#13;
PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT,&#13;
^ ^ ^ ^ ^ » ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ W ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ W » ^ W V ^ ^ &lt; ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ &gt; ^ ^ ^ ^ W ^ M W ^ W ^ ^&#13;
Roosevelt, after whom he was named,&#13;
and his mother, whose given name&#13;
. was Martha, was the daughter of&#13;
James and Martha Bulloch &amp;t Georgia.&#13;
Educate* * t Home.&#13;
Young Roosevelt was primarily educated&#13;
at home under private teachers,&#13;
after which he entered Harvard, graduating&#13;
in 1880. Those qualities of aggressiveness&#13;
which have marked his&#13;
more recent years of public life were&#13;
present with him In college, and he&#13;
was a conspicuous figure among his&#13;
fellows.&#13;
It was an interesting period in the&#13;
history of the party and the nation,&#13;
and young Roosevelt entered upon the&#13;
political field with eagerness and energy.&#13;
The purification of political and&#13;
-official 4ife had been for some time an.&#13;
MRS. THEODORE ROOSEVELT.&#13;
ideal with him, and with this came&#13;
the belief in the efficacy of the application&#13;
of civil-service rules to executive&#13;
conduct. So strongly did he impress&#13;
himself upon,.his political associates&#13;
that in 188¾ he was nominated&#13;
for the state assembly and elected.&#13;
In the State Assembly.&#13;
He served for'inree years and soon&#13;
came to be recognised as an able and&#13;
fearless advocate of the people's rights&#13;
and he succeeded in securing the passafe&#13;
of several measures of great benefit&#13;
The abolition, of fees in the office&#13;
of the county clerk and the abolition&#13;
of the Joint power of the board&#13;
rof aldermen in the mayor's appointments&#13;
were among those of special&#13;
benefit to the eity of New York.&#13;
Another Hanortaat work d a w by aim&#13;
publican convention. He had been&#13;
among those who did not regard Mr.&#13;
Blaine as the most available candidate&#13;
of the party, but after the latter's&#13;
nomination Mr. Roosevelt gave him&#13;
his hearty support, and in the face&#13;
of the remarkable defection in New&#13;
York at that time.&#13;
In the National Civil Service.&#13;
In May, 1899, President Harrison appointed&#13;
him civil service commissioner,&#13;
and he served as president of the&#13;
board until May, 1896. During his incumbency&#13;
he was untiring In his efforts&#13;
to apply the civil service principles&#13;
of merit and capacity to all executive&#13;
departments. As a result of&#13;
this zeal the country was shown the&#13;
first practical application of the rules&#13;
to civil government.&#13;
Civil Service Reformer.&#13;
He proved that unflinching civilservice&#13;
reform was not only consistent&#13;
with party loyalty, but in the&#13;
highest degree was necessary to party&#13;
service. None doubted the reformer's&#13;
Republicanism, but it was not an easy&#13;
task. Judgment, tact, honesty, energy,&#13;
and a certain sturdy pugnacity&#13;
were necessary to the accomplishment&#13;
of his purpose. Every detail of the&#13;
system was opened to carping criticism&#13;
and to hostile attack. The administration&#13;
itself was only friendly&#13;
to the movement. Not only had politicians&#13;
to be kept out of places, but&#13;
competent servitors had to be provided.&#13;
In .the Police Commission.&#13;
As president of the clvll-servlce&#13;
commission Mr. Roosevelt resigned in&#13;
May, 1803, to become president of the&#13;
New York board of police commissioners.&#13;
Legislative investigation had&#13;
shown the corruption in that body,&#13;
and to this field he turned with a new&#13;
zest. An uncompromising enforcement&#13;
of law was his policy. It brought&#13;
criticism and vituperation upon him,&#13;
but he persisted. Honest methods in&#13;
the .police department were forced,&#13;
and civil-service principles were embodied&#13;
into the system of appointments&#13;
and promotions. Sunday closing&#13;
of saloons became a fact, and a&#13;
seemly observance of the day was insisted&#13;
upon.&#13;
Navy's Asslstaat Secretary.&#13;
In April, 1897, Mr. Rooeevelt was&#13;
nominated by President McXinley to&#13;
be assistant secretary of the navy. He&#13;
pushed repairs on the ships and worked&#13;
with might and stain, foraetlng a&#13;
tUctwith 8pain&gt; He toft nothing undone&#13;
to secure the highest efficiency&#13;
in the navy..&#13;
On May 6, 1888, Mr. Rooeevelt resigned&#13;
this place to muster in a cavalry&#13;
regiment for the Spanish war.&#13;
Life in tha west had made this a fitting&#13;
ambition. As a hunter of big&#13;
game, used to the saddle and the camp&#13;
and an unerring shot with rifle and&#13;
revolver, the country recognised in&#13;
film the making of a dashing cavalry&#13;
leader. He had experienced. military&#13;
duty in the New York National Guard&#13;
in the '80s. Col. Wood was put in&#13;
command of the Rough Riders; Mr,&#13;
Roosevelt was lieutenant colonel On&#13;
June 15 the regiment sailed to join&#13;
Gen. Shafter in Cuba*&#13;
With the Bougn Riders.&#13;
From the time of landing until the&#13;
fall of Santiago the Rough Riders&#13;
were giant figures in ths campaign.&#13;
Their work reached a climax on July&#13;
1, when Lieut.-Col. Roosevelt led the&#13;
regimen^ in the desperate charge up&#13;
San Juan hill. He had shared all the&#13;
hardships of his men, and when he&#13;
broke the red tape of discipline to&#13;
complain of Oen. Shatter's camp and&#13;
its dangers from disease the army was&#13;
with him and the war department listened&#13;
to his judgment. On July 11 be&#13;
was commissioned a colonel of volunteers.&#13;
Elected Governor of N e w York.&#13;
Scarcely two months later the new&#13;
military hero was nominated for governor&#13;
of New York. In, the convention&#13;
he received 753 votes, against the&#13;
218 cast for Gov. Frank S. Black.&#13;
Col. Roosevelt entered into the campaign&#13;
with characteristic energy. Men&#13;
of all parties supported him and he&#13;
was elected by a plurality of more&#13;
than 18,000. His administration was&#13;
very satisfactory to his state.&#13;
As reformer, official, military leader&#13;
and state executive, he has carried his&#13;
earnest dashing personality into it all.&#13;
As a Writer.&#13;
As a writer of outing papers his&#13;
varied experiences on the trail have&#13;
served him well. In biography, his&#13;
life of Thomas H. Benton and of&#13;
Gouvernour Morris have been praised.&#13;
Essays and papers dealing with political&#13;
life have added to this reputation.&#13;
Of his latest work. "The Rough Riders"&#13;
has been pointed to as ''one of&#13;
the most thrilling pieces of military&#13;
history produced in recent years."&#13;
—When his name was first proposed&#13;
for the vice presidency, Mr. Roosevelt&#13;
declined the honor, preferring to re^&#13;
main governor. He finally consented,&#13;
after much pressure.&#13;
Mr. Roosevelt's Family.&#13;
Mr. Roosevelt has been married&#13;
twice. His first wife was Miss Alice&#13;
Lee of Boston; the second, Miss Edith&#13;
Carow of New York-. He is the fathei&#13;
of six children, ranging from 16 to 3&#13;
years of age.&#13;
His domestic life Is Ideal. Whethei&#13;
ensconced in winter quarters at Albany&#13;
or New York, or at the famouu&#13;
Roosevelt home at Oyster Bay on Long&#13;
Island, he Is an indulgent father and&#13;
romps with his children with as much&#13;
zest SB the youngest of them. The&#13;
youngsters are known as the Roosevelt&#13;
half-dozen, and all reflect in some&#13;
manner the paternal characteristic.&#13;
All Bright Children.&#13;
The oldest girl is Alice, tall, dark&#13;
and serious looking. She rides her&#13;
father's Cuban campaign horse with&#13;
fearlessness and grace. The next olive&#13;
ALICE ROOSEVELT.&#13;
branch is Theodore, Jr., or "young&#13;
Teddy," the idol of his father's heart&#13;
and a genuine chip of the old block.&#13;
Young "Teddy" owns a shot gun and&#13;
dreams of some day shooting bigger&#13;
game than his father ever did. He&#13;
also rides a pony of his own.&#13;
Alice, the eldest girl, is nearly 16.&#13;
She is the only child by the first Mrs.&#13;
Roosevelt "Young Teddy," the present&#13;
Mrs. Roosevelt's oldest child, is IS.&#13;
Then there are Kermit, 11; Ethel, 9;&#13;
Archibald, 6, and Quentin, 8.&#13;
-&#13;
A Paris periodical asserts that&#13;
France has more Catholic missionaries&#13;
than all the other nations comhined—&#13;
4JW out of a total of «,101&#13;
Quickly Develops Into&#13;
[fMU-U ORES M U M WMKffl U U i a j&#13;
John Herziger, son of Alderman Hersiger,&#13;
of Neenah, Wis., and Vice President&#13;
of the Neenah Young Men's Club,&#13;
writes in a recent letter to The Peruna&#13;
Medicine Co., cf Columbus, Ohio,&#13;
the following:&#13;
"After suffering for two years with&#13;
kidney trouble I received relief and m&#13;
cure from using your wonderful medldue,&#13;
Peruna.&#13;
"For months 1 waa unable to work&#13;
on account of a severe pain In my back,&#13;
and when I was able to do anything 1&#13;
was In pain and distressed meet of the&#13;
time.&#13;
"Hearing so much of the good results&#13;
people had obtained through the&#13;
use of Peruna I determined to give it m&#13;
trial and it was a lucky day for me&#13;
when 1 did so. I am well now and It&#13;
only took a few bcttha of Peruna."—&#13;
John Herziger, 307 Commercial street,&#13;
Neenah, Wis.&#13;
Two years suffering with catarrh of&#13;
the kidneys, unable to work on account&#13;
of the severe pain; could find no relief&#13;
from medicine; gave Peruna a trial and&#13;
was promptly cured—such was the experience&#13;
of John Herziger of Wisconsin.&#13;
This experience has been repeated&#13;
many times. Not only in Wisconsin&#13;
but in every state in the Union. It was&#13;
Indeed a lucky day for this young man&#13;
when his attention was called to Peruna.&#13;
What would have been the result&#13;
had he continued suffering on and fooling&#13;
away precious time wHn other tag**-&#13;
edies, no man can tall. Bat H hi almost&#13;
certain that it would have soda*&#13;
in incurable Bright* disease of the kJ*V,&#13;
neye, which soonar or la^er wonMs&#13;
have proved fataL&#13;
Peruna is a sure Vara for incipient&#13;
Bright's disease of the kidneys. Tsheain&#13;
the early stages of thia disease, ft&#13;
cures permanently. Bright's diseaao&#13;
always begins with catarrh of the kidr&#13;
neys. Peruna cures catarrh wherever -&#13;
located.&#13;
Congrcamuus Bankhesvd's S^asesnenC. '&#13;
Congressman J. H* Bankhead of Alabama,&#13;
one of the most Influential mesabers&#13;
of the House of Representatives,&#13;
in a letter written from Washington,&#13;
D. C , gives his indorsement t o tho&#13;
great catarrh remedy, Peruna, in the*&#13;
following words:&#13;
"Your Peruna Is one of*the&#13;
medicines I ever triad, and no&#13;
should be without your ret&#13;
remedy. As a tonic and a catarrh •&#13;
f know of nothing better."—J* J&amp;-&#13;
Bankhead,&#13;
Samuel R. Sprecher, Junior Beadle-&#13;
Court Angelina No. 3423, I. O. 0. **.&#13;
206 High S t , Los Angeles, Cat, write*:&#13;
"I came here a few years ago sobering&#13;
with catarrh of the kidneys, 1 »&#13;
search of health. I thought that theclimate&#13;
would cure me but found that&#13;
I was mistaken, but what the climatsr&#13;
could not do Peruna could and did *ov&#13;
Seven weeks' trial convinced me that I&#13;
had the right medicine' and I was them&#13;
a well man. I know of at least twenty&#13;
friends and members of toe lodge towhich&#13;
I belong who have been cured:&#13;
of catarrh, bladder and kidney troublethrough&#13;
the use of Peruna and it haa&gt;&#13;
a host of friends in this city."—Samuel;&#13;
R. Sprecher.&#13;
If you do net derive prompt and satisfactory&#13;
results from the use of P e -&#13;
runa, write at once to Dr. Hartman,&#13;
giving a fnll statement of your caaaand&#13;
he will be pleased to give yon Wsv&#13;
valuable advice gratis.&#13;
Address Dr. Hartman, President dt&#13;
The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, O.&#13;
The best antidote for sorrow is&#13;
steady employment&#13;
Brooklyn, N. Y., Sept. 16.—The Garfield&#13;
Tea Co., manufacturers of Garfield Tea,&#13;
Garfield Eeadacbe Powders, - Garfield-Tea&#13;
Syrup, Garfield Relief Plasters, Garfield&#13;
Digestive Tablets and Garfield Lotion, are&#13;
now occupying the large and elegant office&#13;
building and laboratory recently erected by&#13;
them. For many years the Garfield Remedies&#13;
have been growing in popularity and&#13;
their success is well deserved.&#13;
The love of a pure and noble woman&#13;
is unde fin able.&#13;
Hall's Catarrh Care&#13;
Is taken Internally. Price, 75c.&#13;
A pessimist is never happy unless&#13;
he is unhappy.&#13;
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES are the&#13;
brightest, fastest and easiest to use.&#13;
Sold by druggists. 10c per package.&#13;
The lodu and senseless talk of man is but an&#13;
imitation of a donkey's brayine.&#13;
FITS Permanently Cored. T«o fits ornerroanwM after&#13;
first day. u«e of Dr. Kline'* Great Nerve Kwtorer.&#13;
Bend for FREE SB.OO trial bottle and treaties.&#13;
Da. B. H. Xuxt, Ltd., KM Arva St, PfcUadebkAia, Pa.&#13;
Sozodont&#13;
Tooth Powdor Thfbitt thajllwif and 0 5 *&#13;
Exptrltno* etn predate. £ « #&#13;
At all stores, or by mail for the price.&#13;
of Sozodont by mall for the postage, 3 cents.&#13;
HALL* RUCKEU New YORK&#13;
Hot Weather Health.&#13;
During the heated term of July and.&#13;
August one should be careful to keep all.&#13;
the organs of the system in free working1&#13;
condition.&#13;
Baxter's Mandrake Bitters taken b e -&#13;
fore meals will ward off diseases incident&#13;
to this trying season.&#13;
How pleasant is the sound of ice clinking in a&#13;
glass to one with a ra;in? fever!&#13;
DOVT KPOIT, YOUR CLOTHstS&#13;
Use Russ Bleaching Blue and keep them&#13;
white as snow. All grocers. 10c a package.&#13;
Only a few of the things we want arc absolutely&#13;
necessary to our welfare.&#13;
Mrs. Window's Soothing Syrup.&#13;
Tor chilrtren (lamination, a ltlaeeytsh plnaxin. , scoufrteeni *w inthda c oirlnirca st. erecd uacbeo*u Itn*&#13;
It doesn't always pay for a girl to have tco&#13;
many strings to her beau.&#13;
Piso's Cure Is the best medicine we ever used&#13;
for all affections of the throat and lungs.—WM.&#13;
O. ESDSLBT, Vanburcn. lnd..Feb. 1J, 190;.&#13;
1 2 3 PAINT&#13;
When you paint you want&#13;
it, 1 to last; 2 look well; 3&#13;
protect your house. Some&#13;
paint does 1, not 2 or 3;&#13;
some does 2 awhile, not 1 or&#13;
3; lead and oil does 2 well, 3&#13;
fairly, 1 badly.&#13;
Better have it all; 1 2 3&#13;
paint: Devoe ready paint;&#13;
the best isn't too good.&#13;
Get Devoe of yonr dealer; take nothing1&#13;
less. Pamphlet on painting- sent&#13;
free if you mention this paper.&#13;
GOOD-PAIXT DEVOE, CHICAGO.&#13;
Ver store ThanaQaaxter of aCeatmiT"&#13;
The reputation of W. I*. Douglas #3.00&#13;
and S3.50 shoes for style, comfort and&#13;
wear has excelled all other makes sold •*•&#13;
these prices. This excellent reputation h*o&gt;&#13;
been won by merit alone. w . 1». Douglas*&#13;
shoes have to give better satisfaction than.&#13;
other $3.00 and $3.80 shoes because bis&#13;
reputation for the best S3.00 and S3.S0&gt;&#13;
shoes must be maintained. The standard&#13;
has always been placed so high that tne&gt;&#13;
wearer receives more value for his money&#13;
in the W. L. Douglas $3.00 and *&amp;AO&#13;
shoes than be can get elsewhere.&#13;
W. L. Douglas sells more S3.00 and S3.SO&#13;
shoes than any other two manufacturers.&#13;
W. L Douglas 34.00 Qitt Edge Urn&#13;
_ cannot be equalled of efts' srfc*.&#13;
&amp; £ft*k w&amp;r^.—^jfet ¢^¾&#13;
Natare'i Priceless Remee*&#13;
M.O. PHELPS BROWN'S/&#13;
PRECIOUS&#13;
HERBAL&#13;
OINTMENT&#13;
H Curst JkftesJi tnt Petes&#13;
A44rewDr.0.9&gt;-r&#13;
Buri&#13;
Rheumatism, Nsurst*&#13;
, Weak Back, Sprsiss.&#13;
ma. Sorts see sMPsjn.&#13;
lSrjbHsI dIoldssr naoats «U01t , I*t, aMtned' M M I RUM, and for yoor&#13;
a Trial Fro.&#13;
S»9wa.e*&gt;Vwaf-&#13;
M I T W I 7 O I sales rem&#13;
easse. Book of tetttsaoat&amp;ia sad is&#13;
DrsCOVttTt aires&#13;
saiek relief sad cares worst'&#13;
• • SATS* toeataest&#13;
Sis*s*se»fl*&gt;&#13;
"HL- Sold by the best snoe dealers everywhersv-&#13;
Inslst upon having* TV. L. Douglas shoes)-&#13;
with name and price stamped 01&#13;
Saw to etitwl»y Hall.- If W. L.&#13;
are aot aoM fat yoatlewn, stneVotto 1&#13;
isest aitywbfffe on isoslstof 1&#13;
rTtttfliTtfWrpaTtmmfa~tii iiwis rses&gt;&#13;
patetnat wilt equal St aad Sf sss»&#13;
%omDMOSstooaa. in style, « a s *&#13;
ear. TSIM jneaaarwnsiss at"&#13;
f oot as shewn oa wm&#13;
style dstirodi slsai&#13;
W.N.U.—DETROIT—NaSS—lftOt&#13;
Ms**** TMt tssm\&#13;
•WLfm&#13;
•'-.••VtfH m&#13;
% • * * ' ; ! . • - • * :&#13;
' . • » * • • '&#13;
• *. -&#13;
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:'y :.&gt; ' ••&lt;•*:•,-&#13;
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• ' • . • . . '.'/•ft&#13;
. • • • • ' . ! - '&gt;+••:&amp;'"&#13;
*vv i'"&#13;
**TW&#13;
;;:.-&gt;;3$a •'•'• -V0SEr&#13;
i/.pfltt&#13;
-"•" vT&gt;ijB ;:^$1&#13;
v.'j^ig&#13;
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&gt; " i!&#13;
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,;.; V \ •.-.;.-i^;,,v:':'&#13;
' • • . . &gt; - • 1 •&#13;
.''«-&#13;
.•ilW-.1;&#13;
V,T.&#13;
1¾1&#13;
f- •'''•'•V,'&#13;
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p.&#13;
ft£:'&#13;
i&#13;
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"A.&#13;
Sue Cittfkttijtt AbvatclL&#13;
F. U ANDREW8 A CO. P*O*RIETO*8.&#13;
i r q -, w *m4*&#13;
THURSDAY, SEPT. 19,1901.&#13;
« « i » » * W » « I W « « » » — » - . — 1 ^ — - I . — — » . i l l " ! II •&#13;
Now that McJLinley is dead we&#13;
•appose there will be an expensive&#13;
trjal and at last Czolgosz will&#13;
meet his fate in the electric chair.&#13;
Why not dispense with the trial&#13;
and as he murdered the President&#13;
in the presence of thousands, give&#13;
him a public execution.&#13;
•'MH" * * 7 i&gt;ii;i;»ijfi.i WW"&#13;
Doe* It pay to buy cheap.&#13;
A cheap remedy for coughs and&#13;
cold* is all right, but you want something&#13;
that will velleve and cure the&#13;
more severe and dangerous results of&#13;
throat and lung troubles. What&#13;
shall we do? Go to a warmer and more&#13;
regular climate? l e s , if possible; if&#13;
not possible for you, then in either&#13;
cs*e take the ONLY remedy that has&#13;
been introduced in all civilized counties&#13;
with success in severe throat and&#13;
lung troubles, "Boscbee's German&#13;
Syrup." ttnot only heals and stimulates&#13;
the tissues to d'*lroy tbw genu&#13;
diseases, hut allay? ioflaraation, causes&#13;
easy expectoration, gives a good nigh s*&#13;
rest, and cures the patient. Try one&#13;
bottle. Recommended many years by&#13;
alt druggists in the world. Get&#13;
Green's Prize Almanac. For sale by&#13;
F. A. Sigler.&#13;
A ni*ftt*f Terror,&#13;
' *'AwfttJi anxiety was left for tar&#13;
widow of the, brave General Burnbam&#13;
of Machias, Me., when the doctors said&#13;
she would die from pneumonia before&#13;
morning" writes Mrs S. H. Lincoln,&#13;
who attended her that fearful night,&#13;
bur she begged for Dr. King'* New&#13;
Discovery, which had saved her life,&#13;
and cured bej of consumption. After&#13;
taku.g, she slept all night. Farther&#13;
use entirely cured her.1' This marvullous&#13;
medicine is guaranteed to cure&#13;
all Throat, Chest and Lung Diseases.&#13;
Only 50c and a $1.00. Trial bottles&#13;
free at F. A, Sigler's drug store.&#13;
t t W. C. T. UJ&#13;
Edited by thtW. C. T V*t F i n e l y&#13;
&lt;•*&lt; {•imrvmm gr " I " ,Hil»,l ff1.-^ +m*mm&#13;
State Fair at Pontlac.&#13;
The 52nd annual fair of the&#13;
State Agricultural Socity will be&#13;
held at Pontiac, Sept, 23-27." New&#13;
building have been erected on the&#13;
grounds of the Oakland County&#13;
Agricultural Society which are&#13;
ample to recommendate the state&#13;
fair. The main building has 40,&#13;
000 square feet of floor and the&#13;
grand stand seats 5,000. The&#13;
A Protect** r lend.&#13;
The liquor traffic is the basest&#13;
outlaw ever tolerated in a civilized&#13;
country. I t raises up a class&#13;
of men who consider themselves&#13;
amenable to no authority and justified&#13;
in resisting even by violent&#13;
methods all atempts to restrain&#13;
them in their unlawful operations.&#13;
Murder, assult, dynamite outrages&#13;
bulling, bluff, mobs and other&#13;
criminal practices are resoited to&#13;
whenever attemps are made to eradicate&#13;
the saloon or even to confine&#13;
its detestable work to the&#13;
limits of the law. Any community&#13;
can have a mob on its hands by&#13;
undertaking to enforco the prohibitory&#13;
features of the liquor law.&#13;
No community will venture to&#13;
cope with the monster unless&#13;
We d i g in* !$owh*iriroidl * H&#13;
Milford Times which will interest&#13;
our Sportsmen; - ^&#13;
The last legislature attempted&#13;
to umke some change in the game&#13;
laws and it is supposed that the&#13;
intention wa* to hnjee,{'%%&amp; open&#13;
season on buds begin October 1.&#13;
There was some mistake, however&#13;
the governor signing the wrong&#13;
bid or something of the kind.&#13;
This has made a good deal of confusion&#13;
in the minds ot sportsmen&#13;
all over the etate. But the attor*&#13;
ney-general has decided thatao&#13;
T&#13;
Three times within' the last&#13;
forty years the President of these&#13;
tlnited States has been stricken&#13;
down by an assassin. Is it not&#13;
about tiiiie that the government&#13;
took some means to eradicate the&#13;
country of the class of people&#13;
who breed and instill into the&#13;
minds of the people such doctrines?&#13;
We believe in free speech but&#13;
not of the^kind that says "1 wish&#13;
there were more men like Czolgosz."&#13;
— — —&#13;
TO Cute a Cold in One Day&#13;
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets,&#13;
AH drugghts refund the money&#13;
if it fails to cure. E. W. Grove's signature&#13;
is on each box. 25c.&#13;
speed purses aggregate 14,400 in strong and fearless citizens who&#13;
eleven classes. The premium list&#13;
has been greatly enlarged and&#13;
there is a special list for live stock&#13;
owned in Michigan. The management&#13;
has arranged for a large&#13;
number of special attractions&#13;
among which are the famous diving&#13;
horses which leap from a platform&#13;
30 feet in height into a tank&#13;
of water 12 feet deep. We think&#13;
that all our readers will enjoy the&#13;
fair, if they attend this year. Seo&#13;
ad in this issue.&#13;
A Shocking Calamity.&#13;
"Lately befell a railroad laborer,"&#13;
writes Dr. A. Keltet, of Williford,&#13;
Ark., "His foot wt?s badly crushed,&#13;
but Bucklen's Arnica Salve quickly&#13;
cured him. Its simply wonderful for&#13;
Burns. Boils, Piles and all ^kin eruptions&#13;
. U'H the world's champion healer.&#13;
Cure guaranteed. 25c. Sold l&gt;v&#13;
F. A. Sigler.&#13;
W A N T E D - T h e Subscription&#13;
due on the DISPATCH.&#13;
Rush!!&#13;
count not their lives and proper&#13;
ty dear unto 'themselves, stand&#13;
ready to lead the vau. As a rule,&#13;
influential men in eveiy community&#13;
prefer social quiet to tumult,&#13;
and would rather let the saloon&#13;
like a mad wolf go free than to&#13;
undertake to corral it or destroy&#13;
it. Moreover, the law is such&#13;
that extraordinary methods are&#13;
absolutely necessary in order to&#13;
detect the saloon in its crimes and&#13;
bring the responsible parties to&#13;
justice. These methods are always&#13;
expensive, and these also involve&#13;
local citizens unpleasantly&#13;
with strange detectives who must&#13;
be employed to discover the crimes&#13;
and the evidence which will&#13;
convict the criminals. It is a&#13;
shame that an institution permcious&#13;
as the saloon has been allowed&#13;
to entrench itself iu the general&#13;
mechanism of our laws, customs,&#13;
financial interests and social&#13;
forces. The saloon at best is&#13;
intolerable to many citizens, and&#13;
the day will never come when all&#13;
commuities will be acquiescent in&#13;
the presence of its nefarious&#13;
work. Now here, now there, as&#13;
at Owosso last week, a gallant&#13;
mayor, a brave preacher and loyal&#13;
citizen will grapple with the of.&#13;
fender, and the result will be agitation,&#13;
excitement, arrests, mobs,&#13;
trials, acquitals or convictions,&#13;
heart burnings, life-long animosities,&#13;
and peahaps maimings and&#13;
assassinations. Just as long as&#13;
the state sanctions the traffic, and&#13;
for a price' practically protects it,&#13;
so long will temperance people&#13;
find themselves at a tremendous&#13;
disadvantage in trying to protect&#13;
themselves, their children ancl&#13;
homes from the ruthless ravages&#13;
of the defient rum fiend.&#13;
far as birds are concerned, the old&#13;
law holds and partridge, quail,&#13;
spruce hen, woodcock are protected&#13;
until October 20, the open season&#13;
being, in the lower peuinsula,&#13;
from October 20 to November 30&#13;
both inclusive.&#13;
The game wardens are giving&#13;
thorough notice of the law also&#13;
that they will be particular to&#13;
take action agaiust violators-&#13;
The open season on squirrels is&#13;
from October 15 to Nov. 30 and&#13;
on ducks, geese and other water&#13;
fowl from Oct. 1 to Nov. 30.&#13;
Deer may be killed by properly&#13;
licensed nunters, except in certain&#13;
counties, from Nov. 8 to Nov. 30,&#13;
each hunter limited to thre° deer.&#13;
Stood Death off.&#13;
E, B. Munday, a lawyer of Henrietta,&#13;
Tex., once foiled a grave digger.&#13;
He says: '• My brother was very low&#13;
with malarial fever and jaundice. I&#13;
persuaded him to try Electric Bitters,&#13;
and he was soon much better, but&#13;
continued their use until be was&#13;
whollv cur d. I am sure Electric Bit*&#13;
ters saved his Hv«." This remedy expels&#13;
malaria, kills disease germs and&#13;
purifies the blood; aids digestion, regulates&#13;
the liver, Kidneys and Bowels,&#13;
cures constipation, dyspepsia, nervous&#13;
It bas long beep known that i »&#13;
Michigan there was raw materiel&#13;
quantities toiurnteV 'tyw$0i&#13;
supply of ?ortlan4 £emen$&gt; :*he&#13;
osly questiou being ite manufacture&#13;
at a cost warranting the enormous&#13;
outlay in the construction&#13;
end operation of the plant* (fan.&#13;
tories.) lor its manufacture. T o e&#13;
discovery of the new process l o r&#13;
making the cement was a long&#13;
st*p forward in this direction,&#13;
while the increasing demand for&#13;
the article stimulated the er-teipriserand&#13;
capjtal has been fortter&#13;
diseases, kidney troubles, female ccmplaints;&#13;
gives perfect health. Only&#13;
50c at F. A. Sigler^ drucr store.&#13;
Rush! Rush! Everybody is in a hurry&#13;
Just now you are in great haste for&#13;
Job&#13;
c&#13;
" * t . .-&#13;
t i *&#13;
M&#13;
Mrework.&#13;
We can supply you with what&#13;
you want, b e t h e y T ^ e t t e r h e a d s&#13;
I f t i l l l i e f i d s , S t a t e m e n t s ,&#13;
E n v e l o p e s , B u s i n e s s&#13;
C a r d s , and l ^ e d d i n g ^&#13;
S t a t i o n a r y . You will find our&#13;
prices and&#13;
Working Night and Day.&#13;
The busiest and mightiest little&#13;
thing that ever was make is Dr.&#13;
King's New Life Pills. These pills&#13;
change weakness into strength, list&#13;
lessneas into energy, brain-fag into&#13;
mental power. They're wonderful in&#13;
building up the health. Only 25c per&#13;
box. Sold by F. A. Sigler.&#13;
=fr/&#13;
, V - r * .&#13;
•&lt;*-'• * r&#13;
*v&#13;
satisfactory. Try us and see.&#13;
DISPATCH OffIC8»&#13;
Cheap Excursions to San Francisco and&#13;
t-38 Return.&#13;
The Grand Trunk Kailway system&#13;
will have on sale at all its&#13;
ticket offices tickets at extremely&#13;
low rates to San Francisco. Dates&#13;
of sale being from Sept. 18 to the&#13;
26 with privilige of stop overs,&#13;
side trips, etc. The final limit of&#13;
the ticket will be Nov. 15 1901.&#13;
For information, rates, conditi&#13;
o n s of tickets, inquire of all&#13;
agent8 of the Grand Trunk Railway&#13;
system and its connections.&#13;
Slop tne Confffe a n d w o r k * *»ff t n «&#13;
Laxative Bromo-Quinine Tablets cure&#13;
a cold in one day. No &lt; are, no pay,&#13;
fries 25 cents.&#13;
The young men of Ann Arbor&#13;
who are running the Y. M. C. A.&#13;
have arranged for a night school&#13;
again this year for themselves and&#13;
for every other young man in the&#13;
city who feels he is hindered from&#13;
getting on the world by his lack&#13;
of education. Teachers have been&#13;
secured as before from the High&#13;
School and University and each&#13;
one is a specialist in his particular&#13;
subject. They take a personal&#13;
interest iu each student and make&#13;
it a special point to help the man&#13;
who has had but little schooling.&#13;
The tuition fee has been fixed low&#13;
enough so as to bar out no one.&#13;
For members of the association it&#13;
is $2 for one course of 50 lessons,&#13;
?3 for two courses. Any young&#13;
man of good character can become&#13;
a member upon application&#13;
and the payment of the annual fee&#13;
of 12.&#13;
A FREE PATTERN&#13;
(your own •election) to eVery sub*&#13;
scrlber. Oaly 50 cents, a jeir.&#13;
WIe» ^ W L b V O f f l ^ H&#13;
MAGAZINEW&#13;
Whenever you see an able&#13;
bodied young man refusing an&#13;
offer of $1.25 a day for work,&#13;
saying he would starve before he&#13;
would work for such wages, you&#13;
cau bet your last dollar that&#13;
some other person is paying for&#13;
the grub he eats. The young&#13;
man who is willing to work for&#13;
best wages he can got, be it high&#13;
or low, is the one who gets there&#13;
in the end.&#13;
Monday evening a large number of&#13;
our citizens gatoered at. the Slaffan&#13;
store to witness the demonstration of&#13;
the burning qualities ot peat, and to&#13;
hear what the officers of the company&#13;
had to offer. E. G. Palmer, secretary&#13;
of the Chelsea Compressed Peat Co*&#13;
E. C. Miller, treasurer, and Prank T.&#13;
Lodge, member of the board of d'recttors&#13;
were present, and addressed the&#13;
meeting. All were pleased with the&#13;
showing made. C. T. Barcroft, the&#13;
company's architect, is hero and has&#13;
ytakftt out the ground for the buildings,&#13;
it u hoped to have the plant in&#13;
running order by the middle of November,—&#13;
Chelsea Standard.&#13;
A LADIES' MAGAZINE.&#13;
A rem; beautiful colored plaiei; latest&#13;
fashion,; dretimakinu economic, ; fancy&#13;
work; household hint,; fiction, etc. Sub-&#13;
•eriba to-day, or, ,end &lt;c. for latest copy.&#13;
Lady agent* wanted. Send for terms.&#13;
Stylish, Reliable, Simple,Up-to.&#13;
date, Economical and Absolutely&#13;
Per/ect-Fittinsr Paper Patterns.&#13;
MS CALL&#13;
PATTERNS'&#13;
Al Sets* Allowed m4 Perforation stow&#13;
tie tattoo Md Sewios Utes.&#13;
Only 10 and 15 cents each—none higher.&#13;
Ask- for them. Sold in nearly every dry&#13;
and town, or by mail from&#13;
THE NcCALL CO..&#13;
113-115-117 West 3l$t I t , MEW YORK.&#13;
0 *&#13;
Railroad Guide.&#13;
&gt; A.-YD STZAMBHIP UNK8*&#13;
Popular rout« tor Ann Arbor, Toledo&#13;
Hiiii points East, South, and for&#13;
Howeli, O.vo*so, Alma, Mt Pleasant&#13;
Cadillac, Manistee, Traverse City and&#13;
points in Northwestern Michigan.&#13;
IV. H . BKNNKTT,&#13;
G. P.A.Toledo&#13;
MARQUETTE&#13;
»«Uro*a., Txxa.. 1 , 1 9 3 1 .&#13;
Trains leave .South Lyon as follows:&#13;
F&lt;r Detroit nnil E«st.&#13;
10:36 a. m., 8:0, p. m., 8:68 p. m.&#13;
For Grand R-ipids. North and WVgf,&#13;
9:45 a . m . , 2:0S p. m. 6:20 p. jr*&#13;
For Saginaw and Bav Cltv, '**&#13;
10:36 n. m., 3:04 p. m., 8-,¾ p . m .&#13;
For Toledo and South, 10:3ft #, to,&#13;
II. F. MOBLLETH, .&#13;
&lt;'. r\ 4., Bfftrntt.&#13;
PRANK B*y,&#13;
Agent, South Lv&lt;*\.&#13;
•inuijl Trunk Railway Sfalem.&#13;
J.44 a. m. fJAcknon, 1 s t r o l l , ami)!*:]* a, u ,&#13;
S O p. ru. &gt;.&gt;wrmwllat*tt«tl&lt;&gt;i&gt;* biiSu. m.&#13;
mail and oxp..&#13;
•lackann, tanox, an4&#13;
4:4&amp; p, m. thttriuediatoOUIUUM&#13;
mixed. I&#13;
W--'.f:- -J-'&#13;
•j&gt;- .',&#13;
coming, so that nt the present&#13;
time there are ten plants complete&#13;
ed, eight of which are rnnniogday&#13;
and night, turning out over&#13;
6,000 barrels of the finished product,&#13;
daily. Five other plants&#13;
are in the course of construction,&#13;
some of which are nearing com'&#13;
pletion, and locations have been&#13;
selected for eight more, all of&#13;
which are contigious to great deposits&#13;
of the raw material, and on&#13;
which the work will be rapidly&#13;
pushed.&#13;
Investigation shows that Michigan&#13;
can still lead in the production&#13;
of i&gt;he best building materials&#13;
yet produced, and that she will&#13;
lead is evidenced by the enormous&#13;
capital which is bein^invesed&#13;
iu the manufacture of Portland&#13;
Cement, an industry which&#13;
already extends to all parts of the&#13;
lower peninsula, and which will&#13;
eventually extend to the counties&#13;
north of the straits.&#13;
'''-L'~ 's: ' • " ^ '••',&#13;
: . ' / : &gt; * • - . , • • • &amp; • : . : : • : $ {&#13;
.-. i*&gt;&#13;
.f . ; V ' '•&#13;
, * ' • *&#13;
,i.r&#13;
.-^ * mtt. \.&#13;
. A " /&#13;
f.2&#13;
tjO*&#13;
.1&#13;
.jLd-*ti^\*mM'^jjd*iu&#13;
* • • • ¥ i n&#13;
TEEPLfc •* C.ID WELL.&#13;
C a r l o a l t l e a o f t h e Caeno Trt»e.&#13;
T h e cultivation of cacao, s a y : A writer&#13;
ta T h e Scientific Aiiu'ricau. la an Inviting&#13;
agricultural pursuit In Trinidad&#13;
and parts o f Venezuela. T h e cacao tree&#13;
cannot w i t h s t a n d strong sunshine, a n d&#13;
the y o u n g plants h a v e to be shaded by&#13;
banana or plantain trees a n d later,&#13;
w h e n t h e y attain their growth, by tail&#13;
trees k n o w n a s "immortelle*," or t h e&#13;
"mother o f t h e cacao." T h e s e m a k e a&#13;
Kind of c a n o p y over t h e entire plattta&#13;
tton. T h e fruit o f the cacao tree Is a pod&#13;
r e s e m b l i n g a c u c u m b e r nud g r o w i n g on&#13;
t h e trunk or large branches, w h e r e it&#13;
"looks a s though It w e r e artificially attached."&#13;
T h e s e e d s are like large, thick&#13;
l i m a b e a n s Imbedded In pulp. T h e s e&#13;
form t h e c a c a o b e a n s o f commerce. T h e&#13;
processes o f curing and drying require&#13;
much attention.&#13;
Uanriy Thins;* t o Carry.&#13;
F e w people carry pocket scissors of&#13;
the folding* sort. Those that do u e v e r&#13;
part w}t-tsjthem. Convenient "for Tna&#13;
cure use. to cut a clipping from a p a p e r&#13;
at a m o m e n t ' s notice, a string, e t c . ,&#13;
t h e y a n s w e r almost every purpose of&#13;
t h e p o c k e t k n i f e and are much m o r e&#13;
convenient to handle. Give a person&#13;
a c c u s t o m e d to their use a knife a n d&#13;
t h e pocket seisstirnv a n d he wrtt part&#13;
with t h e former tirst.—Hardware.&#13;
• ^ T h e Ift'ater B e e t l e .&#13;
T h e great carnivorous w a t e r beetle,&#13;
; t h e dytiscus, after catching a n d eat-&#13;
1 i n g other creatures ail d a y , w i t h t w o&#13;
minute intervals to como up. poke t h e&#13;
tips of its w i n g s o u t of t h e w a t e r a n d&#13;
! Jam s o m e a i r nguir.st "its spiracles bei&#13;
fore d e s c e n d i n g once more to Its suba&#13;
q u e o u s hunting grounds, will rise b y&#13;
night from t h e suriace of t h e T h a m e s ,&#13;
lift a g a i n those horny w i n g cases, unfold&#13;
a broad and beautiful pair of&#13;
g a u z y w i n g s a n d whirl off on a visit&#13;
of love a n d adventure t o some" distant&#13;
pond, o n to which It d e s c e n d s like a&#13;
bullet from t h e air above.&#13;
W h e n people are s i t t i n g in a greenhouse&#13;
a t night with no l a m p lighted,&#13;
t a l k i n g or smoking, t h e y s o m e t i m e s&#13;
hear a s m a s h a s if a pebble bad been&#13;
dropped on t h e glass from above, i t&#13;
Is a d y s t i c u s beetle w h o s e compound&#13;
e„ e s h a v e mistaken t h e shine of t h e&#13;
g l a s s in the moonlight for t h e gleam&#13;
of a pond.&#13;
A t - n i g h t s o m e of t h e w h i r l i g i g bee-&#13;
So T h e y D o , So::ie of T h e m .&#13;
T h e teacher had been g i v i n g a cla^s&#13;
of y o u n g s t e r s s o m e Ideas of a d a g e s a n d&#13;
h o w to m a k e them, and t o test h e r&#13;
training S1H&gt; put n f e w questions:&#13;
"Birds of a feather—do w h a t ? "&#13;
"Lay e g g s . " piped a small boy before&#13;
anybody else had a chance t o speak.&#13;
ties, t h e shiny beanlike creatures seen&#13;
w h i r l i n g in incessant circles in corners&#13;
by the bank, make a quite audible&#13;
a n d almost musical sound upon t h e&#13;
water.—Spectator.&#13;
Worltr&#13;
U n a p p r e c l a t i v e .&#13;
"You find spring w a t e r a very g r e a t&#13;
Advantage In dairying. I presume?"&#13;
"Oh, I don't know." said t h e milkman.&#13;
"The a v e r a g e person b u y i u g milk&#13;
doesn't k n o w t h e difference b e t w e e n&#13;
spring w a t e r a n d a n y other kind."—&#13;
Detroit Journal.&#13;
A Oooil Bar-pain.&#13;
Minister (reading w e d d i n g service)—&#13;
And y o u . Finns, take this w o m a n f o r&#13;
better, for w o r s e ?&#13;
H a n s F r a n k f u r t e r (conscientiously)—&#13;
F o r better, sir! S h e haf $40; I got n o t -&#13;
hings!—Brooklyn Eagle.&#13;
R e c i p r o c a l H e l p .&#13;
Doctor—Well, my good w o m a n , w h a t&#13;
3o you w a n t ?&#13;
Beggar—A quarter, doctor: g i v e m e a&#13;
quarter, and I'll tell e v e r y b o d y t h a t y o u&#13;
helped m e . — N e w York Times,&#13;
* t WANTED"&#13;
Weak m * n , w e a k w o m e n , p a l e&#13;
m e n , i a l e w o m e n , ner . o u s m e n , n e r -&#13;
v o u s w o m e n , delimitated m e n , d e l u l i -&#13;
felted w o m e n , t&lt;&gt; take Knili1 * R e d P i l l s&#13;
for W a n P e o p l e . They restore H e a i t b ,&#13;
S t r e n g t h a n d IJHv.ufcy. W a k e u p ,&#13;
brace u p b y t*kinir them before t h e&#13;
hot w t a l i i e r . T h e y a r e t h e tfreat hody&#13;
b u i l d e r a n d ii» v &lt;,,per, S p r i n g T o n i c&#13;
and Blood medi'-in*. 2 5 e a b o s .&#13;
K n i l l s Whin* L.ver P i l l s a r e t h e&#13;
great. L i v e r litvitroratur, b o w e l H e g u -&#13;
later. 2 5 doses 25c.&#13;
Knill'* B I U H K i d n e y P i l i s c a r e&#13;
B a c k a c h * a n d K i d n e y troubles. 2 5 c&#13;
a box&#13;
The w o m a n had her a r m s in t h e t u b&#13;
and w a s fiercely scrubbing one dirty&#13;
g a r m e n t after another. Rook agents&#13;
don't often penetrate to that part of&#13;
Chicago, but this one &lt;\^l. H e knocked&#13;
on the front door um he w a s tired,&#13;
and then he went r.rou.:.i To t h e back&#13;
door. T h e w o m a n w a s bobbing u p and&#13;
d o w n over the washboard.&#13;
, "Good morning, madam." said the&#13;
book a g e n t pleasantly.&#13;
"Good morniu." said the w o m a n&#13;
shortly.&#13;
"Pleasant d a y . " observed t h e bookagent,&#13;
sparring for an opening.&#13;
"Good enough," a n s w e r e d t h e w o -&#13;
man.&#13;
" E x c u s e me, madam." said t h e book&#13;
agent, "but I have here a work that I&#13;
would like to s h o w you."&#13;
"TIave you?" a n s w e r e d t h e w o m a n .&#13;
"Well, I've g e t a lot of work that I'd&#13;
like to s h o w you." S h e took one soapy&#13;
hand o u t of t h e t u b a n d w a v e d it a t a&#13;
great pile of dirty clothes.&#13;
"That's my work," w e n t on t h e woman.&#13;
"If your work can beat that, a l l&#13;
right; if it can't, w h y , skip out."&#13;
T h e book a g e n t skipped. — Chicago&#13;
Tribune.&#13;
JUeblfaaCrof&#13;
W* glewt tb*4oUawiag&#13;
the crop report U « M 4 weekij from&#13;
the department ol itate:"&#13;
The tempertnr* haa been about&#13;
two degree* above the normal&#13;
and the rainfall one inch abov&#13;
tbe normal* No crop* have suffered&#13;
from the drought* except in&#13;
a few aectiona where the rainfall&#13;
baa been light Paatnre haa been&#13;
fairly good, tnne enabling stock to&#13;
keep in good condition.&#13;
The final estimate for wheat&#13;
will be made in October. The&#13;
average estimated yield per acre&#13;
in the southern counties is 10&#13;
bushels, in the central counties 14&#13;
bushels, in the northern coun.tiea&#13;
13 bushels, and in the state 11&#13;
bushels. So much wheat was&#13;
plowed up and so many other&#13;
fields cut for bay that it is difficult&#13;
to fix the amount actually&#13;
harvested.&#13;
The season this year has not&#13;
been foyorable for oats. The&#13;
cold backward spring seems to&#13;
have retarded their growth for the&#13;
season. The average yield is&#13;
about three-quarters of what it&#13;
was last year and the quality is&#13;
uot as good.&#13;
In most parts of the State com&#13;
has made a good growth during&#13;
the month. In a few counties, on&#13;
light soU, it has not eared well.&#13;
This is only true in thoBe portions&#13;
ol the state where there has been&#13;
practically, no rainfall. If frosts&#13;
do not prevail prior to the middle&#13;
of September the corn crop will&#13;
be safe and fairly up to the average.&#13;
The bean crop is very uneven&#13;
this year. In a few localities~no&#13;
growth was made so that the crop&#13;
is practically a failure. In other&#13;
sections there has been an excessive&#13;
growth of vines. In some&#13;
cases there lias beeu so much ratir&#13;
• 4 Cftfl*.&#13;
•ergetat, deciding te&#13;
of ill* men decided&#13;
happy event came off It&#13;
we^»e^en*sn»4^^sBBt ••JO' i|r^^^' •^^waeiB*&#13;
^^awa ^^^ifl^S'^sw^ „^^wa^^WwMw*aji s j w&#13;
decided" t o k e e p na&gt; t h e&#13;
c u s t o m o f t h r o w i n g rtca&#13;
• n o e s a t t h e happy couple,&#13;
e v e n t f u l d a y when- t h e h a p p y&#13;
e m e r g e d from their quarters t h e y&#13;
w e r e greeted w i t h a perfect s h o w e r o f&#13;
rice a n d o l d shoes, b u t one T o m m y h a d&#13;
• l i l y s u b s t i t u t e d a b i g pair o f regulat&#13;
i o n Bluchers, w h i c h h e t h r e w «7ith&#13;
s u c h unerring a i m t h a t t h e missile&#13;
' c a u g h t t h e s e r g e a n t j u s t a b o v e t h e e y e ,&#13;
Inflicting a n a a i y cut.&#13;
D i r e c t l y t h e c e r e m o n y w a s o v e r t h e&#13;
s e r g e a n t i m m e d i a t e l y w e n t t o t h e hospital&#13;
t o h a v e t h e w o u n d dressed. T h e&#13;
doctor, a f t e r e x a m i n i n g the s w o l l e n a n d&#13;
discolored optic, inquired b o w It w a s&#13;
done. .&#13;
" W e n , air." replied t h e sergeant, "I&#13;
g o t married today, and"—&#13;
B u t w a s c u t short b y t h e doctor (a&#13;
married m a n i e x c l a i m i n g :&#13;
"Oh, I s e e ! T h a t e x p l a i n s i t ; but, by&#13;
J o v e , she's started early!"—London Ans&#13;
w e r s .&#13;
. ' .- ";; .W • •••* ,.&lt;&lt;•••: .4 '••'•••. V r . *.&#13;
u&#13;
T h e S u s p e n s i o n Brida*e.&#13;
T h e r e is u o doubt that t h e first idea&#13;
of a suspension bridge w a s s u g g e s t e d&#13;
to'primitive man by t h e interlacing of&#13;
tree branches a n d parasitical plants&#13;
across rivers. Probably m o n k e y s used&#13;
them before men did. In very mount&#13;
a i n o u s countries, such a s Tibet a n d&#13;
Peru, they h a v e apparently been used&#13;
since the d a w n of history, possibly earl&#13;
i e r&#13;
4W-A This algnatare is on every box l the genuine&#13;
Laxative Bromo-Quinitie Tablets&#13;
the remedy that c o r e s n eoatl te «MM d a y&#13;
Subscribe tor Dispatch.&#13;
that they will not yield well. As&#13;
a result the yield will be variable&#13;
some very good and some very&#13;
poor.&#13;
Potatoes, like corn and beans,&#13;
vary much throughout the state.&#13;
Where it naer not been too dry&#13;
they have done fairly well. One&#13;
exception to this is where the&#13;
bugs have done much damage.&#13;
Had farmers, in some cases, prevented&#13;
these ravages potatoes&#13;
would be good where corn is good.&#13;
The crop of clover seed ha»&#13;
baen injured some by insects. Iu&#13;
other cases it has made a rank&#13;
growth but did not fill well.&#13;
Some farmers are cutting this&#13;
second crop for hay.&#13;
A Card.&#13;
I t h e u n d e r s i g n e d , d o h e r e b y a g r e e&#13;
to r e f u n d t h e m o n e y o n a 5 0 cent, hot&#13;
He o f Green's W a r r a n t e d S y r a p o f&#13;
T a r if it failes ro c o r e y o u r c o u ? b or&#13;
cold. I also g u a r a n t e e a 2 5 - c e n t bottle&#13;
t o prove s a t i s f a c t o r y o r m o n e y ref&#13;
u n d e d . t 2 3&#13;
W i l l B . D a r r o w .&#13;
".lohn." s;iUI Mrs. il:ii.\s ::f'Tcr t h e&#13;
i d l e r had £o:n&gt; sr.v;iy. "1 wisu you&#13;
wouldn't bunch your blunders so."&#13;
"\Vl::i: do you mean. Maria V" asked&#13;
Mr. Bill us.&#13;
"I didn't mind your telling her that&#13;
yon w » ; e ten y e a r s older than 1. but&#13;
you followed it u p a minute later b y&#13;
letting It slip out that y o u w e r e 52."—&#13;
Chicago Tribune.&#13;
&gt; « S i S * , » » « ^ S * * * » i » W M S * ^ « » S » N ^ * ^ ^ ^ He&#13;
Griswold&#13;
House&#13;
-.-1.&#13;
POSTAL * MOSSY,&#13;
anOMMKTOWS.&#13;
DETROIT.&#13;
A&#13;
strictly&#13;
Hre*&#13;
cloee,&#13;
modem,&#13;
ap-to-dato&#13;
Hotel, located&#13;
la the heart of&#13;
the City&#13;
6 0 Y E A R S '&#13;
E X P E R I E N C E&#13;
liutes, $2, $150,13per Day.&#13;
^ ^ i ^ ^ ^ i i i i &gt; i i i y » ^ M v y &lt; J ^ M ^ &lt; y v ^ * ^ ^&#13;
TKADC MARKS Dcwam&#13;
CoPYRKurrs 4c;&#13;
Anyone sending a sketch and description may&#13;
aniealy ascertain oar opinion free whether an&#13;
invention is probably patentable. Common!©*,&#13;
ttoua atrtot) y confidential. Handbook on Patents&#13;
sent free. Oldest aaenoy for secnrtiuTpatents.&#13;
Patents taken throofta Mann a Co. nostra&#13;
special ftotto*, wtthoot etarire, to the&#13;
aety nhtttrsted week: Lanrostttf*&#13;
**&amp;?,&#13;
T h e H a n d i c a p o f a N a m e .&#13;
Poppers—No; w e haven't christened&#13;
the b a b y y e t . My wife w a n t s t o g i v e&#13;
him a fancy n a m e o a t o f a book, b u t I&#13;
won't h a v e i t&#13;
A s c n m — W h y n o t ?&#13;
Poppers— B e c a u s e then be'd g r o w u p&#13;
to b e h o m e l y a s blue m u d a n d t o u g h a s&#13;
nails. 1 n e v e r k n e w i t t o falL—Philadelphia&#13;
Press.&#13;
V a l v e o f D i a m o n d * .&#13;
A s t o t h e v a l u e o f diamonds, perfectly&#13;
w h i t e s t o n e s o r decided t i n t s o f&#13;
red, rose, green or blue a r e most highl&#13;
y prized. F i n e c i n n a m o n and salmon&#13;
o r b r o w n , black o r y e l l o w s t o n e s&#13;
a l s o a r e esteemed. If flawless a n d&#13;
w i t h o u t t i n t of a n y kind, they a r e&#13;
t e r m e d first water. I f t h e y p o s s e s s a&#13;
steely blue color, a t t i m e s a l m o s t&#13;
opalescent, t h e y a r e called blue white.&#13;
S u c h a r e usually Brazilian stones. Exceptionally&#13;
perfect s t o n e s a r e termed&#13;
g e m s , a n d for such there is n o fixed&#13;
value, the'price depending o n t h e purit&#13;
y a n d t h e brilliancy o f the stone. T h e&#13;
t e r m first w a t e r varies in m e a n i n g , a c -&#13;
cording t o the c l a s s o f goods carried b y&#13;
t h e dealer using i t&#13;
I t Is impossible t o e s t i m a t e t h e v a l u e&#13;
of a diamond b y i t s w e i g h t Color,&#13;
brilliancy, c u t and general perfection&#13;
of t h e s t o n e a l l a r e t o b e t a k e n into&#13;
a c c o u n t Of t w o stones, both flawless&#13;
a n d w e i g h i n g t e n carats, o n e m a y be&#13;
w o r t h $G00 and t h e other,$12,000. E x -&#13;
ceptional stones often bring special&#13;
prices. Off color or imperfect s t o n e s&#13;
sell a t a n a v e r a g e price p e r carat reg&#13;
a r d l e s s o f size. _ __&#13;
H o n F o r t r e s s M o n r o e W a s B n i l t .&#13;
T h e m a n n e r of constructing t h e fort&#13;
a t Old Point Comfort is interesting&#13;
a n d t h r o w s s o m e light on c u s t o m s and&#13;
practices then in vogue. T h e work w a s&#13;
a l m o s t w h o l l y done b y s l a r e ^ w h o w e r e&#13;
brought t o the place by their masters&#13;
a n d leased to t h e engineers in charge.&#13;
T h e s l a v e o w n e r received 5 0 c e n t s a&#13;
d a y for each slave, a n d the g o v e r n m e n t&#13;
furnished each "laborer," a s t h e slave&#13;
w a s called, with t w o suits o f working&#13;
clothes, a pair or t w o of shoes, rations,&#13;
quarters a n d occasionally a little tobacco.&#13;
T h e "laborers" worked w i t h very&#13;
little clothes a n d generally w i t h o u t&#13;
shoes. T!ie3* lived in barracks and were&#13;
subject to a kind of military discipline.&#13;
T h e o w n e r s w e r e regular In c o m i n g in&#13;
to collect t h e hire for their s l a j e s , from&#13;
w h i c h w e m a y Infer that the "constitue&#13;
n t s " of those d a y s k n e w how to appreciate&#13;
a good thing to a degree w o r t h y&#13;
of t h e present generation.—Leslie's&#13;
W e e k l y .&#13;
We the un4wvejaa4 dmftk&gt;ts, off-&#13;
•r a .awaVddl *0*«rtt t* mtf per*o*&#13;
who patebatat o! OJ, two. 25c bout&#13;
of Baxter's Ha*4rake Bitter* Table-to,&#13;
if it fail* to care oomsttpaiiwav biliotuness,&#13;
siok-hea4a«be; jautt^ka. k t s o&#13;
appetite, soar tioatMb** dfpnwif&#13;
liver complaint, or a#y ol tbo d^taasa&#13;
for which it i* recottmeadfd^ Prioa&#13;
25 uaniM for either taWatf or liquid.&#13;
We will also refund the 0^3007 o i ooa&#13;
package of either if it fail* to g i *&#13;
satisfaction, i^&#13;
P. A.Stglw% Ii&#13;
W. B. Darrow,&#13;
m&#13;
&amp; . * ! , • ' * '&#13;
&amp;L&amp;&#13;
• «,?r i»&#13;
®be futtkntg gwpitfft.&#13;
tVKMBMD STSXT TBOBtMY MOM3J3Q ST&#13;
5-BANKL. ANDaSvVS&#13;
Editor and freprtoiw. *&#13;
ttubacrlpttoa Price $1 ia Advaaee&#13;
latsrad at (tie PoetoAee et Piaekaej, Mlehi^tn&#13;
M secona-olsjM suttee.&#13;
AdvsrtUiAg relet made knows on tepllestiea,&#13;
Boelnees Cards, $4.00 per year.&#13;
reeth end mejrzusfl uotlees pabltobed free.&#13;
Aanoascsaieats^E enterulnmeef aiey be p e l i&#13;
for, if desired, by pr«eeatiagthe oflee witfe tickets&#13;
of admission. Ia ease tickets are aotbroagat&#13;
to toe omce, regular rftes will be cbarged,&#13;
AU matter ia local notice column will be eaara*&#13;
ed at 5 cent* per line or fraction tnereof, for eacli&#13;
uuertion. Where ao time isfpecUled, all notioeo&#13;
will be inserted until ordered discontinued, and&#13;
will be chaiged for accordingly. a^s7*AUcnaueee&#13;
of adirartiaemeate MD8T reach this ofdee ae eejiy&#13;
aa TunsDAT morning to insure an insertion tae&#13;
same week.&#13;
JOS T&amp;IJtttJt 01&#13;
In all its branchee, a specialty. We naveall kinds&#13;
and the latest styles ofType, ete., which enabiee&#13;
os to execute all kinds of work, suen as Books.&#13;
Pemplets, Posters, Programmes, &amp;11 Heads, Mete&#13;
Heads, statements, Cards, Auction BilU, etc, in&#13;
superior styles, upon the shortest notice. Prices as&#13;
o-v as good work can b* done.&#13;
-LU BILLS PATASL7 9IJUT O* B V « a r ttstSt*.&#13;
THE VILLAGE DIRECTORY.&#13;
"#•&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICERS.&#13;
PassESBNT..'»«.....— . . . . . C . L.Sigler&#13;
THOSTBBS R. Baker, B. H. Erwin,&#13;
F. Q. Jackson, Geo Reason Jr.&#13;
Cbas. Love, Malachy Roche.&#13;
^*.aBK.... ...MM -.MM. » ....MM&gt;&lt;..M.,..£. B. Browa&#13;
TKKAsaBKH .— ^. MM..J. A. Cadweli&#13;
AassssoB H m . ^.,.Jss. A.Oreene&#13;
3T8ICT COMMISSIONS a ..J.Parker&#13;
UKALTHornoiB ._....Dr.H. K. aiglet&#13;
ATTOgjTiY «... ^. W. TT.'Cerr&#13;
M A I W B A L L , M M . MM. ^,^^, 3 . Brogaa&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
%/|-JETHUi&gt;JsT KPISCOPAL CHURCH.&#13;
--i*l—Revs a . W . Hicke, pastor. 8ervices every&#13;
Sunday morning, at I0:3o, and every Sunday&#13;
C a r e In M a k i n g A x e s .&#13;
A n a x Is subject t o rigid tests before&#13;
It i s pronounced perfect. The steel must&#13;
be of t h e required temper, t h e w e i g h t&#13;
of all a x e s of t h e s a m e size m u s t be&#13;
uniform, all m u s t be ground alike a n d&#13;
in vartous other w a y s conform t o a n established&#13;
standard. T h e Inspector w h o&#13;
t e s t s t h e quality of t h e steel does s o by&#13;
h a m m e r i n g t h e blade a n d striking t h e&#13;
e d g e to ascertain w h e t h e r it b e too&#13;
brittle o r not. A n a x that breaks duri&#13;
n g t h e t e s t i s t h r o w n aside t o b e m a d e&#13;
o*er. B e f o r e the material of a n a x i s in&#13;
t h e proper s h a p e it h a s been heated five&#13;
times, including t h e t e m p e r i n g process,&#13;
a n d t h e a x w h e n completed h a s passed&#13;
through t h e h a n d s o f about 40 workm&#13;
e n , each of w h o m h a s done s o m e t h i n g&#13;
t o w a r d perfecting it. After p a s s i n g Inspection&#13;
t h e a x e s g o t o . the grinding dep&#13;
a r t m e n t a n d from t h a t t o t h e polishera,&#13;
w h o finish t h e m upon emery&#13;
w h e e l s .&#13;
evening at 7:00 o'clock. Prayer meetingThoreday&#13;
evenings. Sunday school at close of morning&#13;
service. CHA8, HSNBY Supt.&#13;
C°"N URBQAl'IONAL CHURCH.&#13;
Rev. 0. W. Rice pastor. Service every&#13;
juoday morning at 10:30 and every Sunday&#13;
evening at T :0C o'clock. Prayer meeting Thurs&#13;
day evenings. Monday school at close of morn&#13;
Inir nervine. Mrs. Tuoa, Read, Supt,, Mocco&#13;
Teep'eSec.&#13;
C T . MARK'S 'JATHOL.IC CHURCH.&#13;
O Rev. M. J. ComLU&lt;*rford, Pastor. Services&#13;
every Sunday. Low mass at 7:80 o'clock&#13;
high mass with sermon at 9:30 a. in. Catechism&#13;
at a :0u p. IU., veepers ana benediction at 7 :«0 p. m&#13;
SOCIETIES;&#13;
I^he \. O. H. Society ot tutu plioo, -neeta every&#13;
third H inUy m trie «"r. A &gt;ttm v [ill&#13;
John Tuoraay and vf. T. K^lly.Ooa itf 0*1 &lt;g«aes&#13;
^PWOICTH LEAGUE. Meets every Sunday&#13;
Cievening at (5:00 octock to the A. bL Cnurcb, A&#13;
cordial invitation is extended to everyuue, especially&#13;
yuuug people. P. L.. Audrewe, Pren a .Miss&#13;
IRISTIAN EVJEVVKt SOJlBrY::-.^^&#13;
iverv Sumi.iy evdnin t at M». Preai lenj&#13;
kl. dtr, jecretary, .rtisa ilutls Cirpmta&#13;
fPHK ^ . C T. U. meets the first Priday of eaol&#13;
I month ai i!::k p. m, at |ne home of Dr. H. fr&#13;
Sigler. Kveryone interested ia temperance&#13;
coadially invited. Mrs.&#13;
Kit a i&gt;urfee, Secretary. '^eal HlgLer, Pree; M»&#13;
mpei&#13;
, Pr«&#13;
i t - 1&gt;he C. T. A. and R. Society of this place, ITH#&#13;
. every third Satnraay evening in the Pr. h*t&#13;
thew Hall. John Donohue, President.&#13;
NIU11TSOP MACCABEES.&#13;
Meet every Friday evening on or before (all&#13;
ol the uioou at their ball in the Swarthout bldg.&#13;
Visiting brothers are cordially invited.&#13;
CHAB. UaaPBBUL, Sir Kni«ht Commandet&#13;
Livingston Lodge, No.7f, ? A A. M. Regilar&#13;
Communication Tuesday evening, on or before&#13;
tbe tun of the moon. Kirk Van Winkle, W. M&#13;
ORDER OF EASTERN STAR meets each month&#13;
the Friday evening following the regular F.&#13;
AA.M. meeting, Mas. MARY RBAO, W. M.&#13;
CamaiBaT B u r r r .&#13;
H a r r y a n d Charlie, aged 5 a n d 3 res&#13;
p e c t i v e l y , h a v e just been seated a t t h e&#13;
n u r s e r y table for dinner. Harry s e e s&#13;
t h e r e i s b u t o n e o r a n g e o n the table&#13;
a n d i m m e d i a t e l y s e t s u p a w a i l t h a t&#13;
b r i n g s h i s mother t o t h e scene.&#13;
" W h y . H a r r y , w h a t are yoti c r y i n g&#13;
for?" s h e a s k s .&#13;
" B e c a u s e there ain't a n y o r a n g e for&#13;
Charlie."—Exchange.&#13;
W i l l i e * I««MU&#13;
, "Isn't it awful how thin Mr. Henpeck&#13;
M now?" remarked Mra. Gabble to her&#13;
husband. "And he used to be so stout"&#13;
H a d H e a r d T a c m A l l .&#13;
Mrs. H e n n y p e e k (in t h e m i d s t o f h e r&#13;
reading)—Here i s a n item which s a y s&#13;
t h a t there a r e more t h a n 250.000 word*&#13;
In t h e E n g l i s h l a n g u a g e .&#13;
Mr. Hennypeck—Yea, m y dear; s o&#13;
T v e heard.—Puck.&#13;
T a s m a n i a is 4.000 m i l e s l e s s In area&#13;
t h a n Ireland. T b e n a m e s of Its 13 coun-&#13;
»Perhaps.»' c h i m e d in little Willie, re-' 2 ? * " a U a o i t a U ^ 6 0 t r o m ^ 1 ^&#13;
m e m b e r i n g h i s trouble w i t h b i s bicycle counties.&#13;
tiwt-^rb^btewlfafojyetttoblow; F l t b ^ . v e r y ^ f o o d ^ ^ ^&#13;
PnilitkapbiaPresav c b i c l n n or torkaj.&#13;
ORDER OF MODERN WOODMEN sleet the&#13;
first Thursday evening of each Mouth in the&#13;
Aiitccabee nail. C. L. Grimes V. C.&#13;
LADIES OF THE MACCABEKS. Mest every Is.&#13;
and $r&lt;i Saturday of eachmonth at *:30 p m. a&#13;
K. o. T. M. hall. Visiting slaters cordially in"&#13;
vited. J CL (A SIG LB a. Lady Com.&#13;
* J&#13;
KNIGHTS or TUB LOTAL GUARD&#13;
meet every second Wednesday&#13;
evening of every month in the K. O.&#13;
T. M. Hall at 7:«)o'clock. AU TialUag&#13;
Guards welcome.&#13;
_ j F. L. Andrews P. M.&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
J. W. MONKS.&#13;
DOCTOR OF DENTAL SURGERY&#13;
PNCKNfcY, MICH.&#13;
offici ovta swua-s paua sToat.&#13;
H. F.SIOLCR M. D- C, L. SIOACR Si, O&#13;
DRS. SIGLER &amp; SIGLER,&#13;
Physicians and Surgeons. All oalis proems*!&#13;
attended to day or uight. Oflee on Staiaetr&#13;
Pinckney, Mien.&#13;
J. F. Mmrrn*&#13;
V E T E R I N A R Y 3 U R 3 C 6 l M &gt;&#13;
Graduate of Ontario Veterinary College, atoo&#13;
the Yetertaary Dentiatry Colkee&#13;
—' Toroato i^aede.&#13;
Will prompUy attend to alt dlaewee e i 3 a « da&#13;
msetioated aeieaaiat e r — » — " i — ' ' r ^-&#13;
floreea teste STBerieedtfiee. orricCat AJtu WNCRHO&#13;
• : ! »&#13;
&gt;0\&#13;
• . ' : * ' . . !&#13;
W:&#13;
-,*,,&#13;
'^xti&#13;
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w"&#13;
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,; &lt;r '. , V.&#13;
I . s i . v&gt;&#13;
&lt; ' &amp; . • • • • - • : • - •&#13;
Lj-jltCV;'.' •&#13;
# • • &gt; • " • • • • '&#13;
it-&#13;
1-&#13;
irV"**SV-' *s&#13;
jj% .3A, &gt;&#13;
If'.V.&#13;
mit.;-;&#13;
r.&#13;
&lt; f ' ' ••&#13;
^ -&#13;
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. * * * « . - • "&#13;
&lt;S&amp;;&#13;
J$wf# ?:•-: f &amp; i v s L. ANPBKWS, Publisher.&#13;
PINOKXBY, MICHIGAN.&#13;
The Nebraska State Game Wtrtiu&#13;
luui forbWden the farmert to flf ht the&#13;
grasshoppers longer with poison, sayla*&#13;
that the loss of birds and game is&#13;
top costly a price to pay for the destruction&#13;
of comparatively few Insects.&#13;
• famous entomologist says that not&#13;
one mosquito' i n four hundred ever&#13;
tastes human blood. T o know how to&#13;
avoid making the acquaintance of that&#13;
one is the important thing, and on&#13;
that'problem the scientists seem to be&#13;
making good progress.&#13;
1 SSSWT&#13;
Gale on Lake Huron Drives Seven&#13;
Vessejs Ashore,&#13;
WHAT MICHIGAN IS WORTH,&#13;
?&amp;• Governor IWOM Mor» Pardons— A&#13;
MyttorfcMU Dostk »t Oxt«d-KvMto and&#13;
Gossip From AU Farts of trns Stat*&#13;
Stewed Dow* for RsMy Rea4|»*&gt;&#13;
By the will of the late Jacob H.&#13;
Rogers, the locomotive builder, the&#13;
bulk of his fortune, possibly eight million&#13;
dollars, is left to the Metropolitan&#13;
Museum of Art, New York, as an endowment&#13;
fund, the income to be used&#13;
for the purchase of objects of art. This&#13;
will place the museum on a splendid&#13;
footing.&#13;
Commander-in-Chief Frederick St.&#13;
George de la Tour Booth Tucker of the&#13;
Salvation army, is now a citizen of the&#13;
United States. The commander has&#13;
secured his final naturalisation papers,&#13;
having been in the United States the&#13;
required five years. He will vote at&#13;
the coming election but will not say&#13;
what ticket he will indorse.&#13;
A railroad company that operates&#13;
coal mines in Pennsylvania recently&#13;
prevented its striking miners from interfering&#13;
with non-union workmen,&#13;
who were employed in pumping water&#13;
out of mines, by building a barbed&#13;
wire fence seven feet high about the&#13;
pump house and dynamo plant and&#13;
then charged it heavily with electricity.&#13;
The Haroa Disaster.&#13;
Owing to the fortunate slackening&#13;
of wind and sea and the herole efforts&#13;
of'n life-saving crew, what promised&#13;
on Saturday night and early Sunday&#13;
Youthful aspirants who plan to ;&#13;
make a living by writing poetry ought j&#13;
to note the fact that the livelihood of&#13;
the English poet, Austin Dobson, was&#13;
earned as principal of the fisheries and&#13;
"harbor department ox the Board oi&#13;
Trade. He has just resigned after&#13;
nearly half a century of service. A&#13;
few men only can earn fame as poets.&#13;
Fewer still are they who can trust to&#13;
the productions of their, muse to pay&#13;
the butcher's bill.&#13;
morning to be one of the greatest shipping&#13;
disasters of recent years on the&#13;
great lakes, has become of secondary&#13;
importance. Out of the crews of seven&#13;
vessels which went ashore within&#13;
a half mile, just above Fort Huron,&#13;
not a life was lost. Just what the&#13;
property loss will bo cannot yet be&#13;
determined. One schooner, the Amaranth,&#13;
of Detroit, is a total wreck; the&#13;
Quito and the Wawatam worked&#13;
themselves free on their own steam;&#13;
the wbaiebnek 202 is high and dry on&#13;
the beach, but it is thought can be&#13;
saved; the Tauly. of Detroit, the&#13;
schooner Page and the tug Sarnia may&#13;
be released without injury. The gale&#13;
and the great cloud of smoke that&#13;
came clown over the lower *»id of Lake&#13;
Huron, caused the disaster by obscuring&#13;
all lights, so that nine vessels in&#13;
all weut ashore. The life saving crew&#13;
took off KG people from the stranded&#13;
vessels and not n life was lost. The&#13;
property loss will be very heavy.&#13;
Micht*«n Valacd nt*91.T0O,OOO,OOO.&#13;
Lansing, Sept. 13.—The state tax&#13;
commissioners have made up the?r&#13;
figures for all the counties of the&#13;
state. There still remain 10 counties&#13;
for which the figures are uncompleted.&#13;
These are Dickinson, Oogeblc, Houghton,&#13;
Ingham, Iron, KeAveenaw, Marquette,&#13;
Ontonngon, Roscommon and&#13;
Wayne.&#13;
So far n? completed the tax commission's&#13;
figures show a total actual&#13;
value of $1.107.591,920, and it is estimated&#13;
that the completed figures will&#13;
show the total actual value of the state&#13;
-to ho a trifle less than $1,700,000,000.&#13;
The equalized value of the state as&#13;
fixed in 189t? Is $1.105.100.000/ The estimates&#13;
for the uncompleted counties&#13;
which are not those of the commission,&#13;
arc ns follows: Dickinson, $12,000,000:&#13;
rtogpbie, $12,000,000: Houghton, $175,-&#13;
000.000: Ingham. $33.000.00(): Iron. $0.-&#13;
As soon as the weather will permit&#13;
and proper locations can be selected,&#13;
there will be pitched near Boston the&#13;
first of a number of camps for consumptives.&#13;
This camp (and each succeeding&#13;
camp will be like it) will consist&#13;
of ten piano-box tents, arranged&#13;
in a circle, with an open-air fire in the&#13;
center, and surrounded by a duck wall&#13;
eight feet high. Each of these tents&#13;
will be a consumptive's home; a consumptive&#13;
will sleep there, even&#13;
through the coldest weather, with no&#13;
other protection than plenty of felt&#13;
blankets, felt sleeping boots, and a&#13;
two-inch gallon jug of hot water.&#13;
000.000: Keweenaw, $4,ooo,000; Marqifette.&#13;
$30,000,000; Ontonagon, $5,000,-&#13;
ono: Roscommon. $50().000; Wavne,&#13;
$.100,000,000. This added to the total&#13;
as fnr as completed by the tax commission&#13;
would make a total valuation&#13;
of $1,085,501,929.&#13;
As a result of a tangle in the steering&#13;
gear of his automobile, Arthur&#13;
Masker of Philadelphia met with a peculiar&#13;
accident. He started to take a&#13;
spin down to Baltimore recently, but&#13;
turned aside from the high road when&#13;
a few miles out from the city. He was&#13;
coursing at a speed of eleven miles&#13;
w^on suddenly, without apparent {&#13;
cause, the machine spurted and veered j&#13;
to one side. It was going at the rate \&#13;
of seventy-five miles an hour when it I&#13;
jumped a fence and struck a tree. Fortunately,&#13;
instead of being an upright&#13;
tree, it was leaning, and instead of being&#13;
crushed by the impact the machine&#13;
slid up the tree and lodged in&#13;
the branches, forty-five feet from the&#13;
ground. . Mr. Fasker was unhurt. He&#13;
climbed out of the seat and slid down&#13;
the tree and walked to a farm house,&#13;
where he hired a farmer to bring him&#13;
to town.&#13;
Accident or Murder?&#13;
Tue body of William D. Hollister,&#13;
the American express agent at Oxford,&#13;
was found on the Michigan Central&#13;
railroad tracks at 11 o'clock Wednesday&#13;
night. The body had been cut in&#13;
two by a passing train. There was a&#13;
huge gash in one side of the unfortunate&#13;
man's head, audthis had led to&#13;
talk of foul play.&#13;
Hollister was last seen alive about&#13;
8:.°&gt;5 o'clock. He had been very ill all&#13;
day, and the symptoms became aggravated&#13;
in the evening. He had a money&#13;
package to deliver to the express messenger&#13;
on the 8:30 train for Detroit.&#13;
Although he was suffering greatly&#13;
he made the trip to the station and&#13;
delivered the package, which contained&#13;
$750. Whether he received any&#13;
money or valuable packages from thjj&#13;
messenger is not known. None were&#13;
found on his person or near where he&#13;
was found. Neither was. his receipt&#13;
hook in evidence. The authorities are&#13;
of the opinion that his death was an&#13;
accident.&#13;
According to the Medical Record, a j&#13;
,gang of swindlers has been playing a&#13;
despicable trick on numerous pharmacists&#13;
in Brooklyn. A man goes to a&#13;
drug store with a simple prescription,&#13;
has it made up, and takes the mixture&#13;
away with him. In an hour or&#13;
two, or the following day, the purchaser&#13;
returns with the medicine,&#13;
which he says he gave to his wife or&#13;
child, as the case may be, and that the&#13;
patient was nearly killed by poison&#13;
which was there through the blunder&#13;
of the compounder. He says his physician&#13;
has analyzed the mixture and&#13;
demonstrated the presence of poison,&#13;
and he allows the druggist to test it&#13;
then and there. The poison is, of&#13;
course, found, as the swindler has&#13;
added it himself, and he thereupon announces&#13;
his determination to sue the&#13;
druggist for damages to atone for the&#13;
results of his alleged blunder. If the&#13;
pharmacist becomes frightened at the&#13;
idea of a suit for damages, and thinks&#13;
St may be possible that a mistake has&#13;
beam mad*, he may accept the suggestion&#13;
of the blackmailer to settle the&#13;
C M * out of court The amount of sot-&#13;
~ t M * s t fc Witt 71» vary from 150 to&#13;
More Pnrdonn Granted.&#13;
Acting upon the recommendation of&#13;
the pardon board. Gov. Bliss has pardoned&#13;
John Page, who was convicted&#13;
in the Hillsdale Circuit Court for the&#13;
crime of arson, and sentenced In November,&#13;
1890. to imprisonment in the&#13;
Ionia reformatory for six years. Page&#13;
is fil years of age and childish, and&#13;
hns been a patient in the hospital ever&#13;
since he was incarcerated. His daughters,&#13;
who reside in Denver. Col., have&#13;
arranged to care for him at their&#13;
homes. The governor also paroled Albert&#13;
M. Tracey,,convicted in the Jacksou&#13;
County Circuit Court of larceny,&#13;
Sept. 17, 1900, to Ionia for 20 months*&#13;
I I » I * I I " I H 'W1-11 9E&#13;
MIISOR MftjWtOAW M A T T * * *&#13;
A i KalamftBoo coalSlif seeing M '&#13;
"Bert Jenkins had his right leg nearly&#13;
cut off by a com^utting machine.&#13;
Twenty-six arc lamps will do the&#13;
street lighting of the village of Bead'&#13;
Ing,&#13;
The convention of Unlversallsts of&#13;
Michigan will meet at Lansing, Oct.&#13;
7, 8 and 0.&#13;
Ann Arbor school population show*,&#13;
a decrease of 44 over lust year. The&#13;
total Is 3.222.&#13;
A vein of fine .bituminous coal lias&#13;
been found In Robinson upon the term,&#13;
of Fred Bethke.&#13;
The schooner Julia B Merrill, with&#13;
a load of lumber, stranded on a reef&#13;
near Manlstiquc*.&#13;
~ At a special election Allegan voted&#13;
to bond the city for $15,000 to improve&#13;
the WMtor works. r- «—&#13;
Firebugs'are creating a reign of terror&#13;
in NUes and every effort Is beins&#13;
made fo run them down.&#13;
Gus Gustafson, of Iron Mountain,&#13;
was probably fatally shot by a companion&#13;
while deer hunting.&#13;
Mrs. Patrick Costello, 05. walked to&#13;
Clear Lake, six miles from home, and&#13;
drowned herself. Despondency.&#13;
The annual reunion of the Allegan&#13;
County Soldiers and Sailors' Association&#13;
will be hold Sept. 18. 19 and 20.&#13;
The 2-year-old son of William Wayant,&#13;
living south of Colon, was struck&#13;
by a Michigan Central passenger engine&#13;
Saturday and instantly killed.&#13;
Janette Clark, a colored girl of Battle&#13;
Creek, has been discharged from&#13;
the Girls* Industrial Home as Incorrigible.&#13;
She was utterly unmanageable.&#13;
•;•&#13;
Spencer Berry, of Beading, was&#13;
found guilty of running a "blind pig."&#13;
He will be sentenced l a w . His resort&#13;
has acquired an unenviable reputation&#13;
of late.&#13;
Officer C. C. Rittenhause. of St. Joseph,&#13;
dived from the Three I. railroad&#13;
bridge, and saved the life of Elmer&#13;
Hasselgrien. who was going down for&#13;
the third time.&#13;
A telegram announces the death at&#13;
Kansas City. Kan., of -David It. Smiley,&#13;
formerly a keeper at the Jackson&#13;
prison, and for four .years sheriff of&#13;
Calhoun county.&#13;
At a special meeting of the Xorthville&#13;
council it was voted to request&#13;
the Pere Marquette Railroad company&#13;
tn ponstnict u tunnel under Its high&#13;
tracks at the depot.&#13;
Potatoes in Wexford county will be&#13;
a larger crop this year than for many&#13;
years. jai&lt;l will average over 15p bushels&#13;
per •acre. The corn crop will be&#13;
larger than for ten years.&#13;
Rev. W. S. Anient, the Chinese inls-&#13;
Mlehliran Pensions.&#13;
Washington, Sept. 13.—Michigan&#13;
pensions were granted Thursday as&#13;
follows: Increase—Lafayette B. Sackrider,&#13;
Munith. *8; Clias. L. Brown,&#13;
Roscommon, $17; Marcus D. Elliott.&#13;
Holly, $15; .las. Osboro, Ferry. $12;&#13;
Peter Campbell, Midland, $12. Widows&#13;
—Ann Hitchcock, Lawton, $12; Harriet&#13;
A. Hopkins, Pato, $12; Catherine&#13;
Lyons, Norway, $8.&#13;
Col. j . s. R*«em r&gt;e«d.&#13;
Col. J. Sumner Rogers, founder at)d&#13;
head of the military academy nt Or*:&#13;
chard Lake, died after a lortg Illness.&#13;
i . » * ••&#13;
A postpfflco has been established at&#13;
Hoakwood. Cheboygan county, with&#13;
Charles E. Hoak as postmaster.&#13;
The board of public works of Saginaw&#13;
in star chamber session knocked*&#13;
out the elght-bonr day for city employes.&#13;
Wm. P. CbristJeucy, third son of the&#13;
late United States senator, Isaac P.&#13;
jartoaancy, has died at Xftaaiag, aged&#13;
M-years.&#13;
sioiiar.r now in Owosso. will return to&#13;
Pekinthis fall. Mrs. Anient will accompnnv&#13;
him. Their children will attend&#13;
school at Obeiiln.'O.&#13;
During a row in Bay City Charles&#13;
Davis assaulted Joe Delumme. of Essexyille,&#13;
slashing his throat. The&#13;
wounded man's condition is critical.&#13;
Davis claims self-defense.&#13;
Dr. W. C. Garvin, ot Mllltngton, n a s&#13;
badly bruised, and his son Charlton&#13;
lies at the point of death with an eight-&#13;
Inch cut in Ids scalp. They were&#13;
struck by a runaway team.&#13;
Monday's storm blow down the huge&#13;
smokestack of the Munroe Manufacturing&#13;
Co., Muskegon, badly damaging the&#13;
factory building. Alwut sixty men are&#13;
thrown out of employment. No one&#13;
was injured.&#13;
The children of Johu ICvamer. who Jw««—a promineut farmer in Paris&#13;
township. T»0 years ago. would like&#13;
to know whether he is dead or alive,&#13;
as considerable property awaits him&#13;
in Holland.&#13;
Charles .Tenner Thompson, paroled&#13;
by Gov. Bliss, was released from the&#13;
Detroit house of correction Saturday,&#13;
after serving six months of a year's&#13;
sentence for embezzling' money from&#13;
his employers.&#13;
Messrs. Lamb and Washburn, of&#13;
Titusville. Pa., have been investigating&#13;
lauds surrounding Port Huron, with a&#13;
view of further developing its oil resources.&#13;
They will sink a number of&#13;
experimental wells.&#13;
A 3-year old (laughter of Merritt Osborne,&#13;
a Pore Marquette switchman,&#13;
was fatally hurt Sunday In Saginaw,&#13;
while playing about a flat car loaded&#13;
with iron. A rail was loosened and&#13;
fell upon the child.&#13;
Congressman Fordney. of the Eighth&#13;
district, who has lx&gt;en spending some&#13;
time in the tlm1x.»r belt in the statu&#13;
of Washington, shot and killed one of&#13;
the largest mountain lions ever bagged&#13;
in that state. He will bring home the&#13;
pelt as a .trophy.&#13;
Word hns been received of the conviction&#13;
at Unnlaska of the men Harrington&#13;
and Newton for the murder of&#13;
Con and Florence Sullivan, formerly&#13;
of Muskegon. The two men have been&#13;
sentenced to be hanged.&#13;
J. F. McKnight, in the dark. Tuesdny&#13;
night, drove his horse off an embankment&#13;
near Henderson, and horse,&#13;
buggy and driver rolled over nhef over&#13;
to the river 100 feet lielow. The horse&#13;
lost an eye. and the driver came near&#13;
losing hi* life. ' _&#13;
Miss Fannie Booth, who live-? one&#13;
mile south of Alma, was not feeling&#13;
.wejtt and arose nt an early hour. When (*ne struck a match she accidentally&#13;
set fire to her clothing. Soon the&#13;
house wa« m flames*, and the family&#13;
had dttticulty 4n escaping. - They car^&#13;
ried the injured girl to a neighbor's,&#13;
where her burns were dressed, and&#13;
she is now in n very critical condition.&#13;
The receipts of the Detroit United&#13;
Railway for August. 1001. are given&#13;
as «281,940.20. an Increase of 10 per&#13;
cent over August, 1900. The receipts&#13;
for thf year to September 1 are given&#13;
as fl4BL74T;». a ****! Increase of 32&#13;
per cent over the tame period la 1000.&#13;
tbA ffftin formerly &lt; M t f $ t H&#13;
^ Ji'iwSmitb, som4 n\lW's*uthet*t&#13;
cXj^Jest ¢1,000 h » i ? | i ^ l o w 4 4 s J * }&#13;
old* wagon box In a corn crib, when&#13;
Smith wasJ kilted by lightning soaifr&#13;
months ago It w*s known that about&#13;
he feared banks.&#13;
"An^frospe. Centra-engine m a d * * 1&#13;
day, killing A. Maxso and M. Lawrence,&#13;
section men. The four others&#13;
of the. gang WPW** h|yJnm^lwg # h e&#13;
men failed j*£ see 4fae iocomett^e on&#13;
account of the fog:&#13;
The village of Klngsley. fourteen&#13;
miles south, of Traverse City,. -vas&#13;
visited by a disastrous ftre early&#13;
Tuesday -morn big, Four stores amV&#13;
stoelcs'weie burned. The n w liroka&#13;
out in the town hall, which was also&#13;
destroyed. The loss is,f40v00p. |t &lt; y&#13;
The question as to whether a circuit&#13;
judge can control the minutes of&#13;
a grand jury has arisen. In Grand&#13;
•Hnplds, and it will be ieJten^jCpjjUlc&#13;
Supreme Court for flual settlement.&#13;
Great inventions which, in some&#13;
cases, might have changed the tenor&#13;
of the business, world of the present&#13;
gayy have bean want-only destroyed or/&#13;
lost* thoagh the eeosntrictttes or distorted&#13;
imagination of the inventor.&#13;
iThe^atory of« sam^oJgtJieaeUoet Inventions&#13;
is" interesting. It la hardly&#13;
twenty years, aince John P l y m o u t h ;&#13;
the Wolverhampton engineer and^demotive&#13;
power-&#13;
The question is one of Interest, as it&#13;
will affect ull future grand juries.&#13;
Franklin Kent, of Ortonvlllev has&#13;
trained a great many horses * ini his&#13;
maiiy years' experience, but his star&#13;
performance is to take* a wild westers •&#13;
horse from the corral and have him&#13;
thoroughly subdued in twenty minutes&#13;
so that it will follow him around like&#13;
a lamb.&#13;
Dr. C. A. Stewart, of Pay City, who&#13;
was assaulted last Saturday by persons&#13;
who accused blin of applauding&#13;
the shooting of McKinley, and who left&#13;
the city that day, returned Tuesday,&#13;
and' -will resume his practice." His&#13;
first act was to take out his first naturalization&#13;
papers.&#13;
ft. N. Spltke and Catherine Zust, of&#13;
Chicago, were married by Sarah E.&#13;
Browuell, a St. Joseph spiritualistic&#13;
medium, and the matter coming to the&#13;
ears, of County Clerk Church, he refused&#13;
to recognize the ceremony «nd&#13;
demanded that they be married over&#13;
again by a clergyman. The couple,&#13;
consented, and Rev. French performed&#13;
the ceremony.&#13;
The prison board of control has recommended&#13;
paroles as follows: Clyde&#13;
Herbert, sentenced to 12 years from&#13;
Mecosta county, next friend Senator&#13;
James W. Humphrey, of Allegan; John&#13;
Mitchell, seven years, from Van Buren&#13;
county, next friend H. T. Hoffman,&#13;
of Jackson; Albert BlosI, eight years,&#13;
from Saginaw, next friend Matthew&#13;
Strobel. of Saginaw.&#13;
W. D. Hollister, aged 42, of Oxford,&#13;
was kilh?d-AVcdnesday night by a M.&#13;
C. railroad train. The body was cut&#13;
in two and a gash on the head seems&#13;
to indicate foul play. He was agent&#13;
for the American Express Co., and&#13;
went to the junction to meet the southbound&#13;
passenger train, which passed&#13;
•at-HJ&amp;0_p__uL. Hti hail a package of&#13;
$7r&gt;0, which was delivered.&#13;
Judge Shepard. of the Cheboygan&#13;
Circuit Court, hns made a ruling that&#13;
a truant officer is not a policeman.&#13;
This is important to truants, as by (he&#13;
court's decision a truant officer, to have&#13;
the power to arrest, must be a meinher&#13;
of the police force. The decision was&#13;
the result of the arrest of a young&#13;
girl by A. J. Finn, a duly appointed&#13;
truant officer, for not attending school.&#13;
Wm. J. Tabor, of Kalamazoo, has&#13;
begun suit against his stepmother,&#13;
Mary C. Tabor, and his stepsister,&#13;
Mayme A. Tabor, to get possession of&#13;
land lu Bloomfleld township, which he&#13;
claims as a part of his father's estate.&#13;
The property is valued at $8,000. It&#13;
is claimed that the wife deeded the&#13;
land to her husband, Moses K. Tabor,&#13;
but that at his death the deed disappeared.&#13;
The shortage due to the failure of&#13;
the Reynolds (Train Co.. of Fort Huron,&#13;
has increased to $19,G40.4\, and Judge&#13;
Law has granted the request of the&#13;
minority stockholders of the company&#13;
that the elevator company he restrained&#13;
from paying that amount to the&#13;
First National. Exchange and . Commercial&#13;
banks. TJ10 minority claim&#13;
that the elevator company was not liable&#13;
for the shortage.&#13;
On the farm of Jerome Austin, near&#13;
Holly, there Is said to be burled treasure.&#13;
Austin died some time ago and&#13;
on his deathbed told his wife that&#13;
there was treasure oh the farm. He&#13;
did not reveal the hiding place. Mrs.&#13;
Austin began pondering over her husband's&#13;
words. She consulted a clairvoyant&#13;
at Flint and the clairvoyant&#13;
decided to search for the treasure. The&#13;
supposed treasure Is not yet located.&#13;
Because William Christopher is alleged&#13;
to have said that President Mc-&#13;
Kinley ought to have been shot, he&#13;
was set upon by indignant citizens of&#13;
Negaunee, and but for the interference&#13;
of police would have been seriously&#13;
injured. He was ordered to leave town&#13;
Inside of 24 lionrs or suffer the consequences.&#13;
Christopher was employed&#13;
as fireman at the city waterworks. He&#13;
was discharged for making the alleged&#13;
remark-&#13;
By a rear-end collision, a mile west&#13;
of Chase Sunday, Engineer Henry&#13;
Hatswell, of work train No. 45, and&#13;
Thomas Moore, of Baldwin, a section&#13;
foreman, were seriously injured. Hatswell's&#13;
shoulder was dislocated and&#13;
Moore's spine badly strained. Four&#13;
other trainmen were slightly hnrt. The&#13;
cabin car and a box car on the extra,&#13;
into which the work train ran,&#13;
were demolished. HatswelTs heme is&#13;
in. Saginaw.&#13;
Reports to the state board of&#13;
health, by representative physicians&#13;
in active general practice, in different&#13;
parts of the state, Indicate-that diarrhea,&#13;
neuralgia, rheumatism,' bronchitis&#13;
and ton s 11 It Is. in the order&#13;
named, caused the most sickness in&#13;
Michigan during the past week. Cerebrospinal&#13;
meningitis was reported&#13;
present at two places, whooping cough&#13;
at 7. measles at U , diphtheria at 25,&#13;
smallpox at 26, eearlet fever at 65V typhoid&#13;
fever a t M6 and consumption a t&#13;
1SS.&#13;
VALUAJsUlMAt NOW&#13;
^ • • - ^ T T : WORLD.&#13;
M p i&#13;
Tb«tr S«er*t»-fc»i»« Ia%MfSt|Mg &lt;&gt;•*•#&#13;
signer, discovered&#13;
of heat, exhibited it in one of the&#13;
simplest, cheapest and most useful en*&#13;
gines. imaginable, and then deprived&#13;
tuVWorld.of itsHdrfefits. He had produced&#13;
beforehand a round dozen of excellent&#13;
invention^ whlen still bear his&#13;
name, including the modern revolving&#13;
chimney cowl; and, having made a&#13;
large fortune, he developed himself t o&#13;
harnessing the ordinary heat of a fire&#13;
and making a new power of it. The&#13;
idea was laughed at by all his friends,&#13;
but, after four years of study and experimenting,&#13;
he produced a stationary&#13;
engine that gave double the power of&#13;
any steam-driven mechanism at about&#13;
a third the cost, and also a small&#13;
model heat locomotive, large enough&#13;
to draw a truck .i^ith a man in it. He&#13;
invited a committee of scientists and&#13;
engineers, inciudlng Profs. Huxley and&#13;
Forbes Brown, and showed them that&#13;
his two machines worked t o perfection.&#13;
The-a8*ir made a great stir, and&#13;
it proved that a great power of unlimited&#13;
scope had been discovered.&#13;
Waymouth was flooded with offers of&#13;
huge sums for his invention, but, for&#13;
no apparent reason, except, perhaps,&#13;
the alleged madness of genius, he absolutely&#13;
refused to. either bring it out&#13;
himself or sell the secret He announced&#13;
himself satisfied with the triumph&#13;
of the invention and before his&#13;
death, a year later, he destroyed all&#13;
the papers and plans explaining the&#13;
system, and removed the essential&#13;
parts of the two engines. These engines&#13;
are still possessed by his heirs,&#13;
but nobody has been able to make&#13;
anything of them. Still stranger was&#13;
the famous loss of the recipe for the&#13;
manufacture of diamonds, some fifteen&#13;
years ago. Herbert. Warner, who&#13;
alone discovered and held the secret&#13;
of diamond making, did not live to&#13;
wreck the diamond industry, as people&#13;
thought he would, and the circumstances&#13;
of the loss were mysterious&#13;
and tragic. Inferior dlamond3 can&#13;
still be produced artificially, but only&#13;
at a cost of about ten times their&#13;
value. Warner, after years of experimenting,&#13;
was able to turn out a genuine&#13;
diamond of large size and of the&#13;
first water, at the cost of a small fraction&#13;
of the complete stone's worth.&#13;
He, like Waymouth, of heat power&#13;
fame, manufactured his diamonds before&#13;
an audience of scientists, and produced&#13;
three fine stones, which were&#13;
tested and pronounced faultless. Two&#13;
of them are still in existence and are&#13;
the greatest curiosities the jewel world&#13;
has ever seen. But within a fortnight&#13;
of this triumph, before any of the new&#13;
stones vere put on the market, Warner&#13;
utterly disappeared from his house&#13;
in Harley street, London, leaving no&#13;
trace whatever. So complete was his&#13;
disappearance that from that day to&#13;
this not the smallest explanation has&#13;
been hit upon. Then there is the lost&#13;
secret of the wonderful new meta.&#13;
called "talium," which would certainly&#13;
have been worth many millions sterling&#13;
to the nation and the inventor.&#13;
G-rantley Adams discovered it just&#13;
eight years ago, and during its short&#13;
life it was one of the greatest wonders&#13;
of the "science and commerce"&#13;
world.&#13;
It was sheer vanity that kept Grant&#13;
Finlay from giving to the world the&#13;
benefit of his invention for the total&#13;
abolition of smoke. He evolved a simple&#13;
system by which any fire or light&#13;
could be made to consume its own carbon,&#13;
and though he demonstrated the&#13;
usefulness of the invention many&#13;
times, he obstinately refused to put it&#13;
on the market or sell the secret of i t&#13;
His own house, just outside Glasgow,&#13;
was fitted with the system, which did&#13;
not cost him thirty shillings for the&#13;
entire building, and no Jot of smoke&#13;
was ever emitted there. All his fire*&#13;
consumed their own smoke, and he&#13;
was fond of showing the efficiency ot&#13;
his invention to guests, but never&#13;
would he explain the working of i t&#13;
and he died two years ago, earryina&#13;
bis secret with him' to the grave. A&#13;
week before hit death he had i l l the&#13;
"anti-smoke" apparatus stripped from&#13;
his house and destroyed.—Utica Globe.'&#13;
It isn't what a mas says that&#13;
counts; it's his ability to make others&#13;
believe him.&#13;
Many * man has discovered aftex&#13;
mixing politics with his busineae thai&#13;
he hae BO bnstoeas to asjta with hit&#13;
V .&#13;
"?•»"' *-*'" 'i ****Amut)Lm&#13;
• * • ' • * !&#13;
mm m'•"&gt;'.* '""il n,.UiUan nfhm JEW miium,«i ln !siH»iS»i^5tS^»^Mr^7i5!K5S5S555^ ».•&gt;»•&gt;•!, iWffww**&gt; -M* 5KS sesss "8*&#13;
•• &gt; &lt; •&#13;
at 2:15&#13;
i ^ . : ^ » &gt; : »&#13;
'• ^ «.&#13;
Relatives and Friends Waited for&#13;
Death Several Honrs--End&#13;
Was Peaceful and Calm. • • i . . , . .&#13;
Softly Chanted a Hymn Before Lapsing Into&#13;
U nconsciousttess—- All the Skill Known&#13;
to Science Failed to Revive Him.&#13;
«••&#13;
lag of the bowel* would have ta« effect&#13;
of aHaying tbe wild pulsation* of&#13;
the liMit Hit puis* did drop to 120.&#13;
iind to* prospect was sligbtlj brighter.&#13;
But owing to bis extreme weakness&#13;
and bis fattftie ho attempt was made&#13;
to conceal the serious apprebeaslon&#13;
which was felt. Toe feeling of depression&#13;
tacvtesed in volume and intensity.&#13;
Shortly after 2 o'clock the physicians&#13;
and nurse -detecte* a weakening - of&#13;
the heart action. The pulse fluttered&#13;
and weakened and the president sank&#13;
toward collapse.&#13;
sale s * i a t l « » EsapUy**.&#13;
The end appeared to be at hand. Be-&#13;
•torativc8 were speedily applied and&#13;
the physicians fought the buttle with&#13;
all the forces of science. Action was&#13;
Immediate and decisive. Digitalis and&#13;
strychnine were administered and as a&#13;
WILLIAM M ' K I N L E Y ,&#13;
PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES. WHO WAS SHOT AT DUFFALO. N. Y.. BY&#13;
LEON CZOLGOSZ, FRIDAY, SEPT. 6. AND DIED SATURDAY MORNING. SEPT. 14.&#13;
PRESIDENT'S LAST FAREWELL.&#13;
President McKinley died at 2:15 Saturday morning. His last conscious&#13;
hour on earth was "spent with the wife to whom he devoted a lifetime of&#13;
care. He died unattended by a minister of the gospel but his last words&#13;
were a humble submission to God in whom he believed. He was reconciled&#13;
to the fate to which a cruel assassin's bullet had condemned him and&#13;
faced death in the same spirit of calmness which has marked his long and&#13;
honorable career. His last conscious words, reduced to writing by Dr. Mann,&#13;
who stood by his bedside when they were uttered, were as follows: "Goodbye.&#13;
Ail good-bye. It is God's way. His will be done."&#13;
His relatives and members of his official family were at the Milburn&#13;
house, except Secretary Wilson. His friends came to the door took a parting&#13;
look at him and turned tearfully away. He was practically unconscious&#13;
during this time, but powerful stimuiauts, including oxygen, were employed&#13;
to restore him to consciousness for the final par ting, with his wife. He asked&#13;
for her and she sat at his side and held his hand. He consoled her and&#13;
bade her good-bye. She went through the heart-trying scene with the same&#13;
bravery and fortitude with which she has borne the grief of the tragedy&#13;
that ended his life.&#13;
President McKinley began to sink&#13;
shortly after 2 o'clock Friday morning,&#13;
after a critical period of 12 hours, in&#13;
which alarm and hope mingled in the&#13;
emotions of" those who surrounded&#13;
him. Trouble began on the preceding&#13;
afternoon through the failure of digestive&#13;
organs to perform their functions.&#13;
The necessity for nourishment had&#13;
been pressing for several days and the&#13;
partial failure of artificial means had*&#13;
led to the adoption of natural means.&#13;
The rectum, through which nourishment&#13;
had been injected previously to&#13;
Wednesday, became Irritated and rejected&#13;
the enemas. This forced the&#13;
physicians to try 4o feed him through&#13;
the mouth, probably before the stomach&#13;
was prepared.. The first administration&#13;
of beef Juice through the&#13;
mouth, however, seemed to agree with&#13;
the patient, and tbe physicians were&#13;
highly gratified at thejcay the stomach&#13;
seemed to receive the food* The&#13;
breakfast of chicken broth, toast and&#13;
coffee, given Thursday morning, was&#13;
*poken of by all the physicians as&#13;
'strong evidence of the president's&#13;
marked Improvement. It was only&#13;
when 1% became apparent late in the&#13;
'morning that this food had not agreed&#13;
with the president that the first genuine&#13;
anxiety appeared.&#13;
\ %&#13;
D o c t o r * W e r e A l a r w e d .&#13;
Fresideiit McKinley, already weak&#13;
from the ordeal of the tragedy, and&#13;
suffering, complained of an increasing&#13;
feeling of fatigue. He had heretofore&#13;
been so buoyant and cheerful that his&#13;
complaints were regarded seriously.&#13;
The pulse was then also abnormally&#13;
high, 120 beats to the minute. With n~&#13;
temperature of 100.2 it should have&#13;
been 30 beats lower. The weakness&#13;
of the heart began to arouse serious&#13;
concern. Instead of growing better&#13;
the president's conditio* after that&#13;
grew steadily worse.&#13;
At 8:30 Thursday night tike physicians&#13;
announced o*cl*Uy that the&#13;
president's condition was net so good.&#13;
The problem of disposing of the foot:&#13;
In the stomach woe Deceasing a serl&#13;
ous one and the dagger.of aeart failure&#13;
increased. As lattnlaJsV approached&#13;
the situation was growls* critical. Calomel&#13;
and oil were gtraf to flush the&#13;
bowek} and digitalis ta^jutet his heart.&#13;
However, just befete midnight thr&#13;
president had two aaerntlona of tht,&#13;
bowels, whltsk veltafajl him very much&#13;
and the maMghtvolletin was more&#13;
favorable. J £ staesjf that all tbe c©hdltlons&#13;
nam faagJired since the last&#13;
bulletin.&#13;
• It w a i M t a M p ths* that tb* open-&#13;
I™&#13;
last resort saline solution was injected&#13;
into the veins.&#13;
A general alarm went speeding to&#13;
the consulting physicians and trained&#13;
nurses as fast as messengers, the telegraph&#13;
and telephone could carry it.&#13;
The restoratives did not at once prove&#13;
effective- and it was realised that the&#13;
president was in an extremely critical&#13;
coadltlon. The realization, with the&#13;
shadow of death behind it, led to another&#13;
call and that a summons to&#13;
the cabinet, relatives^ and close personal&#13;
friends of the president.&#13;
A n Affecting* F a r e w e l l .&#13;
Before G o'clock It was clear to those&#13;
at the president's bedside that he was&#13;
dying and preparations were made for&#13;
the last sad offices of farewell from&#13;
those who were nearest and dearest to&#13;
him. Oxygen had been administered&#13;
steadily, but with little effect in keeping,&#13;
back the approach of death. The&#13;
president came out of one period unconscious&#13;
only to relapse into another.&#13;
But in this period when his mind&#13;
was partially clear, occurred a series&#13;
of events of profcnindly touching character.&#13;
Down stairs, with strained and&#13;
tear-stained faces, members of the cabinet&#13;
were grouped In anxious waiting.&#13;
They knew the end was near, and that&#13;
the time had come when they must&#13;
see him for the last time on earth.&#13;
This was about 0 o'clock. One by one&#13;
they ascended the stairway—Secretary&#13;
Root, Secretary Hitchcock and Atty.-&#13;
Gen. Knox. Svcretnry Wilson also&#13;
was there, but he held back, hot wish-&#13;
1 ug to &lt;Kee. xhe presideuLJii his last^&#13;
agony. There was only a momentary&#13;
stay of Hie -cabinet officers at the&#13;
threshold **t the death chamber. Then&#13;
they withdrew, the tears streaming&#13;
down their faces and the words of intense&#13;
grief choking their throats.&#13;
After they left the sick room the&#13;
physicians rallied him to consciousness&#13;
and the president asked almost immediately&#13;
"that his wife he brought to&#13;
him. The doctors fell back into the&#13;
shadows of the room as Mrs. McKinley&#13;
came through the doorway. The&#13;
strong face of the dying man lighted&#13;
up with a faint smile as their hands&#13;
were clasped. She sat beside him and&#13;
held his hand and heard from him his&#13;
last words of encouragement and comfort.&#13;
Then she was led away, and not&#13;
again during his living hours did she&#13;
see him. Despite her physical weak&#13;
ness she bore up bravely under the ordeal.&#13;
The president himself fully realized&#13;
that his hour had come and his mind&#13;
turned to his Maker. He whispered&#13;
feebly:&#13;
"Nearer, my flod, to Thee."&#13;
The words of the hymn were always&#13;
dear to his heart. Then in faint accents&#13;
he murmured:&#13;
"Good-bye. all; good-bye. It is God'j*&#13;
way. His will be done, not ours."&#13;
With this sublime display of Christian&#13;
fortitude the president soon after&#13;
lapsed into unconsciousness.&#13;
ills 11 Ce was prolonged for hours by&#13;
the adoilnistra^en of «*#gen&gt; and the*&#13;
pretident flaalfr iexprewad a deelre to&#13;
fee allowed to die* About 850 Friday&#13;
night the administration of oxygen&#13;
ceased and tbe pulse grew fainter and&#13;
fainter. He was sinking gradually,&#13;
tike a child Into the eternal wumber. 4 Midnight came, and still the tremendous&#13;
vitality of the president was&#13;
battling against dissolution. Another&#13;
hour passed on, and still another.&#13;
At 2 o'clock DnJUxey was the only&#13;
physician in tfce death chamber. The&#13;
others were • in' j§»- adjoining room,&#13;
wbJj^ the relatives, cabinet efilcers&#13;
and nearest friends were gathered in&#13;
silent groups in the apartments below.&#13;
As he watched and waited. Dr. Rixey&#13;
observed a slight convulsive tremor.&#13;
The president had entered the valley&#13;
of tbe shadow of death. Word was&#13;
at. once taken to the immediate relatives&#13;
who were not present to hasten&#13;
for the last took upon the president In&#13;
life. They came lb groups, tbe women&#13;
weeping and the; men bowed and sobsfteaes&#13;
i*P»**i H»»'W»»w»'"t»*»""rr&#13;
blng in their intense grief.&#13;
Grouped about the bedside at this&#13;
final moment were the only brother of&#13;
the president, Abner McKinley and bis&#13;
wife; Miss Helen McKinley and Mrs.&#13;
Sarah Duncan, sisters of the president;&#13;
Miss Mary Barber,- niece; Miss Sarah&#13;
Duncan, niece; Lieut.. James F. Mc-&#13;
Kinley. Wni. M. Duncan and John Barber,&#13;
nephews; F. M. Osborne, a cousin;&#13;
Secretary George B. Cortelyou, Hon.&#13;
Charles C. Dawes, comptroller of the&#13;
currency; Ool. Webb C. Hayes and Col.&#13;
Wm. C. Brown.&#13;
• , i&#13;
The minutes were now flying and&#13;
it was 2:15 o'clock.&#13;
Silent and motionless, tbe circle of&#13;
loving friends stood about the bedside.&#13;
Dr. Rixey leaned forward and placed&#13;
his ear close to the breast of the expiring&#13;
president. Then he straightened&#13;
up and made an effort to speak.&#13;
"The president Is dead," he said.&#13;
The president had passed away&#13;
peacefully, without the convulsive&#13;
struggle of death. It was as though&#13;
he had fallen asleep.&#13;
GANGRENE CAUSED D E A T H .&#13;
MBS. M'KIK^Jiy,,&#13;
T U * »X*£AYKX&gt; WIDOW OF T M M W l s l » » U l U&#13;
CSOLGOSZ'S FAT*. 0XA1XO.&#13;
«ke- IS*r4#wwr «f~ « * * '&#13;
W i l l a o j f t « J M l » ^ * o * « t * * .&#13;
Tbe wretch••'-f^dja Oaojfc^- *^ir.&#13;
stand* accused of murder. /;&#13;
The crime was eommftted wHk *»aV&#13;
Ico .aforethought, sad as such waa.&#13;
murder In the first degree, the puuisfr&#13;
ment for which under the law of New&#13;
York is death in the electric chair. «*•&#13;
Had the death of the president oe--&#13;
curred at any other time than » tbe&#13;
early hfnirs of morutng. it would bare&#13;
boded ill to the evil genius of the episode.&#13;
The angry spirit of the people&#13;
at Buffalo had reached an intense&#13;
pitch. Foreseeing the danger of pea*&#13;
sible riot, the poiico headquarters,&#13;
where Czolgoss Is confined, was roped&#13;
off and the menacing thousands held&#13;
at bay.&#13;
If the president's death bad come&#13;
before midnight it would hare- been&#13;
difficult to avoMt a coaftict; but the&#13;
srojEds,^gradjial^ broke up as tbe new&#13;
Official A n n o u n c e m e n t of R e s n l t&#13;
of A u t o p s y .&#13;
The official announcement of the&#13;
physicians as a result of their autopsy&#13;
on the president's body that death resulted&#13;
from gangrene of the wounds,&#13;
led to much discussion of the causes&#13;
leading up to this gangrenous condition.&#13;
The_^Ttttut^rli^h--«tr4uai_^^^r^h^&#13;
breast bone did not pass through the&#13;
skin and did little harm. TheWher&#13;
bullet passed through both walls o^Jhe&#13;
stomach near its lower border. Both&#13;
holes were found to be perfectly closed&#13;
by the stitches, but the tissue around&#13;
each hole had become gangrenous. After&#13;
passing through the stomach the&#13;
bullet passed into the back walls of&#13;
the abdomen, hitting and tearing the&#13;
upper end of the kidney. This portion&#13;
of the bullet track was also gangrenous,&#13;
the gangrene involving the pancreas.&#13;
The bullet has not yet been&#13;
found. There was no sign of peritonitis&#13;
or disease of other organs. The&#13;
heart walls were very thin. There was&#13;
no evidence of any attempt at repair&#13;
on the part of nature and death resulted&#13;
from the gangrene which affected&#13;
the stomach around the bullet&#13;
wounds as well as the tissuM, around&#13;
tlie further course of the bulttt. Death&#13;
was unavoidable by any surgical or&#13;
medical treatment, and was the direct&#13;
result oi the bullet wound.&#13;
All the tissues through which the&#13;
bullet passed were dead. This is very&#13;
remarkable Indeed. The area of the&#13;
dead flesh in the stomach was perhaps&#13;
•is great ns a silver dollar in circumference.&#13;
Dr. Wasdin, the marine hospital&#13;
expert,, was strongly inclined to&#13;
rhe opinion that the bullet had been&#13;
poisoned.&#13;
day came on, ana ny 2:io a. m., wneu&#13;
the death announcement came, the&#13;
down-town thoroughfares were deserted.&#13;
For the moment the anger of the&#13;
outraged people is forgotten in their&#13;
poignant grief, and this will doubtless&#13;
consign Czolgosz to the swift and inevitable&#13;
punishment provided by law.&#13;
T b e U n s p e a k a b l e T n r k .&#13;
Fifty Armenian retiattrt|pnists, according&#13;
to Turkish repHK recently&#13;
set fire to the Mussulman quarters at&#13;
M,ush, Turkish Armenia, where fighting&#13;
afterward occurred, the Armenians&#13;
retiring toward Sassoun. Massacres&#13;
by Koords have already taken place in&#13;
the Daiuizra district of Armena; 12&#13;
villages were destroyed and only the&#13;
young girls were spared. History does&#13;
not record a persecution more cruel&#13;
that that which the Koords have mad*&#13;
upon the Armenians. In two years,&#13;
between the fall of 1SI&gt;4 and the spring&#13;
of 1S0«, it has been estimated that 80,-&#13;
000 were killed. The sultan makes no&#13;
pretense of giving the Armenians as&#13;
agreed when a commission of the powers&#13;
was sent to investigate the massa&#13;
ere of 1894. To make up fov the 80,-&#13;
U00 Armenians whe had boen killed, he&#13;
pardoned some 24 people of that country&#13;
serving sentences, and com-i&#13;
muted the sentences off 54, who were&#13;
to have been executed, to life imprisonment.&#13;
Also he agreed to appropriate&#13;
a certain proportion of the state's&#13;
taxes to them for the construction of&#13;
churches and schools. This last part&#13;
-of. the agreement was partly carried&#13;
out in 1897, but it is claimed that the&#13;
sultan has made no attempt to protect&#13;
the Armenians by sending into their&#13;
country the armed force necessary to&#13;
prevent the Koords from attacking&#13;
them.&#13;
T h e R a n k s A r e T h i n n i n g .&#13;
The ranks of the G. A. R. are rapidly&#13;
thinning. Each annual report shows a&#13;
decrease of members. The death roll,&#13;
year by year, grows more and more&#13;
rapidly. The greatest membership&#13;
was in 1S1H). when it reached over&#13;
409.0OO. This year Adjt.-llen. Sterret's&#13;
report shows a membership of&#13;
20f).hO7. New York. Pennsylvania,&#13;
Ohi.&gt; and Illinois, the big G. A. It.&#13;
states, are losing members gradually.&#13;
This* year New York has ."»01 pjsts;&#13;
Pennsylvania. .V»7 iwsts. Utah has only&#13;
four posts, while Floridu has 17. During&#13;
the year 8.750 members have died.&#13;
Of that number 403 died from wounds&#13;
received in battle and 2,350 from diseases&#13;
contracted in service.&#13;
^ :&#13;
BASE BALL.&#13;
Uelow we pubtiau tha standin? of&#13;
the American and National league clubs&#13;
op to and including tne games playeJ&#13;
on Sunday, September 15:&#13;
AM31UJA.V LB VGtT {.&#13;
Won. Lost. Perm's&#13;
Chittvro. 7J ii .62&#13;
Boston '0 aa ^WOctroit&#13;
&amp;&gt; M AV.I&#13;
Pailadelphia 81 C&gt; .52»&#13;
Baltimore 6) 61 .«6&#13;
Washington 51 to .4."&gt;1&#13;
Cleveland hi 71 .418&#13;
ililwau^co 48 7i&gt; UsCS&#13;
NATIONAL I.1AQCT&#13;
Won. Lo&lt;\ Per c*»&#13;
PilUbur* 7? U .630&#13;
Pailadeiphu 71 51 .A8J&#13;
Brooklyn 71 33 .573&#13;
St. Louis 6&gt; 5* A »&#13;
Boston , .* 8,' til •'"*&gt;*&#13;
CaiCH.ro .¾) 77 .3**&#13;
New York i7 73 .&amp;K&#13;
Cincinnati -)8 73 .as»7&#13;
T H E M A R K E T S .&#13;
NVw York—Cattli*—Steers, $4 ^ £ 6 ; halfbreeds,&#13;
54 i(Ka\ 70; oxen and stags, $4^4 3J;&#13;
bulls. $2 5&lt;fcfi3 50; cows. *1 Go^y 2i&gt;; cno.ee&#13;
arid t-ytra. $43-1 23; sheep. $2 M&amp;3 75; culls,&#13;
J2; lambs $3 75Ji?; choict. *6 S^if, 35; Canada&#13;
lambs. $5'ti5 3T&gt;. Hogs. *5 $05£8 90.&#13;
Chicago—Cattle—Good to prime steers,&#13;
$3 13-36 IS; poor to medium, 5W*3 75; stockers&#13;
and feeders. $2 75*14 2i: cows. $1 504*&#13;
1 73; heifers. $2@3; eanners. $1 50fe2 40;&#13;
bulls. $2 25:&gt;i4 75: calves, $33K 25; Texas&#13;
steers. $3@4 50; western steers. SS 75fto 40.&#13;
Hojfs—Mixed and butchers. $6 10@6 75;&#13;
good to choice heavy. $8 «Wt6 90; rough&#13;
heavy, $*fw&gt; 40: light. $S 10¾6 05; bulk oi&#13;
sales. $6 Wi$$ 50. Sheet*: good to oholco&#13;
wethers. $3 75®4: fair to choice mixed.&#13;
S3 50£3 65: western sheep, $3 \W3 85; native&#13;
lambs, iiU'r, western lambs. $ @4 90.&#13;
Buffalo— Csttie—Light receipts; market&#13;
unchanged; hog», best heavy hogs. $6 96©&#13;
7; mixed and mediums. $6 90«ft 96; York.&#13;
en». comfed. Mcht to srood weights, $6*70fl&#13;
6 So; Michigan* and grassera. $8 4&gt;ti« «0;&#13;
pigs, comfed. generally $6: others £&gt; 254»&#13;
5 SO; roughs. $69« 10; stags. I&amp;S&amp; 25, Sheep&#13;
—Best lambs. $4 9(V&amp;5: choice. IS "5?ffi 10;&#13;
others $2 50¾4 ft): mixed sheep. S3 5&gt;i©3 70;&#13;
culls to good, r»«?3 40; wethers, $3 8094;&#13;
yearlings, $3 8004 10.&#13;
Detroit—WboM—Xn. 1 white. Tie; No.&#13;
i red. 70*40. No. 2 mixed at 57o and 1 par&#13;
.No. S vstlow at 57Ve per bu. Oats—No. 2&#13;
white nominal at 3«*4c;No. 3 white. J « c ,&#13;
Chicago—Whf-nt—No. S sprtnf. «7%*WJlc;&#13;
No. 2 red TWTfiUr. Con*—No. •, tWc,&#13;
Onts—No. 2. 3«*.^S5^; No. 2 white. » M »&#13;
37v. c: &gt;'o. s «-Mt*. 3K»'-fi**ie: &gt;•«. 2, Sfc&gt;;&#13;
N e w YorV—Wheat-No. 2 red. TSVs f. o.&#13;
b. afloat: No. 2 red. 74Hc eleva»or: N o .&#13;
1 northern Duluth, 7«c *. o. b. a f W t . Coth.&#13;
pnot easier; N»&gt;. 2. *l*fce eter»»t«-, »*nfl&#13;
«2V^ f. o. b. »»float. Oatt Nn. J,-«c- Wo»&#13;
St STUr: No. 2 whlt*«. 40c; Vn X Wlflt*.&#13;
2?c: traek tnlx«d W ^ T H , STUsiaBct ttucfic&#13;
whit* TT«item, ©H©47c; options l l n n , ^ ^&#13;
y&#13;
.: 511&#13;
;•. •&gt; A-&#13;
'• :••• •('..••Vi.'V '&#13;
•vm&#13;
, 'vc- . -/.: ^w*4&#13;
'•••'••'w&#13;
it.&#13;
1&#13;
-;i&#13;
"••VI&#13;
• • ' &amp;&#13;
.. ft&#13;
• ; • ! , " ! &gt; : • • W&#13;
^&#13;
• • *&#13;
t •;&lt;'• V&#13;
._f__&#13;
::&gt;.lv&#13;
•':'t .ZLW&#13;
•-•W^'A1&#13;
«&#13;
• ^ V*".&#13;
•fH Him ft m •*•• ilii ffii'i 'iti&#13;
* ~ »&#13;
^ H S J ,&#13;
?#&#13;
$&#13;
3NQHTH WKE.&#13;
BjtM^y'jp»dkiy haa purchased a&#13;
:; Jmjpie# SSfert and wife, of&#13;
^Waea* were home Sunday.&#13;
"" 3|^v '.&amp; IfcCftmbttrn, of Water&#13;
ooipoue hii pastorate&#13;
here for anotW year.&#13;
; Fred Scbnlte has sold his interest&#13;
in the threshing business to&#13;
his partner, Peter Gorman.&#13;
Mrs, LDC^ Wood was called&#13;
a&amp;;&#13;
ft.&#13;
Monday to see her daughter, Nettie&#13;
Leatob, near Chelsea, who is&#13;
quite sick. -*•..&#13;
Mesdamea Sarah and Harriot&#13;
Brown, of East Putnam, were&#13;
guests of Mrs. Win. Wood Saturday&#13;
and Sunday.&#13;
Dawson's for&#13;
FerSale&#13;
Golden Cnaff w.&#13;
wed, clean and-nice.&#13;
Z. A. HABTS&#13;
Unadilla&#13;
boat&#13;
UFF,&#13;
, Mich&#13;
at&#13;
to&#13;
€:&#13;
f&#13;
ANDERSON&#13;
Miss Nora Durkee visited&#13;
John Birnies'-Sunday.&#13;
Miss Kittie Hoff returned&#13;
her work in Lansing Sunday.&#13;
Some from this place attended&#13;
the funeral of Wm. Williams at&#13;
Willianiville, Monday.&#13;
Miss Agnes Qraner was accompanied&#13;
ho me'from MtClemens by&#13;
her cousin, Richard Brennan.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Phelps, of&#13;
Stockbridge, took dinner Satur-&#13;
. day with their daughter, Mrs. E u -&#13;
gene Smithy&#13;
Word reached here last week&#13;
• that Fred May, formerly a Unadilla&#13;
boy, was kilted in a railroad&#13;
accident. Particulars not known.&#13;
The Anderson Farmers' Club&#13;
held at the home of .Richard&#13;
Clinton and wife, Saturday last,&#13;
was well attended considering the&#13;
, busy season. There was no program&#13;
as the committee was informed&#13;
of meetiDg at too late an&#13;
hour, but several subjects interesting&#13;
to farmers were discussed.&#13;
% &amp;••-,&#13;
KV&#13;
{i.i&#13;
i t *&#13;
1 -s.&#13;
;-r-1&#13;
t UNADILLA.&#13;
Herbert Lane, of HoweM, spent&#13;
Sunday'under the parental roof.&#13;
J o b * Hill and wife, of Mulligan,&#13;
are'visiting his brother Ado.,&#13;
at this place.&#13;
Vise Adeline Bunker, of Manitb,&#13;
visited at Ptrry Mills' one&#13;
day last week.&#13;
A little child of Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
James Livermore is very sick with&#13;
cholera infantum.&#13;
Bert and Mell Hartsuff and&#13;
families were guests of their parents&#13;
here Sunday. *&#13;
Albert Watson, wife and family,&#13;
~ were guests of J. D . Colton and&#13;
wife, in Chelsea, Sunday.&#13;
E d Hows and wife, former residents&#13;
of this place, and who have&#13;
• been making it their home in P e -&#13;
toskey, have moved to Lansing.&#13;
William Williams an old and&#13;
respected resident of this place,&#13;
' d i e d at his home on Saturday,&#13;
S e p t 14. A wife, two sons and&#13;
one daughter are left to mourn&#13;
$heir loss. ,&#13;
&gt; The Unadilla Farmers' Club&#13;
will meet at the home of Z. A.&#13;
Hartsuff on Saturday afternoon,&#13;
8eptT21. The following program&#13;
Will be rendered:—&#13;
Mi»ic by Club.&#13;
"':, prayer.&#13;
Minutes of last meeting.&#13;
QuarWU.&#13;
*• Beejtetlon, No Tint, Knth Pjper.&#13;
Bolo Baiery Glenn.&#13;
Paper k Mn. F.«L. Andrew*.&#13;
Discussion led by Mrs. Hettfe Marshall.&#13;
Iostreatetttal Duett, by Misses&#13;
GeofgSe WeetfaU, Lottie Walker.&#13;
BseHatfam, ' Soward Marshall.&#13;
E*wcy Gleon.&#13;
e w w ^ ^ ^ p ^ i w e ^ p ^^g ^W'' eea^jw^e^e*••^•••s •eje)#w' ass*. %ejsrw,.&#13;
way tbt test silver wedding came&#13;
about It was In the tine of Hugnes&#13;
Capet Two of hie most faithful serrants,&#13;
a man and a woman* bad grown&#13;
gray fa his employ. How could bo reward&#13;
them!&#13;
Calling the woman, he said: "Tour&#13;
service Is great, greater than the man's,&#13;
whose service Is ^ cat enough, tor the&#13;
Woman always &amp;7u» work harder that&#13;
a man, and therefore I will gtve yon a&#13;
reward. At your age I know of* none&#13;
better than a dowry and a husband.&#13;
The dowry Is here. This farm from&#13;
this time forth belongs to ypu. If this&#13;
mas who has worked with you for five&#13;
and twenty years is willing to marry&#13;
you, then the husband is ready,**&#13;
"Your majesty/' said the old peasant&#13;
'•how is it upfMibte thfttWA ^ n l d mar*&#13;
ry, having already silver hairs V&#13;
"Then it shall be a silver wedding.**&#13;
And the king gave the couple'silver&#13;
enough to keep them in plenty.&#13;
Such was the origin of the silver&#13;
wedding, a custom which, spreading all&#13;
through France, subsequently became&#13;
known to the world.&#13;
Potato oa a LoWtcr.&#13;
A lobster Is found in the water, but&#13;
not always—in fact, some of the most&#13;
successful lobsters that ever lobstered&#13;
were born and raised on dry land.'&#13;
One can usually tall a lobster by its&#13;
actions. For Instonce^tf a young man&#13;
enters a crowded drawing room and&#13;
wafts oil over the feet of the assembled&#13;
guests without their consent or&#13;
approval the young man at once becomes&#13;
a lobster.&#13;
The fathers of lobsters usually have&#13;
money. In fact, It is difficult to be "a&#13;
real stand up and fall down lobster&#13;
unless the lobster's father has money..&#13;
It Is an odd fact that many girls&#13;
seem to adnftre lobsters, ft would&#13;
seem that a girl ought to know better,&#13;
but she doesn't until she marries a&#13;
lobster. Then she tumbles.&#13;
Lobsters have no brains. If you&#13;
don't believe it. split a lobster's head&#13;
open with an ax if you den't care any*&#13;
thing about the ax.&#13;
Shis world would be a much more&#13;
desirable abiding place if there were&#13;
no lobsters injt—Ohio State Journal.&#13;
H*4*?e, the Slasrl* Minded.&#13;
An election petition was being tried,&#13;
and a witness was called to prove&#13;
-bribery."&#13;
"One of the gentlemen says to me,&#13;
'Hodge, you must rote for the Tories,' N&#13;
said the witness.&#13;
"And what did you answer to that?"&#13;
asked the counsel.&#13;
•* 'Well,* says 1.4How mucbr -'&#13;
"And what did the agent say?"&#13;
"He didn't say nothing. The other&#13;
gentleman comes to me and says, 'You&#13;
must vote for the Liberals, Hodge/ "&#13;
"And what did you answer?"&#13;
"I said, 'How much?1 So he arst me&#13;
what t'other gentleman offered me, and&#13;
I told him 5 shillings."&#13;
"And what did the Liberal agent do?"&#13;
"He gave me 10 shillings."&#13;
Counsel sits down triumphant, and&#13;
up starts the other side.&#13;
"Did you Tete for the Liberals?"&#13;
"No."&#13;
"Did yon vote for the ToriesV&#13;
"No. I a'in't got a vote!"—Spare Moments.&#13;
Restoring tfte Polish.&#13;
Says a housekeeper: "My piano,&#13;
which had been covered with a cambric&#13;
cover, was loaded with dust that had&#13;
sifted through the sleazy cloth. The&#13;
dust was too thick to be wiped off. It&#13;
should have been blown and HgMly&#13;
whisked off ftrst, hut t£ls my maid did&#13;
not do, and in&gt;eoaeee,uence the grime&#13;
was wiped In for all I know with a&#13;
damp eloth. At all events the highly&#13;
polished surface was clouded over almost&#13;
to a gray, and I was in* despair&#13;
until a friend suggested a remedy. She&#13;
advised me to wring as dry as I could&#13;
a piece of chamois from out a basin&#13;
of water and rub the piano until the&#13;
chamois was bone dry. This I have&#13;
done and completely restored the polish."&#13;
Bow Pepper Is Prepare*.&#13;
The pepper plant Is propagated by&#13;
cattiags, comes lato bearing three or&#13;
four years after It Is set and yields&#13;
two crops annually* for about IS years.&#13;
When a few of the berries change&#13;
from green to red, all of them are gathered,&#13;
because if they were allowed to&#13;
ripen any longer they would be less&#13;
pungent. To tit them for market they&#13;
are dried, separated by rubbing with&#13;
the hands and cleaned by winnowing.&#13;
The black pepper of commerce consists&#13;
of the berries thus prepared.&#13;
Tae Rlsrht Handlist of Books.&#13;
A book should not be bent back till&#13;
the binding Is cracked and loosened nor&#13;
laid face downward on a chair or table&#13;
nor left out over night In the rain, nor&#13;
should Its leaves be turned down to&#13;
mark the place. Cultivate a good memory&#13;
as to the page where yon leaje off&#13;
and be Independent of external aids.—&#13;
T a,diss* Hams Journal. "~r&#13;
to a Vteloao Circle.&#13;
"I wonder what makes a man's hair&#13;
fan out so fast when It once startsT&#13;
"Worryt Nothing tends to make a&#13;
man bald so much, as worry, gad notbtng&#13;
worries a mas so much as the. Msa&#13;
that ha la becosaki«^haJ4."-&#13;
^aaaai» a v aap apwajaavajaaaaaa) ^aaiaajnajfl.&#13;
Rev. Fr. Oomarford was in Jacswn&#13;
the first of tno wte^.&#13;
F&gt; L , Andrews took in the excursion&#13;
to Frankfort this wash.&#13;
- F . A, Sigler ipent the tirst of tba&#13;
weak in Jackson on business.&#13;
Mrs. John H o a k i « visiting relatives&#13;
iu s i t Pleasant this weak.&#13;
Mike Fitsaimmoni of Stock or idga&#13;
was in town the first of the weak,&#13;
After Nov. 1 a two-cent stamp will&#13;
be required on alt letters on B. f. D.&#13;
Masdames Jsania Butler and Orvil)&#13;
Topper, of Hamburg, yiiited friends&#13;
hers the first of the weak.&#13;
The Fowlerville Fair aaaceiation ara&#13;
making extensive preparation for&#13;
their annual fair Oct. 8, 9 , 1 0 , 1 1 .&#13;
Miss Sarah Armstrong, of Geneva,&#13;
N. Y. visited at the home of bar consin,&#13;
Dudley Grieve the past week.&#13;
In trying to separate two dogs from&#13;
fighting one day last weak, Gue Smith&#13;
was quite severely bitten on the arm*&#13;
New Fall Goods are being advertised&#13;
quite extensively and it is reporfed&#13;
that green will be one of the&#13;
popular colors worn,&#13;
Died of tvphoid fever, at his home&#13;
sooth ot ibe village, Mr. Ot'la Jackson&#13;
Funeral will be held this afternoon&#13;
(Thursday) at the home.&#13;
Mrs. Sheets of Plainfield, returned&#13;
Tuesday trom a five-weeks visi* with&#13;
her son Sylvpster in Milford. While&#13;
there she enjoyed a few days outintr&#13;
at Pettibone lake, and reports the fish&#13;
ing fine.&#13;
Frank Erwin of Alma was in town&#13;
the tirst ot the week. His father has&#13;
secured a job in the beet soyar tact&#13;
ory. Mrs. Erwin will move there&#13;
so me time next week. We shall be&#13;
very sorry to lose them from our village.&#13;
Rev, C. W. Rice and family moved&#13;
to Grand Blanc Wednesday where&#13;
he will fill the pulpit in the Con*!&#13;
church. Rev. Rice and wife have&#13;
made many friends here who are loth&#13;
to see tbem leave. May success attend&#13;
them iii their new location.&#13;
W. A. Nixon aud wife who have&#13;
spent the past year on the Travis farm&#13;
at Portage are moving back to their&#13;
old borne in Ohio, where he will again&#13;
assume the duties of a superintendent&#13;
in the oil districts. We wish them success&#13;
although we are loath to lo*e&#13;
them.&#13;
Our entire country was thrown into&#13;
deepest trournin last Saturday by the&#13;
news that President McKihley, who&#13;
had bean struggling between lite and&#13;
death from wounds caused by the assassins&#13;
revolver, had succumbed to the&#13;
inevitablft and at 2:15 bad passed&#13;
peaceably away. Not only does&#13;
our own country mourn but every&#13;
nation under the *un mourn with us&#13;
as all recocrnized that Mr. McKinley&#13;
was one of the first roan in the entire&#13;
world and as a President stood without&#13;
a peer.&#13;
OBITUARY.&#13;
William Black Sr. was born in&#13;
Newburg, Shiawassee Co., April 16,&#13;
1843, and died at his home in Pinck*&#13;
ney Sept. 11,1901, aged 58 years, 4&#13;
months and 25 davs.&#13;
In 1870 be married Miss Sarah M.&#13;
Taylor, of Pinck ney and to them ware&#13;
born two children, William J. and&#13;
Beulab Zoe.&#13;
He has bean a patient sufferer for&#13;
a number of years, but only confined&#13;
to his bed a short time before his&#13;
death.&#13;
Funeral was held from the borne&#13;
Friday Sept, 18, p. m. conductsd by&#13;
Rev. (3. W. Rice, ane the remains were&#13;
laid to rest in the village cemetery.&#13;
• T««r of tkm BsewrteA.'&#13;
It requires about four days to make&#13;
an Investigation of the Bacurtal. the&#13;
great Spanish palace, there being such&#13;
a multitude of rooms and apartments.&#13;
To travel all the halls, chambers, corridors,&#13;
lengths and depths of the great&#13;
palaos woald require a tour amounting&#13;
taolarlOOskUsa.&#13;
•eaitfcr&#13;
Tbt time In the summer at which tha&#13;
Jsaure* begin to tarn la a tokraMy sura&#13;
lodtcattoo of the aoundnssa af the&#13;
tsaa. tosne trees v i O k t s p their foUagt&#13;
green until 8eptambsr, while the leaves&#13;
of raihsaltajr trass will begin to show&#13;
• f ten-afaf haaw* m MMtv Ira&#13;
NIWTO5 T« K i a i , claim agaat, of&#13;
Alb.oo, Miob., will be a t -Tuomey&#13;
House/' Pinckney, on Wednesday&#13;
Oot a, 1901, to attend to Pension Business.&#13;
All soldiers, bofch of Oivfl and&#13;
Spanish wars, Dependent mothers&#13;
and fathers, and other* bavin* claims,&#13;
are invited to call and see bim. Spaa*&#13;
ial attention given to widows and In*&#13;
crease claims Many formerly rejected&#13;
can BOW be allowed. Bring yonr&#13;
pension eertifieate with yon. 2w&#13;
JUST&#13;
What You Want&#13;
Oust Proof&#13;
better Pile&#13;
n&#13;
For Sale at&#13;
THE DISPATCH OFFICE. a&#13;
w!U b* H«lct at '.-&gt;. i-&#13;
PONTIAC SEPT. aa«a7&#13;
New Ground New Bnildinifs.&#13;
Good Transportation,&#13;
Large bhow. Fit* Bfte«*v&#13;
Splendid attractions. Bui!&#13;
far© and excursion rates. Ask&#13;
yoor B. K *Ke*t. We wan*&#13;
yon to attend this year. Yon&#13;
will see a great lair.&#13;
1. H. BuTtgrflitlfL&#13;
Ml www i w ^ r v w ^ B ^ n ^ p i r ^ ^ ^&#13;
('••- • ,:•&gt;!.•&#13;
.-,-.- -, . „ - ^ -i.-Ui&#13;
v/&#13;
.•;,&gt;. ••• t&#13;
Secretary.&#13;
Business Pointers.&#13;
W A N T E D :&#13;
An apprentice to learn dressmaking&#13;
one who snows something about plain&#13;
sewing. Enquire of Mrs. Cbas.&#13;
Grimes over Jackson's store. 38tf&#13;
These cool days remind us that winter&#13;
is approaching and our wood sopply&#13;
is low. Any of our many subscribers&#13;
who wish to help us out along&#13;
this lioe we would be pleased to have&#13;
them do so immediately.&#13;
For 8ml«.&#13;
Anyone in need of a well pump will&#13;
do well to call on us. Desiring to&#13;
put in a force pump we have a good&#13;
sfcond band pump in good running&#13;
rder. It was working well in a 53&#13;
foot veil when changed for the force.&#13;
Tbe pump may be seen at Teeple &amp;&#13;
Ced well^&#13;
If a person has anything to sell, be&#13;
be merchant or tarmei, it does not&#13;
pay to wait until your competitor has&#13;
the start of you before yob let the&#13;
buyer know you have it for sale. The&#13;
DISPATCH is the best medium in this&#13;
vicinity through which to let your&#13;
wants be known.&#13;
Michigan State Fair at PontlaeSeptember2*&#13;
to27, 1901.&#13;
For the anove the Grand Trunk&#13;
Railway System will aiake the fare&#13;
for the round trip—plus 50 cents lor&#13;
admission coupon. Careful arrange&#13;
ments have been made for train service&#13;
for the occasion. Sept. 27 will&#13;
be Maccebee day and rate of ONE&#13;
GENT per mile will be made from&#13;
some of its stations. For particulars&#13;
apply to anv agent of the Company.&#13;
STURGEON BAT, WIS.&#13;
Ann Arbor Railroad makes It a regnlar&#13;
station for Its Car Ferries*&#13;
Tbe Ann Arbor Railroad car ferries&#13;
are now making regular stops at&#13;
Sturgeon Bay Wis, Steamer leaves&#13;
Frankfort Monday, Wednesday and&#13;
Friday 9:30 a m, Sturgeon Bay 8:80&#13;
p m and arrives Menominee 5.80 p ro.&#13;
Goto? east steamer leaves Menomi*&#13;
nee same diva 11:80 p j n . Sturgeon&#13;
Bay 1:80 am and arrive Frankfort&#13;
following morning 7:80 a mt V89&#13;
tb&lt;£ii)U&#13;
Detroit&#13;
"To-Day"&#13;
A Daily Paper&#13;
and&#13;
The&#13;
Pinckney&#13;
Dispatch&#13;
A Weekly Paper&#13;
/&#13;
Both&#13;
One Year&#13;
For&#13;
Only&#13;
a*&#13;
$2.:30&#13;
•j,&#13;
S /</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 19, 1901</text>
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                <text>September 19, 1901 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>1901-09-19</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="7026">
                <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. XIX. PINCKNEY, LIVINGSTON CO., MICH., THURSDAY, SEPT. 26, 1901. No. 39&#13;
Black the Blacksmith.&#13;
Commencing Monday, Sept.&#13;
-—8f and continuing two weeks,&#13;
my shop at Anderson will be&#13;
closed as I am obliged to be&#13;
absent for that time. After&#13;
returning I will be ready to&#13;
do your blacksmithing as usual&#13;
aud at my usual prices.&#13;
Black the Blacksmith.&#13;
LOCAL NEWS.&#13;
Edward A. Bowman,&#13;
DEPARTMENT&#13;
STORE . . . . .&#13;
HOWELL. - MICHIGAN&#13;
BOWMAN'S&#13;
S p e c i a l S a l e o f :&#13;
Battenberg- and Art Needle&#13;
Goods.&#13;
A L S O&#13;
Big New Stock of China.&#13;
bower Prices than elsewhere&#13;
Trade at B o w m a n ' s » Pay»&#13;
T h e Busy S t o r e ,&#13;
Howell, Mich.&#13;
Bancroft fair Oct. 1 2 3 4.&#13;
Brighton fair Oat. 16-17-18.&#13;
Ann Arbor fair Ost. 1 2 - 3 4.&#13;
Fowlervillfi fair Qct.-&amp;^40JTL__&#13;
Be ture to read all the advs. in this&#13;
I issue.&#13;
Several from here are taking in tb9&#13;
state fair this week.&#13;
Miss Ethel Read returned this week&#13;
to her studies at the U. of M.&#13;
Mrs. Maria Backus nt 8 to&lt;?l&lt; bridge&#13;
was a guest of friends here the past&#13;
week.&#13;
Pinckney has within its village liraits&#13;
40 widows, 4 grass widows, and 3&#13;
widowers.&#13;
Mesdames F. b . Andrews and E . R.&#13;
Brown were in Parshallviile the first&#13;
of the week.&#13;
Thee three frosts of the past week&#13;
did considerable damage in this part&#13;
of Michigan.&#13;
Rev. Stephens, of Plymouth, vis-red&#13;
his daughter, Mrs. F . G. Jackson, the&#13;
last of last week.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Collier of Wayne&#13;
attended the funeral of Orla Jackson&#13;
last Thursday.&#13;
No wonder men are a scarce article&#13;
in Pinckney as we have 40 widows all&#13;
living within the city limits.&#13;
Mrs. Will Crofoot and Mrs. Casper&#13;
Sykes were guests of Mrs. 1. J . Cook&#13;
at Brighton, Saturday and Sunday.&#13;
The, Cong'l church and society will&#13;
hold a Harvest Home Festival, on the&#13;
evenings of Oct, 25 and 26, at the&#13;
Pinckney opera house. Watch the&#13;
DISPATCH for particulars.&#13;
This Week's&#13;
Specials:&#13;
Apron Ginghams,&#13;
Light Print,&#13;
Ladies' 50c Corset,&#13;
Men's extra heavy Socks&#13;
Paraffine Wax,&#13;
1 lb Baking Powder,&#13;
- Dried Beef,&#13;
Lion Coffee,&#13;
All S a l e s CASH.&#13;
F. G. JACKSON&#13;
5J£cyd&#13;
4c "&#13;
44c&#13;
5c pr&#13;
10c&#13;
7c&#13;
2.2c 11)&#13;
12c '&#13;
Mrs. Valentine Dinkle is visiting&#13;
relatives in Kansas.&#13;
R. B Arnell has traded his farm&#13;
north of town for one north of Brighton.&#13;
Miss Mabel Sigler yissited Edith&#13;
Wood at A n d e T s W ^ t t e - i t w t ^ - l a s t&#13;
week.&#13;
Miss Ethel Durfee and Miss Hazel&#13;
Vaughn were guests of trie nds, in&#13;
Dexter, Saturday.&#13;
Robt. Russell who is well known&#13;
here is now pastor of the Methodist&#13;
Protestant church at Franklin.&#13;
Mrs. H. Seymors and son of Jackson&#13;
visaed her mother, Mrs. Chaiker&#13;
in West Putnam, the past week.&#13;
Arc! ie Durfee ot Stockbridge is at&#13;
W. W. Barnard's store in this place,&#13;
with a stcck of clothing, cloaks, etc.&#13;
Saturday, Mrs. Chas. Grimes will&#13;
move her dress making parlor to Hie&#13;
rooms over Eugene Campbell's store.&#13;
Thos. and Win, Cooper are preparing&#13;
tor the erection ot a large basement&#13;
barn on their farm southwest of&#13;
this village.&#13;
We had to issue over 50 extra papers&#13;
this week to meet the demand.&#13;
The order came too late so we printed&#13;
only iour pages.&#13;
Hiram E Harlow of Stockbridge,&#13;
which many from this place will&#13;
remem er as a fine penman, died at&#13;
his home Sept. 17.&#13;
Sept. 29 is the date on which Bishop&#13;
Foley will be in this place and administer&#13;
first comtiiunion to the class.&#13;
High Mass at 9 a. m., Low Mass at 11.&#13;
The Misses Boyle *fc Halstead have&#13;
just returned from Grand Rapids and&#13;
Detroit, with a full line of millinery&#13;
goods. Watch for their adv. next&#13;
week.&#13;
Fletcher k Hail's salesman sold&#13;
goods too last Tuesday and Wednesday&#13;
to write a n e w adv. and they are doiiiLr&#13;
business just the same and the old&#13;
adv. holds good.&#13;
Ma.-ter Gilbert ri„ Hicks who has&#13;
been p e n d i n g Ihu summer with his&#13;
grandparents, at the Methodist par-&#13;
| sona^e, returns to his home in Washj&#13;
ington D. (J. next Saturday.&#13;
| ii. H. Er win of Alma is in town as-&#13;
'fisting to p;ick up and ship" their goods&#13;
I to that place where he has a job. We&#13;
j are very to-lose them as the family&#13;
j made many warm friends while here.&#13;
All members of the order of Eastern&#13;
—Star are re-quested to -be present at&#13;
the annual election to-morrow even-&#13;
I ing Sept. 27. "&#13;
I Edith C. Greene, Secy.&#13;
Free 3 3 . 0 0&#13;
PHOTOS Free&#13;
For the week beginning __Segtember 30 and&#13;
, ending October 5, I will take $3.00 Photos&#13;
Free to get samples of my work before the&#13;
public.&#13;
B u t t o n s a n d P h o t o J e w l e r y at G u t P r i c e s .&#13;
All Photos mounted on up-to-date cards—&#13;
Call and see the styles.&#13;
A. M. HUNTINGTON,&#13;
Pinckney Mich.&#13;
A CHANCE FOR YOU TO BUY&#13;
New Fall Clothing&#13;
G a p e s , J a c k e t s , P U P S c a r f s a n d&#13;
L a d i e s 9 T a i l o r - m a d e S u i t s a t h o m e *&#13;
We will be.at W. W. Barnard's, Pinckney, with a full line* of&#13;
above mentioned from Fletcher it Hall Go's. Department&#13;
Store, Stockbridge, from the&#13;
the&#13;
2 4 to 23 of S E P T E M B E R .&#13;
These goods are nil new. bought for this falls trade, with ex • »p:i &gt;:i &gt;,- &gt;m&gt; line of&#13;
Ladies' aud Misses' Jackets, which we sell one hour of each day between .me and two&#13;
o'clock at one, two and three dollars. These art garments that sold !a.st year at from&#13;
rive to tifteen dollars. It yon want one of these you be on hand, as they will go &lt;iuiek&#13;
and we postiveW will net sell these garments only at the above stated hour. We will&#13;
be able to give you an all wool Man's Suit for live dollars, new and up-to-date, and&#13;
we will have equal If as good bargains from this pcierf upward. They must be seen to&#13;
be appreciated Ladies' Tailor made Suits at ten and twelve dollars uiily, but special&#13;
bargains. Ladies' Fur Scarfs at fr^ni one to ten dollars. Ladies' Jackets from tive to&#13;
tifteen dollars. A large assortment oi: Boys' and Children's Suits. We are going to&#13;
show you that we have the riglit things aud at the riyht prices. One of our principle&#13;
object; in coming to Pinckney and making the prices we will is to do some advertising&#13;
OBITUARY.&#13;
T h e " F i t c h " A q u a t i c G r e a m S e p a r a t o r .&#13;
i If you're running a dairy,—be there one cow or one hundred—&#13;
your profit dedends upon the quality of cream you're&#13;
getting.&#13;
If you aren't getting all the cream there is in your milk,&#13;
iyou're losing just that much money.&#13;
I By the old system of milk-setting you lose-from ten to twenty&#13;
per cent, of the cream, besides doing a lot of uunecssary work.&#13;
Cold water is added to the warm milk and the sudden&#13;
change in temperturc aud consistency causes, the cream and&#13;
milk to separate: and because of the cream being the lighter it&#13;
is forced to the top.&#13;
You get all the cream in an hour after milking, your skimmilk&#13;
is sweet and clean, the cream is smooth, sweet, firm and&#13;
clean, and requires less than half the time formerly required&#13;
to churn it.&#13;
The hutter is better, sweeter, and you get from ten to twenty&#13;
iper cent, more of it.&#13;
No pans, crocks.or milk cans needed, no extra labor, no&#13;
waste cream.&#13;
You can wash it in two minutes and have ready for the next&#13;
milking.&#13;
Taking it all in all, it saves the women's work, costs less&#13;
than one.half as much as a full equipment of pans, skimmers,&#13;
jars, crocks, cans, etc., besides saving enough cream in one&#13;
year to pay&amp;r itself tenfold.&#13;
' Here are our prices:&#13;
No. 1. Capacity, 10 gals.. $3.50.&#13;
No. 2. Capacity, 15 gals., 4.50.&#13;
No. 8. Capacity, 23 gals., 5.00.&#13;
Sold on trial and warranted by&#13;
TEEPtE-TCADWELL&#13;
Orla Backus .Jackson was born Oct&#13;
25 1847 in Stock bridge, Ingham Co.&#13;
Mich. He died at his home south of&#13;
this place, Monday evening, Sept. 16,&#13;
1901.&#13;
On March 3, 186S he was united in&#13;
marriage to Miss Ella M. Brown of&#13;
Pinckney Mich, and he than purchased&#13;
tbeir farm home where they hava&#13;
spent so many happy hours. He was&#13;
a devoted loving husband caring most&#13;
tenderly for his wife in the many&#13;
hours of sicknes that came to hpr lot.&#13;
May th'e Good Lord who l u s called&#13;
him so suddenly from his earthly&#13;
home reward him as he justly deserves.&#13;
Itopeat ed ly and e m p batica l ly d u ri n K&#13;
his last days he expressed his love for&#13;
Jesus Christ.&#13;
The home, village and community&#13;
have lost a helpful and upright friend&#13;
and citizen. O u r loss is his gain.&#13;
Card of Thanks.&#13;
as we feel there is a certain amount ot trade here we should have coining to Stockbridge&#13;
for von have none ot the above Hues in PiucKii* v and have to farther awav than we&#13;
are. We are going to do business while we are here anil the prices we will make and&#13;
the styles we will show will do it. ti-&gt;ods all marked in plain figures and sold for cash&#13;
only.&#13;
Y o u r s f o r G a s h B a r g a i n s ,&#13;
FLETCHER 6c HAL.L CO.,&#13;
R e p r e s e n t e d by A. W- DURFEE.&#13;
Through the columns of the DISPATCH&#13;
we wish to thank oar friends who&#13;
so kindly assisted in our recent bereavement&#13;
especially for the beautiful •&#13;
flowars. Only those who have passed&#13;
through like sorrow can truly realize&#13;
our Kr**t-*ffliction.&#13;
4Urs. ORLA BACKUS JACKSON.&#13;
School Books&#13;
and School supplies of all kinds at prices&#13;
that defy competition.&#13;
Before&#13;
you buy get our PRICES on supplies.&#13;
A F e w Groceries&#13;
yet to close out at less than COST.&#13;
\ i F. A. SIGLER.&#13;
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TALMAGE^ SERJ10N.&#13;
*THE SPIfilt OF AMITY*1 LAST SUNDAY'S&#13;
SUBJEOT.&#13;
**»&#13;
Barbarous People Bhojred U* No&#13;
Kfadnee*" — Act* xxrlil: %&#13;
&gt;Ka*4aeM la Action the Greatest of&#13;
1MI, ay Loiri* Klop»cfc, N. Y.]&#13;
Wswhington, Sept. 22.—In this dlseonrae&#13;
Dr. Talmage commends the&#13;
sfttrtt of amity and good feeling and&#13;
snemtlens illustrious examples of that&#13;
•spirit; teat, Act* xxvlli, 2, "The barpeople&#13;
showed us#ho little&#13;
'n&#13;
C*v ;**&#13;
Here we are on the island of Malta,&#13;
^another name for MelTta. This island,&#13;
w h i c h has always been an important&#13;
commercial center, belonging at different&#13;
times to Phoenicia, to Greece,&#13;
-to Rome, to Arabia, to Spain, to&#13;
France, s e w belongs to England. The&#13;
of the island is about 100 square&#13;
It is la the Mediterranean sea&#13;
of such clarity of atmosphere that&#13;
Mount Aetna, 130 miles away, can be&#13;
-distinctly seen. The island is glorio&#13;
u s l y memorable because the Knights&#13;
« ( Malta for a long while ruled there,&#13;
tat moee famous because of the apostolic&#13;
shipwreck. The bestormed vess&#13;
e l o n which Paul sailed had "laid&#13;
to** on the starboard tack, and the&#13;
wind was blowing east-northeast, and,&#13;
t h e vessel drifting probably a mile and&#13;
a half an hour, she struck at what is&#13;
n o w called St. Paul's bay. Practical&#13;
sailors have taken up the Bible account&#13;
and decided beyond controversy&#13;
t h e place of the shipwreck. But the&#13;
island, which has so rough a coast, Is&#13;
for the most part a garden. Richest&#13;
fruits and a profusion of honey characterized&#13;
it in Paul's time as well as&#13;
s o w . The finest oranges, figs and&#13;
olives grow there.&#13;
When Paul and his comrades crawled&#13;
o p on the beach, saturated and&#13;
hungry from long abstinence from&#13;
food and chilled to the bone, the islanders,&#13;
though called barbarians bethey&#13;
could not • speak Greek,&#13;
their doors to the shipwrecked&#13;
anXortnnates. Everything had gone&#13;
t o the bottom of the fteep, and the&#13;
barefooted, bareheaded apostle and&#13;
ship's crew were in a condition to appreciate&#13;
hospitality. About twentyflve&#13;
such men a few years ago I found&#13;
In the life station near East Hampton,&#13;
l o n g Island. They had got ashore in&#13;
t h e night from the sea, and not a hat&#13;
o r shoe had they left. They found&#13;
ont, as Paul and his fellow voyagers&#13;
found out, that the sea is the roughest&#13;
*&amp; all robbers. My text finds the ship's&#13;
crew ashore on Malta and around a&#13;
hot Are drying themselves and with&#13;
the best provision the islanders can&#13;
offer them. And they go into government&#13;
quarters for three days to recuperate,&#13;
Publlus, the ruler, inviting&#13;
them, although he had severe sickness&#13;
i n the house at that time, his father&#13;
down with a dangerous Illness. Yea,&#13;
for three months they staid on the&#13;
Island watching for a ship and putting&#13;
the hospitalities of the islanders to a&#13;
severe t e s t But it endured the test&#13;
satisfactorily,and it is recorded for all&#13;
the ages of time and eternity to read&#13;
and hear in regard to the inhabitants&#13;
*of Malta, **The barbarous people&#13;
tahewed ns no little kindness."&#13;
A Magnificent Word.&#13;
Kindness! What a great word&#13;
that i s ! It would take a reed as long&#13;
a s that which the apocalpytic angel&#13;
TOied to measure heaven to tell the&#13;
length, the breadth, the height of that&#13;
munificent word. It is a favorite Bible&#13;
word, and it is early launched in tha&#13;
book of Genesis, caught up in the&#13;
hook of Joshua, embraced in the book&#13;
•of Ruth, sworn by in the book of&#13;
Samuel, crowned in the book of&#13;
Psalms and enthroned in many places&#13;
i n the New Testament. Kindness! A&#13;
word no more gentle than mighty. I&#13;
-expect it will wrestle me down before&#13;
I g e t through with it. It i3 strong&#13;
enough to throw an archangel. But it&#13;
wHt he well for us to stand around&#13;
i t and warm ourselves by its glow as&#13;
Pant and his fellow voyagers stood&#13;
around the fire on the island of Malta,&#13;
where the Maltese made themselves&#13;
immortal in my text by the way they&#13;
treated their victims of the sea. "The&#13;
barharoas people showed us no little&#13;
Madness."&#13;
The Grace of Forgiveness.&#13;
B u t are you waiting and hoping for&#13;
^sorae one to be bankrupted or exposed&#13;
o r discomfited or in some way overthrown&#13;
then kindness has not taken&#13;
nosseaslon of your nature. You are&#13;
'wrecked o n a Malta where there are&#13;
oranges. You are entertaining a&#13;
so unlike kindness that kindaril!&#13;
not come and dwell under&#13;
t h e same roof. The most exhausting&#13;
unhealthy and ruinous spirit on&#13;
is a revengeful spirit or retaliatrtag&#13;
spirit, as I know by experience,&#13;
l o r f have tried it for five or ten mlnat&#13;
a time. When some mean&#13;
has been done me or said about&#13;
he*, t hare felt: "I will pay him in&#13;
I d s ' o w n coin. I will show him up.&#13;
Ingratet The traitor! The liar!&#13;
i-villainV But five or ten minutes&#13;
of the feeling has bean so unnerving&#13;
and exhausting I have abandoned&#13;
it, and I cannot understand how&#13;
people can go about torturing themselves&#13;
five or ten or twenty years,&#13;
trying to get even with somebody.&#13;
The only way you will ever triumph&#13;
over your enemies is by forgiving&#13;
them and wishing them all good and&#13;
no evil. As malevolence is the most&#13;
uneasy and profitless and dangerous&#13;
feeling, kindness is the most healthful&#13;
and delightful. And this is not an&#13;
abstraction. As I have tried a little of&#13;
the retaliatory feeling, so I have tried&#13;
a little of the forgiving. I do not&#13;
want to leave this world until I have&#13;
taken vengeance upon every man that&#13;
ever did me a wrong by doing him a&#13;
kindness. In most of such cases' I&#13;
have already succeeded, but there are&#13;
a few malignants whom I a m y&lt;&#13;
suing, and I shall not be content until&#13;
I have in some wise helped them or&#13;
benefited them or blessed them.,&#13;
Rare Flower from Royal Garden.&#13;
The king of Prussia had presented&#13;
to him by the empress of Russia the&#13;
root of a rare flower, and it was put&#13;
in the royal gardens on an island, and&#13;
the head gardener, Herr Fintleman,&#13;
was told to watch it. And one day it&#13;
pu{ forth its glory. Three days of&#13;
every week the people were admitted&#13;
to these gardens, and a young man,&#13;
probably not realizing what a wrong&#13;
thing he was doing, plucked this flower&#13;
and put it in his buttonhole, and&#13;
the gardener arrested him as \e was&#13;
crossing at the ferry and asked the&#13;
king to throw open no more his gardens&#13;
to the public. The king replied:&#13;
"Shall I deny to the thousands of&#13;
good people of my country the privilege&#13;
of seeing this garden because one&#13;
visitor has done wrong? No; let them&#13;
come and see the beautiful grounds."&#13;
And when the gardener wished to&#13;
give the king the name of the offender&#13;
who had taken the royal flower he&#13;
said, "No, my memory is very tenacious,&#13;
and I do not want to have in&#13;
my mind the name of the offender lest&#13;
it should hinder me granting him a&#13;
favor some other time." Now, I want&#13;
you to know that kindness is a royal&#13;
flower, and blessed be God, the king&#13;
6f mercy and grace, that by a divine&#13;
gift, and not by purloining, we may&#13;
pluck this royal flower and not wear&#13;
it on the outside of our nature, but&#13;
wear it on our soul and wear it forever,&#13;
its radiance and aroma not more&#13;
wonderful for time than wonderful for&#13;
eternity.&#13;
Hopeful and Cordial Wards.&#13;
Oh, say the cordial thing! Say the&#13;
useful thing. Say the hospitable thing.&#13;
Say the helpful thing. Say the Christlike&#13;
thing. Say the kind thing. I admit&#13;
that it is easier for some temperaments&#13;
than for others. Some are born&#13;
pessimists, and some are born optimists,&#13;
and that demonstrates itself all&#13;
through everything. It is a cloudy&#13;
morning. You meet a pessimist and&#13;
you say, "What weather today?" He&#13;
answers, "It's going to storm," and&#13;
umbrella under arm and waterproof&#13;
coat show that he is honest in that&#13;
utterance. On the same block, a minute&#13;
after, you Ineet an optimist, and&#13;
you say, "What do you think of the&#13;
commercial prospects?" and he says,&#13;
"Glorious. Crops not so good as usual,&#13;
but foreign demand will make big&#13;
prices. We are going to have such an&#13;
autumn and winter of prosperity as we&#13;
have never seen." On your way back&#13;
to your store you "meet~a~ pessimist&#13;
merchant. "What do you think of the&#13;
commercial prospects?" you ask, and&#13;
he answers, "Well, I don't know.&#13;
Wheat and corn crop blasted in Kansas&#13;
and Missouri, and the grain gamblers&#13;
will get their fist in, and the hay&#13;
crop i3 short in some places, and in&#13;
the southern part of Wisconsin they&#13;
had a hailstorm and our business is as&#13;
dull as it ever was." You will find the&#13;
same difference in judgment of character.&#13;
A man of good reputation is assailed&#13;
and charged with some evil&#13;
deed. At the first story the pessimist&#13;
will believe in guilt. "The papers said&#13;
so, and that's enough. Down with&#13;
him!" The optimist will say: "I don't&#13;
believe a word of it. I don't think that&#13;
a man that has been as useful and&#13;
seemingly honest for twenty years,&#13;
could have got off track like that.&#13;
There are two sides to this story, and*&#13;
I will wait to hear the other side before&#13;
I condemn him." My hearer, if&#13;
you are by nature a pessimist, make a&#13;
special effort by the grace of God to&#13;
extirpate the dolorous and the hypercritical&#13;
from your disposition. Believe&#13;
nothing against anybody until&#13;
the wrong is established by at least&#13;
two witnesses of integrity. And, if&#13;
guilt is proved, find out the extenuating;&#13;
circumstances, if there are any.&#13;
Kindness! Let us, morning, noon and&#13;
night, pray for it until, w e get it.&#13;
Kindness of Aotton.&#13;
Furthermore, there is kindness of action.&#13;
That Is what Joseph showed to&#13;
his outrageous brothers. That is what&#13;
David showed to Mephibosheth for his&#13;
father Jonathan's sake. That is what&#13;
"Qneslphoni8 showed to Paul in the&#13;
Roman penitentiary. That is what&#13;
William Cowptr recognized when he&#13;
said he would not trust a m a n , w h o&#13;
would with his foot needlessly crush&#13;
a worm. That is what our assassinated&#13;
President Lincoln demonstrated&#13;
when his private' secretary found' him&#13;
In the capitol grounds trying to get a&#13;
bird back to the nest from which 1*&#13;
had fallen, and which quality the illustrious&#13;
man exhibited years before&#13;
when, having with some lawyers in&#13;
the carriage on the way to court passed&#13;
on the road a swine fast In the mire,&#13;
after awhile cried to his horses, "Ho"&#13;
and said to the gentlemen, "I must go&#13;
back and help that hog out of the&#13;
mire." And he did go back and put&#13;
on solid ground that most unintereit*&#13;
ing Quadruped. That was the spirit&#13;
that was manifested by my departed&#13;
friend, Hon. Alexander H. Stephens of&#13;
Georgia—and lovelier man never exchanged&#13;
earth for heaven—when at&#13;
Washington. A senator's wife, who&#13;
told us of the circumstances, said t o&#13;
him, "Mr. Stephens, come and see my&#13;
dead canary bird." And he answered,&#13;
or I could not look at the poor thing&#13;
without crying." That is the spirit&#13;
which last night ten thousand mothers&#13;
showed to their sick children coming&#13;
to give the drink at the tenth call as&#13;
cheerfully and as tenderly as at the&#13;
first call.&#13;
Suppose all this assemblage and all&#13;
to whom these words shall come by&#13;
printer's type should resolve to make&#13;
kindness an overarching, underglrding&#13;
and all-pervading principle of their life&#13;
and then carry out the resolution. Why&#13;
In six months the whole earth would&#13;
feel it. People would say, "What is the&#13;
matter? It seems to me that the world&#13;
is getting to be a better place to live&#13;
in. Why, life after all is worth' living.&#13;
Why, there is Shylock, my neighbor,&#13;
has withdrawn his lawsuit of foreclosure&#13;
against that man, and because he&#13;
has had so much sickness in his family&#13;
he is going to have the house for one&#13;
year rent free. There is an old lawyer&#13;
in that young lawyer's office, and do&#13;
you know what he has gone in there&#13;
for? Why, he is helping to fix up a&#13;
case which is too big for the young&#13;
man to handle, and the white-haired&#13;
attorney is hunting up previous decisions&#13;
and making out a brief for the&#13;
boy. Do you know that a strange&#13;
thing has taken place in the pulpit,&#13;
and all the old ministers are helping&#13;
the young ministers, and all the old&#13;
doctors are helping the young doctors,&#13;
and the farmers are assisting each&#13;
other in gathering the harvest, and&#13;
for that farmer who is sick the neighbors&#13;
have made a 'bee,' as they call it,&#13;
and they have all turned in to help&#13;
him-get his crops into the garner? And&#13;
they tell me that the older and more&#13;
skillful reporters who have permanent&#13;
positions on papers are helping the&#13;
young fellows who are just beginning&#13;
to try and do not know exactly how to&#13;
do it. And after a few erasures and&#13;
interpolations on the reporter's pad&#13;
thejrvsay, 'Now, here is a readable account&#13;
of the tragedy; hand it in, and I&#13;
am sure the managing editor will take&#13;
it.' "&#13;
. Sew Dispensation of Conlullty.&#13;
My hearers, you know ana I know&#13;
we are far from that state of things.&#13;
But why not inaugurate a new dispensation&#13;
of geniality. If we cannot have&#13;
a millennium on a large scale, let us&#13;
have it on a small scale and under our&#13;
own vestments. Kindness! If this&#13;
world is ever brought to God, that is&#13;
the thing that will do it. You cannot&#13;
fret the world up, although you may&#13;
fret the world down. You cannot scold&#13;
it into excellence or reformation or&#13;
godliness.&#13;
The cast wind and the west wind&#13;
were one day talking with each other,&#13;
and- ^he—east wind said to -the—west&#13;
wind: "Don't you wish you had my&#13;
power? Why, when I start they hail&#13;
me by storm signals all along the&#13;
coast. 1 can twist off a ship's mast&#13;
as easily as a cow's hoof cracks an&#13;
alder. With one sweep of my wing I&#13;
have strewn the coast from Newfoundland&#13;
to Key West with parted ship&#13;
timber. I can lift and have, lifted the&#13;
Atlantic ocean. I am the terror of all&#13;
invalidism, and to fight me back forests&#13;
must be cut down.for fires, and the&#13;
mines of continents are called on to&#13;
feed the furnaces. Under my breath&#13;
the nations crouch into sepulchers.&#13;
Don't you wish you had my power?"&#13;
said the east wind. The west wind&#13;
made no answer, but started on its&#13;
mission, coming somewhere out of the&#13;
rosy bowers of the sky, and all the&#13;
rivers and lakes and seas smiled at its&#13;
coming. The gardens bloomed, and the&#13;
orchards ripened, and the wheatflelds&#13;
turned their silver into gold, and&#13;
health clapped its hands, and joy&#13;
shouted from the hilltops, and the nations&#13;
lifted their foreheads into the&#13;
light, and the earth had a doxology&#13;
for the sky, and the sky an anthem for&#13;
the earth, and the warmth and sparkle&#13;
and the gladness, and the foliage, and&#13;
the flowers, and the fruits, and the&#13;
beauty, and the life were the only an*&#13;
swer the west wind made t o the insolence&#13;
of the east wind*s interrogation.&#13;
WeU Worth Trying*.&#13;
Take a large acorn, suspend it by a&#13;
thread so as to neatly touch the water&#13;
in any glass vessel, set it upon your&#13;
mantelshelf, bracket or table, and let&#13;
it stand there for about two months&#13;
without in any way interfering with it&#13;
excepting to supply fresh water. The&#13;
acorn will burst, throw a root down&#13;
into the water and a stem upward,&#13;
sending out from the stem beautiful&#13;
green leaves.&#13;
* mwmimam. QWewaMaBMsneael wmm Immtm&#13;
WJZZU8 LEFT BY THE OBLIGING&#13;
RED MEN.&#13;
On Oraveotteaa' Memorial! the Figure*&#13;
Are Placed Ufofcie Down to Denote&#13;
' Death and Betura to BartU— Work of&#13;
Primitive Artist*.&#13;
The study of the sign language oi&#13;
the red man is a fascinating one. Perhaps&#13;
the simplest form of their picture&#13;
writing is that on the grave-head&#13;
memorials of their chiefs. These are&#13;
boards or posts, set up and inscribed&#13;
with certain symbols. The depleting&#13;
of figures upside down denotes death&#13;
and return to earth, and figures thus&#13;
inscribed are often seen in Indian epitaphs.&#13;
In other esses—the idea of&#13;
death is indicated by a cross with two&#13;
spaces filled in, making a figure somewhat&#13;
of the hourglass shape. On a&#13;
post set up about 100 years ago a&#13;
unique inscription Is to be read. A&#13;
reindeer at the top Is the totem mark,&#13;
of the deceased and his family, and is&#13;
depicted upside down for the reason&#13;
explained, t o the left of this figure&#13;
are seven transverse marks, meaning&#13;
that the dead chief had led seven war&#13;
parties. Three vertical marks below&#13;
mean three wounds received in battle.&#13;
A moose's head tells of a desperate&#13;
struggle with an infuriated animal of&#13;
that sort, and a hatchet and pipe indicate&#13;
great influence in peace and war.&#13;
Another post, simply inscribed with&#13;
the figure of a bear with three horizontal&#13;
lines below it, shows that the departed&#13;
hunter was of the Bear clan&#13;
or family, and that he had» attended&#13;
three war parties. An interesting example~&#13;
of Indian picture writing was&#13;
found 6ome time ago in the Comanche&#13;
country In Texas. The inscription,&#13;
which dates back to the time when&#13;
Spain was still engaged in American&#13;
conquest, is upon the shoulder blade of&#13;
a buffalo. A mounted Indian is depicted&#13;
killing with a spear a Spaniard&#13;
armed with a gun, the tragedy being&#13;
enacted in the presence of the disputed&#13;
buffalo Itself, who, in a piebald or&#13;
semi-skinned condition, is contemplating&#13;
the contest from a lower part of&#13;
the picture. An elegant scroll line by&#13;
the side of-the evidently doomed Spaniard&#13;
expresses the circuitous route by&#13;
which the Indian followed his enemy.&#13;
The length of body and shortness of&#13;
legs of the horse would seem to denote&#13;
that it belonged to a dachshund variety&#13;
of equines, while, to the uninitiated&#13;
observer the buffalo somewhat resembles&#13;
a cockroach. Several examples of&#13;
what appear to be the artistic efforts&#13;
of a very juvenile scholar in the absence&#13;
cf his teacher's observation have&#13;
been Interpreted by an expert. One&#13;
picture contains two figures remotely&#13;
in the likeness of humanity. One&#13;
holds, or is supposed to hold—for the&#13;
members of that body capable of that&#13;
operation are represented by two&#13;
straight lines—something not accurately&#13;
defined. The purpose of the&#13;
remaining actor in the scene represented&#13;
is rather clearer. He is depicted&#13;
in the act of "letting off" an antique&#13;
firelock aimed direct at the other.&#13;
By the side of the individual with the&#13;
firelock are a bundle and a tree. Tho&#13;
whole is a trespass notice, and a very&#13;
strong hint to the passerby of what he&#13;
may expect from the property owner&#13;
should he attempt to filch.any of the&#13;
latter's goods!&#13;
The composition may be divided, for&#13;
the purpose of description, into two&#13;
Ms*** mNa mwtxi*?*^&#13;
"W&#13;
' tlo*V» •» i t * e o a s h t y GeaaraL&#13;
To most minds s c l e n ^ ^ n s ^ r n m e n U&#13;
are | 0 fearfully nnd&gt;wWferfuUy constructed&#13;
that no attempt is ever made&#13;
to pry into the manner of their performing&#13;
their functions, the results&#13;
obtained being aeeepted as a matter of&#13;
course. Yet many such instrument*,&#13;
while apparently most'' 'eotnpttcatsd,&#13;
are really based on very simple principle*.&#13;
Of these the thermometer and&#13;
the barometer are, of course, now generally&#13;
understood, although this w a s&#13;
not always true. Another meteorological&#13;
instrument, however, which i»&#13;
much used, but which is more or lose&#13;
mysterious to the public, is that b y&#13;
which the amount of moisture in t h e&#13;
air Is , determined. While delicately&#13;
constructed and balanced by means of&#13;
fine springs, the chief reliance is placed&#13;
in a few horse hairs, which are exceedingly&#13;
responsive to the influence&#13;
of dampness. When the air becomes&#13;
moist they relax, and a pivoted bar,&#13;
one end of which forms an indicator,&#13;
Is drawn along a scale, which shows&#13;
just to what extent the air is saturated&#13;
with water. When the air is dry the&#13;
horse hairs become tense and the indicator&#13;
is returned to its appropriate&#13;
place on the scale. It is in this way&#13;
that track is kept of General Humid*&#13;
ity, whose damp forces so effectually&#13;
conspire to keep humanity in misery&#13;
during warm weather.&#13;
An Incomplete Home.&#13;
We run wild over the furnishings of&#13;
a house; its furniture, carpets, hangings,&#13;
pictures and music, and always&#13;
forget or neglect the most important&#13;
requisite. Something there should bo&#13;
always on the shelf to provide against&#13;
sudden casualties or attacks of pain.&#13;
Such come like a thief in the night; a&#13;
sprain, strain, sudden backache, toothache&#13;
or neuralgic attack. There is&#13;
nothing easier to get than a bottle of&#13;
St. Jacob's Oil, and nothing surer to&#13;
cure quickly any form of pain, The&#13;
house is Incomplete without i t Complete&#13;
it with a good supply.&#13;
The Light Care.&#13;
Arc lights are now in use for t h e&#13;
cure of skin diseases, especially of lupus.&#13;
They have cured, it is said, 311&#13;
cases in 462 in Denmark, and in Lond&#13;
o n the applicants for treatment&#13;
number 100 a day. The rays destroy&#13;
certain bacilli, it is said, and stimulate,&#13;
circulation as well a s increase the nutritive&#13;
activity. It is even alleged that&#13;
cancer has been successfully treated.&#13;
The patient bathes in a flood of 4,000,-&#13;
candle-power light, lying on a cot in u&#13;
cabinet, his eyes protected by colored&#13;
glasses, and after this treatment he&#13;
arises, free from rheumatism, asthma,&#13;
consumption, ache, and many other&#13;
things. Such at least is the report.&#13;
Let us wait in some patience till we&#13;
hear the results of official trials and&#13;
Investigations, and hope that all which&#13;
has been said of the light cure in Denmark,&#13;
France and England will come&#13;
true in general practice.—Brooklyn&#13;
Eagle.&#13;
"New York City, June 12th, 1901.—I heartily&#13;
recommend Garfield Tea for liver trouble.&#13;
Our family physician prescribed your Tea,&#13;
and after taking four package* my system&#13;
is in perfect condition and my complexion&#13;
has become clear.*' It has been demonstrated&#13;
by year* of use throughout the world that&#13;
Garfield Tea cleanses the system and purifies&#13;
the blood; from all reports it would seem&#13;
that nothing can equal this simple herb medicine&#13;
that cures in Nature's way,&#13;
Approach High Economy.&#13;
Contrary to the general belief, the&#13;
cMef "rows of" figures and objects, ' engines of torpedo boats are not at all&#13;
while at the lower corners are depicted extravagant ^ the use of steam, but&#13;
a bird and a turtle. The figures all ' b r o a c h high economy, considering&#13;
resemble those juvenile efforts to rep- t h a t t h e y a r e d r i v e n regardless of cost,&#13;
resent the human form Jbefore the ar- t h e s o l e v i e w ^ 1 ^ t 0 « e t ^ 6 highest&#13;
tistic aspirant has attained a knowl- P 0 ^ 1 0 ^ piston speed in the shortest&#13;
edge of anatomy or perspective. A fig- t i m e . w I t b f o r c e d d r a f t o f n e a t e s t inure&#13;
at the end of the second row rep- tensity- T h o c o a l b u r n e d P e r ^ 1 ^ 1&#13;
resents the subaltern officer in charge n o r s e ^wer i n t h c ^ 3 6 o f o n e host&#13;
of the guard of United States troops, recently constructed was only 1.88&#13;
This military personage is distinguish- . p o u n d 3 *** h o u r - w l t h a consumption&#13;
ed by a curly line intended to repre- , o f sixty-eight pounds per square foot&#13;
sent his sword. Next to him i3 the&#13;
secretary of the expedition, as shown&#13;
by the thing in h i s hand, which is said&#13;
to be a book. Next is the geologist&#13;
and the weapon with which he appears&#13;
to be attacking the secretary's&#13;
head is his geological hammer. Two&#13;
assistants and the interpreter are also&#13;
graphically depicted. Just above is a&#13;
row of infantry soldiers, their gun3 being&#13;
represented in a separate row. By&#13;
the side of each of the principal rows&#13;
is something intended to represent a&#13;
fire, to shew that the soldiers had a&#13;
separate fire and mean. The bird and&#13;
turtle denote the results of the preceding&#13;
day'8 chase, cooked (as indicated&#13;
by another fire) and eaten. The&#13;
guides, who are Indians and represented&#13;
in the second row, hare their race&#13;
designated by the absence of hats,,&#13;
which are to he seen on all the other&#13;
figures denoting that they are white&#13;
men. It is to be noted that the Indian&#13;
artist haB drawn the figures of himself&#13;
and his companion at least twice&#13;
as large as any of the "palefaces.'—&#13;
Washington Times.&#13;
\&#13;
Self-comparison with other people&#13;
always minifies our faults and magnifies&#13;
our virtues.&#13;
of gas.&#13;
1 V ."• *!&#13;
t&#13;
WISCONSIN rArtM LANDS.&#13;
The best of farm lands can be obtained&#13;
now in Marinette County, W i s -&#13;
consin, on the Chicago, Milwaukee &amp;&#13;
S t Paul Railway at a low price and on&#13;
very favorable terms. Wisconsin is&#13;
noted for its fine crops, excellent&#13;
markets and healthful climate. W h y&#13;
rent a farm when you can buy one&#13;
much cheaper than you can rent and&#13;
in a few years it will be your own&#13;
property. For particulars address&#13;
F. A. Miller, General Passenger Agent&#13;
Chicago, Milwaukee &amp; St. Paul Railway,&#13;
Chicago.&#13;
Buffalo FoUoe Ask More Tlsaa,&#13;
The Chicago detectives and police&#13;
were notified Thursday by the&#13;
Buffalo officials that the District Attorney&#13;
had decided that he did not&#13;
have sufficient evidence to secure the&#13;
extradition of the anarchists now held ,&#13;
in Chicago at the request of Chief&#13;
Bull, The local officers were asked to&#13;
consult with Dr. Taylor, the Chicago&#13;
City Prosecutor, with reference t o securing&#13;
a continuance of the habeas&#13;
corpus proceedings before Judge Chetlaln,&#13;
until Sept. 19.&#13;
A good many people quote the golden&#13;
rule as if they were the author.&#13;
Good advice is of ten suspeeted when&#13;
given by a disinterested person.&#13;
ir^li i * ^ s*iae*teiB*^tt&#13;
JfcV w &gt;•?&#13;
•ml&#13;
.."""\4&#13;
:i&#13;
V&#13;
A Story ©f&#13;
the Ea.Qt.&#13;
5YLVANUS&#13;
COBB, JR.&#13;
OoyrrlfhWdtptbf Bonner* Sooa.&#13;
CHAPTBK XVn.-(ConUn«ed.)&#13;
And thus was tae work accomplished;&#13;
and with a wsult not to be&#13;
won4«r«d a t The Arabs had bean&#13;
brave enough &gt; over their rich prises,&#13;
but they had lacked the sinew and&#13;
force of the attacking party. In fact,&#13;
upon foot, hand to hand, and front to&#13;
front, either Julian or his lieutenant&#13;
might have been a match for half of&#13;
them.&#13;
"Those two rascals are not worth&#13;
pursuing,'' said our hero, ^ s he noticed&#13;
that Hobaddan was looking after the&#13;
fleeing Arabs. "Let them go. We&#13;
have gained all we sought."&#13;
After this Julian turned towards the&#13;
females. Ulin saw him coming, and,&#13;
with no thought save that of tenderest&#13;
gratitude, she moved forward to meet&#13;
him.&#13;
"Heaven bless you, kind sir!" she&#13;
said, as she extended to him her&#13;
hand.&#13;
"8weet lady," returned the chieftain,&#13;
fervently, "talk not of blessings to&#13;
me. Let me be the one to call down&#13;
blessings. I know to whom I owe my&#13;
life and my liberty. Hobaddan has&#13;
told me all. Oh, let me bear ever with&#13;
me the blessed privilege of remembering&#13;
thee in my prayers to God!"&#13;
Tears gathered in the eyes of the&#13;
maiden, and her lips trembled; and&#13;
when she spoke her voice betrayed&#13;
the deep emotion that stirred her soul.&#13;
"Indeed, fair sir," she said, with her&#13;
hand still rating in ale, "you should&#13;
not deny to me the privilege which&#13;
you claim for yourself. If you can&#13;
feel pleasure in cherishing a holy gratitude,&#13;
I can feel the same. When I&#13;
reinsurer the dreadful fate to which&#13;
the Arabs had doomed me, I cannot&#13;
forget the blessings which are due to&#13;
the kind power that delivered me."&#13;
"As you please, lady," replied Julian,&#13;
letting go her hand. "The thought&#13;
that thou art blessing me will be a&#13;
blessing Indeed. And here is our fair&#13;
Albia," he continued, turning to the&#13;
bondmalden—and a close observer&#13;
might have seen that he thus turned&#13;
in order to subdue emotions that were&#13;
rising to trouble him. "J do not forget&#13;
that some blessing belongs to&#13;
you."&#13;
"I have served my mistress," said&#13;
Albia, modestly. And then, perceiving&#13;
that a change of subject would be a&#13;
relief to both parties, she added, "We&#13;
owe you so much, sir, that you will be&#13;
forced to accept my grateful blessings&#13;
with those of my lady. And now, if I&#13;
may dare to interrupt you, will you&#13;
tell us how you chanced to discover&#13;
us?"&#13;
"It was very simple, lady." replied&#13;
Julian, directing his answer to the&#13;
princess; "and though seemingly an&#13;
accident, still I cannot help thinking&#13;
that some kind spirit must have superintended&#13;
the work. When we left Damascus&#13;
we took a course slightly different&#13;
from this; but on the way we&#13;
met a poor traveler who informed us&#13;
that he had been robbed. He did not&#13;
tell us that the robbers were Arabs,&#13;
and I fancied that they might be some&#13;
of my own people. Fearing this, I&#13;
"aeTeTmlued to—follow—them.—Their&#13;
course was a crooked one, and vhen&#13;
I finally reached the grove of datepalms,&#13;
I had made up my mind to&#13;
search no more. We were asleep in&#13;
the grove, and Osmir awoke just as&#13;
a party of horsemen were leaving the&#13;
spring. He ran out and discovered&#13;
that the strangers were Arabs, and&#13;
that they had two females with them."&#13;
• • • * * •&#13;
The chieftain directed ^he slaves to&#13;
drag the bodies of the dead Arabs together,&#13;
and take from them the gold&#13;
and jewels which had been taken from&#13;
the princess, and then to cover them&#13;
up in the sand; after which he requested&#13;
Hobaddan to examine his&#13;
wound. It seemed to be but a slight&#13;
puncture, just below the collar bone,&#13;
upon the left side, and as it was&#13;
bleeding but slightly, Julian concluded&#13;
not to have it probed. A simple compress&#13;
staunched the blood, and it was&#13;
thought that there could be no danger.&#13;
When the slaves had done their&#13;
work, the chieftain approached our&#13;
heroine, and asked her whither she&#13;
wished to go.&#13;
"I will see you safe to your journey's&#13;
end," he said, "even though it be to&#13;
the gates' of Damascus."&#13;
"I go not that way, sir," she replied.&#13;
"I wish to And the cave of an old hermit&#13;
named Ben Hadad."&#13;
Julian started as* he heard this; but&#13;
he quickly recovered himself.&#13;
"Do you know that old man?" he&#13;
asked.&#13;
"No, sir—I never saw him; but he&#13;
was a friend to my mother and I think&#13;
he will be a friend to me."&#13;
"Ah—do you go out from Damascus&#13;
to find a friend?"&#13;
"I pray you, sir, ask me no questions.&#13;
If yon know where Ben Hadad&#13;
lives, and it would not trouble you too&#13;
much, I freely'accept your escort"&#13;
"Noble lady, I not only know his&#13;
place of abode, but my own course lies&#13;
directly that way. If we start at once&#13;
and meet with no further obstacle,&#13;
we may reach it by the rising of another&#13;
sun."&#13;
"The sooner we start tte better,"&#13;
said Ulin; "and I can ride a long time&#13;
without resting."&#13;
"We will ride as fast and as far as&#13;
*ur horses are willing," added Julian,&#13;
as he truned to prepare for the move.&#13;
In a few minutes they were mounted,&#13;
Ulin and Albia once more taking&#13;
the horses that had brought them&#13;
from Damascus; and when all was&#13;
ready, the chieftain and his lieutenant&#13;
led off, leaving Shubal to ride with&#13;
the females, while Osmir and Selim&#13;
brought up the rear.&#13;
A few hours past noon they stopped&#13;
in a pleasant grove, where pure fresh&#13;
water bubbled forth from a basin of&#13;
whit* saad, and here they made a dinner&#13;
of bread and fruit while the horses&#13;
rested. Julian spoke with the princess&#13;
and asked her how she bore the fatigue&#13;
of t-7ie Journey; but his manner was&#13;
free from any shade of familiarity.&#13;
She in turn asked concerning his&#13;
wound, and expressed the hope that it&#13;
might not prove serious. When he&#13;
had gone, Albia remarked:&#13;
"The more I see of that man, the&#13;
more do I love and honor him. He&#13;
is no common man, my lady."&#13;
"I shall always remember him with&#13;
gratitude," returned Ulin, gazing down&#13;
as she spoke.&#13;
"And I," added the bondmalden,&#13;
earnestly, "should like to remain with&#13;
him, and serve him always."&#13;
"You are generous, Albia."&#13;
"Because I am but a poor slave, and&#13;
can only pay such debts with grateful&#13;
service.*'&#13;
"No, no, Albia—a slave no more.&#13;
When we left my father's house you&#13;
stepped forth free. You are my companion—&#13;
not my slave."&#13;
The girl caught the hand of her mistress,&#13;
and bathed it with tears.&#13;
"Free!" she murmured. "Aye—free&#13;
to serve you now and evermore! Still,&#13;
dear lady, there is a holy satisfaction&#13;
in feeling that the servile badge is&#13;
stricken off. Your poor slave loved&#13;
you truly, and you may be assured&#13;
that Bhe will love you none the less&#13;
now that she is a slave no more."&#13;
Shortly after this, and while yet Albia&#13;
was drying her eyes, Julian called&#13;
up the horses, and made ready for another&#13;
start.&#13;
Late in the evening they reached the&#13;
bank of the Pharphar, and once more&#13;
stopped to rest. The cave of the hermit&#13;
was only a few leagues distant,&#13;
and could be easily reached by midnight.&#13;
For himself the chieftain did&#13;
not care. He wished the princess to&#13;
act her own pleasure.&#13;
• » * •&#13;
The cave of Ben Hadad was in a&#13;
deep valley, where the river wound&#13;
oetween two long, high hms; and&#13;
thick woods shut it out from the heat&#13;
of the noonday sun and from the gaze&#13;
of the stranger. A good path led tu&#13;
it from the plain, thoush a person&#13;
needed acquaintance with the way in&#13;
order safely to follow it. Julian was&#13;
surely used to the path, for' he threaded&#13;
its various windings without any&#13;
hesitation, and at length drew up before&#13;
a bold face of rock, beneath an&#13;
overhanging shelf on which was the&#13;
entrance to Ben Hadad's cave. It was&#13;
too dark now to fee all this plainly,&#13;
but those who had been there before&#13;
knew very well where they were. A&#13;
loud call from Hobaddan soon brought&#13;
a lighted torch from the cave, borne&#13;
by a black slave.&#13;
"What ho, Ortok; where is your&#13;
master?" demanded the lieutenant&#13;
"Ho, ho—it is Hobaddan."&#13;
"Yes. you grinning rascal, it is I;&#13;
and it is also Julian; and, furthermore,&#13;
others are with us. Where is&#13;
Ben Hadad "&#13;
"He is in his bed, sir, sound asleep."&#13;
"And where is my—where is Ezabel?"&#13;
"She is also asleep, sir."&#13;
"Then call them at onee. But hold&#13;
—lead" us into the cave first."&#13;
The negro came out with his torch,&#13;
and while Hobaddan stopped a few&#13;
moments with the slaves to look after&#13;
the horses, Julian letf Ulin and Albia&#13;
into the cave. It was a broad, high&#13;
chamber in the solid rock, and the&#13;
light of the torch revealed the fact&#13;
that there must be other chambers beyond.&#13;
In a little while a tall, broad-shouldered&#13;
old man, with hair and beard as&#13;
white as the breast of a swan, came&#13;
forth from a distant passage, and almost&#13;
at the same time an aged woman&#13;
came from another direction. Julin&#13;
quickly approached them, and spoke&#13;
a few words in private and then said,&#13;
aloud:&#13;
"These ladies, good father and Brother/&#13;
seek your *Jd~juut protection. Aik&#13;
them BO questions tonight, tor they&#13;
are worn and weary, and need repots.&#13;
On the morrow they will tell you their&#13;
story." He then approached7 the princess.&#13;
The old woman, when she saw Albia's&#13;
face, recognised her at once; and&#13;
as she gazed upon the beautiful features&#13;
of the princess, the latter said:&#13;
tures of the princess, she said":&#13;
"Good mother." replied Ulin, "I shall&#13;
tell you the whole truth and then you&#13;
will know just how much protection'&#13;
we need,"&#13;
And thereupon she went on, and related&#13;
all that had transpired to the&#13;
present She told how she had consented&#13;
to be the wife of the king-r-she&#13;
told of the death of her mother—and&#13;
then ahe told how, in her bereavement,&#13;
she bgean to dread and fear the man&#13;
she had promised to marry.&#13;
The woman took Ulln's nandr and&#13;
pressed it warmly between her own.&#13;
"Dear child," she said, with much&#13;
emotion, for she had been deeply&#13;
moved during the recital—"you could&#13;
not have told your story to one who&#13;
could have better understood it. I not&#13;
only sympathize with you, but I will&#13;
protect you, if need be, with all the&#13;
power I possess; and I assure you that&#13;
our good Ben Hadad will join me with&#13;
all his heart. You did right in fleeing&#13;
from the wicked king. I know him&#13;
well, lady; and I believe you have not&#13;
only saved yourself from an unhappy&#13;
fate, but you have saved Horam from&#13;
committing more crime. Thus much&#13;
we understand," and now, my dear&#13;
Ulin, if I may venture upon the inquiry,&#13;
what do you propose to do in&#13;
the future?"&#13;
"My thoughts in that direction have&#13;
been vague and troublesome,". replied&#13;
the princess. She spoke frankly, for&#13;
Ezabel had won her entire confidence.&#13;
"I have reflected upon the subject, and&#13;
my mind has found but one resting&#13;
place. I must remain away from&#13;
Damascus until the king is dead. I&#13;
can think nothing more. Where I&#13;
abide I care not, so long as I am safe&#13;
from harm."&#13;
The princess fell upon the woman's&#13;
neck and blessed her; and after a little&#13;
time sne became calm, and wiped the&#13;
grateful tears from her face. Her next&#13;
question was of Julian. Had he yet&#13;
left the cave?"&#13;
"No," replied Ezabel; "nor will he&#13;
leave it at present! He is wounded in&#13;
the breast, and "&#13;
"Wounded!" repeated Ulin, catching&#13;
suddenly—at the word, and turning&#13;
pale. "Is it dangerous?"&#13;
"No, not dangerous, lady; but he&#13;
must have rest and nursing. It is&#13;
more serious than he at first thought;&#13;
but if he is careful, there will be no&#13;
danger."&#13;
"Oh," cried the maiden, in a tone of&#13;
relief, "I am glad it is not dangerous.&#13;
If he had suffered on my account, the&#13;
joy of my escape Crom Horam would&#13;
have been sadly darkened."&#13;
CHAPTER XVIII.&#13;
Ezabel bowed her head, and pressed&#13;
her hands upon her brow. There was&#13;
certainly some aeep and sudden emotion&#13;
moving within her, for her frame&#13;
trembled, and incoherent whisperings&#13;
fell from her lips.&#13;
"Julian will not suffer," she said,&#13;
when she at length raised her head.&#13;
"Ben Hadad has examined his wound,&#13;
and it can be easily healed."&#13;
"You have known Julian for some&#13;
time," pursued Ulin, musingly.&#13;
"Yes. I have known him from childhood,&#13;
and mv son has been his conttetta&#13;
WIS* Ball S&lt;s*ft*a» Mow a*4 with&#13;
OHMS' Moftsra XssptwisssMts.&#13;
"If," said a dealer in such things,&#13;
"anybody had told our grandfathers&#13;
that the time would come when we&#13;
should have ball-bearing grindstones&#13;
X suppose they would have thought he&#13;
was crazy; but we have them now and&#13;
they are not very costly, either. If the&#13;
grindstone is one that is worked with&#13;
a treadle there are ball bearings on&#13;
the crank, where the treadle rod is&#13;
connected, as well as on the shaft on&#13;
which the grindstone turns. Really, it&#13;
is a pleasure to see that homely old&#13;
tool, the grindstone, mounted on ball&#13;
bearings, and it is a positive delight to&#13;
see how easily such a grindstone turns.&#13;
But the ball bearings are not the only&#13;
modern improvement in grindstone&#13;
equipment. There are nowadays grindstone&#13;
frames and attachments that are&#13;
patented. The old, old way of turning&#13;
a grindstone "was-with-a^crankr or *&#13;
single treadle; but nowadays we have&#13;
single, treadles, one for each foot, aud&#13;
the frame that supports the grindstone&#13;
has upon one end of It a seat like you&#13;
see pn a mowing machine or anything&#13;
of that sort, this being by no means&#13;
a device for a lazy man.^but a convenient&#13;
means of enabling the man using&#13;
the grindstone to get at it to the best&#13;
advantage. If you, knowing the grindstone&#13;
of ancient times, will picture to&#13;
yourself a man sitting in a comfortable&#13;
seat so placed on the end of the&#13;
frame that he can get square at the&#13;
face of the stone, which he turns by&#13;
means of two treadles, one under each&#13;
foot, the stone itself turning on ball&#13;
bearings throughout, a grindstone yet&#13;
distinctly modernized, you will get&#13;
some idea of the difference between the&#13;
old grindstone and the new.—Detroit&#13;
Free Press.&#13;
If there ia any truth i »&#13;
that happinesav Is the&#13;
pais* mental and physical, taw&#13;
meat of it can only be torn* to&#13;
ten. But w far as the physical **&#13;
cerned, it is within&#13;
least measurably so, as far as&#13;
go. The sum of human w&amp;mrr t * tssst&#13;
line is made up of greater or less, 4»-&#13;
grees of physical suffering. The astosw&#13;
aches and pains which afflict nuMifcasT&#13;
are easy to reach and as easily eawseV&#13;
There are none in the whole catejsjvv*.&#13;
which, if taken in time,&#13;
cured. They must In soma U&#13;
filet the nerves, the bones, the&#13;
and joints of the human body.&#13;
are all more or less hurtful and&#13;
ful to the system. S t Jacob's OU 1»&#13;
made to cure them, to search out MeV&#13;
den pain spots, and to cure&#13;
in a true remedial and lasting&#13;
Very, very many have not known&#13;
plness for years til) they used i t&#13;
very many are puttlug oft cure&#13;
happiness because they don't use it.&#13;
" . • • _ , ' &lt; - • &gt; . .&#13;
cr&#13;
' - ' • ' : * • • !&#13;
' m&#13;
Every fool is fasinated by his&#13;
folly.&#13;
Ladle* Can Wear Shoe*&#13;
One size smaller after using;&#13;
Foot*Ease, a powder. It makes tiejftYt.&#13;
or new shoes easy. Cures swollen, ~&#13;
sweating, aching feet ingrowing:&#13;
corns and bunions. All druggists*;&#13;
shoe stores, 25c. Trial package&#13;
by mail. Address Allen &amp; Olmsted,,&#13;
Le Roy, N. Y.&#13;
A DISTINGUISHED MISSIONARY.&#13;
Washington, lnd.. Sept 23d.—There&#13;
is st present, living at 106 East 15th&#13;
street in this cityv a most remarkable&#13;
man. He is Rev. C. H. Thompson, and&#13;
he came to Washington from Little&#13;
York, lnd., a short time ago.&#13;
Rev. Mr. Thompson spent many&#13;
years of his long and useful life as a&#13;
missionary among the Indians of the&#13;
West The great exposure rnd the&#13;
drinking of so much bad water brought&#13;
on Dia^tes, and at Wagoner, Indian&#13;
Territory, he was struck down while&#13;
preaching.&#13;
Physicians, one of them a Chicago&#13;
specialist, pronounced his case hopeless&#13;
Dodd'8 Kidney Pills were recommended,-&#13;
and—as-a^last-resort be tried&#13;
them. Ho was completely cured, and&#13;
restored to good health and his case&#13;
and its cure has caused a sensation&#13;
among the physicians.&#13;
Will Lire In a Teat.&#13;
Edward Wise of New Castle, Del.,&#13;
son of the late Charles V. Wise of the&#13;
firm of Shapp &amp; Wise, of Philadelphia,&#13;
will have a large tent erected in the&#13;
yard of his home on Third street. In&#13;
the tent he will make his abode in&#13;
the hope of recovering his health.&#13;
In the house in which the members&#13;
of his family hate resided many cases&#13;
of illness have existed, and he believes&#13;
the building contains the germs of&#13;
disease.&#13;
Too many men mistake&#13;
for misfortunes.&#13;
their fasfttsv&#13;
What is the me of employ!&#13;
to do your dyeing for you.&#13;
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES yew&#13;
do it just as well as a profi&#13;
Sold by druggists, 10c, per&#13;
"Sever falter when yon step to 4 » i&gt;&#13;
right thing.&#13;
Pain relieved, sickness prevented, wj&#13;
timely use of Wizard Oil. Keep i t always&#13;
in the home.&#13;
Life is mostly made up of desire&#13;
regrets.&#13;
Hall'* Catarrh Core&#13;
Is a constitucioiial core. Price. 3Se&gt;&#13;
Some things are not as hard to peifoi&#13;
we once have proceeded to tackle them.&#13;
ATr*&gt; Wlnalow'* S o o t h i n g&#13;
Tor children teething, •oftem the „&#13;
Itawnatlon. allay* pain, c u m wind ooUa&#13;
The dance is as much tbe propaganda&#13;
as the gospel ts that of heuvea:&#13;
DON'T TAKE ANT CHAHGB&amp;&#13;
Kuss Bleaching Blue does the best work. ASP&#13;
pood grocers. 10c. Avoid cheap ImltaUo—i&#13;
Impulse raises the dust on the road,&#13;
slstence reaches the goal.&#13;
BE MEN. Zooklxoo. the great lartgontar,&#13;
at once. Sent for SI I pontage M M .&#13;
Zookl Co,, 1101 Russell St., Detroit, Mick.&#13;
The man who lives on top&#13;
shouldn't object to climate.&#13;
of&#13;
Piso's Cure cannot be too highly spoke* «f&#13;
a cough cure.—J. W. O'BRBIN, a s Third Ai&#13;
N., Minneapolis. Minn.. Jan. 6, 1980.&#13;
A slip of the tongue is often more&#13;
thaa a slip &lt;m the ice.&#13;
THE CHEAPEST PAINT&#13;
The economy in using&#13;
Devoe ready paint is in results&#13;
more than price. It&#13;
stant companion."&#13;
"Your son?"&#13;
"Ah—perhaps you did not know that&#13;
Hobaddan was my son."&#13;
"I did nt"&#13;
"Well—such is the fact. Hobaddan&#13;
is my only child. He was a strong&#13;
youth, with the stature of manhood,&#13;
while yet Julian was an infant; and&#13;
from those early years the two have&#13;
been always together. In the beginning&#13;
Hobaddan was the guide and protector;&#13;
but In later years, since Julian&#13;
has reached the age and strength of&#13;
maturity, my son has been consent to&#13;
call him master."&#13;
Julian is much feared in Damascus/'&#13;
said Ulin.&#13;
"The king fears him," returned Ezabel,&#13;
quickly; "and he has occasion for&#13;
fear; but no poor man fears him.&#13;
However. I will not take it upon myseif&#13;
to excuse Julian's faults. He may&#13;
have sinned; he may have pursued his&#13;
revenge too far. Let those who have&#13;
suffered what he has suffered condemn&#13;
him if they can."&#13;
"He has suffered much, good mother?"&#13;
"More than I can tell, my child,"&#13;
"He Is of Damascus born?"&#13;
Yes."&#13;
"And—perhaps—of honored family?"&#13;
"The blood which runs in his veins&#13;
is as pure and noble as ever supported&#13;
a human life. The king himself cannot&#13;
boast a nobler origin; aye," continued&#13;
Esabel, with startling earnestness,&#13;
"and even now, with the whole&#13;
story of his life up to this present&#13;
hour, stamped upon his brow, he is&#13;
nobler, and better, and purer, than the&#13;
lords of Damascus. He is a man, and&#13;
his heart is true; and I love him for&#13;
the generous, devoted love there is fa&#13;
his soul."&#13;
(To be continued*) , ;&#13;
Are Ton Using Allen's Foot-Ease?&#13;
It is the only cure for Swollen,&#13;
Smarting, Burning, Sweating Feet,&#13;
Corns Snd Bunions. Ask for Allen's&#13;
Foot-Ease, a powder to be shaken intp-j&#13;
the shoes. At all Druggists and Shoe ; c o v e r s m o r e a n d l a s t s l o n g e r&#13;
StojBMa_25c\ SjMnpleseot FREE. Ad- I . , _ , , ... °&#13;
dress Allen S. O T m s T e ^ n ^ e T l o y T ^ ^ - Y ^ n a ^ - l e a a a n d — O i l , t W O _ t a V&#13;
There is a strong" resemblance&#13;
tween the union and the leek.&#13;
be-&#13;
I GOOD HOUSEKEEPERS&#13;
I use the best. That is why the? buy 1 Bleaching Blue. All good grocers, 13c.&#13;
Russ&#13;
Some men's understanding is limited only by&#13;
the size of their feet.&#13;
Hot Weather Health.&#13;
During tbe heated term of July and&#13;
August one should be careful to keep all&#13;
the organs of the system in free work*&#13;
in? condition.&#13;
Baxter's Mandrake Bitters taken before&#13;
meals will ward off diseases incident&#13;
to this trying season.&#13;
| W.N.U.—DETROIT—NO.Se—IQOl&#13;
I tinea aasverisg Adve-tlseaieata KiaHy&#13;
) Hestioa This rapen&#13;
one; ten to one of some paint*&#13;
Use Devoe; and figure cost&#13;
by the square yard, or year,&#13;
not by the gallon; it's tbe&#13;
cheapest paint-made, figured&#13;
that way.&#13;
Ask the nearest dealer for&#13;
insist on having' it. Our pamphlet&#13;
painting- free if you mention this&#13;
GOOD-PAINT DEVOE, CHICAGO.&#13;
I t f R V r O I quickrelief aad &lt;&#13;
Book of testftroal&amp;is and is Sals* sa, sw a. eassrs SOBS. S«* a&gt; atsa&#13;
vVfJENSION^&#13;
. ^ ^&#13;
[&gt;r»ln civil war. IS MUudtcatta* el&#13;
ifafStC.eawlta&#13;
•or* «r«*. ua* ITbompsM't Eft • • • • *&#13;
AGENTS WANTED AIM orsnui. r a m u x o t n m ASD KSSI- p f s t r f t i n g r a r v&#13;
MIST BtsralCT B4*A6K*s, to handle tb« L J * S i a i l i p i&#13;
only amhorlted ofleial. authentic life of I V I C K M S a C w •&#13;
a)ao RlTinff lire* of oar other martyr Tr iIJuuu, alaaaSa IBS\&#13;
Garfield; eonplett inside htotory of the vlllaiaoaa worktnga uf the anarchistic if rimim. animate B —&#13;
trared; over SO© page*; liberal commission to ajrrou and a straight gaaraatetd salary to lao— fc» aSja*&#13;
advanced poattlooa. Tou never had a better opportunity to make big money qatckr* aad easily thaaM*.&#13;
have today. To* can make SAOO per month for the next three months pasolng- this marvatoas hlataaj •**•&#13;
sreat aad food aod useful life. Strike sow, while the Iron Is hot. Do not delay, for every day Is wamT ~&#13;
• • 0 . 0 0 to SSO.OO to yoo. Aad Mar la mtad that tf yoa demonstrate to ne that yea aaa aaS&#13;
that later in the fan we win be wllltog to employ yoa nnder a straight oat guaranteed salary to an '&#13;
Instruct other agents. This is the chaaco of a lifetime. We make our own bocks aad can easily&#13;
the offer of aay other BOOM aad will do so. Maay of these concerns that are edvenfcmg MeKJnley I&#13;
merely, genera) agents aad boy their hooka from ne. We advise yon to order from as and thus deal &lt;&#13;
with the maaofactnrere. Credit given; freight pal J: oatflt free. Write today ami eaael t e a &lt;&#13;
poetag* on oatttt. CO-OPKRATIVK PFH. CO. (Mannfacta rem of the oelyoaS&#13;
of McKlpl»y&gt;. SOS-3SS DKABBORX STKKKT, CHICAGO. .&#13;
S0Z0D0NT for tut Teeth ». Breath 25*&#13;
At all Stares, ar by Mall fw As pries. NALL i lUCKEL, Saw T o * .&#13;
*.'&#13;
1&#13;
i&#13;
V-&#13;
*Y&#13;
J '% ,P^' •fc 3$ WJ.&#13;
WW.;. UL^I " « ' • : &gt; ! .&#13;
, ' ¥ * ' . #&#13;
h ^-&#13;
':wr •A-&#13;
• ' T " #P rr- V"&#13;
^ ,&#13;
•.*,JV'.&#13;
^ : : 1^-&#13;
0&lt; -*1'.&#13;
i-&#13;
•&#13;
•**" ; \ /-&#13;
.. V^*-. -A. #'*»«•-. «ufe*&gt;* '••M*'"&#13;
Sue fhwlnwjj fjfojratdj.&#13;
F. L ANDREWS^d CO. PROPRIETORS.&#13;
THURSDAY, SEPT. 26,1901.&#13;
Strong spirit of ammonia applied&#13;
to the wounds of snake bites&#13;
or rabid animals is better than&#13;
any caustic. It neutralizes the&#13;
izirus.&#13;
THE TRIP TO FRANKFORT-OH- THE-LAKE&#13;
WHAT WE SAW AND HOW IT IMPRESSED US.&#13;
TO Cute a Col d In One Day&#13;
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets.&#13;
All d r u g g u t s refund tbe money&#13;
if it fails to CUM. E. W. Grove's signature&#13;
is on each box. 25c.&#13;
' C a r b o l i c acid p o i s o n i n g c a n b e&#13;
q u i c k l y c u r e d b y g i v i n g cider vine&#13;
g a r d i l u t e d w i t h e q u a l p a r t s of&#13;
w a t e r i n half a t u m b l e r f u l d o s e s&#13;
every five o r t e n m i n u t e s f o r a i e w&#13;
times.&#13;
Stop t h e CouffU wntl w o r k s off Ibe&#13;
Cold.&#13;
Laxative Bromo-Quinine Tablets cure&#13;
a cold in one day. N o ' u r e , no pay.&#13;
Price 25 cents.&#13;
Undoubtedly tbe reduced rates to j T H E CLIMATE.&#13;
t b e northern part ot Michigan during j The climate at Frankfort, while&#13;
the past few 3 ears have given moat of they have very warm weather at&#13;
o u r readers our idea feomewbat of the times, there is always a refreshing&#13;
vastneas of our state and its .produc-j breeze I row lake Michigan which re-&#13;
A towel d i p p e d i n b o i l i n g w a t e r&#13;
w r u n g o u t rapidly, folded t o p r o -&#13;
p e r size, a n d a p p l i e d t o t h e a b d o -&#13;
m e n , w i t h a d r y flannel over t h e&#13;
h o t towels, a c t s like m a g i c in i n -&#13;
fantile colic.—M. E . D o u g l a s .&#13;
Working Night and Day.&#13;
The busiest and mightiest little&#13;
tbmtf that ever was make is Dr.&#13;
King's New Life Pills. These pills&#13;
change weakness into strenguh, listlessness&#13;
into energy, braia-fag into&#13;
mental power. They're wonderful in&#13;
buildinar up the health. Only 25c per&#13;
box. Sold by F . A. Sigler.&#13;
Artificial silk h a s b e e u p r o d u c&#13;
ed from a v a r i e t y of s o u r c e s such&#13;
a s wood p u l p , etc, a n d in t h e&#13;
Glasgow e x h i b i t i o n , n e a r t h e&#13;
M o o r i s h stall, t h e r e is s h o w u a&#13;
c o m p l e t e series of s p e c i m e n s t o&#13;
show h o w c o t t o n waste c a n b e e c u&#13;
v e r t e d i n t o silk of very fine fibre,&#13;
w h i c h t a k e s o n dye-stuffs i n a&#13;
m o s t p e r f e c t m a n n e r . T h e p r o -&#13;
d u c t is k n o w n a s C h a r d o n e t silk.&#13;
A Shocking Calamity.&#13;
"Lately befell a railroad laborer,"&#13;
writes Dr. A. Kellet, of Willi ford,&#13;
Ark., "Hi*s foot w^s badly crushed,&#13;
but Bucklen's Arnica Salve quickly&#13;
cured him. Its simply wonderful for&#13;
Burns. Boils, Piles and all s^kin eruptions.&#13;
It's tbe world's champion healer.&#13;
Cure guaranteed. 25c. Sold bv&#13;
P. A. Sigler.&#13;
Miss E u i m a G o l d m a n t h e a n a r -&#13;
chist t e a c h e r , d i d n o t like t h e idea&#13;
of b e i n g c o m p e l l e d t o a t t e n d a&#13;
m e m o r i a l service for P r e s . M c K i n -&#13;
ley last T h u r s d a y . S e b e i n g a n&#13;
i n m a t e of a p r i s o n was obliged t o&#13;
obey rules, a s all p r i s o n s h e l d m e -&#13;
morial services.&#13;
A night of Terror.&#13;
"Awful anxiety was felt for the&#13;
widow of the brave Genera! Burnham&#13;
of Macbias, Me., when tbe doctors said&#13;
she would die from pneumonia before&#13;
morning" whites Mrs. S. H. Lincoln,&#13;
who attended her that fearful night,&#13;
but she begged for Dr. King's New&#13;
d i s c o v e r y , which had saved her life,&#13;
and cured hej of consumption. After&#13;
taking, she slept all night. Further&#13;
use entirely cured her." This marvellous&#13;
medicine is guaranteed to cure&#13;
all Throat, Chest and Lung Diseases.&#13;
Only 50c and a $1.00. Trial bottles&#13;
free at P . A, Sigler's drug store.&#13;
ti.veness. We have made the trijTsevexal&#13;
times and have noted many&#13;
change? in a few years. Many thou*&#13;
sanos of acres which a lew years ago&#13;
was nothing but A dreary waste, covered&#13;
by the debris left by the lumber&#13;
mill and forest fires have been reclaimed&#13;
and to-day large rields of corn&#13;
and other grain can be seen.&#13;
In and around Alma we could not&#13;
help but notice that every little patch&#13;
of ground had been tilled '&lt;y someone&#13;
and sown to the sugar beet to supply&#13;
the beet s u s a r factory at Alma besides&#13;
thousands of acres on tbe farms. For&#13;
miles each side; of that place vast fields&#13;
of beets could be seen on every side.&#13;
Evidently the beet sutjar industry has&#13;
come to stay in the central p a r t of&#13;
our statu at least.&#13;
lieves the oppressive heat. In winter&#13;
they have plenty of snow but we were&#13;
surprised to learn that the thermometer&#13;
seldom reaches below zero and&#13;
that is one ot tbe main reasons that&#13;
peaches thrive. We were informed&#13;
tbat frosts seldom visit that section&#13;
sooner tban the last of October and&#13;
later than the middle of ..&gt;ay in the&#13;
spring. Ot" course they have strong&#13;
disagreeable winds in the winter although&#13;
the little bav does not freeze&#13;
over so but what t h e ferry runs un&#13;
different piaces of boarding tbe next&#13;
day. Thoss who went for bass or pike&#13;
got them in great abundance.&#13;
Crystal lake is a beautiful sheet ol&#13;
water varying from two to three miles&#13;
wide and twelve long, the west end&#13;
coining within only a short distance&#13;
of lake Michigan and only one and a&#13;
half miles walk from Frankfort. The&#13;
! * V f !CTT&#13;
tfctiubore&#13;
•and&#13;
1 I'i'frfl'y g&#13;
tentaAndpitcYttV&#13;
2 n l '• k l i ^ a l o ^ e &lt; ^ i e g * n t&#13;
hotel erected by tbe A n a , Arbor rail-.&#13;
road Co., will be in dperatton when&#13;
there will be plenty of accomodatioi&#13;
[for all, who may wjah to go to Prankfort-&#13;
ori-the lakes.&#13;
Tbe Ann Arbor Co. believes ra being&#13;
talked about and are continually d&lt;&#13;
ing something to bring themselves before&#13;
public notice and to this end ue+»&#13;
freely of printers ink as tbe most sn*e&gt;&#13;
way to do so. Their cheap excursioi.&#13;
to northern points have oeen patronized&#13;
by thousands, and few there are&#13;
shores ot the lake are sand raakrn^f*110, ^ n o t w a p t t o ^ m a k e tbe kii*&#13;
the finest kind of bathing. The little&#13;
streams that empty into the lake (and&#13;
they are numerous) abound with&#13;
speckled trout. It certainly is a raecca&#13;
tor tbe sport loving tourist.&#13;
THE SCENKRY.&#13;
The scenerv about Frankfort, and&#13;
Crystal lake does not vary tr.uch from&#13;
til J a n u a r y , and the captain of tbe ! other places along the shore of lake&#13;
little ferry boat Pottawattamie, reaps Michigan although one never tires of&#13;
a rich harvest. j the beautiful green hills or the white&#13;
THE PEOPLE. sand along the shore. The ever&#13;
We found tbe people genial, whole ! changing view on the lake as vessels&#13;
souled and alt seemed to try to make! come and go is entertaining and the&#13;
the visit ol the tourist pleasant. J. R. i everlasting s-w i-s h, s-w-i-s-b of the&#13;
iXT" ••"\&gt;~'i*&amp;\ ,» .-a. - -.Tr*-? -*r&#13;
- 7jsh.»-.&#13;
i t w i , r i j ? « f ?-.•?&lt;•&#13;
VIEW OF FRANKFORT FROM SOITH SIDE OF BETSY BAY.&#13;
Further on north among the pin«&#13;
lands, once, covered by the timber thai&#13;
is now mfrde into our homes or scattered&#13;
to the utmost parts ol the, United&#13;
States for building purposes, these,&#13;
lands now barren of all vegetation and&#13;
on which nothing seemingly but timber&#13;
will grow, makes one think ot the&#13;
forestry effort being made in our state&#13;
to replant and start again the forests&#13;
Criss proprietor of the Commercial&#13;
hotel, on the south side, although very&#13;
busy With his peach farm Of 4.500 trees&#13;
found time to entertain his guests and&#13;
many baskets of fine peaches are l*ft&#13;
in the waiting room for guests to help&#13;
themselves and he never tired of giv&#13;
injr all the information wanted in regards&#13;
»o boats, fishing etc., and is will-&#13;
_toJa!vo anyone o u t to tbe peach farm&#13;
water as it comes upon ihn beech has&#13;
a most soothing effect and one never&#13;
tires in good weather of climbing to&#13;
the top of the bills, where an u n o b -&#13;
structed view can be had for miles,&#13;
and fitting for hours wa'ching tbe&#13;
ever changing scene. The small fishing&#13;
smack which goes out every morning,&#13;
returning in the evening with the&#13;
spoils of the day, the three-masted&#13;
schooner, or sleam barge, all form a&#13;
scene that is nevar to be forgotten.&#13;
The light house and life-saving station&#13;
are also points ot interest and it.&#13;
is well worth ones time to try and be&#13;
present on drilling days when tjie&#13;
civ-w come out. The shore is parroted&#13;
continually and at the first signal ol&#13;
distress the civw are ready to take&#13;
tlver lives in their own lands to rescue&#13;
A Chicago specialist advertised&#13;
for twenty boys to furnish skin&#13;
forBkin grafting and agreed to&#13;
pay three dollars apiece. One&#13;
hundred eighty boys responded to&#13;
the advertisement and there were&#13;
not twenty sound ones in the&#13;
whole lot A large per cent of&#13;
them were barred because of&#13;
cigarette heart This is an encouraging&#13;
outlook for the future&#13;
America. So far cigarette&#13;
so that future generations may reap w n e r e they can spend the day p i l i n g&#13;
where we have sown and our state not, and eating pcac es or fishing on the&#13;
be entirely destitu'e of timber. Al- lake, or in the tront stream* near l.y&#13;
ready many hundreds of acres have, X|r&lt; Oriss u'ainis Frankfort to bo the&#13;
given to the enterprise and some help ! home of the cantelonp*, 0.«aae as in&#13;
given hy the state but on studying j fact any muskj.rte!on_and it' WH are&#13;
the matter more thoroughly and . - a n v judge of tbe flavor of such Mi it&#13;
knowing something of these thousand ; w e a a r P e w j t h h j n i i Through him&#13;
acres of land that will never raise j a n f } t l , e compliments of Con Comfort&#13;
anything but timber we certainly are! another genial fruit grower we -were&#13;
impressed with tbe thought that too:&#13;
much cannot te dene or granted to&#13;
push the work and that immediately.;&#13;
FRANKFORT. I&#13;
When we a r r i v e ! at Frankfort a&#13;
cold drizzly rain had set in which con- j&#13;
tinued more or Jess for twenty-four :&#13;
hours and we almost wished we bad!&#13;
sta-ffl &amp;t home; but with the next day i&#13;
•he sun sltone we thawed up and he- ]&#13;
gan to enjoy ourselves. T:ie village;&#13;
of Frankfort is situated on Hefsy Hay j&#13;
and river which forms an excellent j&#13;
harbor and shipping point. Looking&#13;
around on the vast sand hills which!&#13;
surround tbe pace we wondeied what&#13;
the product could be unle&amp;s it was the&#13;
lumber, lath, and shingles made from '&#13;
the logs that come down Hetsy river, i "~ —— _ .&#13;
We found out however by keeping i a b ! e t u l , r i n K h o i n e a s f i a H a h ^ k e t of, the helpless mariner or ventursome&#13;
our e v ^ and ea*s open that this was ° * a y f t ™s k™elon ** it has ever been i fourists and many persons owe their&#13;
again.&#13;
Another important project which&#13;
will call for an additional expenditure&#13;
of 1150,000 is announced by tbe Ann&#13;
Arbor railroad in connection with the&#13;
vast changes and improvements being&#13;
worked on Frankfort-on-the-Lake,&#13;
For some time the company ha*&#13;
been securing the right at' way, and is&#13;
finally in a position to announce th»-&#13;
construction of a railroad connecting&#13;
Frankfort and Crystal Lake, running&#13;
for a great part of the distance alonp&#13;
the shores of Lake Michigan and Crystal&#13;
Lake.&#13;
The primary purpose of this ina&#13;
provement is to enable tbe guests athe&#13;
new hotel and the occupants, of&#13;
tbe summer cottages at Frankfort t -&#13;
enjoy tbe splendid bathing facilitietwhich&#13;
will be provided at Crysta'&#13;
Lake. In tbe summer open cars wil&#13;
leave Frankfort every 45 minutes&#13;
The entire trip will require only 45&#13;
minutes, and the passengers will b»-&#13;
enabled to stop at the grounds and at&#13;
the colonies at Frankfort and Crystal&#13;
Lake.&#13;
People who have visited ,Frankfort&#13;
and Crystal Lake will recall that th^&#13;
two resorts are already connected b\&#13;
rail, but frbis new circle railroad will&#13;
be a vast improvement for summer&#13;
traffic following-, as-Ur-does, a pic4ur^-&#13;
esque and beautiful route close to tlvshores&#13;
of the two lakes. It will als&lt;&#13;
provide of course more frequent and&#13;
more rapid service, and the ride in itself&#13;
will be so pleasant and beautiful&#13;
that it will prove one of the attractions&#13;
of tbe resort.&#13;
To those who have never made a&#13;
trip through that part.of Michigan we&#13;
would say tbat it is worth the price&#13;
just to get an idea of the size of the&#13;
state and what.is done along tbe hue.&#13;
The cost will be small and no one&#13;
would ever regret it.&#13;
We took i&gt;evera! pictures of the&#13;
scenes in and around Frankfort and&#13;
will be ^lad to show them and give&#13;
any information we cao to those who&#13;
wish to make the trip either this or&#13;
next season,&#13;
Railroad Guide.&#13;
THE NEW HOTEL, "ISLAND VIEW HOUSE."&#13;
one of the- best peach producing&#13;
counties in the state and that hundreds&#13;
of bushels were shipped daily&#13;
from this port to nearly every village&#13;
and city on lake Michigan. Every&#13;
riraft from the Ann Arbor enr ferries&#13;
to the little''hooker"-n! only a few&#13;
tons bw rden take out frrm 10 to 500&#13;
bushels of Frankfort/peaches which&#13;
' o u r fortune to see. Mr. Comfort raises&#13;
what is called tbe J a p mu&gt;kmelon&#13;
also, wbich for flavor is ah-ad of the&#13;
same k i n ! grown in its horn* country&#13;
Japan. Tins of IOUIMJ is by repo.t lor&#13;
wo never ate any in J a p a n ' hut think&#13;
they could not h« l&gt;etter.&#13;
THE FISHING.&#13;
T1I:J fishing there is superb. We&#13;
irt has been no bar to matrimy,—&#13;
Ex.&#13;
lives to the crew at Frank forty11 Only&#13;
Sunday last they picked up*'three&#13;
whose boat capnzed in the blow, and&#13;
saved them from a watery grave.&#13;
ACCOMODATIONS.&#13;
The hotel accomodations at present&#13;
are good and will be much improved&#13;
in the season to come and no one need j&#13;
want for a good place to sb'^p and eat&#13;
at prices ranging from $1 00 to $:1.00&#13;
per day, Week board can ue secured&#13;
tor even h*s. Many private houses&#13;
&gt; AMD 8TEAM8HIP LINES*&#13;
Popular route tor 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 i l r o a d , J a n . 1 , 1 9 3 1 .&#13;
Trains leave South Lyon as follows:&#13;
For Detroit and Eest,&#13;
10:36 a. m., .1:04 p. ra.; 8:58 p. tu.&#13;
For Grand Rapids, North and West,&#13;
9:4o a. m., 2:08 p. m. 6:20 p. M.&#13;
For Saginaw and Bav Citv,&#13;
10:3« a. m.\ ft:04 p. ru., 8:"&gt;8 p. m.&#13;
For Toledo and South, I0R»(&gt; a. m,&#13;
KliANN P.iV, H. V. MOELMCK,&#13;
Ageot, Wcmt'i r.vo&lt;i. ti. P. A., Detroit,&#13;
we found rivaled any peach we ever • are not. much ol a &gt;portsman but anya&#13;
t e t . r f l v o r . Wjlbin only about tour • one can catch fish there. ThuiMlay,&#13;
mite* &lt;&gt;f thn i',Hy thf»re »r* several tin company with A. E Clark of Shot.&#13;
farms that baVe tr(&gt;m 3.000 to 20^000 herd mot IVny b\u mil of Frankfort j a « a n a i m i n g to tak« roomer* and&#13;
tree* in bearing some of tbem having | we enjoyed a iouple ot hour* perch I hoarders so one c a i be accomodated&#13;
fishing on Crystal Jake and as a 16snit&#13;
120 fine fellows were cooked at the&#13;
been bearing for sixteen years and are&#13;
I at hardy, seem ing ly as an apple tret. j&#13;
al most as cbeaply as at home. Then&#13;
there are hindreds who take their&#13;
ttrand Trunk Railway System.&#13;
»» 0.-14 a. m. Jack&gt;on,L netrofc, nod&#13;
6*5 p. ra. I intermedials Btatlou* mail and ex p.&#13;
.Tftcknon. Lenox, and&#13;
4:45 p. m.[intermediate station*&#13;
I _ mixed.&#13;
S'M ft a.m.&#13;
8:16 p. m.&#13;
7:55a.'m. |&#13;
?&#13;
The fclft a. m. and 6:4» p j o . trajni bare throng*&#13;
coach between Jackson and Detroit.&#13;
W. J. Bhwk, A Flntkaer&#13;
I I liltlitilthIMlfill'1 Tn T- '&#13;
-y&#13;
j«wei stoves art N U *r&#13;
TEEPLE ^ OADWELL.&#13;
6 9 ^ « * ^ t )&#13;
W. C- 7. UEdited&#13;
hy the W. C. T P.of Plt&gt;ctn»v&#13;
N i n e t y p e r cent, of t h e s a l o o n s&#13;
of N e w Y o r k a n d B r o o k l y n a r e&#13;
o w n e d by b r e w e r s .&#13;
G e o r g i a will m a k e t h e p r o h i b i t&#13;
tion of t h e l i q u o r traffic t h e p r i n -&#13;
cipal, issue in t h e n e x t p o l i t i c a l&#13;
c a m p a i g n .&#13;
T h e N e w Y o r k L i f e I n s u r a n c e&#13;
c o m p a n y h a s w h e e l e d i n t o l i n e&#13;
mud e s t a b l i s h e d a t o t a l a b s t a i n e n c e&#13;
d e p a r t m e n t .&#13;
H y d e p a r k , C h i c a g o , is t h e l a r -&#13;
gest m u n i c i p a l t e r r i t o r y u n d e r&#13;
p r o h i b i t i o n in t h e U n i t e d S t a t e s&#13;
in p r o p o r t i o n t o p o p u l a t i o n . I t&#13;
nas g r o w n from 90,000 in 1890 t o&#13;
A sleek s t r a n g e r g o t a nice wad&#13;
of money from a n A d r i a n livery&#13;
firm for a l a r g e call clock. H e&#13;
had sold lots of a d v e r t i s i n g space,&#13;
on s a m e for $5 to $10 p e r space.&#13;
T h e clock was a t l a s t p u t i n p l a c e&#13;
a n d t h e t i m e p i e c e a n d a d v e r t i s e&#13;
merits p a i d for, T h e n t h e clock&#13;
failed to r u n p r o p e r l y a n d t h e&#13;
sleek s t r a u g e r took i t u p t o h i s&#13;
r o o m to fix it. U p t o d a t e n e i t h e r&#13;
t h e s t r a n g e r , h i s r o o m n o r t h e&#13;
wonderful clock h a v e b e e n located.&#13;
•Some p h i l o s p h e r w i t h a s e n s e&#13;
of k e e n o b s e r v a t i o n s a y s : " T h e&#13;
a v e r a g e w e s t e r n f a r m e r toils e a r l y&#13;
and late, often d e p r i v i n g himself&#13;
of n e e d e d r e s t — f o r w h a t ? T o feed&#13;
h o g s — f o r w h a t ? T o g e t m o r e&#13;
m o n e y w i t h w h i c h t o b u y m o i e&#13;
l a n d — f o r w h a t ? T o r a i s e m o r e&#13;
"Corir=for what?"—Tft raise- nior-e-k&#13;
h o g s — f o r w h a t ? T o b u y m o r e&#13;
land. A n d w h y d o e s h e wish&#13;
m o r e l a n d ? W h y , h e w i s h e s t o&#13;
raise raor^ corn, to feed m o r e h o g s&#13;
to b u y m o r e l a n d t o raise m o r e&#13;
c o r n t o feed m o r e hogs. A n d in&#13;
212,000.&#13;
A t t h e r e c e n t B r i t i s h c o n g r e s s&#13;
&gt;n t u b e r c u l o i s , P r o f e s s o r B r o u n r -&#13;
lel, d e a n of t h e m e d i c a l faculty of&#13;
Paris, said a n y m e a s u r e s t e n d i n g&#13;
:o l i m i t t h e r a v a g e s of a l c o h o l i s m&#13;
vould d i m i n i s h t h e m o r t a l i t y from&#13;
•ousumpt.ion.&#13;
N o m a n h a s ever h a d occasion&#13;
.) r e g r e t t h a t h e was n o t a d d i c t e d&#13;
ro t h e u s e of l i q u o r s . N o w o m a n&#13;
ias ever h a d occasiou t o r e g r e t&#13;
h a t s h e w a s n o t i n s t r u m e n t a l i n&#13;
n f l u e n c i n g y o u n g m e n to use i n -&#13;
d i c a n t s , — J o h n D . Rockefeller.&#13;
&gt;exter Mosquitoes May Transmit Malaria.&#13;
U p o n s u b j e c t i n g t h e blood of&#13;
wo p a t i e n t s in D e x t e r t o a n a l y -&#13;
sis t h e d o c t o r foirad~H fille d with&#13;
n a l a r i a g e r m s of t h e t e r t i a n form. ! g u i l t y of a m i s d e m e a n e r a n d on&#13;
)r. D o c k of t h e U n i v e r s i t y of • conviction t h e r e o f s h a l l b e p u n i s h&#13;
l i c h i g a n w a s i n f o r m e d a n d h e ed b y i m p r i s i o n m e n t i n t h e coun-&#13;
- m t a m a n from t h e college^ h e r e ' ty jail n o t m o r e t h a n n i n e t y d a y s&#13;
• ) c a t c h m o s q u i t o e s t o e x p e r i m e n t 0 i b y fine n o t l e s s t h a n $ 5 o r&#13;
/ i t h , as h e t h o u g h t t h a t t h i s d i s - m o r e t h a n $100 o r by b o t h&#13;
&gt;;se, as well a s y e l l o w fever is s u c h fine a n d i m p r i s o n m e n t in t h e&#13;
s p r e a d by m o s q u i t o e s . I d i s c r e t i o n of t h e c o u r t . " W i t h&#13;
T h e disease is s i m i l a r t o t h e 1 t h i s law in forve t h e " s a f e s t " w a y&#13;
Ad f a s h i o n e d fever a n d a g u e , n o j is t o buy y o u r m e l o n s a n d o t h e r&#13;
•ises of w h i c h — e x c e p t i n g t h o s e ^ fruit.&#13;
:om S p a n i s h w a r — h a v e b e e n r e -&#13;
ported i n t h i s vicinity i n a b o u t 20&#13;
ear.&#13;
A c a n n i n g f a c t o r y i s o n e ; of t h e&#13;
p o s s i b i l i t i e s i n t h e n e a r l u t u r e In.&#13;
B r i g h t o n , l t ' m i g b t b e w«H f a r&#13;
t h e f a r m e r s b e f o r e t h e y i n v e s t&#13;
t h e i r b a r d e a r n e d c a s h i n t h e e n -&#13;
t e r t e r p r i s e t o i n v e s t i g a t e f o r t h e&#13;
s a k e of h a v i n g a f a c t o r y , s o m e of&#13;
t h e c a n n i n g f a c t o r i e s i n t h e s o u t h&#13;
e r n p a r t of t h e s t a t e a n d see if i t&#13;
is a p a y i n g v e n t u r e . I f a c o m -&#13;
p a n y will a g r e e t o f u r n i s h t h e&#13;
f a c t o r y a n d f a r m e r t o s u p p l y i t&#13;
w i t h v e g t a b l e s a n d f r u i t i t w o u l d&#13;
b e a g o o d t h i n g ; b u t w h e n t h e farm&#13;
e r h a s t o f u r n i s h t h e c a s h t o&#13;
b u i l d t h e factory t h e n s u p p l y i t&#13;
i t s o m e t i m e s p r o v e s a failure.&#13;
S u c h a n e n t e r p r i s e w o u l d b e a&#13;
g o o d t h i n g i n a n y t o w n a n d vicini&#13;
t y if i t is r u n o n t h e p r i n c i p a l s&#13;
of a n y o t h e r b u s i n e s s .&#13;
.-* W A ^ T E r &gt; "&#13;
Weak men, weak women, pale&#13;
men, pale women, ner»ous men, nervous&#13;
women, debilitated men, debilitated&#13;
women, to take KmU'a Red Pills&#13;
tor Wan People. They restore Health,&#13;
Strength and Beauty. Wake up,&#13;
brace u p by taking them before the&#13;
hot weather. They are the great body&#13;
builder and developer, Spring Tonic&#13;
and Blood medicine, 25c a box.&#13;
Knills White Liver Pills are the&#13;
m e a t Liver Invisrorator, Bowel Regulator.&#13;
25 do*e.s 25c.&#13;
Knill's Blue Kidney Pills cure&#13;
Backache and Kidney troubles. 25c&#13;
a. box.&#13;
When General QMif^irifr in China.&#13;
fays a contributor t o p t u y t Stories, lie&#13;
Journeyed by water from Tien-tsin to&#13;
Peking. One morning there was no&#13;
wind, and the .coolies, walking along&#13;
the river bank, pulled the houseboat.&#13;
They made little progress, and finally&#13;
the general called his Chinese servant&#13;
and said:&#13;
"Boy, why for these coolies no can&#13;
walkee more fast?"&#13;
"Must talhee lowder," the boy replied.&#13;
The general, thinking the boy's meaning&#13;
was that Lie should speak fn a tone&#13;
the coolies could overhear, raised bjs&#13;
voiee and repeated:&#13;
"Why for these coolies no can walkee&#13;
more fast?"&#13;
To, which tiie boy Imperturbably answered&#13;
as before, "Must talkee lowder."&#13;
Several times this dialogue was repeated,&#13;
and General Grant did talkee&#13;
louder, until he fairly shouted.&#13;
At last the boy slightly varied his&#13;
response: "No 'casion speak so high,"&#13;
he said. "More better talkee lowder."&#13;
Our hero was just beginning to feel&#13;
like Alice in Wonderlaud when-a ray&#13;
of light seemed to flash across the&#13;
mind of the boy, and he rushed to the&#13;
end of the boat, seized fhe captain's&#13;
arm and, dragging him to General&#13;
Grant, exclaimed: '&#13;
"This man belong [pidgin English&#13;
for 'is'J lowder; just now can talkee&#13;
he."&#13;
General Grant saw the joke. On Chinese&#13;
boats the captain is called "lowd&#13;
e r r&#13;
H e r D o u b t .&#13;
Mabel—What do you think of the&#13;
Rev. Dr. Leach's idea that there will&#13;
be few if any men in heaven?&#13;
Maud—Huh! Would you call that&#13;
heaven?—Chicago Tribune.&#13;
Stood Death off.&#13;
E. B. Munday, a lawyer of Henrietta,&#13;
Tex., once foiled a grave digger.&#13;
He says: '• My brottfer was very low&#13;
with malarial fever and jaundice. I&#13;
persuadred bun to t r y Etectrie Bitters,"&#13;
and he was soon much better, but&#13;
continued their use until he was j&#13;
wholly car d. I am suro Electric Bitters&#13;
saved his live." This remedy expels&#13;
malaria, kills disease serins and&#13;
purifies the blood; aids digestion, reg-&#13;
I ' u l l e d L i n c o l n ' s H a i r .&#13;
While Mr. Lincoln was living in&#13;
Springfield a judge of the city, who&#13;
was one of the leading and most influential&#13;
citizens of the place, had occasion&#13;
to call upon him. Mr. Lincoln&#13;
was not overparticular ia his matter of&#13;
dress and was also careless in his manners.&#13;
The judge was ushered into the&#13;
parlor, where he found Mr. Lincoln&#13;
sprawled out across a couple of chairs,&#13;
reclining at his ease. The judge was&#13;
asked to be seated and, without chang&#13;
4ng his position in the least, Mr. Lincoln&#13;
entered Into conversation with&#13;
his visitor.&#13;
While the two men were talking Mrs.&#13;
Lincoln entered the room. She was&#13;
of course greatly embarrassed at Mr.&#13;
Lincoln's offhand manner of entertaining&#13;
his caller, and, stepping up behind&#13;
her husband, she grasped him hy the&#13;
halr~and rwttcbed- his bead -abotitr-a-t&#13;
the same time looking at him reprovingly.&#13;
* o n c e .&#13;
We the u n d e r s i g n ^ &amp; *•***&lt;!§,&#13;
a*ree to refund the money o*_ Aefft&#13;
cent bottle of Down's Elixir if i t doe*&#13;
noJ core a n ; ccugh, cold, whoopiof&#13;
couch, or throat trouble. We.»i#0&#13;
guarantee Down's Elixir t o cure com&#13;
sumption, when used according to 4U&#13;
rections, or money back. A fall doe*&#13;
on going to bed and small doeea daring&#13;
the day will cure the most severe&#13;
cold, and stnp the mo3t distressing&#13;
cough.&#13;
F. A. Sigler,&#13;
W. B . Darrow,&#13;
&gt;*• , * , : •&#13;
§l;&#13;
m*&#13;
Ibe fittfhuey fispatdie f&#13;
PUBLISHED ;MBAY MQayiae BT&#13;
F R A M K . L.. A N D R E W S &amp; C O .&#13;
EDITORS *MO PROPRIETOR*.&#13;
Subscription Price $1 in Advance.&#13;
Sate red at the Poetoftlce at Pinckney, Michigan&#13;
as second-class matter.&#13;
Advertising rates made known on application.&#13;
Business Cards, $4.00 per year.&#13;
reaihand marriage notices published tree.&#13;
Announcements of entertain uteats may oe paid&#13;
for, if desired, by j&gt;r renting the office with tickets&#13;
of admission. In case tickets are oot brought&#13;
to the office, regular rates will be charged, '&#13;
All matter in local notice column willbect&#13;
ed at 5 cents per line or fraction thereof,&#13;
insertion, where no time is specified, ail notice*&#13;
••si&#13;
hart*&#13;
reach&#13;
will be inserted until ordered discontinued, and&#13;
will be chained for accordingly. Z&amp;~A.U changes&#13;
of advertisements M CSX reach this office as earl*&#13;
as TciiDiT morning to insure an insertion the&#13;
same week.&#13;
JOS f*8l.\ 2TJV G /&#13;
In all its branches, a specialty. We haveall kinde&#13;
sod the latest styles QI Type, etc., which enable*&#13;
us to execute all kinds of work, such as Books,&#13;
Pamplete, Posters, Programmes, Bill Heads, Note&#13;
Heads, Statements, Cards, Auction Bills, etc., in&#13;
superior styles, upon the shortest notice. Prices a*&#13;
o'v as good work can b" done.&#13;
MLL BILLS PAT4.BL7 V f R * ? 0 p BV£&amp;y 3COM T d ,&#13;
THE VILLAGE DIRECTORY.&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICERS.&#13;
PRKSIDKNT . . w . . . . . . « — .C. L, Sigler&#13;
TriCBTiiss R. Baser, K. H. Etwia,&#13;
F. Qt. Jackson, Geo Reason Jr.&#13;
Chaa. Love, Malachy I$i&gt;cne.&#13;
LLSBK. ..............MM... •...MM ,.. K. R. Bcowa&#13;
TREABCBKR - J. A. Caiwall&#13;
ASPKSSOU M.JdB. A.Greene&#13;
bTUKBTCoKMissioNSti J. Parker&#13;
HEALTH O m e n a Ds. U. F. Sl«ier&#13;
ATTORN BY., ..**«•• ••* ••&gt;••#•• ..•••«•«•.•&lt; ^. W • \ . UttFr&#13;
MABSUALL _ S. Brogan&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
}&#13;
•.f&#13;
r. 'Ii&#13;
disftHS«*s, kiiney troubles, female ccmplaints;&#13;
srives perfect health. Only&#13;
50c at P. A. S i l l e r s druur store.&#13;
t h a t circle h e m o v e s u n t i l t h e A l - ulatesthe liver, Kidneys and Bowel?,&#13;
m i g h t y s t o p s h i s p r o c e e d i n g s . "&#13;
T h e following s t a t u t e is of special&#13;
i m p o r t a n t a n c e a t t h i s season&#13;
of t h e year, " A n y p e r s o n w h o&#13;
s h a l l e n t e r a v i n e y a r d , o r c h a r d or&#13;
g a r d e n d u r i n g t h e m o n t h s of J u l y&#13;
A u g u s t a n d S e p t e m b e r o r O c t o -&#13;
b e r , w i t h o u t t h e c o n s e n t of t h e&#13;
o w n e r , a n d p i c k , t a k e , c a r r y axvay&#13;
d e s t r o y or i n j u r e a n y of t h e fruit,&#13;
v e g a t a b l e s or c r o p s thevin, or in&#13;
a n y w i s e i n j u r e o r d e s t r o y a n y&#13;
bush,--teeer-A^ae-aE-plnnt s h a l L J i a .&#13;
the rebuke&#13;
wife, then across to the judge and,&#13;
without rising, said:&#13;
"Little Mary, allow me to introduce&#13;
you to my friend, Judge So-and-so."&#13;
It will be remembered that Mrs. Linm&#13;
r e s constipation, dyspepsia, nervous coin's oialdeu name was Mary Todd&#13;
METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH.&#13;
i»X Kev. H. W . Hicks, pastor. Services every&#13;
Mr. Lincoln apparently did not notice ^ ¾ S ^ i ^ U ^ l ^ t a S S S l ^ i l&#13;
l i e Simply looked up a t his day evenings. Sunday school at close of morning&#13;
service. CHA9. HENRV Supt.&#13;
and that she was very short in stature.&#13;
—Leslie's Monthly.&#13;
Q u e e r Case o f E v o l u t i o n .&#13;
The general law of evolution is from&#13;
the useful and practical into the ideal&#13;
and beautiful. This seems to be reversed&#13;
in the case of the lily and the&#13;
banana. The banana is really a developed&#13;
tropical lily from which the seeds d u l u m T m ^ n ' e t is 'fixed. YfTt Is iound&#13;
have been eliminated and the fruit t h f U t h e l u } u k m i i s , , ^ t , i t h e r t 0 0&#13;
greatly expanded. Tins is very much f a s t o l . t o o s l o % v . a c u n v u t o f o l e e t r i c i t v&#13;
as if an angel should evolve into a fat. | g s w i t o b e d o n , a m l U u , l i t t l e m a g n e t&#13;
comfortable stockbroker.-Lxchange. ; b e g , n g t o p u „ a , t ,,t l m i , t a l n s ,t s w | n g g&#13;
j to and fro. It only retards or acceler-&#13;
R e s n l n t l n s ; a C l o c k .&#13;
It is not. of course, possible to seize&#13;
hold of the hands of a clock and push&#13;
them backward or forward a tenth or&#13;
a twentieth part of a secoud. which is&#13;
about the limit of error that is allowed&#13;
at the Greenwich observatory, so another&#13;
method: is devised. Near the pen&gt;&#13;
CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH.&#13;
Kev. O. W. itice pastor. Service every&#13;
Sunday morning at 10:30 and every Sunday&#13;
evening at 7:0C o'clock. Prayer meeting Thar*&#13;
day evenings. Sunday school at close of mora&#13;
in* service. Mrs. Tnoa. Head, Sum,, Mocco&#13;
TeepieSec.&#13;
ST. MAKY'S'JAl'HOLLC CHURCH.&#13;
Kev. M. J. CouimerforU. Viator. Services&#13;
every Sunday. Low mass at 7:30 o'clock&#13;
high mass with sermon at 9::)0 a. m. Catechism.&#13;
at^;0U p in,, vespers ana benediction at 7:10 p. en&#13;
SOCIETIES;&#13;
t&#13;
Ontario.&#13;
O n t a r i o .&#13;
w i t h&#13;
"'iia aignature is on every box tthe genuine | , , j&#13;
Laxative Bromo-Quiniise Tabieta lunflea&#13;
.e remedy that c o t e s a c o l d i n o n e &lt;tay&#13;
A Card.&#13;
I, the undersigned, do hereby a^ree&#13;
10 refund the money on a 50 cent bottle&#13;
of Green's Warranted Syrup of&#13;
Tar if it failes ro cure your coupb or&#13;
cold. I also guarantee a 25-eent bottle&#13;
to prove satisfactory or money re-&#13;
• t23&#13;
Will R. Darrow.&#13;
a u a r o n t oor»/w»' a t e s t i i e m o t i o u hy an infinitesimal °\ -, 'Vvi fraction of a second each time, but it&#13;
square miles, is larger than all the fol- k t h ( ? n[ou a l u l i n a f e w&#13;
lowing states of the Lnion: New \ o r k , , t h o u s a n d s w i l l s t h e t e n t b o r t b e t w e n .&#13;
49,1,0 square miles; Massachusetts,; t i e t h v&amp;n Qf t h o a l m o s t i n v i s i b l e e r r o r&#13;
g the clocks&#13;
proper instant of&#13;
t i m n _ T n n i l n n V n w c&#13;
Vermont, 9,565, making a total of 20G,-&#13;
670 square miles.&#13;
The A. O. H. Society o£ tills i)lvi», u^ats every&#13;
tbird Si-iUv lutnj «"r. Mitun* tUll.&#13;
Juhn l'au'.nsy and M. T. K^Uy,0»nt&lt;r DU&gt;gite»&#13;
t^PWORTH LEAGUE, \leetl~every Sunday&#13;
Hfe\ening at &amp;.0O ociocic In cue M. t . Ctiurcn, A&#13;
cordial invitation is extended Co everyoue, especially&#13;
young people. F. »,. Andrews, PreB.&#13;
CH'Rl.sriVN ESDE.WOR SO JIE CV:- *•)*&#13;
ir.^^ ever/ Sunday ev.j;iin&lt; at '*&gt;:i). Presi tea&#13;
Miss L. M. Uod; s^cr'itar^, .Mis* [lulii Carp^nte&#13;
I&#13;
rl&gt;HE W. C. T. LT. lueete tue firat Friday oi eaa&gt;&#13;
1 month at-J:30 p. m. at tne liome of Dr. U. 1?&#13;
Sigler. Everyone interested in temperance&#13;
coatlially invited. Mrs. '^eal Siller, Pres; Mn&#13;
Ktta Durfee, Secretary.&#13;
H o w A b o u t DlahTrnshlnfff&#13;
A writer, one professing to k n o w ,&#13;
s t a t e s that the progress of modern industrial&#13;
ai't lias d o n e a w a y with much&#13;
(f tlie household drudgery to wliit-h&#13;
\ro!Uv ;i wore formerly subjected and&#13;
'.'..::: ;..(&gt; r.-^ri: !:r.s IU\MI ia foo many&#13;
•. ",".N .: r ••:::; &lt;t' sutiu'lent occupation&#13;
i ,• :•:• lr ; i • -•.". 11 v cMereiso, ills a n d&#13;
S u b s c r i b e l o r Diflpatch.&#13;
. ! ^ ^ I W N W»»«»«%» ^^»^*^W&gt;» IS***^A**&lt;&#13;
6 0 YEARS*&#13;
EXPERIENCE&#13;
\ The&#13;
Griswold&#13;
House&#13;
OOSTAL 4 MORf&gt;r,&#13;
» * o m n * o * a .&#13;
A&#13;
•trtotly&#13;
flratcW&#13;
modern,&#13;
up-to-date&#13;
Betel, located&#13;
In the heart ol&#13;
DETROIT. ^ a t y&#13;
I&#13;
Rate*, $2, $Z50, $3 per Day.&#13;
oe*. eaaiie Urae* 4 eaiaweia tr.&#13;
T D A D C M A R K S&#13;
DniQNt&#13;
COFVRIGHTS AC.&#13;
Anyone sending a nXeteh and description may&#13;
quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an&#13;
invention is probably patentable, Commnnlca*&#13;
tlons strictly confidential. Handbook on Patent!&#13;
sent free. Oldest agency for secuflncpatenta.&#13;
Patents taken throusrta Mann 4 Co. recelte&#13;
tpeeial notice* without ebanre, In tha Scientific flmerkatt A handsomely tlrnrtTated waekly, Lanreat ciN&#13;
eolation of any aeientlne toarnal. Terms, M a Sir; foor months, |L Sold hy all nawsdealeia.&#13;
Question Answered.&#13;
Yes, August Flower still has the&#13;
largest sale of any medicine in the&#13;
civilized world. Your mothers* and&#13;
grandmothers' never thought of usin^&#13;
anything else for Indigestion or. Biliousness.&#13;
Doctors were scarce, and&#13;
they seldom heard ol* Appendicitis,&#13;
T h i r t e e n R u l e a In C o i n s .&#13;
"I have never been able to comprehend,"&#13;
said a veteran numismatist,&#13;
"why so many Americans should believe&#13;
that a vast amount of ill luck centers&#13;
around the number 13.&#13;
"The commonest of all our silver&#13;
j coins is the -5 cent piece. In the words&#13;
'quarter dolhar' are 13 letters. Thirteen&#13;
letters compose E Pluribus Uuum. In&#13;
the tail of the eajile are 13 feathers and&#13;
in the shield are 13 lines. There are IT,&#13;
stars and 13 arrowheads, while if you&#13;
will examine they bird through a microscope&#13;
you will find 13 feathers iu his&#13;
wing."&#13;
The C T. A. and li. Sot-ieoy ot this place, n»&lt;*i&#13;
evexy third tiattiruay evening in the Fr. ii»tthew&#13;
Hail. John Douohue, President,&#13;
IT NIGHTS OP MACCABEES.&#13;
IVMeet every Friday evening on or before foil&#13;
ol tbe moon at their hall in the Svvarthout bidg.&#13;
Viaitinp brutlinrs are conliallv invited.&#13;
CUA8. U4HPBELL, Sir Knisht Commandai&#13;
Livingston Lodge, No.;-*;, ? 4, A. M. K»$u!ar&#13;
Communication Tuesday evening, on or before&#13;
the lull of the moon. Kirk VanWinkle, W. i l&#13;
~m&#13;
o RDEK OF EASTERN ST AH meets each month&#13;
the Friday evening foliowing the regular F.&#13;
AA.M. meeting, MKS. MARY READ, W. M.&#13;
0KDEK OF MODERN WOODMEN »eet the&#13;
nret Thursday evening of each Mouth in the&#13;
Maccabee hall.4 C. L. Grimes V. C.&#13;
LADIES OF THE MACCABEES. Meet every la&#13;
and 3rd Saturday of eachmonth at i-.'-iO p m. a&#13;
K.«). T. M. hall. Visiting sisters cordially in&#13;
viied. JULIA SIGLEU, Lady Com.&#13;
R e f l n l n c P e t r o l e u m .&#13;
The refining of petroleum is a process j&#13;
of distillation in which it is separated&#13;
Into, several marketable products.&#13;
There are two methods of distillatiou,&#13;
known technically as "in vacuo" and&#13;
"cracking." In the first the petroleum&#13;
V&#13;
Nervous PrD^tration or heart failure&#13;
etc. They used August Flower to *8 distilled in a partial vacuum and in i OFFICE OVER SIGLER'S PRUQ STORE&#13;
KNIGHTS OP THE LOYAL GUARD&#13;
meet every second Wednesday&#13;
evening of every montnintne K. O.&#13;
T. M. Hall at 7:30 o'clock. All visiting&#13;
Guards welcome.&#13;
F. L. Andrews P. M.&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
J. W. MONKS.&#13;
DOCTOR OF DENTAL SURGERY&#13;
P'NCKNEY, MICH.&#13;
clean out the system and stop fermentation&#13;
of undiceestd food, r e f l a t e the&#13;
action of the liver, stimulate the nervous&#13;
and organic action of the system,&#13;
and that is all they took when feeling&#13;
dull and bad with headaches and other&#13;
aches. You only need a few doses&#13;
of Greeus August Flower, in form, to&#13;
maVe you satisfied there is notkinc&#13;
serious tbe matter with you. Get&#13;
Green's Prize Almanac. Sold by F.&#13;
A. Sigler, Pinckney.&#13;
the second with superheated steam.&#13;
This process receives its name from the&#13;
cracking sound of the steam as it&#13;
enters the undistilled petroleum.&#13;
H a r d H i t .&#13;
Lord Fitzfoodle, casting himself on&#13;
his knees before Araminta, gave utterance&#13;
to-the following: "Oh, that I&#13;
could snatch a pine from aome prime*&#13;
jval forest! 1 would sharpen the end&#13;
with my penknife, dip tt in the molten&#13;
crater of Vesuvius and write upon the&#13;
azure wall of heaven in letters of living&#13;
fire, 'Aramtota, 1 love t h e e ! ' "&#13;
H. F. SIGLER M. D- C. I , SIGLER M, 0&#13;
•DRS. SIGLER•&amp; SIGLER,&#13;
Physicians and Surgeons. 'All calls prompt!&#13;
attended today or uight. Office on Mainstr&#13;
Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
J. F. Ml£~VE*&#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&#13;
the Veterinary Dentietry College&#13;
Toronto-Canada,&#13;
Will promptly attend to all diseases ot;th* do&#13;
mestioated animal at a reasonabto prioa.&#13;
Horses teeth examinediFiea,&#13;
O m C E a t MILL. PINCKNEY &lt;'&#13;
1¾¾&#13;
•'Av •&#13;
*fc&#13;
tJ&gt;-&#13;
W •&#13;
M*&#13;
f&#13;
f.r-&#13;
- • . • * • « It/ '&#13;
V;- [ ? &gt; • •&#13;
1¾&#13;
1 1*&#13;
m&#13;
FRAVK L. AXDJUCWS, Publisher.&#13;
riNCKKEY, • * • MICHIGAN.&#13;
The new cone on Mount Vesuvius,&#13;
formed during the late eruptions, has&#13;
been suddenly engulfed into the crater.&#13;
The mountain has now assumed its&#13;
old appearance.&#13;
Dr. Hans Blum, one of the biographers&#13;
of Bismarck, haa become mentally&#13;
deranged, owing to his losses through&#13;
the recent failure of the Leipziger&#13;
bank, and has been placed in an asylum.&#13;
He is a son of Robert Blum, who&#13;
was executed in Vienna during the&#13;
revolution of 1848.&#13;
In cold countries, where snow pre-.&#13;
Tails during a long winter, many of&#13;
the animals change the hue of their J&#13;
coats to a white tint The Arctic pear&#13;
and fox are white throughout the year.&#13;
The northern hare is brown in summer&#13;
and white in winter. The weasel&#13;
is especially curious; it retains its&#13;
brown coat until the first snow appears,&#13;
and then whitens in a few&#13;
hours.&#13;
Loss of the Hudson and Crew Has&#13;
. X ' . Been Confirmed.&#13;
ACCIDENT AT THE FLINT FAIR.&#13;
Reunion of ta« Seventh Mtahljraa Infantry&#13;
at Detroit— Michigan Pensions—Event*&#13;
and Gossip Prom All Fart* of tfre State&#13;
Stewed Down for Beady Readlas*&#13;
Forty years ago President Lincoln&#13;
appointed John Jap Jackson of Parkersburg,&#13;
W. Va., Judge of the United&#13;
States circuit court and he still holds&#13;
the position. During all these years&#13;
he has never failed but once to hold&#13;
court at the appointed time. That was&#13;
when confederate troopSpUnder Gen.&#13;
Loring were in possessioiPof Charlestown,&#13;
where the sessions were held,&#13;
and the session assigned for that date&#13;
had to be postponed.&#13;
It is announced from Constantinople&#13;
that the Sultan has had to be bled.&#13;
For some time he has manifested a&#13;
somnolent tendency. Recently he slept&#13;
continuously for fifteen hours, and after&#13;
awaking for about an hour he went&#13;
to sleep again. He was only roused&#13;
by his Arab body physician applying&#13;
ice to his temples. The physician then&#13;
intimated to the Sultan that his condi*&#13;
f.fati tfifHofttpd excess of blood, and that&#13;
bleeding was necessary in order to obviate&#13;
danger to the brain. After making&#13;
the doctor swear on the Koran&#13;
that no injurious results need be apprehended,&#13;
the Sultan let himself be&#13;
bled, and his quick-witted servitors&#13;
gathered the blood into tiny phials,&#13;
which can be sold to the faithful at&#13;
1&lt;M&gt; piastres each. ~~&#13;
i&#13;
Dr. L. 0. Howard, entomologist of&#13;
the department of agriculture, has&#13;
Just made public some startling statements&#13;
of the property losses caused by&#13;
insects. He believes they aggregate&#13;
over $300,000,000 a year. The Rocky&#13;
Mountain locust or western grasshopper&#13;
in 1874, ate up $100,000,000 worth&#13;
of growing crops. The chinch-bug&#13;
alone has eaten $300,000,000 worth of&#13;
'corn and wheat in the western states&#13;
since 1850. As for the mosquito, apart&#13;
from the losses believed to be due to&#13;
its pernicious activity in the spread of&#13;
yellow fever and malaria, It is an immense&#13;
depredator of real estate values.&#13;
A New Jersey newspaper recently&#13;
estimated that its extermination&#13;
in that one state alone would add&#13;
to its real estate valuation not less&#13;
than $100,000,000.&#13;
The Flint Fair Accident.&#13;
An accident that will result in the&#13;
death of two of the victims, and which&#13;
caused the serious Injury of several&#13;
others, occurred on the Flint fair&#13;
1 grounds into Thursday afternoon. One&#13;
of the, guy ropes of, a TtuTts wheel,&#13;
operated by a man ndined. Crell, got&#13;
loose, the stake to which It was fastened&#13;
pulling out, and the structure&#13;
fell. The cars were filled at the time.&#13;
Joseph Pear, of Chicago, aged 30,&#13;
while trying to save his sister and&#13;
niece, was' taught and had his jaw&#13;
broken. His skull was also fractured&#13;
and be will die. Fred Borden, of&#13;
Ionia, who was taking tickets, was&#13;
struck and received injuries that will&#13;
cause his death. Miss Bessie Weeks,&#13;
aged 18, had her cheek bone crushed&#13;
in; John, aged i), and Auabel. aged 8,&#13;
children of liev. C. A. Llpplneott, were&#13;
badly injured, but will recover. Miss&#13;
Bertha Rock liad her shoulder cut, was&#13;
badly bruised and was picked up in&#13;
an unconscious condition. Fern Smith,&#13;
aged 12,'was rendered unconscious,&#13;
hut was not badly injured. Miss Alice&#13;
Knight, daughter of M. A. Knight, had&#13;
an arm broken. &gt;M. \V. Hortou. who&#13;
was selling tickets, was bruised on the&#13;
wrist and leg.&#13;
W i l l Serve 1*1 fe Sentence.&#13;
Lucius A. Weeks has been found&#13;
guilty of murder lu the first degree for&#13;
the killing of Mrs. Jennie Parish on&#13;
the night of June 5 last at Flint.. When&#13;
asked if he had anything to say Weeks&#13;
said that he thought the Jury had been&#13;
prejudiced against him because of the&#13;
shooting of the president. Judge "Wlsner&#13;
told the prisoner that the president's&#13;
assassination had nothing to do&#13;
with it. and that under the evidence*&#13;
the jury could have arrived at no other&#13;
^erdiefc—Be-then^ sentenced-thA-^u^_&#13;
,*m«j"°ttw*» « M P W&#13;
8m*Upox easa* are increasing at&#13;
- *rf4&amp;000 creamery 4* to be add&lt;K^to&#13;
the industries of Buchanan.&#13;
Bay City is to have another sugar&#13;
beet factory. Capital, $00,000.&#13;
A new project for an opera house in&#13;
Poutiac has been launched.&#13;
The new State Fafr grounds at Pontlac&#13;
were dedicated last Saturday.&#13;
Harbor Beach to to have a beet sugar&#13;
factory. The capital will be&#13;
1300.000.&#13;
According to the local board of&#13;
health, there are no smallpox cases&#13;
in Saginaw.&#13;
The Larlum Record, a daily paper,&#13;
was burned out. Loss $4,000, covered&#13;
by Insurance.&#13;
The school census just completed&#13;
shows that Xorthville has 433 children&#13;
of school age. — J __&#13;
The miners of the town of Pas D3&#13;
Calais have elected Mile. Lea Bourdon&#13;
as their queen of the coal carnival.&#13;
This young woman is in the coal trade&#13;
in the capacity of a sifter, and although&#13;
*her work is so grimy she has&#13;
a beautiful complexion, which, no&#13;
doubt, added to her good character,&#13;
gave her the necessary number of&#13;
votes, although the competition was&#13;
keen, her fellow-candidates being&#13;
drawn from the cleaner walks of life.&#13;
The car which carried the queen and&#13;
her maids of honor was decorated with&#13;
flowers, picks, lanterns, etc. Mile.&#13;
Bourdon is only 17, and the coronation&#13;
In the center of the town made a very&#13;
beautiful tableau. To be coal queen entitles&#13;
her to a small annuity from the&#13;
treasury of the town, and with her&#13;
French thrift she will save this for her&#13;
dot.&#13;
oner to Jackson for life at hard labor.&#13;
The murder was a cold-blooded affair.&#13;
Weeks was jealous of the woman&#13;
and shot her because she received at&#13;
tentions from a rival. Weeks is a married&#13;
man. He broke down when sentenced.&#13;
Just before the trnin for Jackson&#13;
•started—his—little dTrugtrtPT Mabel&#13;
braved the curiosity of the crowd and&#13;
kissed her lather an affectionate goodby.&#13;
On\r 20O Survived.&#13;
Tho annual reunion of the Seventeenth&#13;
Michigan Infantry, known as&#13;
the Stonewall Regiment of the Wolveriue&#13;
state, was held in Detroit QJI&#13;
the 17th Inst Qf the original 1,000&#13;
members of the regiment, which was&#13;
one of the most hardy fighting in the&#13;
war, but 200 came out alive. Among&#13;
these were 17 of the parent company i&#13;
13.. which started from Ypsilantl, and&#13;
nil 17 were present to-day. Lieut.-Col.&#13;
Constant Luce, of Monroe; Capt. Safford.&#13;
of Lansing; President George H.&#13;
Hopkins; treasurer, G. W. Harmon,&#13;
and Col. F. W. Swift were amoug the&#13;
prominent members present.&#13;
The regiment left Detroit 39 years&#13;
ago Aug. 17.&#13;
As the steamer Sheffield was leaving&#13;
the river Scheldt one evening recently&#13;
the captain and passengers observed&#13;
the unusual phenomenon (in these latitudes)&#13;
of a large waterspout. The&#13;
steamer was a few miles off West&#13;
Capple, and from a heavy thunder&#13;
cloud lying due west of this point, and&#13;
computed to be about ten miles distant,&#13;
a dense black column was&#13;
formed, which appeared to fall by a&#13;
sinuous course Into the sea. At this&#13;
distance the surface of the sea—where&#13;
the waterspout touched its surfacewas&#13;
at once surrounded by a smokelike&#13;
obscurity. Hundreds of tons of&#13;
water must have dropped heavily into&#13;
the sea. The black line of communication&#13;
between the oloud and the sea&#13;
fell precipitately at nrst, then for&#13;
some distance appeared to encounter&#13;
a fresh current of air and was borne&#13;
along laterally, after which it dropped&#13;
into the sea. Thw phenomenon continued&#13;
dashing up the surface of the sea&#13;
tor about four minutes.&#13;
Los* of the Ilndson and Crew,&#13;
All doubt about the f:iT&lt;» of the&#13;
steamer Hudson and her crow of 2."&#13;
men was removed when the .1. (\&#13;
Ford landed the remains of Sherman&#13;
G. Brooks, wheelsman on the lost ship,&#13;
in Sault Ste. Marie Saturday.&#13;
The body was picked up 2.' miles&#13;
from the place where the Iluitaon is&#13;
supposed to have foundered Monday.&#13;
The body has a life preserver with&#13;
the words "S. S. Hudson" on it. It&#13;
was inside the pilot house'of the lost&#13;
ship, which was floating bottom up.&#13;
The ship's compass was also recovered.&#13;
DUfsif In Mictalgrnn,&#13;
Reports to the state board of health,&#13;
by representative physicians in active&#13;
general practice, in different parts of&#13;
the state, Indicate tlmt diarrhea, rheumatism,&#13;
neuralgia, bronchitis and&#13;
dysentery, in the order named, caused&#13;
the most sickness in Michigan, during,&#13;
the past week. Oerebro spinal meningitis&#13;
was reported present at two&#13;
places; whooping'cough at R, measles&#13;
at 8. smallpox at 21. diphtheria at 32.&#13;
scarlet fever at 'M. typhoid fever at 114&#13;
and consumption (it 107.&#13;
George Ward, aged 13 years, was&#13;
accidentally shot by a companion and&#13;
seriously wounded.&#13;
John Kobler. of Steire. lost his&#13;
creamery and cider mill by Are. Loss,&#13;
$3,000; no insurance.&#13;
The annual reunion of the Fifth&#13;
Michigan Infantry. "Kearney's Devils/'&#13;
was held at Romeo.&#13;
Frank Wisner fell on a saw at Ingrim's&#13;
shingle mill, near Sunrise lake,&#13;
Oscoda county, and was killed.&#13;
The new school census shows the&#13;
children of school age In Bay City to&#13;
be 4,400, a gain of 307 over 1000.&#13;
Conductor Win. I&gt;. McMillan, of the&#13;
A»n Arbor railroad, fell between two&#13;
curs and received serious injuries.&#13;
Congressman Corliss, of Detroit, expects&#13;
a Pacific cable bill to pass the&#13;
next session. He is working for it.&#13;
The fifty-first annual fair of the St.&#13;
Joseph County Agricultural society&#13;
will be held at Centrevllle Oct. 1, 2, 3&#13;
and 4.&#13;
Carrie XatkHh-the-famoushatehetwielder.&#13;
ban offered to appear as an&#13;
attraction at the Mason fair for $150&#13;
per day.&#13;
Frank Campbell and Pat Sbafter&#13;
were arrested while unlawfully spearing&#13;
fish in Horsey lake. They were&#13;
fined $43.&#13;
The cucumber season in the vicinity&#13;
of Plain well is a record breaker. On&#13;
one day this week $3,741 was paid out&#13;
-for_them^ T&#13;
Manager Ely. of the Northville&#13;
Dowel works, poked .his linger into a&#13;
dowel machine, which shredded his&#13;
finger to the bone.&#13;
The plant of the Newport Creamery&#13;
Co.. at Newport, burned; no insurance.&#13;
This is the second loss to the com-&#13;
P-anyjyjthln IS months. j&#13;
Dapartwisnt Commander tftetKlatcfe*&#13;
of til* Michigan O. A. R.. lias issued&#13;
general orders regarding, the teafeoH&#13;
President McKluley. In which th*&#13;
dead'riiieftaitt- is warmly&#13;
The.Michigan Central Pa*k Co., of&#13;
Chicago,' has- bought and pfctted ftfftd&#13;
into lots around Hlggins hike, Roscommon,&#13;
awl Js establlshlnjc a large resort.&#13;
Already 2400 lots have been&#13;
sotd.&#13;
Aeronaut Bert Truman fell from his j&#13;
balloon from the bight of 25 feet at&#13;
North* Adams and was seriously injured.&#13;
The balloon became entangled&#13;
in telephone wires a* it started to ascend.&#13;
- &gt;&#13;
Robert Thomas, while training a&#13;
noma at Northville was severely&#13;
bruised by the animal lu ruing a somersault.&#13;
Thomas was tin-own a rod&#13;
away and his arm was broken at the&#13;
wrist.&#13;
James H. Scott._colored» 0* Cusso*&#13;
pblfsr who it is alleged stole household&#13;
property belonging to his grandfather&#13;
TiJe Hcliley court resumed in tbw toil&#13;
mm^^Wtyfr^ • ' 4MP#m^&#13;
' • * - : •&#13;
hf Howlaon; MrtV&#13;
Dewey aocombanied her husband, ami&#13;
remained a&gt; s b * # - &amp; &amp; • .Gerterai attendance&#13;
was n©e larre.&#13;
Rear .Admiral JTrances J, Ulgginsoo,&#13;
commander-Iu^Sef&gt;f^h0 North Atlantic&#13;
squadron, was the first witness.&#13;
He said he commanded the Massachusetts&#13;
during the Spanish war, for a&#13;
time part of the flying squadron of&#13;
which Schley had been tn command.&#13;
He told of Joining the Jtoet at Newport&#13;
News; of going to Clenfuegos, Cubft.&#13;
May 22. 1888. His testimony covered&#13;
the arrival at Santiago, the firing on&#13;
the Colon and Schley1* manner in the&#13;
fight Some written questions were&#13;
asked by Lemly for the court. ThV &lt;&#13;
third question created a sensation. It&#13;
was: "Was every ( effort made by&#13;
s^htey *ft de*&gt;r"y &lt;?r cppt^y^ th e ftpna-&#13;
Ish steamer Colon as she lay at anchor&#13;
in the harbor at Santiago between the&#13;
Reunion Declared Off.&#13;
The soldiers' and sailors' reunion&#13;
of the Northeastern association, which1&#13;
was to bnve been held at Flint the first&#13;
five days in October, was declared off&#13;
to-day by President M. C. Barney. The&#13;
reason assigned is that the old soldiers&#13;
would not attend owing to the recent&#13;
national bereavement.&#13;
James Summer* dropped ofT a moving&#13;
train and fell under the wheels.&#13;
Ills left leg was amputated below the&#13;
knee.&#13;
The state pardon board has recommended&#13;
to Gov. Hlias that tho sentence&#13;
of life in the case of Henry Pramo IK?&#13;
commuted to 20 years. He has seven&#13;
years' yet to serve. Prnme and Clms.&#13;
Macnrd went to *\\o home of Mrs. Mc-&#13;
Kcndrick aud robbed her of $700. the&#13;
savings of a life time. ' They gagged&#13;
her Bp tightly that site died. Prame&#13;
helped In the eoi.vlctlon of Maeanland&#13;
was an unwilling spectator In the gagging&#13;
of Mrs. McKcndrlck.&#13;
and made' hlr, " escape, has been eap-! 2 Jft a n d 31 st of May?"&#13;
A meeting of the Presbytery of Detroit&#13;
was held in South Lyons. There&#13;
was a large number of well known&#13;
ministers in attendance.&#13;
The canning factory at Birmingham.&#13;
14 miles south of St. Joseph, was&#13;
burglarized, and the thieves carried off&#13;
about 2,™ ™»* of fruit.&#13;
l-ied Hamilton, who is alleged to&#13;
have committed forgery in Durand&#13;
over a year ago, lias been found in \&#13;
Crookston, Miun., and will be brought&#13;
back.&#13;
The Odd Fellows of the village of&#13;
Perry dedicated a new lodge hall with&#13;
appropriate exercises. Tho Odd Fellows&#13;
for a distance of 2."&gt; miles attended.&#13;
Fred Heitunn, aged ~&gt;8. WJJS choked&#13;
to death Friday while endeavoring to&#13;
swallow a piece of meat during the&#13;
supper hour at the American house,&#13;
Sebewaing.&#13;
James Summers attempted to alight&#13;
from a moving train at Decatur and&#13;
was thrown under the wheels. He&#13;
will have to go through life with one&#13;
foot hereafter.&#13;
A telephone pole fell on Robert&#13;
Kcyes. of Saginaw, at Flint, probably&#13;
breaking his back. He was digging&#13;
a hole for a catch-basin when the accident&#13;
occurred.&#13;
A Pere Marquette *raln ran over and&#13;
mangled beyond recognition a middleaged&#13;
man supposed to be named&#13;
Priest, near Tage, on the Harbor&#13;
Springs branch.&#13;
The residence of Edward Ewald. in&#13;
Fair Plalus, was burglarized. The robbers&#13;
smashed down the rear door with&#13;
an ax and secured valuables amounting&#13;
to about $100.&#13;
Don A. Goodwin and wife, of the&#13;
Fraser house. Ba.v City, were thrown&#13;
from a rig by a runaway horse and&#13;
both severely injured. Mrs. Goodwin's&#13;
condition Is critical&#13;
The course for 1001-02 of the Students'&#13;
Lecture Association at Ann Arbor&#13;
will consist of 1"&gt; numbers. The&#13;
secretary announces that they expect&#13;
Wu Ting Fang on the list.&#13;
George Blair, son of the war governor,&#13;
ex-prosecuting attorney of Jackson&#13;
county, is reported to be In a critical&#13;
condition from apoplexy at his&#13;
homo.in Stewart, Florida.&#13;
James Hunter claims he was Injured&#13;
several years ago by falling on&#13;
a defective Durand sidewalk. He lost&#13;
one case for damages and has just&#13;
started a new one for $10,000.&#13;
Three large lmrns on the farm of 1&#13;
Frank Jordan, in Atlas, caught fire&#13;
from the engine of a bean threshing&#13;
outfit and were burned to rhe ground.&#13;
Los? is $4,000; insurance $2,500.&#13;
Frank Hadley, of Hadley village,&#13;
who recently lost his barns by Are,,&#13;
had a b&lt;»o and JJo.OOO feet of lumber&#13;
and So.O'K) shingles were taken from&#13;
J Lapeer to his farm by 17 teams.&#13;
-John Lattnmcr. a farmer residing&#13;
In Sanborn township, was gored to&#13;
death ny a bull. No one saw him&#13;
fight for life, but there are evidences&#13;
the-*truggle was a desperate one.&#13;
tured In St. Joseph by Deputy Sheriff&#13;
Seuant.&#13;
While reaching over for a bucket of&#13;
water in his old-fashioned well Monday&#13;
morning, Lawrence Hummel. 58,&#13;
of Adrian, slipped and fell headlong 00&#13;
feet to the bottom. He was instantly&#13;
killed.&#13;
Mason L. Brown, a Detroit civil engineer,&#13;
has begun suit for $300 against&#13;
the Owosso &amp; Corunna Electric Co.,&#13;
for services In surveying a line of the&#13;
proposed extension to Durand, which&#13;
has never been built.&#13;
Mrs. Isaac Redfern. of North Lansing,&#13;
attempted suicide and murder by&#13;
Jumping into the river with her 4-yearold&#13;
daughter clasped to her breast.&#13;
Mother and child were rescued by&#13;
some nearby fishermen.&#13;
The heavy gales along the Lake&#13;
Michigan shore are doing thousands of&#13;
dollars' damage to the apple crop. It&#13;
is estimated that 40,000 bushels of ap-&#13;
"pies have been blown from the trees&#13;
within the past 24 hours.&#13;
The village of Jones boasts tho&#13;
youngest editor in the state. Miss&#13;
Grace Erway, aged 15. who edits and&#13;
publishes the Jones Star. The paper&#13;
is a full-fledged country weekly, with&#13;
a good- advertising patronage.&#13;
While playing with a gun Tuesday&#13;
night at their home, four miles northeast&#13;
of St. Louis, Roy Neigh, aged 12.&#13;
accidentally—shot'his—ststrr;—Eelna,&#13;
ngtd 10. The charge took effect in&#13;
the head and killed her Instantly.&#13;
Reports to Secretary of State Warner&#13;
show that there were 2,072 deaths&#13;
in Michigan during August, corresponding&#13;
to n death rate of 13.1 per&#13;
cent per 1,000 population. This Is an&#13;
wwsually-loJW-.mortnlity for August.&#13;
Objections came thick and fast, but&#13;
the witness answered: "No, f do not&#13;
think it was." Long arguments followed&#13;
and tho court finally withdrew&#13;
the question.&#13;
Commander Seaton Shroeder was&#13;
the only witness Saturday. His testimony&#13;
dealt with the crutee of the flying&#13;
squadron from Cienfuegos to Santiago&#13;
and the bombardment of the&#13;
Spanish ship Cristobal Colon as she&#13;
lay in the harbor at Santiago on May&#13;
31.&#13;
The commander said that the cruise&#13;
was not as expeditious as it should&#13;
have been. He also said that in the&#13;
bombardment of the Colon the fleet&#13;
had not acted as deliberately as the&#13;
commander-in-chief bad announced it&#13;
to be hie purpose to have it act.&#13;
Commander Harber and Admiral&#13;
Hlgginson were cross-examined. The&#13;
testimony was adverse to Schley, especially&#13;
that of Shroeder and Hlgginson.&#13;
The German Lutherans are building&#13;
a fine ohurch at West Branch.&#13;
AMUSKMKXTS IV DETROIT.&#13;
WWBK ENDING SKPT. 28.&#13;
AVKNOTE THKATEB—Vaudevllie—Prloes: afternoon,&#13;
10,15, A 2ft; evening, 10,20.2V5; reserv. 50c&#13;
LYCEUM THEATER—Ward &amp; Vokes—Wed. and&#13;
Sar. Mat. 25c; evenings, 15, &amp;&gt;, So and 73 cents.&#13;
WHlItT.vN\ E15Y a nGdR 2A5cN; De—veDnainnggesr.s 1 0oc,f 2P0acr aisn—d M30ac.t inee&#13;
BASE BALL.&#13;
Fred Schmltt, father of the secretary&#13;
of the Sebewaing Sugar Co., and one&#13;
of Sebewnlnj?'s most prominent and&#13;
influential farmers, was seriously injured&#13;
by. being kicked by a vicious&#13;
horse In bis own barn Friday evening.&#13;
The town of Law ton seems to be&#13;
filled with tramps, the number varying&#13;
from 25 to 100. They seem Indisposed&#13;
to leave the place and are quarrelsome&#13;
and impudent. The authorities are&#13;
considering means to sot rid of them.&#13;
A special election will be held In&#13;
Charlotte Sept. HO to vote on the proposition&#13;
to bond the city for $50,000 and&#13;
if it carries. $30,000 will be spent for a&#13;
sewage system and $20,000 for the improvement&#13;
of the water works system.&#13;
Mrs. Lizzie Palmer, of Port Huron,&#13;
it is claimed, was to have been mar&#13;
ried Sunday to Louie Lambert,-of Detroit,&#13;
and when he failed to arrive she&#13;
resorted to carlmlic acid and alcohol.&#13;
She is about 47 years old; her recovery&#13;
is doubtful.&#13;
The secretary of war has notified&#13;
the city council of Ronton Harbor&#13;
and tl«e B1R Four and Pere Marquette&#13;
railroads that unless tho three swine j&#13;
bridges across Paw Paw river are in&#13;
and completed within six months, a&#13;
penally will bo required.&#13;
Benjamin Everaert. a cooper, of&#13;
Gladstone, was convicted of stealing&#13;
miscellaneous merchandise from Si&gt;o&#13;
line freipht cars. Tha police believe&#13;
he was the lender of a gang that systematically&#13;
robbed the company. He&#13;
was given 00 days In jail.&#13;
Gov. Bliss has appointed Dr. Herbert&#13;
F. Palmer.% of Detroit, a member of&#13;
the state live stock commission to succeed&#13;
Frank C. Wells, of Macomb county,&#13;
who resigned to take the oflice of&#13;
state vetorinnrlan. The governor also&#13;
appointed Frank Proctor, a G, A. K.&#13;
man, county agent of Hillsdale countj.&#13;
Samuel Kirk, a car repairer on the&#13;
Grand Trunk, found a purse on a&#13;
train containing $807. He returned it&#13;
to the owner, who is an Owosso business&#13;
mnn. The latter wrote out a re&#13;
ceipt for the money, but gave the tinder&#13;
neither reward nor a single word of&#13;
thanks.&#13;
John Simmons, the highway robber&#13;
who was sentenced at Flint to four&#13;
years in Ionia, tried to set the jail on&#13;
Are, but tho flames were extinguished.&#13;
Simmons and Loirts Haley .were locked&#13;
in their cells, but managed to pick the&#13;
locks, and were found roaming about&#13;
in the corridors.&#13;
Owosso Is to lose its pugnacious&#13;
Below we publlsu the. standing of&#13;
the America a and National league clubs&#13;
up to and including1 the frames played&#13;
on Sunday, September 25:&#13;
AMBRICAX LBAOU*&#13;
Won.&#13;
Chicago 82&#13;
BOStOBTVTT."."rr.T.TT 73 Detroit 70&#13;
Philadelphia -. 63&#13;
Baltimore 0*2&#13;
Washington 50&#13;
Cleveland ,. frl&#13;
Milwaukee 4?&#13;
NATIONAL LIAGUS.&#13;
Won. J&#13;
Pittsburg 82&#13;
Philadelphia. 78&#13;
Brooklyn 7^&#13;
St Louis 67&#13;
Boston 65&#13;
NewYork 61&#13;
Chicago 81&#13;
Cincinnati 47&#13;
Lost.&#13;
40&#13;
no AS&#13;
61&#13;
61&#13;
67&#13;
77&#13;
92&#13;
-oss.&#13;
44&#13;
M&#13;
66&#13;
60&#13;
64&#13;
75&#13;
80&#13;
76&#13;
Perct&gt;.&#13;
.CM&#13;
ft *Ml ..B54770&#13;
.527&#13;
.4½&#13;
.468&#13;
.403&#13;
.364&#13;
Perot.&#13;
.610&#13;
.575&#13;
.666&#13;
.582&#13;
.504&#13;
.40»&#13;
.380&#13;
.384&#13;
THE MARKETS.&#13;
Detrolt.—Cattle—Choice butcher steers,&#13;
$5 I0ft5 25; good to choice butcher steers,&#13;
$4 75&lt;&amp;r,; light to Rood, 83 756)4 6-»; li*ht to&#13;
good butcher steers and heifers, 83 404$&#13;
4 50; mixed butchers and fat cows, 82 M0v&#13;
3 80; canners and common thin butchers,&#13;
8204 75. 13ulls—LlRht to good butchers&#13;
and sausage, 82 50493 50: stockers and light&#13;
feeders, 82 80@&gt;3 75: veal calves at 85&amp;? per&#13;
100 lbs. Sheep and Lambs—Best lambs.&#13;
$4 7o(r£5; light to irood and good mixed&#13;
lots, $4 25®4 65; fair to good mixed and&#13;
butcher sheep, 83(?i/4; culls and common. 82&#13;
fp2 75. HORS-Mixed and butchers, 86 72½&#13;
@8 87i£; bulk at $6WX?i6 85; pigs and light&#13;
Yorkers. 86@t&gt; 72½; stags, 1-3 off; roughs,&#13;
85 hO&amp;b 80.&#13;
Buffalo.—Good fat cattle, steady to&#13;
strong; outlook for stockers and feeders&#13;
very unfavorable; vpals, 86@7 .¾). IIoffs—&#13;
Higher; heavy. 87 2TK07 40; mixed and mediums,&#13;
$7 15tfr7 20; mixed and mediums,&#13;
$7 15(Ti7 20; ynrkers, light to best eornfed,&#13;
87 20; grassers and Michigan. 86 70fcfi;&#13;
pigs, ffi 25#« 80: roughs, 86 2M?i6 50. Sheep&#13;
—Steady; mixed culls to best, 81 70&amp;4;&#13;
wethers and yearlings. M 4 25. N&#13;
Chicago.—CntUe—Good to prime steers,&#13;
$6 10@6 50; poor to medium, 81@6; stockers&#13;
and feeders, 82 50-^4 30; cows. 82 50©4 7.T;&#13;
heifers. $2 2565; canners. 81 50&lt;f?2 35; bulls.&#13;
81 HKM 75: calves. M 50®6 75. Hogs—Mixed&#13;
and butchers. 86 50(ft7 15; good to choice&#13;
heavy, $C 4.&gt;fT6 SO; light. 86 fiOW: bulk of&#13;
sales, 86 60(ff6 ?5. Sheep—Good to choice&#13;
wethers. 83 60ft3 W); fair to choice mixed,&#13;
$3 30&lt;a3 60; native lambs, 83(^4 7.x&#13;
Cincinnati—Cattle—Heavy steers, choice&#13;
to rxtra. 85 33(^5 75; nominal, fair to good,&#13;
84 754M.2.*: oxen. 81 75®M 35; butchers*&#13;
choice. 84 75/fi5: fair to good. 83 40(^4 65:&#13;
heifers, good to choice, 83 65®4 15; extra,&#13;
34 25@4 35: common to fair, '82 2Zm 5fl;&#13;
cows, good to choice. 83 WXf?4 10: fair to&#13;
medium, 82&lt;J73 25. Hogs—Good to choice&#13;
packers and butchers, 87(7/^7 10; mixed&#13;
packers. $6 &amp;XfM 95; stags and heavy fat&#13;
«ows, 84 5(KR&gt;6 50: light shippers, 85 DO®&#13;
* 70; pigs. 110 lbs. and less, $4 25ftR 85.&#13;
Sheep— Kxtra. 83 20®3 25; good to choice.&#13;
f&gt;2 S0fa'3 15; common to fair, 81 25&lt;H&gt;2 25.&#13;
Lnmbs—Few fancy at 14 80: extra. 84 6y&lt;i&gt;&#13;
I 75; good to choice, 83 75©4 50; common to&#13;
fair, 82 6003 60.&#13;
Pittsburg.-Cattle — Choice. 85 75^6;&#13;
r»rlme.85 50®5 70; good. 85 20#5 50; tidv.&#13;
•A 90®5 16: fair. 8504 50; heifers. 82 60®4 2':&#13;
Dxen, 82 50&lt;??4 50; fat cows. $1 50@4; bulls&#13;
and stags. 82f©4; common to fresh cows.&#13;
f20@85; good fresh cows, 8354B60. iHogs—&#13;
Prime heavy. 87fi0®7 25; mediums. 87 15®&#13;
f (»; best heavy Yorkers, 87 06®7 16: light&#13;
Yorkers, 86 80CP7; grassers. 86 50®6 80;&#13;
nigs. 86 2f&gt;$* 50; skins. $4 75&amp;5 25. Sheen-&#13;
Best wethers. 83 8504; good, 83 50«« 75:&#13;
mixed. 834^3 25; culls jind common, 81 23(0&#13;
mnyor, S. D. Emory, who says be Is- \ 26: yearlings, 82 50@4 2R: sprln* lambs,&#13;
golug-lxu'k to^Tlostou to live. He like* &lt;3®515; veal calves. 87 26®7 50.&#13;
eastern wnys the best, but must ntny _ _ \&#13;
hero throe years more, as bo Is under&#13;
contract with a poultry firm. His&#13;
flfjhts for reform have given tho city&#13;
a state reputation.&#13;
Contract holders in the United States&#13;
Savings Association, the head office of&#13;
which Is located in the Hodges buildlug,&#13;
In .Detroit, have l&gt;een notified that&#13;
the redemption fund hns been exhausted&#13;
and that the company will Issue&#13;
stack In some Colorado mine in&#13;
oNchnuffe for paid-up contract*?.&#13;
Grain, Bte.&#13;
Detroit.—Wheat—No. 1 white, 73V$c; No.&#13;
I red, 73c; No. 3 red, 70c: mixed winter,&#13;
rac. Corn—No. 2 yellow, 59c; No. 2 mixed,&#13;
»Hc. • Oats-No. 2 white, 88¼c; No. 3&#13;
white, S7%c.&#13;
Chicago.—'Wheat—No. S »prlnjr. 66¼^&#13;
R*o; No. « red. 7lHc. Corn—No. 2, R8%c;&#13;
No. 2 yellow. 68%«*9e. Onta—No. 2, 36U&gt;6&gt;&#13;
17c: No. 2 white, 88H@39c; No. 3 white, 380&#13;
Cincinnati,—Wheat-*Rece1pt« light; No.,&#13;
winter red, 78o. Corn—No. 2 mixed, Me;&#13;
No. I white, Be. Oati—No. 2 mixed, £T&gt;;&#13;
No, 9 white. »c. _&#13;
J ^ , '&#13;
' v ^&#13;
/&#13;
:* v3&#13;
», '&#13;
f. v.&#13;
H^i'»wMr&#13;
•"•^t ?•&#13;
•W" 5=2= s=a flftft •mMbaww* iiiiiniir. "*W«W" w*4-&#13;
,*?-^SI*l&#13;
m&#13;
&gt; * / • •WM- • • &gt; " • • Imposing Funeral Ceremonies&#13;
Precede&gt; Interment of Mc-&#13;
KJntey atCanton.&#13;
, Oat under the whispering oak tree* f&#13;
of WMUAVU cemetery, in * vine-covered&#13;
vault, almoat burled In a sloping&#13;
ailUide, all that Is earthly of WlUiam&#13;
McKinley now reats. About the flower-&#13;
•trewn slope* a picket line of soldteri&#13;
stands silent in the shadows.&#13;
Whole D«y CU?e* to Grief.&#13;
All day Thursday mulled drums&#13;
heat their reoulemB. brasses walled out&#13;
&lt; »&#13;
th3 strains of marches of the deadTP11*3^4^**"1-113^&#13;
great men of the nation followed a&#13;
funeral car in grief and tears. Through&#13;
solid banks of bareheaded men and&#13;
weeping women and children, fringed&#13;
by a wall of soldiers, marching military&#13;
and civilians passed with the&#13;
mourners of the distinguished dead.&#13;
First among those who followed the&#13;
dead during the Journey from the&#13;
homo to the tomb was the man who is&#13;
now at the head of the government.&#13;
Mrs. McKinley Near* Collapse.&#13;
Mrs. McKinley was unable to attend&#13;
the funeral. While the last rites were&#13;
being said she remained in a room of&#13;
the family home, dazed, not realizing&#13;
that death had come to her husband,&#13;
almost paralyzed mentally. During the&#13;
morning, at her urgent request., she&#13;
sat alone for a time beside the coffin&#13;
as it lay in the south parlor of&#13;
the house. No one seeks to lift the&#13;
veil that is drawn over this scene&#13;
about the bier of the last earthly&#13;
sleep. The casket was not opened.&#13;
But she was near the one who ever&#13;
had cared for and protected her; near&#13;
tne dead for whom grief has burned&#13;
fr into the soul of a country the lessons&#13;
of manliness and beneficence taught by&#13;
his life.&#13;
Flnnl Ceremonlet Impressive.&#13;
The last ceremonies for the late&#13;
president were marked with a dignity&#13;
that struck dumbness to the tens of&#13;
thousands who watched the funeral&#13;
column make the journey from the&#13;
home to the cemetery. From the&#13;
south parlor of the frame house which&#13;
had so long been the family home the&#13;
But the men, of the war days of forty&#13;
years ago, with whom the martyred&#13;
president had marched in his youth,&#13;
passed up this road before the funeral&#13;
car approached. They caught up the1&#13;
ilowers as they passed, pressing them&#13;
to their lips. Just ahead of the hearse&#13;
marched the handful of survivors at&#13;
the late president's own regiment.&#13;
They, too, gathered up the bloom* as&#13;
tSlooms Taken as Mementos.&#13;
So it happened that when the men&#13;
of the army and of the navy carried&#13;
the black casket within the, shadow&#13;
of the vault the flower carpet had disappeared,&#13;
its blooms, however, to be&#13;
guarded for years as mementos of this&#13;
day of sorrow. '&#13;
Just without the entrance to this&#13;
mausoleum stood the new president of&#13;
the United States. The colfln rested&#13;
on supports only a hand's reach from&#13;
him. Then the members of the cabinet&#13;
formed an open line with him, and&#13;
members of the family—all save the&#13;
lone woman who was in the home&#13;
under the close watch of Dr. Rixcy—&#13;
gathered near. "Earth to earth, ashes&#13;
to ashes, dust to dust," came the benediction&#13;
from the lips of the venerable&#13;
Bishop Joyce.&#13;
The roar of the cannon echoed from&#13;
the hilltop just above. It came as a&#13;
mighty "amen." Again the white-&#13;
.haired minister spoke. Again came the&#13;
crashing roar of the salute, its rever&#13;
berations beating on and on over the&#13;
hills about the city.&#13;
"Taps" Sounded by Bugler.&#13;
"Taps," the saddest call the bugle&#13;
language of the army knows, came&#13;
from eight bugles. The last notes were&#13;
held until the breath of the wind&#13;
seemed to rob them of life. Away&#13;
down the bread street, two miles away,&#13;
the marching columns were 3till coming.&#13;
The music of the bands, muted,&#13;
it seemed, by some giant hand came&#13;
floating to the group about th-3 vault—&#13;
"Nearer, My God, to Thee, Nearer to&#13;
FUNERAL TRAIN EN ROUTE FROM WASHINGTON&#13;
SCENE AT A WAY STATION.&#13;
TO CANTON&#13;
casket was borne to the First Metho- j Thee." Once again came the crash&#13;
dist church at Canton, with statesmen, j from the guns' above.&#13;
diplomats, great men of nation, representatives&#13;
of the world, gathered&#13;
with the surrounding members of the&#13;
family. Ministers of five religious denominations&#13;
said .the simple services.&#13;
Great Throng Joins In H y m n .&#13;
Troops banked the streets about, but&#13;
the thousands who had gathered near&#13;
and stood in places for five h,ours held&#13;
weir ground, catching up the broken&#13;
drains of "Nearer, My God, to Thee."&#13;
The silence of calm had come; jthe silence&#13;
of supreme excitement had passed.&#13;
"It was not at him," said the minister&#13;
of the church, all but hidden&#13;
from sight by the mountains of blooms&#13;
and floral pieces that bound in the pulpit&#13;
and choir loft, "that the fatal shot&#13;
was fired, but at the heart of our government."&#13;
Then he added: "In all&#13;
Door Is Closed Upon Martyr.&#13;
Then the casket was carried within&#13;
the vault. Five infantrymen marched&#13;
behind it. A moment passed ar.d the&#13;
outer doors were closed. The last ceremony&#13;
was over; the third martyred&#13;
president of the United States. had&#13;
been committed to God and eternity.&#13;
Slowly the marching column treaded&#13;
about the crescent road to the left of&#13;
the temporary tomb. Then darkness&#13;
threw its veil over all, tb.3 sileni&#13;
guards took their stations, tho cejaetery&#13;
gatoj were closed.&#13;
Nevvr Mourning More Sincere.&#13;
That is the bare outline of one of&#13;
the most imposing and impressive funerals&#13;
ever seen in the United States.&#13;
To fill in all its details would lake&#13;
the coming years men will seek, but [ Pages, while to convey an adequate&#13;
will seek in vain, to fathom the enormity&#13;
and the wickedness of that&#13;
crime."&#13;
New President in Tears.&#13;
These words brought home with&#13;
crushing force the warning that the&#13;
last scenes were being enacted. Among&#13;
those who sat with bowed heads was&#13;
President Roosevelt The tears welled&#13;
into his eyes as he heard the petitions&#13;
that God might guide his hands&#13;
aright. Then camo the last stage of&#13;
this Journey to the city of the dead.&#13;
Members of the United States senate,&#13;
-those who sit in the house 6f representatives,&#13;
officials and citizens from&#13;
practically every state In the union,&#13;
soldiers, military organisations—a column&#13;
of more than 6,000 men followed&#13;
the funeral car on this last journey.&#13;
Path Is Carpeted In Flowers.&#13;
The skies were hidden by cloud3&#13;
of gray, but not a drop of rain fell.&#13;
The path of flagging Ifedtng to the&#13;
iron-gated vault was burled beneath&#13;
1\ covering of blooms. This carpet&#13;
of flowers came as an/offering frua.&#13;
the school cfeildnea of Nashville, lean.&#13;
idea of the feature of it all which was&#13;
most conspicuous—the depth and silence&#13;
of the grief displayed—is beyond&#13;
words. In that respect it was tho&#13;
scenes of Wednesday enacted over&#13;
again with increased intensity. All&#13;
along through the great black lane of&#13;
people that stretched from the Mc-&#13;
Kinley hone to the cemetery—quite&#13;
two miles—were men and women&#13;
weeping as though their dearest friend&#13;
was being !»oine to the grave.&#13;
Every Eye Dim With Tears.&#13;
About the tomb Itself the outburst&#13;
of grief wMstlll more striking. As&#13;
the casket Wffs borne into the vault&#13;
there was not a member of the cabinet&#13;
who was hot vTsTbTy" affected, while&#13;
several were in tears, with their&#13;
handkerchiefs to their eyes. Secretary&#13;
Root, although controlling himself&#13;
to #ome degree of outward calm,&#13;
was deeply moved, while President&#13;
Roosevelt repeatedly pressed his handkerchief&#13;
to his eyes.&#13;
Scenes at the Church.&#13;
It was 1:50 o'clock when the procession&#13;
reached the stately stone ediflco&#13;
where the funaral services wore&#13;
to be held. At the church entrance&#13;
were drawn up deep, flies of soldiers,&#13;
with bayonets advanced, keeping a&#13;
clear area for the advancing casket&#13;
and the. long train of mourners. The&#13;
hearse halted while President Roosevelt&#13;
and members of the cabinet&#13;
aiighted. Again they grouped themselves&#13;
at either side of the entrance,&#13;
and with uncovered heads awaited the&#13;
passing of the casket Then the flower-&#13;
coverea coffin was brought from the&#13;
»hearse and as it passed within the,&#13;
black-draped entrance the president&#13;
and his cabinet followed within the&#13;
edifice.&#13;
Members o f Congress Enter.&#13;
At tho rear of each or tne tour aisles&#13;
stood a soldier at attention, cap in&#13;
hand, musket held straight in front.&#13;
The members of the senate entered. At&#13;
pew. 4ix«?tlr iitfhine, t&amp;e men of- the&#13;
naty a** Just across the aial* from&#13;
President Roosevelt After Dr. and&#13;
Mrs. Boer came the venerable Joseph&#13;
Saaton, uncle of Mrs. McKinley. Th«&#13;
great organ had left the funeral march&#13;
and now tJ^'reed* pealed out the&#13;
strains of "Nearer, My God, to Thee."&#13;
Those who had accompanied the funeral&#13;
train then were seated. Senatoi&#13;
and Mrs. Fairbanks came first, fol*&#13;
lowed by Controller Charles Gate*&#13;
Dawes. Senator Hanna followed. Ht&#13;
looked worn and leaned on his cane,&#13;
Mrs. Hanna accompanied him. Then&#13;
the black-gloved ushers seated the&#13;
other members of the party.&#13;
The formation of the funeral procession&#13;
was as follows:&#13;
., First Division.&#13;
Gen. Eli Torrance, national commander&#13;
O. A. R., commanding, and. staff.&#13;
Grand Army band.&#13;
E. F . Taggart. department commander G. ATit., of ohio. ananroofr.&#13;
Canton Post, No. 26, Canton, O.&#13;
Buckley Post, No. 12, Akron. O.&#13;
Bell liarmon P o s t No. 86, Warren, O.&#13;
C. G. Chamberlain Post, No. 86, East&#13;
Palestine, O.&#13;
FUNERAL CORTEGE NEARTNG THE CAPITOL AT WASHINGTON.&#13;
the head walked Senator Allison of&#13;
Iowa. Then came Penrose and Cockrell,&#13;
Scott, Burrows of Michigan, Tilman&#13;
and Mason of Illinois. Next the&#13;
members of the house filed In. They&#13;
numbered almost 150. Speaker Henderson&#13;
at the head. Louder came the&#13;
mourn of the band, and outside the&#13;
troops had formed a phalanx of sabers&#13;
and bayonets;—Then, under tho black&#13;
shrouded door, came the casket.&#13;
Under Arch of Sabers.&#13;
The black coffin had passed under an&#13;
arch of drawn sabers as it was carried&#13;
up the steps. Lieutenant General&#13;
Miles and the men of the army and&#13;
Rear Admiral Farquhar and th»* men&#13;
of the navy held their positions. Covered&#13;
with a great American flag, bearing&#13;
only sprays of immortelles and&#13;
roses tendered by the Legation ol&#13;
honor, the casket was slowly •brought&#13;
to the front, supported on the shoulders&#13;
of the blue jackets and the soldiers.&#13;
At the foot of the mountain of&#13;
flowers marking the altar ami the&#13;
choir loft lay the bier shrouded, too.&#13;
in the national colors and in black.&#13;
On this the- casket was placed under&#13;
the quivering folds of the starry banner,&#13;
with the lights shedding their effulgence&#13;
from above, the fragrance of&#13;
the flowers hovering about and the&#13;
music of Beethoven's grand funeral&#13;
march pulsing from the organ, the&#13;
bodybearers gently lowered the flagdraped&#13;
and flower-adorned coffin to its&#13;
support.&#13;
All Rise as Coffin Passes.&#13;
Then the generals took their places&#13;
in the first seat to the right of the&#13;
central aisle. The rear admirals&#13;
crossed and tool: the first pew to the&#13;
left. Every one wfthin the church had&#13;
risen as the casket was brought in.&#13;
They remained standing. A moment&#13;
later and President Roosevelt entered&#13;
through the same doorway of black.&#13;
Given Post, No. 133, Wooster, O.&#13;
Hart Post, No. 134, Maasillon, O.&#13;
Other Grand Army posts.&#13;
Second Division.&#13;
"•'"• M i l |i ) • i . i i n t f « « — ^ w y ^&#13;
A strike for*b*tfher* "waiea^o^ " ^&#13;
switchmen employed at the Kentucky&#13;
&lt;fc Indiana bridge/ across the OWe&#13;
river at Louisville, has caused ar tie-,&#13;
up of freight trains which affects eight&#13;
railroad*, more or less seriously; About&#13;
1,300 cars are side tracked at *tew Afc&#13;
bany, Youngstown and Louisville, aad&#13;
not a wheel has turned since Friday&#13;
afternoon. Engines with steam up and&#13;
their engineers and firemen ready to&#13;
move are to be seen by the dozens at&#13;
Youngstown and at the terminals of&#13;
the bridge.&#13;
The roads directly affected by the&#13;
strike are the Baltimore A Ohio,&#13;
Southwestern, the Monon snd the&#13;
Southern. Others affected indirectly&#13;
are the Louisville 4 Nashville, the&#13;
Louisville, Henderson &amp; St. Louis, the&#13;
Illinois Central and some of the&#13;
freights of the Bljt Four and the&#13;
Chesapeake &amp; Ohio railroads.&#13;
C a p t u r e d ISO B r i t i s h .&#13;
*vtfir&#13;
- p . .&#13;
; • • ; • • ' • • : • • " : • \ -&#13;
• V . i , .&#13;
V , ' ' • • • ' , • '•• •• . ' I * ! ' . * ?&#13;
•:.::: ' •&lt;•',' V l M&#13;
The Boers captured three companies&#13;
of mounted infantry under Gough,&#13;
who were reconnoitering south of&#13;
Utrecht. Afler a severe fight the&#13;
British forces lost their guns which&#13;
had firnt been disabled. British casualties&#13;
wert» two officers and 14 men&#13;
killed; five officers and 25 men wounded&#13;
and Ave officers and 1¾) men captured.&#13;
Gou.ch, who escaped during the&#13;
night, reports that there were 1.000&#13;
Boers in the attacking party which&#13;
was led by Botha.&#13;
French reports that Smuts rushed&#13;
the cordon at Elandwiverpoort. The&#13;
British losses were three officers killed&#13;
and one injured, and 20 men killed and&#13;
80 wounded. Boers who were dressed&#13;
in khaki, lost heavily.&#13;
Wo G u e r r i l l a W a r f a r e .&#13;
Joseph J. Emery, formerly the Detroit&#13;
agent of the Associated Press,&#13;
who has been conducting the Associated&#13;
Press service in the Philippine*&#13;
for the last year, returned home for&#13;
a visit. Mr. Emery has been all&#13;
around the islands with the Taft com-&#13;
4" mission, and declares that with the&#13;
exception of parts of the Islands of&#13;
Mindora and Samar. there is no guerrilla&#13;
warfare or trouble of any kind,&#13;
and that In the island of Luzon it is&#13;
safe to travel anywhere without an&#13;
armed escort. There ar'e some 45,000&#13;
troops on the islands, or 20,000 lesn&#13;
than in l(JO0. and it is expected this&#13;
force will gradually be reduced onehalf.&#13;
MaJ. Charles Dick, commanding.&#13;
Eighth Regiment Military Band.&#13;
Detachment Ohio National Guard.&#13;
Troop A of Ohio National Guard, guard&#13;
of honor.&#13;
Officiating clergymen.&#13;
Funeral car and bearers.&#13;
Honorary bearers.&#13;
-Speciat guard—of honor. Gen. -Nelson A. I _ : .&#13;
Miles, Admiral George Dewey. Gen. » § • . . - « . « . «» ^ &gt; A m ^ » i . « n .&#13;
John R. Brooke. Gen. Elwell S. Otis, M e s s a g e s o f C o n d o l e n c e .&#13;
Gen. George L. Gillespie. ; There i s no c e s s a t i o n in the flow o f&#13;
Family Presfdent? S and Cabinet i ^ i j , I &gt; i U c h p s f r o m e v e r . V « &gt; m e r o f t h e&#13;
President Yof Senatel^knd United States ^ t ' t h e x p r e s s i n g s y m p a t h y w i t h t h e&#13;
Senators. j A m e r i c a n people and admiration f o r&#13;
SpGeoavkeerrn oorfs Hoouf ses taotfe sR ewpritehs ensttaatfifvse. s.&#13;
Gen. Leonard Wood, Governor of Cuba.&#13;
Ohio state officials.&#13;
Circuit Court Judges, state of Ohio.&#13;
Gov. McKinley's former staff officers.&#13;
Federal officers of Cleveland.&#13;
Federal officers of Chicago.&#13;
Federal officers of Canton.&#13;
Federal officers of Massillon.&#13;
Board of directors of Pan-American Exposition.&#13;
Board of Cook County officials, Chicago.&#13;
Third Division.&#13;
•Maj. A. Vignos, commanding.&#13;
Gate City Guards of Atlanta, "Ga.&#13;
Cleveland Grays.&#13;
Cleveland Scotts Guards.&#13;
William McKinley Command Spanish-&#13;
American War Veterans.&#13;
Sons of Veterans.&#13;
Union League Legion.&#13;
Cunton Encampment, No. 91.&#13;
Fourth Division.&#13;
A. B. Foster, Grand Commander of Ohio,&#13;
commanding.&#13;
Knights Templar.&#13;
Grand Lodge of Ohio.&#13;
Eagle Lod^e of Canton.&#13;
Canton Ledge of Canton and other Masonic&#13;
lodtfes.&#13;
T h e r e m a i n i n g three d i v i s i o n s were&#13;
m a a e up of representatives from clubs,&#13;
societies, civic bodies and t h e E i g h t y -&#13;
second r e g i m e n t of N a t i o n a l Guards,&#13;
together with other military organizations.&#13;
W h e n the funeral a t Canton began&#13;
all the tides of American life stood&#13;
still. T h e wheels of industry ceased t o&#13;
revolve. T h e h a m m e r s of toil paused&#13;
Mr. McKinley. A m o n g the numerous&#13;
m e s s a g e s received to-day w a s a long&#13;
rxpi'ossion of deep sorrow from t h e&#13;
c r o w n prince o f S i a m , w h o is n o w in&#13;
London.&#13;
A special edition of the Gazette, London,&#13;
w a s entirely confined t&lt;&gt; Kin&gt;;&#13;
lid ward's orders directing the court t o&#13;
go into mourning for a w e e k for t h e&#13;
iate President McKinley.&#13;
t'j.Toi-4 t h e C a n t e e n .&#13;
Tho army c a n t e e n w a s the s*u...j-vtof&#13;
a U.ngthy discussion at a session o f&#13;
the American P u b l i c Hoalsh association&#13;
a t Buffalo, and upon its conclusion&#13;
t h e following resolution w a s&#13;
adopted wirh but o n e dissent ins; v o t e :&#13;
"Unsolved, That this t&gt;ody deplore*&#13;
any action in curtailing the operation&#13;
of a r m y c a n t e e n s or post e x c h a n g e s&#13;
a s formerly e x i s t i n g i u the United&#13;
S t a t e s and in the interest of general&#13;
ami military s a n i t a t i o n and temperance&#13;
recommends ^ their re-establishment."&#13;
His lips quivered s l i g h t l y a s h e was i n their beat. The ship stopped h e r&#13;
1.&gt; K i l l R o o n e v e l t .&#13;
Frank Idinps. 2 2 y e a r s old. blavksmith.&#13;
w a s arraigned •before J u d g e&#13;
K e n n e d y at the Central Police Court.&#13;
Cleveland, upon t h e charge o f s u s -&#13;
picion, hi a saloon on St. Clair street.&#13;
Idings is alleged t o h a v e s a h h "I belong&#13;
to a society that will give,$r&gt;0 000&#13;
to any man w h o will kill President&#13;
Roosevelt."&#13;
Mings, at his hearing, did not d e n y&#13;
that he had m a d e the statement.&#13;
Gen. F n n n t o n Ha» A n p o n d i c l t i * .&#13;
(ion. Fur.stou I:; in the hospital a t&#13;
Manila suffering from appendicitis,&#13;
l i e will probably be operated upon.&#13;
Aguinaldo h a s w r i t t e n to Civil Governor&#13;
Taft and Military Governor&#13;
Chaffee saying that h e regrets the*&#13;
great loss 'suffered by t h e people' of&#13;
the Tutted S t a t e s iu tin- death&#13;
President McKinley.&#13;
of&#13;
P l o t Y o r k ' s D e a t h .&#13;
A sensational story w a s published&#13;
in Hamilton, Out., to the effect t h a t&#13;
| four men w e i v overheard in a bar-&#13;
I room -discussnig t h e killing oi.' t h e&#13;
IH'.ke of York, a n d that the listeners&#13;
are convinced that there i s a plot o n&#13;
foot t o a s s a s s i n a t e the d u k e w h e n h e&#13;
visits Hamilton. The police take n o&#13;
stock in the story.&#13;
SAILORS AND SOLDTERS BEARING THE CASKET.&#13;
escorted to the pew directly behind&#13;
General Miles. Behind him came Secretaries&#13;
Hitchcock and Wilson and&#13;
Postmaster General Smith, who filed&#13;
Into the next pew, and with them&#13;
went Secretary Cortelyou, the man&#13;
wao had made every effort that a loyal&#13;
heart could prompt to save the life&#13;
which had gone out under the bullet.&#13;
Members of Family Seated.&#13;
Then came the members of tbe family,&#13;
all being seated to the left of the&#13;
central aisle. Abner McKinley, brother&#13;
of the dead president, and his wife&#13;
walked slowly at the head or the&#13;
biack-clad line. He was seated in the&#13;
throb in its race against time. The&#13;
miner dropped his pick. The farmer&#13;
checked his team in mid-furrow. The&#13;
crowds in the city streets halted. All&#13;
activities save the ministrations to the&#13;
deadly sick and the dying were suspended.&#13;
The sun in heaven for a space&#13;
looked down upon a motionless nation,&#13;
where nearly every head was bent.&#13;
Special services were held in the&#13;
churches of the national capital and&#13;
hundreds of other cities.&#13;
Lieutenant Peary accused of abandoning&#13;
his ship surgeon. Dr. Diedrlck,&#13;
at Etah, Greenland, because of a quarrel.&#13;
Six W e r e K i l l e d .&#13;
A switch not properly set brought a&#13;
passenger express and a heavy freight&#13;
train together with the resultant&#13;
deaths of six passengers on the express&#13;
train, ami injuries to 2."&gt; other*,&#13;
on the main line of the New York.&#13;
New Haven &amp; Hartford railroad at&#13;
Avon, Mass.&#13;
M c K i n l e y ' * L i f e I n i m r a a e e .&#13;
T h e Ohio insurance c o m m i s s i o n e r&#13;
corrects a N e w York s t a t e m e n t on t h e&#13;
subject and s a y s l*vesident M c K i n l e y&#13;
carried !?l."i\00o life insurance.&#13;
T h e oil-Hals of the W h i t e S*ar l i n *&#13;
emphatically d e n y t h a t .1. P i e r p a n t&#13;
Morgan has bought the line.&#13;
Secretary L o n g s i y s that M c K i n -&#13;
ley's death "has put out the last ciiabcrs&#13;
of sectional bitterness."&#13;
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UNADILLA.&#13;
Mrs. Jas. McKinder is on the&#13;
sick list.&#13;
AmbroBft Pond of Jackson Co.,&#13;
who took Emmet Folkeraon's&#13;
horse and buggy while working&#13;
for Gene Smith, has been found.&#13;
NORTH LAKE.&#13;
Geo. W e b b h a s a n e w t o p b u g g y .&#13;
, r . „ . . . . , a J a c k F r o s t m a d e a few calls&#13;
V i n a B a r t o n is w o r k i n g at 8 . , , , ,&#13;
T» J. » £ Ba r t o n 6 of oSit o c1k1b n• dj g e . n e r e jasc weeK.&#13;
A r t h u r O o b b of S t o c k b r i d g e&#13;
visited at J a s , B a r t o n ' s S u n d a y .&#13;
G e o . M a y a n d wife m o v e d i n t o&#13;
t h e A g n e s M a r s h a l l h o u s e t h i s&#13;
-week* —&#13;
J . D . C o u l t ^ n a n d wife of C h e l -&#13;
sea visited A . C. W a t s o n a n d wife&#13;
S u n d a y .&#13;
A l a r g e n u m b e r from h e r e a r e&#13;
a t t e n d i n g t h e s t a t e " fair a t P o n -&#13;
tiac t h i s week.&#13;
Mrs. W m . S m i t h a n d d a u g h t e r&#13;
Tna a n d M r s . L . K . H a d l e y w e r e&#13;
in C h e l s e a o n S a t u r d a y .&#13;
W m . L i v e r m o r e a n d d a u g h t e r&#13;
Mrs. K i t t i e B u d d a r e v i s i t i n g at&#13;
F r e d D o u g l a s ' of I o n i a .&#13;
M r s . D a v i d S u l l i v a n w h o h a s&#13;
been v i s i t i n g h e r b r o t h e r Z. A .&#13;
Hartsuff r e t u r n e d to h e r h o m e in ; a u o t u e r season.&#13;
C o l u m b u s , O h i o , last week. |&#13;
R e v . M r . R y a n p r e s i d i n g e l d e r&#13;
will p r e a c h h e r e n e x t S u n d a y even&#13;
i n g a n d h o l d q u a r t e r l y conference&#13;
at 9 o'clock M o n d a y m o r n -&#13;
ing-&#13;
Mrs. B e n I s h a m w a s h o m e S a t -&#13;
u r d a y a n d S u n d a y ,&#13;
M o s t f a r m e r s h e r e will sow r y e&#13;
i n s t e a d of w h e a t t h i s fall.&#13;
J o e F e r g i s o n w a s a t J a c k s o n&#13;
f r a m S a t u rday~till'~H o n d a y 7&#13;
N e a r l y e v e r y o n e h e r e is crazy&#13;
to g o to P o n t i a c t h i s week.&#13;
H a r r y H a d i e y h a d a sick h o r s e&#13;
t h e first of t h e week. H e t u r n e d&#13;
it o u t a n d lost it, at lease he can&#13;
n o t find it.&#13;
M r s . R. C. G l e n n a n d d a u g h t e r&#13;
Mrs. J a s . C o o k e visited in D e t r o i t&#13;
t h e first of t h e week on t h e i r way&#13;
to t h e P a n - A m .&#13;
T h e h e n s in t h i s v i c i n i t y m a y as&#13;
well h a v e a vacatiou a s F a r n u m ' s&#13;
g r o c e r y wagon is n q t e x p e c t e d on&#13;
t h i s r o u t e after t h i s w e e k u n t i l&#13;
thoroughly discussed after which&#13;
the meeting adjourned to meet at&#13;
the home* of Mr. and tyre. Frank&#13;
Ives the third Saturday in Oct&#13;
Hamburg and Putnam Farmers Club.&#13;
Program for Hamburg and Pat&#13;
nam farmers club to be held Jas.&#13;
Nash's Saturday Sept. 28.&#13;
Music,&#13;
Reading,&#13;
Duet,&#13;
Reading.&#13;
Duet,&#13;
Grace Lake&#13;
Miss Hall&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. S. Swarthout&#13;
Miss VauFleet&#13;
Mrs. J . D. VanFleet p.nd&#13;
Adda Kice&#13;
-Recitation, Jas. Ouly-&#13;
Readinjr, Mrs. Francis&#13;
Duet, Nettie Hall and lva Placeway&#13;
Reading. Mrs. E. Kennedy&#13;
Recitation, Fred Swarthout&#13;
STILL MORE LOCAL.&#13;
ANDERSON&#13;
A n d y R o c h e r e t u r n e d to t h e U .&#13;
of M. T u e s d a y .&#13;
- S a m u e l ^VilsonJeii_Saiuj:day_to&#13;
a t t e n d t h e U . of. AI.&#13;
F l o y d D u r k e e of n e a r M u n i t l i&#13;
S u n d a y e d a t Home.&#13;
E d d M c C a y e t t c u t his foot w i t h&#13;
PARSHALLVILLEC&#13;
h a s . Cole oE Owosso m a d e a&#13;
s h o r t visit h e r e t h i s week.&#13;
W a r r e n Cole w h o h a s been&#13;
q u i t e sick is some b e t t e r at t h i s&#13;
w r i t ting.&#13;
J a y Cole of D n r a n d is h e r e t h i s&#13;
week a s s i s t i n g his m o t h e r in fini&#13;
s h i n g u p t h e falls w o r k .&#13;
_ J . L . a n d Geo. P a y n e with&#13;
t h e i r wives a n d M. V a u C a m p a n d&#13;
wife a t t e n d e d t h e w e d d i n g of J o h n&#13;
V a n C a m p at O w o s s o last week.&#13;
T h e g r a p e c r o p is l a r g e h e r e&#13;
t h i s season a n d v e r y fine ones are&#13;
Fred Campbell and Raymond S i l -&#13;
ler were in Howell the h'rst of the&#13;
week.&#13;
Last Wednesday night the safe in&#13;
postoffice at So. Lyon was blown open&#13;
and $150 worth of stamps were taken.&#13;
No clue.&#13;
Will Murphy was in Plymouth last&#13;
Friday to see the horse races. Green&#13;
Wilson owned by James Roche ol this&#13;
place was among the number and won&#13;
in three straight heats, Purse&#13;
•• - • "'-•, • - j ^ i "&#13;
examiner is traveling in t o * Mate.&#13;
PenHioners should bo on the lookout&#13;
for him. He approaches pensioners&#13;
with the statement that their pension&#13;
is about to be reduced or suspended,&#13;
but promises for a consideration from&#13;
$2 to $10 to secure their reinstate*&#13;
ment on the rolls. He is a fraud.&#13;
Any pensioner approached by such a&#13;
person sbauld at once call an officer&#13;
and have them arrested.—fix. Any&#13;
I pensioner who wishes to consult N\ T.&#13;
\ Kirk, whose "adv" appears in this, issue&#13;
we can personally recommend him&#13;
.to you.&#13;
Frederic E. Arnold, of Ann Arbor,&#13;
has been granted arpafaut on an invention&#13;
to prevent the ashes from falling&#13;
off a cigar while it is beinsr smoked.&#13;
The support consists of the rods&#13;
preferably made of asbestos, nickel,&#13;
German silver or aluminum, arranged&#13;
longitudinall between the bunch and&#13;
the wrapper, forming a sort of basket&#13;
which retains the ashes and prevents&#13;
their falling.—Chelsea Herald. Now&#13;
if Mr. Arnold will invent a cigar tha£&#13;
will not light, many will rise up and&#13;
call him ble.sed, as there will be many&#13;
more pairs of shoes bought.&#13;
These cool days,&#13;
'•" » 'I 1 1 ^ * — p w&#13;
Rosa* to refctv Jflqute* «1&#13;
rtrhs at win:&#13;
ter is approaching and oar wood sap*&#13;
ply is low. Any of oar many subscribers&#13;
who wish to help as o a t along&#13;
this liae we would be pleased to have&#13;
them do so'immediately.&#13;
• i" i — — — — • — — — ^ - — — m m '&#13;
For Sale. J&#13;
Anyone in need of a well pump will&#13;
do well to call on us. Desiring to&#13;
put in a force pump we have a good&#13;
second band pump in good r u n n i n g&#13;
order. It was working well in a 58.&#13;
foot v ell when changed tor the force.—&#13;
: ¾ ^ •'•&#13;
In Meniorlum.&#13;
OCOK .&#13;
At the annual meeting of the society&#13;
of church workers held Wednesday&#13;
MissMay VanFleet, a member of j'afternoon Sept. 18 the following lines&#13;
Mrs, 11. E. Finch's class in the M. E. j to the memory of Miss Lizzie Camp-&#13;
Sundav school, entertaintd her teach- | bell who died J u n e 27, were read:&#13;
er and* Classmates at her home east of ™* isa Reaper whose name is Death,&#13;
And, with his sickle keen,&#13;
The pump may be seen at Teeple &amp;&#13;
Cad wells.&#13;
If a person has anything to sell, be&#13;
he merchant or farmei, it does not&#13;
pay to wait until your competitor bas&#13;
the start of you before you let the&#13;
buyer know you have it for sale. The&#13;
DISPATCH is the best medium in this&#13;
vicinity through which to let your&#13;
wants be known.&#13;
STURGEON BAY, WIS.&#13;
Ann Arbor Railroud makes it a regular&#13;
station for its Car Ferries.&#13;
this village last Saturday. The young&#13;
ladies spent a very enjoyable day.&#13;
,1. H. ^eibly who has been handling&#13;
the V. S. Combination Survey has just&#13;
a c o r n c u t t e r r e c e n t l y .&#13;
R i c h a r d R o c h e visited a t W m . ! s e l l i n g for fifty c e n t s p e r b u s h e l&#13;
L e d g w i d g e ' s t h e first of t h e week.&#13;
B e a n p i c k i n g b e g a n at t h e elev&#13;
a t o r M o n d a y with n i n e p i c k e r s .&#13;
E d d C r a n n a a n d wife of L y n -&#13;
don s p e n t S u n d a y with friends in&#13;
A n d e r s o n .&#13;
M a b e l S i l l e r of P i n c k n e y was&#13;
t h e g u e s t of E d i t h W o o d F r i d a y&#13;
a n d S a t u r d a y .&#13;
T h e r e w a s no school W e d n e s d a y&#13;
as t h e t e a c h e r , W i l l R o c h e , att&#13;
e n d e d t h e state fair.&#13;
E l v a HofT of H o w e l l is v i s i t i n g&#13;
h e r p a r e n t s in t h i s place. S h e ret&#13;
u r n e d S a t u r d a y from a visit in&#13;
D e t r o k r&#13;
«&#13;
Mrs, H a t t i e S t e p h e n s o n a n d&#13;
niece F l o r a S m i t h , visited M r s .&#13;
S's p a r e n t s in S t o c k b r i d g e o v e r&#13;
S u n d a y .&#13;
S e v e r a l from this place a t t e n d -&#13;
ed a p a r t y at I. J . A b b o t t s F r i d a y&#13;
e v e n i n g . 41 n u m b e r s were sold&#13;
a n d all r e p o r t a fine time.&#13;
T h e M i s s e s C l a r a a n d M y r a&#13;
W i l l i a m s a n d b r o t h e r C a r l of&#13;
S t o c k b r i d g e , visited t h e i r sister,&#13;
Mrs. F r e d M a c k i n d e r , S u n d a y .&#13;
W h i l e B u r r S m i t h was c u t t i n g&#13;
weeds T u e s d a y , h i s l i t t l e sister&#13;
F l o r e n c e c a m e u p b e h i n d h i m u n -&#13;
n o t i c e d a n d received a blow from&#13;
t h e c o m c u t t e r c u t t i n g h e r face&#13;
q u i t e b a d l y .&#13;
B . F . A n d r e w s will have m o r e&#13;
t h a n o n e h u n d r e d b u s h e l s .&#13;
He reai&gt;8 the beurded grain at a breath,&#13;
Ami the flowers that grow b^wee!!.'1&#13;
This lveaper named Death has again inleaded&#13;
our ranks and another loved one,&#13;
, . . f . . Miss I.izzie Campbell has been calledhome.&#13;
completed Ins delivery in Hamburg ^ 2 v e r g . n c e o m . o r g a n i z , l i o l l ,1M e x l s t e d&#13;
township. He bas met with splendid , g h e h.,g b p e n a n a c t i v e member but death has&#13;
success and -everyjjodj is p l e a s e d ^ J _ c l ^ p j j I p r _ . 0 n e raore n a m e has been&#13;
obtain the valuable goods at so small&#13;
a price.&#13;
ftey, E. E. Caster and wife were&#13;
guests of Rev. and Mrs. H. W. Hicks&#13;
and F. L. Andrew's family the last, of&#13;
last week. Rev. Caster was on his&#13;
way to his new appointment at ClfeP&#13;
sea having been pastor of the M. E.&#13;
1 The Ann Arbor Railroad car ferries&#13;
are now making regular stops at&#13;
Sturgeon Bay Wis. Steamer leaves&#13;
Frankfort Monday, Wednesday and&#13;
Friday 9:30 a m, Sturgeon Bay 3:30&#13;
p m and arrives Menominee 5.30 p ni.&#13;
Going east steamer leaves Menomi-,&#13;
nee same davs 11:3'&gt; p m. Sturgeon&#13;
Bay 1:30 a m and arrive Frankfort&#13;
following morning 7:30 a ra. t-39&#13;
D o n ' t F a i l to Visit T h e&#13;
STOCKBRIDGE FAIR&#13;
OCTOBER 2, 3 AND 4, 1901&#13;
and see t h e g r a n d&#13;
Automobile Race&#13;
T h i s will be the m o s t e x c i t i n g race ever h e ld on o u r t r a c k . D O N ' T&#13;
M I S S I T . W e h a v e some of t h e&#13;
Best Horses in the Country&#13;
e n t e r e d in t h e S p e e d Class, a n d G o o d R a c e s a r e a s s u r e d .&#13;
OUR BALL GAME&#13;
W i l l be a h u m m e r . E n t r i e s a r e b e i n g m a d e r a p i d l y a n d a g r a n d d i s -&#13;
play in all classes is a s s u r e d a n d first-class a t t r a c t i o n s e a c h d a y .&#13;
R e d u c e d r a t e s on railroad—train s t o p s a4 g r o u n d s .&#13;
F. E. IVES, Pres. C. J. CAIN, Sec.&#13;
stricken from the earthly roll cill, one&#13;
more luime added to the heavenly one.&#13;
Truly the unseen presence of death hss&#13;
many times walked with silent step sideby-&#13;
side with us and has taken dear and&#13;
loved ones from our midst, many have&#13;
been iemoved_by_ his relentless hand.&#13;
Death «1 ways comes veiled in mystery&#13;
and draped in sadness.&#13;
May we as a society take heed from&#13;
these numerous warnings and when one by&#13;
one are summoned may we be preprred to&#13;
cheerfully respond to the heavenJv roll&#13;
call. ' * &gt;&#13;
Pensions.&#13;
WEST MARION.&#13;
K m m a P e c o t t visited M i s s Alice&#13;
B e a c h S a t u r d a y a n d S u n d a y .&#13;
M r s . A l b e r t M i l l e r a n d d a u g h -&#13;
t e r took d i n n e r w i t h M r s . H . WT.&#13;
S m i t h S u n d a y .&#13;
A. J . W i l h e l m a n d wife a n d&#13;
G e o . B l a n d J r . and: wife w e r e t h e&#13;
g u e s t s of M*s. A. B . F a r r i n g t o n&#13;
S u n d a y last.&#13;
J o h n W i t t y Sr. of N o r t h L a k e&#13;
a n d d a u g h t e r of Denver,, Colo.,&#13;
a r e s p e n d i n g a few d a y s w i t h J o h n&#13;
a n d W e s l e y W i t t y .&#13;
Tlae W e s t M a r i o n c h u r c h has&#13;
.been w i t h o u t s e r v i c e s for several&#13;
S u n d a y s o w i n g t o t h e p a s t o r n o t&#13;
c o m i n g f r o m c o n i e r e c c e .&#13;
UNADILLA FARMER'S CLUB&#13;
T h e S e p t . m e e t i n g of t h e c l u b&#13;
was e n t e r t a i n e d b y Mr. a n d M r s .&#13;
Z. A. Hartsuff last S a t u r d a y aftern&#13;
o o n . T h e c l u b was called to ord&#13;
e r b y p r e s i d e n t , E . L . G l e n n a n d&#13;
o p e n e d with s i n g i n g " A m e r i c a , "&#13;
t h e n followed t h e r e a d i n g of t h e&#13;
m i n u t e s of t h e l a s t m e e t i n g .&#13;
" D a m e D u r d e n " was s u n g by&#13;
M e s d a m e s F S t o w e . A. G. W a t s o n&#13;
a n d M e s s r s W m . L a v e r o c k a n d&#13;
W m P y p e r ; a recitation, " N o&#13;
T i m e , " by R u t h P y p e r a n d E . L .&#13;
G l e n n s a n g " T i s b u t a n old faded&#13;
r o s e - b u d . " A fine p a p e r e n t i t l e d j&#13;
" C o n t e n t m e n t , " w r i t t e n b y M r s . |&#13;
F . L . A n d r e w s a n d in h e r a b s e n c e&#13;
r e a d by M r s . Z. A. Hartsuff. T h e&#13;
p a p e r was ably d i s c u s s e d b y V e s -&#13;
d a m e s H e t t i e a n d A g n e s M a r s h a l l&#13;
M e s s r s . T h o s . H o w l e t t , W m . R a n -&#13;
d o l p h , a n d o t h e r s . H o w a r d M a r -&#13;
s h a l l gave a l a u g h a b l e r e c i t a t i o n ,&#13;
" W h e n m o t h e r ' s a t t h e club. A '&#13;
d u e t , " S c a n l a u ' s R o s e S o n g " b y&#13;
E . L . G l e n n a n d M a b e l Hartsuff.&#13;
T h e q u e s t i o n box wns c o n d u c t e d&#13;
b y T h o s . H o w l e t t . T h e r e was an !&#13;
a b u n d a n c e of g o o d q u e s t i o n s all&#13;
church in Howell for the past t w o&#13;
yeavs.&#13;
John MapRS left a pnff hall at the&#13;
Backus meat.market. 1'uesdav which&#13;
measures about five feet in circumference&#13;
and weitflis 21 pounds.—Stockbridge&#13;
Hrief. It is stated by «ood authority&#13;
that the common puff ball (one&#13;
likes to send rolling through the pas&#13;
tures by a kick) are .a species of mushroons.&#13;
What a feast the above won Id&#13;
have been.&#13;
Postmaster Swarthout called our attention-&#13;
to the article in our last issue&#13;
retfardinsr the new postoffice regulations.&#13;
He informs us it was a mis*&#13;
ak^n as he had received orders that&#13;
the two-cent stamp was to be used&#13;
from Aufir. 1. The source from which&#13;
we pleaned the item misled us.&#13;
We clip the following from the&#13;
Sheldon, Iowa Mail: "Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
K. E. Kearney on Saturday received&#13;
with open arms their seventh son,&#13;
making the roster of their amily&#13;
number eleven. They have never&#13;
been called upon to mourn the loss ol&#13;
a single child and it is the hope of every&#13;
one who knows how ideally happy&#13;
their home is that this {'harming circle&#13;
.may cominuu intact." ' •&#13;
A fellow pretending to be a pension&#13;
Whale House*.&#13;
At one time not very long ago there&#13;
was on the Lancashire, coast, near&#13;
Lythan, England, a cottage and boathouse&#13;
thr.t were made almost entirely&#13;
from the ivmains of a score or so of&#13;
whales that had beeu driven ashore&#13;
some years before. The framework of&#13;
the edifice consisted wholly of whalebone,&#13;
and the dried skins of the huge&#13;
creatures were neatly and strongly fastened&#13;
as a covering for walls and roof.&#13;
There is another builtHng of exactly&#13;
the same kind at Peterhead, In Scotland,&#13;
and in this case the skulls of the&#13;
whales and some of the heavier bones&#13;
are used with great effect as outside&#13;
ornannent.s.&#13;
NKWTO.V T. KIRK, claim agent, of&#13;
Alb.on, Miidi., will be at "Tuomey&#13;
Hou^e," ~—.Einckniiii, on Wednesday&#13;
Oct. 2, 1901, to attend to Pension Business;.&#13;
All soldiers, both of Civil and&#13;
Spanish wars. Dependent mothers&#13;
and lathers, and others having claims,&#13;
are invited to call and see him. Special&#13;
attention given to widows and Increase&#13;
claims. Many formerly rejected&#13;
can now be allowed. Bring your&#13;
pension certificate with you. 2w&#13;
Looked Like Economy,&#13;
Uncle IIIrani (just back from the big&#13;
city)—I don't think that nephew of&#13;
our'n is got as much money as he&#13;
makes out he has.&#13;
Aunt Kmily—-"Why, I thought you said&#13;
he had such a nice home in the city.&#13;
Uncle Hiram—But I didn't tell ye&#13;
nothin about him havin both them little&#13;
girls a* his'u playin on the same planner&#13;
at once. I tell ye he's a-gettin hard&#13;
up.—San Francisco Chronicle.&#13;
S T E W A R T ' S&#13;
ROOFING&#13;
A N D&#13;
ROOFING MATERIALS&#13;
for making NEW ROOFS and repairing&#13;
OLD ROOFS of ail kinds. Best i i the&#13;
market, Send for Catalogue,&#13;
W. H. S T E W A R T ,&#13;
1 0 5 J O H N S T . . N. Y.&#13;
Crmfe retrolenm.&#13;
From crude petroleum 'ire made kerosene,&#13;
gasoline, naphtha, paraffin and&#13;
vaseline. A still heavier oil. left as a&#13;
residue, is used for axle grease, and the&#13;
carbon is turned into stick* for electric&#13;
lights. The sulphuric acid which is&#13;
used for purifying the&gt;products of petroleum&#13;
is recovered and turned Into&#13;
fertilizer for farms where there is too&#13;
much phosphate rock, which is thus&#13;
flissoived.&#13;
Writ I n s For Money.&#13;
Fond Father—l'es, my boy at the varsity&#13;
lias written severaJ articles for the&#13;
magazines.&#13;
Friend—But he's not a professional&#13;
writer, surely?&#13;
"What do you mean by 'professiona&#13;
l ? ' "&#13;
"Why, he doesn't write for money?"&#13;
"Doesn't he? You ought to see some&#13;
of bis letters to me."—Exchange.&#13;
W A * T I - : D :&#13;
An apprentice to learn dressmaking&#13;
onn who Knows somethinp About plain&#13;
sewing, t Enquire ol Mrs. Ob as.&#13;
Grimes over Jackson's store. 38 tf&#13;
JUST&#13;
l/lfhat You Want&#13;
Dust Proof&#13;
better File&#13;
For Sale at&#13;
"THE DISPt TCH OFFICE. "&#13;
0</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 26, 1901</text>
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                <text>September 26, 1901 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>1901-09-26</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>VOL. XIX FINOKNEY, LIVINGSTON 00., MIOH., THURSDAY, OCT. 3 . 1901. No. 40&#13;
£&#13;
:A»&#13;
Edward A. Bowman,&#13;
DEPARTMENT&#13;
STORE . . . . .&#13;
HOWELL. - MICHIGANBOWMAN'S&#13;
Special Sale oft&#13;
Battenberg and Art Needle&#13;
Goods.&#13;
A L S O&#13;
Big New Stock of China.&#13;
Lower Prices than elsewhere&#13;
Trade at BOWIItail's » P«V»&#13;
The Busy Store,&#13;
Howell, Mich.&#13;
LOCAL N E W S .&#13;
Bancroft fair Oct. 1 2 8 4 .&#13;
Brighton fair Oct. 16-17-18.&#13;
Ann Arbor fair Oct. 1-2-34.&#13;
Fowlerville fair Oct. 8 940-11.&#13;
BARGAINS&#13;
IN PHOTOES.&#13;
You can get them at the&#13;
Gallery in Pinckney. All&#13;
kinds of&#13;
*&#13;
Buttons and&#13;
Photo Jewelery.&#13;
Call and see work, and get&#13;
prices.&#13;
A. M. HUNTINGTON,&#13;
Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
Mrs. Estella Graham spent the past&#13;
week in Stockbridge.&#13;
Geo. Hen dee and wife were in Dorand&#13;
the last of last week.&#13;
Eugene Campbell is having his&#13;
house treated to a coat of paint.&#13;
Miss Cook, of Toledo, was a guest&#13;
of her coasin Ed Cook, the past week.&#13;
Cbas. Taylor and family of South&#13;
Lyon visited relative* here the past&#13;
week.&#13;
F. L. Andrews is visiting bis broth&#13;
er, who is sick, and other relatives in"&#13;
Par8hallville.&#13;
Mrs. Myrtilla Hammond, of Canada,&#13;
is visiting her parents, Albert&#13;
Reason and wife.&#13;
J. J. Randall and wife of Monjtt&#13;
Mo. are the gnests of the Raen tamily&#13;
and other relatives here.&#13;
Ho well is advocating the boiling of&#13;
all drinking water, owing to the prevalence&#13;
of typhoid fever.&#13;
Dr. and Mrs. H. F. Sigler spent&#13;
three days last week attending tbe&#13;
State fair at Pontiao and visiting Dr,&#13;
LeBarron and family.&#13;
Mrs. H. W. Hicks and little grandson,&#13;
Gilbert7Teft today for Washing;&#13;
ton, D. C. She will return bv way of&#13;
Cincinatti and visit Prof. F. C. Hicks&#13;
and family.&#13;
Mr. and Sirs. Barry of N. Y. state&#13;
visited her aunt, Mrs. M. Nash, the&#13;
past week. While in Michigan they&#13;
will also visit otber relatives in Ovid&#13;
and Bay City.&#13;
On Thursday last while playiner on&#13;
tbe school ground, Clyde Darrow fell&#13;
in such a manner as to fracture his&#13;
right arm at the elbow, It will be&#13;
several weeks before he can use it as&#13;
it is considered woise than a break.&#13;
Just Received&#13;
At JACKSON'S,&#13;
A. fine line of Black Dress Goods&#13;
at 50c, 75, 85c, $1.00 and $1.25 per yd.&#13;
A large assortment of Plain and Figured Silks&#13;
from 50c to $1.25 per yd.&#13;
A fine line of Plain and Figured Tennis Flannel&#13;
at 5c, 8c, 10c and 12c per yd.&#13;
A complete line of Men's* Ladies', Misses'&#13;
and Children's Cotton and Wool Underwear&#13;
at prices in reach of all.&#13;
We will close this week, all odds and ends&#13;
in Men's, Boy's, Ladies', Misses' and Children's&#13;
JSlioes at Cost Price,&#13;
Men's extra heavy socks 5c pr,&#13;
Apron Ginghams $xAc yd.&#13;
; * &lt; 5 &amp; g 3 £ ^ ^ £ ^&#13;
20th Century Stove Greeting.&#13;
The old reliable firm that have built up their trade with&#13;
your vain able assistance, are happy to inform yoa that&#13;
they are iu better position to serve youi wants than ever&#13;
the^ were iu the 19tn Century, and cordially invite you&#13;
to our store and investigate the truth of the statement&#13;
that we have the best Hue of '&#13;
Steel Hangfes. Base Burner,&#13;
Opal audi Heating1 Stoye»&#13;
erer seen in Pinckney*&#13;
- and at prices that defy competition.&#13;
Always Yours,&#13;
lEEMi &amp;&#13;
Little A lie* Boobe is under tbe&#13;
doctor's care.&#13;
Or. J* W. Monks was in Ann Arbor&#13;
on business Monday.&#13;
Several from here will attend the&#13;
Stock bridge fair this week.&#13;
Mrs. Flora Snyder, of H or ton, visi&#13;
ed ber people here this week.&#13;
Rev. J. 0. Howell will hold services&#13;
at, the Cong'l cbnrch next Sunday&#13;
morning.&#13;
Mrs. Emily Patrick, of Buffalo, has&#13;
been visiting her brother, A. B. Green&#13;
tbe past week.&#13;
Gnstave Grind ling, of Fowlerville,&#13;
was a guest of Miss May flanigan&#13;
over Sunday.*&#13;
Henry Bates, of Kansas, and Cbas.&#13;
Bates of Dexter, visited at A. J. Wilbelme'&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Don't forget the dates of tbe barvest&#13;
festival to be held at tbe Opera&#13;
House Oct. 25-26&#13;
Mrs. Orange Backus, of Marion,&#13;
was a guest of Mrs. A. J. Wilbelm&#13;
tbe drst ot the week.&#13;
Mrs. Flora Grimes and Shirley&#13;
Mann spent tbe last of last week in&#13;
Detroit and Pontiac.&#13;
Rill Monks started Monday tor&#13;
Ypsilanti where he will take a course&#13;
of study in tbe Normal college.&#13;
Onr merchants can sell yoa goods&#13;
just as chetfp and some goods cheaper&#13;
than you can get elsewhere. Try&#13;
them.&#13;
A torn a'09 weighing 3 lbs. 7oz. was&#13;
left at this office /Tuesday. It was&#13;
grown by Mrs. J. W. Place way and&#13;
is ff bouncer.&#13;
Cbas. Hicks and son. of Jackson,&#13;
visited bis parents, Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
George Hicks, and other relatives&#13;
here this week.&#13;
Mrs. Mary Finnigan, of Toronto,&#13;
Canada, and Mrs. A. Feldber, of Jackson,&#13;
visited their aunt. Mrs. Kearney,&#13;
the first of tbe week.&#13;
The advertisement which, appeared&#13;
in tbe last issue of tbe of tbe DISPITCH&#13;
it should have read trona Sept.30 that&#13;
"Black tbe blacksmith's1' shop at Anderson&#13;
won Id be closed.&#13;
RESOLUTIONS.&#13;
Adopted by Livingston Tent, N o .&#13;
285 K. 0 . T . M., Sept. 28tb 1901.&#13;
WHEREAS:-—The Supreme Ruler, in His&#13;
infinite wisdom has taken from our tent&#13;
our beloved brother and Sir Knight, Orla&#13;
B. Jackson; therefore, be it&#13;
RESOLVED:—That in the death of our&#13;
brother, the community has lost a most&#13;
upright and honorable member; the wife&#13;
is bereft of kind, loving, and devoted&#13;
companion,and the Knights of the Maccabees&#13;
a true and loyal Sir Knight.&#13;
RESOLVED:—That in this darkest hour&#13;
of sorrow and affliction, we extend to the&#13;
bereaved one the truest and deepest sympathies&#13;
uf our hearts.&#13;
RESOLVED:—That these resolutions be&#13;
entered on the records of our Tent; that&#13;
the same be published in the Pinckney&#13;
DISPATCH and a copy be presented to the&#13;
family; and be it further&#13;
'RESOLVED:—That the charter of oar&#13;
Tent be draped in morning fo?a period of&#13;
thirty days.&#13;
C. L. GRIMES, Committee.&#13;
0. £. &amp;&#13;
Last Saturday evening at a special&#13;
meeting of tne OES the following officers&#13;
were in&gt; tailed:&#13;
W. M. Mrs. Mary Read&#13;
Patron, Mr. Durtee&#13;
A. M., Mrs. Julia Sigler&#13;
Sec, Mis* Maude Teeple&#13;
Treas, Miss Moceo Teeple&#13;
Adah, Ms. Cad well&#13;
Ruth, Miss Grace Gardner&#13;
Esther, Mrs. Nora Reason&#13;
Martha, Mrs. Edith Greene&#13;
Electa, Miss Georgia Gardner&#13;
Organic, Mrs. Myrtle Brown&#13;
Conductress, .&lt;tr*. Mettie Vaughn&#13;
A. 0., Mrs. Georgia Van Winkle&#13;
Warden, Mrs. 0. 8. Richards&#13;
Sentinel, Mrs. Addie Mclntyre&#13;
Marshall, Miss Jessie Green.&#13;
Mrs. Sarah Beebe leaves Harbor&#13;
Springs this week for Livingston&#13;
county to spend the winter with&#13;
friends and relatives.&#13;
Mrs. Bertha Mann returned tg Detroit,&#13;
Tuesday, to take up a post-gradapd&#13;
bacteriology&#13;
at tbe Detroit Medical College.&#13;
The Wm. Smith will case that has&#13;
been on trial in Washtenaw county&#13;
was decided in favor of bis housekeeper&#13;
Miss Martha French. Tbe&#13;
heirs will appeal the case.&#13;
About twenty friends of Mrs. J. A.&#13;
Donaldson gave ber a surprise last&#13;
Thursday evening it being her 53d&#13;
birthday. A vary enjoyable evening&#13;
was spent by the company.&#13;
Rex Read celebrated his eleventh&#13;
birthday by entertaining a few bov&#13;
friends, Monday afternoon. A good&#13;
time was enjoyed by tbe lads at bat&#13;
and ball, also that that is dear to a&#13;
boy8 heart, a spread. May he s*e&#13;
many more bappy birthdays.&#13;
T. N. Jones died at his borne in&#13;
Hartland, last • Sunday a t&#13;
one o'clock, and the funeral was held&#13;
from tbe home Wednesday morning,&#13;
and the remains were laid in tbe&#13;
Holly cemetery. For many years he&#13;
has been a resident of Hartland. He&#13;
leaves a wife, three pons and three&#13;
daughters besides a large circle of&#13;
friends to mourn their loss.&#13;
Too state fair at Vontiae last week&#13;
was one of the best ever held by the&#13;
association, and tbe best attended.Tb*&#13;
crowd was so large that it wa« impossible&#13;
to care for them. On Thursday&#13;
tbe Grand Trunk Railroad was ^unable&#13;
to secure cars enontrb to. carry&#13;
the people and over 300 were left be&#13;
tween here and Pontiac who coold&#13;
not get on tbe train. 120* tickets&#13;
were sold from here that day.&#13;
txA Smte»«M» l\£rl L °*&#13;
Many imported models, together&#13;
with numberless irresistible creations&#13;
from our Own Workroom.&#13;
Come and Inspection&#13;
Will Be Pleased.&#13;
Boyle &amp; Halstead.&#13;
Parlors over the Bank.&#13;
School Books&#13;
and School supplies of all kinds at prices&#13;
that defy competition.&#13;
Before&#13;
you buy get our PRICES on supplies.&#13;
A Few Groceries&#13;
yet to close out at less than COST.&#13;
F. A. SIGLER:&#13;
Drug-grierf&#13;
BOOK BINDING.&#13;
Having settled down to business in our new&#13;
quarters, secured new tools, stock, etc., we are&#13;
better prepared than ever to do book binding of&#13;
all kinds.&#13;
Magazines,&#13;
Pamphlets,&#13;
Receipts,&#13;
Blank Books, Etc.,&#13;
Bound in a substantia/ manner in Leather, Cloth&#13;
or Paper. Bring us /our magazine* and let&#13;
make them valuable additions to your Horary.&#13;
3 . &amp;. &amp;&amp;Atra» &amp; Co.&#13;
' ' • ' ' • ' • • ' • • &lt; " ' ' ^ \&#13;
• " . ; &gt; ; ; • ' . . . • •&#13;
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TALMA(*K&gt;8 8KRH0N.&#13;
«*FCAT« Or 01UVION U S T SUNDAY**&#13;
SUBJECT.&#13;
Be No MOM&#13;
Jokv^SxW. «0—"Ita Blfhteovs&#13;
4S* la Svertaattaf Bemembr*moe"-~&#13;
jPaelms exll. 0.&#13;
^-ft'^Wttr^S&#13;
tOepyrigfct, 1ML by Louie Klopsch, N. 7.]&#13;
Washington, Sept 29.—In this diseourse&#13;
Dr. Talmage shows how any&#13;
oae can be -widely and forever recollected&#13;
and cheers despondent Christian&#13;
workers; texts, Job xxtv, 20, "He shall&#13;
ibe no more remembered/' and Psalms&#13;
-cxil. ¢, "The righteous shall be in evergasting&#13;
remembrance."&#13;
GZ oblivion and Its defeats X speak&#13;
'today. There is an old monster that&#13;
•wallows down everything. ' It&#13;
crunches individuals, families, communities,&#13;
toamisphe&#13;
« p of yea&#13;
etjdes, of&#13;
•aonster 1:&#13;
w •&#13;
nations, continents,&#13;
worlds. Its diet is made&#13;
of centuries, of ages, of&#13;
kiUenniums. of eons. That&#13;
Called by Noah Webster&#13;
sad all other dictionaries "Oblivion."&#13;
It Is a steep down which everything&#13;
tolls. It is a conflagration in which&#13;
everything is consumed. It is a dirge&#13;
which all orchestras play and a period&#13;
sit which everything* stops. It is the&#13;
cemetery of the human race. It is the&#13;
domain of forgetfulness. Oblivion!&#13;
At times it throws a shadow over all&#13;
of us, and I would not pronounce it&#13;
today if I did not come armed in the&#13;
strength of the eternal Ood on your&#13;
behalf to attack it, to route it, to demolish&#13;
it.&#13;
Why, just look at the way the families&#13;
of the earth disappear. For awhile&#13;
they are together, inseparable, and to&#13;
oach other indispensable, and then&#13;
they part, some by marriage going to&#13;
establish other homes, and some leave&#13;
this life, and a century is long enough&#13;
to plant a family, develop It, prosper&#13;
it and obliterate it. So the generations&#13;
-vanish. Walk up Pennsylvania avenue,&#13;
Washington; Broadway, New&#13;
York; State street, Boston; Chestnut&#13;
Btreet, Philadelphia; the Strand, London;&#13;
Princess street, Edinburgh;&#13;
GbAmps Elysees, Paris; Unter den&#13;
Linden, Berlin, and you will meet in&#13;
this year, 1901 not one person who&#13;
wanted there in the year 1801. What&#13;
-emgalfment! All the ordinary&#13;
• efforts at perpetuation art dead&#13;
failures. Walter Scott's Old&#13;
Mortality may go round with&#13;
his chisel to recut the faded epitaphs&#13;
on tombstones, but Old Oblivion&#13;
has a quicker chisel with which he can&#13;
cut out a thousand epitaphs while Old&#13;
Mortality is cutting one epitaph.&#13;
Whole libraries of biographies devour-&#13;
«d of bookworms or unread of the rising&#13;
generations. All the signs of the&#13;
stores and warehouses of great firms&#13;
have changed, unless the grandsons&#13;
think that it is an advantage to keep&#13;
the old sign up because the name of&#13;
the ancestor was more commendatory&#13;
than the name of the descendant. The&#13;
city of Rome stands today, but dig&#13;
' down deep enough, and you come to&#13;
another Rome, buried, and go down&#13;
still farther, and you will find a third&#13;
Some. Jerusalem stands today, but&#13;
*Jttg down deep enough and yon will&#13;
land a Jerusalem underneath and go&#13;
on and deeper down a third Jerusalem.&#13;
Alexandria, Egypt, on top of an&#13;
Alexandria, and the second on top of&#13;
t^e third. Many of the ancient cities&#13;
are buried thirty feet deep or fifty feet&#13;
deep or 100 feet deep. What was the&#13;
matter? Any special calamity? No&#13;
The wind and waves and sands and&#13;
'flying dust are all undertakers and&#13;
rgravediggers, and if the world stands&#13;
long enough the present Washington&#13;
and New York and London will have&#13;
top of them other Washingtons&#13;
New Yorks and Londons, and only&#13;
after digging and boring and blasting&#13;
will the archaeologists of far distant&#13;
centuries come down as far as the&#13;
ihighest spires and domes and turrets&#13;
&gt;ot our present American and European&#13;
^cities.&#13;
Th* Boll of Armies.&#13;
Call the roll of the armies of Baldwin&#13;
I. or of Charles Martel or of Marlborough&#13;
or of Mlthridates or of Prince&#13;
iFrjederick or of Cortes, and not one&#13;
answer will you hear. Stand them in&#13;
tine and call the roll of the 1,000,000&#13;
in the army of Thebes. Not one&#13;
Stand them in line, the&#13;
1,704,690 infantry and the 200,000 cavalry&#13;
of the Assyrian army under Ninas,&#13;
and call the roll. Not one an-&#13;
.«wor. Stand in line the 1,000,000 men&#13;
•of Sesostris, the 1,200,000 men of&#13;
Attaxorxes at Cunaxa, the 2,641,000&#13;
&gt;man under Xerxes at Thermopylae and&#13;
-eon the long roll. Not one answer.&#13;
the opening of our civil war the&#13;
of the northern and southern&#13;
were told that if they fell in&#13;
their names would never be&#13;
sfatfotten by their country. Out of&#13;
million men who fell in battle or&#13;
in military hospitals yon cannot&#13;
»oaH the names of a thousand, nor the&#13;
mvoja* of 680 nor the names of 100.&#13;
moraine names o* fifty. Oblivion! Are&#13;
too'feet of the dancers who at the&#13;
&lt; of the Duchess of Richmond at&#13;
the night before Waterloo all&#13;
sttil?&#13;
heard&#13;
dealt AU deaf, Ars too eyes that ^ w&#13;
the coronation of George U. all claeedt&#13;
All closed. Oblivion! A hundred&#13;
years from now there will not bo a&#13;
being on' this earth thai knew we ever&#13;
iited.&#13;
In some old family record a descendant&#13;
studying up the ancestral line may&#13;
spell out our name and from the faded&#13;
Ink with great effort find that some&#13;
person by our name wan born somewhere&#13;
in the nineteenth century, but&#13;
they will know no more about us than&#13;
we know about the color of a child's&#13;
eyes born last night in a village in&#13;
Patagonia. Tell me something about&#13;
your great-grandfather. What were&#13;
his features? What did he do? What&#13;
year was he born? What year did he&#13;
die? And yoitf great-grandmother?&#13;
Will you describe the.style of the hat&#13;
she wore, and how did she and your&#13;
great-grandfather get on in each&#13;
other's companionship? Was it March&#13;
weather or June? Oblivion! That&#13;
mountain surge rolls over everything.&#13;
Even the pyramids are dying. Not a&#13;
day passes but there is chiseled off a&#13;
chip of that granite. The sea Is triumphing&#13;
over the land, t and what is&#13;
going on at our Atlantic coast Is going&#13;
on all around the world, and the continents&#13;
are crumbling into the waves,&#13;
and while this is transpiring on the&#13;
outside of the world, the hot chisel&#13;
of the internal fire is digging under&#13;
the foundations of the earth and cutting&#13;
its way out toward the surface.&#13;
It surprises me to hear the people say&#13;
they do not think the world will&#13;
flnallly be burned up when all the scientists&#13;
will tell you that it has for&#13;
ages been on fire.&#13;
Why, there is only a crust between&#13;
us and the furnaces inside raging to&#13;
get out Oblivion! The world itself&#13;
will roll into it as easily as a schoolboy's&#13;
India rubber ball rolls down a&#13;
hill, and when our world goes It is so&#13;
interlocked by the law of gravitation&#13;
with other worlds that they will go&#13;
too, and so far from having our memory&#13;
perpetuated by a monument of&#13;
Aberdeen granite in this world there&#13;
is no world in sight of our strongest&#13;
telescope that will be a sure pediment&#13;
for any slab of commemoration of the&#13;
fact that we ever lived or died at all.&#13;
Our earth is struck with death. The&#13;
axletree of the constellations will&#13;
break and let down the populations of&#13;
other worlds. Stellar, lunar, solar,&#13;
mortality. Oblivion! It can swallow&#13;
and will swallow whole galaxies of&#13;
worlds as easily as a crocodile takes&#13;
down a frog.&#13;
Yet oblivion does not remove or&#13;
swallow everything that had better&#13;
not be removed or swallowed. The&#13;
old monster is welcome to his meal.&#13;
This world would long ago have been&#13;
overcrowded if not for the merciful&#13;
removal of nations and generatipns.&#13;
What if all the books had lived that&#13;
were ever written and printed and&#13;
published? The libraries would by&#13;
their immensity have obstructed intelligence&#13;
and made all research impossible.&#13;
The fatal epidemic of books&#13;
was a merciful epidemic. Many of the&#13;
state and national libraries today are&#13;
only morgues, in which dead books are&#13;
waiting for some one to come and recognize&#13;
them. What if all the people&#13;
that had been born were still alive?&#13;
We would have been elbowed by our&#13;
ancestors of ten centuries ago, and&#13;
people who ought to have said their&#13;
last word 3,000 years ago would snarl&#13;
at u&amp;', saying, "What xare you doing&#13;
here?" There would have been no'&#13;
room to turn around. Some of the&#13;
past generations of mankind were not&#13;
worth remembering. The first useful&#13;
thing that many people did was to die,&#13;
their cradle a misfortune and their&#13;
grave a boon. This world was hardly&#13;
a comfortable place to live In before&#13;
the middle of the eighteenth century.&#13;
60 many things have come into&#13;
the world that were not fit to stay in&#13;
we ought to be glad they were put out&#13;
The waters of Lethe, the fountain of&#13;
forgetfulness, are a healthful draft&#13;
The history we have of the world in&#13;
ages past is always one sided and cannot&#13;
be depended on. History is fiction&#13;
illustrated by a few straggling&#13;
facts. * * • '&#13;
Wby We Should Be Bem«mbered.&#13;
Now, I have told you that thlsobll-r&#13;
vion of which I have spoken has its&#13;
defeats and that there is no more reason&#13;
why we should not be distinctly&#13;
and vividly and gloriously remembered&#13;
five hundred million billion trillion&#13;
quadrillion qulntilllon years from now&#13;
than that we should be remembered six&#13;
weeks. I am going to tell you how&#13;
the thing can be done and will be&#13;
done.&#13;
We may build this "everlasting remembrance,"&#13;
as my text styles it, into&#13;
the supernal existence of those to&#13;
whom we do kindness in this world.&#13;
You must remember that this infirm&#13;
and treacherous faculty which we now&#13;
call memory is in the future state to be&#13;
complete and perfect. "Everlasting remembrance!"&#13;
Nothing will slip the&#13;
stoat grip of that celestial faculty. Old&#13;
you help a widow pay her rent? Did&#13;
yon find for that man released from&#13;
prison a place to get honest work?&#13;
Did you pick up a child fallen on the&#13;
curbstone and by a stick of candy put&#13;
his hand stop tot hurt on hit&#13;
acratched kneefBid yew assure a business&#13;
mail owamped by the stringeney&#13;
of the money markot that times would&#13;
afterawhile ho, battett DWyoaleada&#13;
Magdalen of the street into a mjdftit**&#13;
mtstion, where the Lord said to bet,&#13;
^Neither do I condemn thee. Qo ond&#13;
sin no more?" Did you teli&gt;* man&#13;
clear discouraged in his waywardness&#13;
and hopeless and plotting suicide that&#13;
for him was near by a lover in which&#13;
he might wash and a coronet of eternal&#13;
blensednesa he might wear? What&#13;
are epitaphs in graveyards, what are&#13;
eulogiums in presence of those whose&#13;
breath Is in their nostrils, what are unread&#13;
biographies in the alcoves of .'&#13;
city library, compared with the imper*&#13;
ishable records you have made in the&#13;
illumined memories of those to whom&#13;
you did such kindnesses? Forget&#13;
them? They cannot forget them. Not*&#13;
withstanding all their might and&#13;
splendor there are some things the&#13;
glorified of heaven cannot do, and this&#13;
is one of them. They cannot forget an&#13;
earthly kindness done. They have no&#13;
cutlass to part that cable. They have&#13;
no strength to hurl into oblivion that&#13;
benefaction. Has Paul forgotten the&#13;
inhabitants of Malta, who extended the&#13;
island hospitality when he and others&#13;
with him had felt, added to a shipwreck,&#13;
the drenching rain and the&#13;
sharp cold? Has the victim of the&#13;
highwayman on the road to Jericho&#13;
forgotten the good Samaritan with a&#13;
medicament of oil and wine and a free&#13;
ride to the hostelry? Have the English&#13;
soldiers who went up to God from&#13;
the Crimean battlefields forgotten&#13;
Florence Nightingale? Through all&#13;
eternity will the northern and southern&#13;
soldiers forget the northern and&#13;
southern women who administered to&#13;
the dying boys in blue and gray after&#13;
the awful fights In Tennessee and&#13;
Pennsylvania and Virginia and Georgia,&#13;
which turned every house and barn&#13;
and shed into an hospital and incarnadined&#13;
the Susquehanna and the James&#13;
and the Chattahoochee and the Savannah&#13;
with brave blood? The kindnesses&#13;
you do to others will stand as long in&#13;
the appreciation of others as the gates&#13;
of heaven will stand, as the "house of&#13;
many mansions" will stand, as long as&#13;
the throne of God will stand.&#13;
Defeat of Oblivion.&#13;
Another defeat of oblivion will be&#13;
found in the character of those whom&#13;
we rescue, uplift or save. Character ia&#13;
eternal. Suppose by a right influence&#13;
we aid in transforming a bad man into&#13;
a good man, a dolorous man into a&#13;
happy man, a disheartened man into a&#13;
courageous man, every stroke of that&#13;
work done will be immortalized. There&#13;
may never be so much as one line in a&#13;
newspaper regarding it or no mortal&#13;
tongue may ever whisper it into human&#13;
ear, but wherever that soul shall go&#13;
your work upon it shall go, wherever&#13;
that soul rises your work on it will&#13;
rise, and so long as that soul will last&#13;
your work on it will last. Do you suppose&#13;
there will ever come isuch an idiotic&#13;
lapse In the history of that soul&#13;
in heaven that it shall forget that you&#13;
invited him to Christ; that you, by&#13;
prayer or gospel word, turned him&#13;
round from the wrong way to the right&#13;
way? No such insanity will ever smite&#13;
a heavenly citizen. It is not half as&#13;
well on earth known that Christopher&#13;
Wren planned and built St. Paul's as it&#13;
will be known in all heaven that you&#13;
were the Instrumentality of building a&#13;
temple for the sky. We teach a Sabbath&#13;
class or put a Christian tract in&#13;
the hand of a passerby or testify for&#13;
Christ in a prayer meeting or preach a&#13;
sermon and go home discouraged; as&#13;
though nothing had been accomplished,&#13;
when we had been character building&#13;
with a material that no frost or earthquake&#13;
or rolling of the centuries can&#13;
damage or bring down.&#13;
There is no sublimer art on earth&#13;
than architecture. With pencil and&#13;
rule and compass the architect sits&#13;
down alone and in silence and evolves&#13;
from his own brain a cathedral or a&#13;
national capitol or a massive home before&#13;
he leaves that table, and then he&#13;
goes out and unrolls his plans and&#13;
calls carpenters and mason and artisans&#13;
of all sorts to execute his design,&#13;
and when it is finished he walks&#13;
around the vast structure and Bees the&#13;
completion of the work with high satisfaction,&#13;
and on a stone at some corner&#13;
of the building the architect's name&#13;
may be chiseled. But the storms do&#13;
their work, and time, that takes down&#13;
everything, will yet take down that&#13;
structure-until there shall not be one&#13;
stone left upon another. But there is&#13;
a soul in heaven.&#13;
88 m 353&#13;
/*i&#13;
m+» LMB!&amp;&#13;
A YOUNO OHIOAJ&#13;
HMfclftVl&#13;
Brooklyn. IC T„ iapt. misinform*-.&#13;
received regarding tho wc~&#13;
it taer Qi&#13;
|l* ovei&#13;
the&#13;
!'€annptOof!&gt;ff»' She XlgbA&#13;
(&amp;mi. Magrad^r1fc Oilot^**,&#13;
Spaniards Proposed a Bolinghft.&#13;
They tell a story to the effect that&#13;
when the Society for the Prevention ol&#13;
Cruelty to Animals proposed to establish&#13;
a branch in a leading city of Spain&#13;
the municipal body courteously accepted&#13;
the proposal and offered to hold a&#13;
grand bull fight at once to furnish ths&#13;
funds.—Troy Times.&#13;
Australian Apples.&#13;
Parts of Australia are becoming live*&#13;
ly rivals to Canada and the United&#13;
States in the European apple trade.&#13;
Tasmania, especially, has been found&#13;
a first-class apple-raising country.&#13;
There are 8,873 acres in apple orchards&#13;
there and the product in 18M was 863,-&#13;
916 bushels.&#13;
iUdmtaatkm » at&#13;
will have an equipment of pernet&#13;
lights $ beautiful globes, which*&#13;
burn day and night, year in and year,&#13;
out, and shed a brilliant glow without&#13;
ceasing. Leaking gas lets will be a&#13;
thing of the past The disagreeable&#13;
duty of cleaning keroaeue lamps will&#13;
be only a memory and a tradition.&#13;
Every family will have a supply of&#13;
porcelain or glass globes, each one of&#13;
them a tiny sun, throwing out a&#13;
strong, beautiful white light from&#13;
within. The globe will be something&#13;
of a mystery, for it will have no connection&#13;
with any wires, and it will&#13;
require no refilling or attention. It&#13;
will be sealed hermetically, and its&#13;
contents will probably be concealed&#13;
from sight, but by shaking it one may&#13;
be able to ascertain that there is a liquid&#13;
inside.&#13;
Cannot Govern the Light.&#13;
There will be no way of turning the&#13;
light down or of turning it off. It may&#13;
be put in a closet in the daytime or&#13;
hidden under a hood, but It will go&#13;
right along putting in 24 hours' work&#13;
every day. The inventor says it will&#13;
continue to do its very best so long&#13;
as the globe remains sealed perfectly,&#13;
even though that should be for years.&#13;
The secret of the perpetual light is&#13;
a combination of chemicals in a vacuum.&#13;
The chemicals are four or five&#13;
In number, but Mr. Magrady declines&#13;
to give further information as to their&#13;
identity until the patent office has&#13;
passed on his application for a patent.&#13;
They are less than an ounce in bulk.&#13;
When brought into contact in the&#13;
globe, they dissolve and give off&#13;
strong fumes. When these fill the receptacle&#13;
the globe is sealed so perfectly&#13;
as to keep out all air. The gas&#13;
:tMJM ^ i ^ M s f c . ^ W apt ;to aott^ tho&#13;
GEORGE P. MAGRADY.&#13;
formed by the chemical combination&#13;
glows with dazzling intensity, the inventor&#13;
says. A test has shown a&#13;
strength of 36 candle power. The light&#13;
is white and is as steady as an incandescent&#13;
electric light, there being&#13;
no flicker. Mr. Magrady is a photographer&#13;
and made his discovery by accident.&#13;
While engaged in photographic&#13;
work he noticed a bottle give forth&#13;
a small but bright light, and on investigation&#13;
learned that it happened&#13;
to contain a mixture of several chemicals.&#13;
He at once saw the possibility&#13;
of a new illuminant and began a series&#13;
of experiments to determine its quality&#13;
and to discover the conditions under&#13;
which it might be made of practical&#13;
use. He was successful in his&#13;
experiments and now declares that a&#13;
lamp can be made at a cost of about&#13;
75 cents.&#13;
Shocking Turkish Superstition.&#13;
Hanan, a village on the borders of&#13;
Anatolia, in Turkey, was the scene of&#13;
a horrible tragedy a few days ago.&#13;
There had been an epidemic In the&#13;
district for some weeks, and, as its&#13;
ravages ever became greater, the villagers&#13;
finally felt satisfied that ft was&#13;
the work of sorcerers, and, after a&#13;
thorough Investigation, they arrested&#13;
a man named Asian, and his sister and&#13;
openly charged them with being the&#13;
direct cause of the disease. The two&#13;
prisoners avowed their innocence, but&#13;
the mob insisted that they had been&#13;
using incantations and other evil&#13;
spells, and that their sole object in&#13;
doing so was to invoke an epidemic.&#13;
Without delay sentence was pronounced.&#13;
Asian was burned alive on&#13;
an improvised scaffold, and his sister&#13;
was mercilessly tortured with red hot&#13;
irons.&#13;
News of the shocking crime was at&#13;
once taken to the local authorities and&#13;
in a few hours the principal instigators&#13;
were arrested. It is not believed,&#13;
however, that this step will aid much&#13;
toward the extirpation of superstitious&#13;
•Jsas In Kannn.&#13;
t..M* oi* 1 ,''f ip" ""&#13;
V*. fcOa-V, A *#&gt;A :222£&amp; tVwJtt&#13;
Trees grow out 61 'doors and doors&#13;
are made out of trees.'&#13;
WISE PAIfc$INGr&#13;
Not much wB^pahting&#13;
done; poor paint,;iarjstly; too&#13;
cheap. Nobody wants it&#13;
poor; everybody grants it&#13;
cheap.&#13;
Devoe ready paint is cheap&#13;
because it isn't poor; it's un&gt;&#13;
like any other; because we&#13;
guarantee results instead of&#13;
materials.&#13;
Wise painting is—Paint in&#13;
the fall and use Devoe&gt;&#13;
Ask your dealer; tao'll get it tat you. Book&#13;
on painting free If yoa mention this paper.&#13;
GOOD-PAINT DEVOE, CHICAGO,&#13;
Sozodont&#13;
G o o d fow Bsu* T e w t H&#13;
N o t B a d f o r G o o d T o e t H&#13;
Sozodont • • 25c&#13;
Sotodont-Tooth Powder 25c&#13;
Urge Liquid and Powder 75c&#13;
BALL &amp; RUCK EL. New York,&#13;
5R15 A WEEK!&#13;
^l"**&gt;*^ and BXPBNSBI for Alan Witn Rig To introduce our POULTRY MIXTURE la&#13;
the country; straight salary; weekly pay;&#13;
year's contract. We famish bank reference&#13;
of our reliability. We require no money In&#13;
Advance for samples. Address with stamp,&#13;
EUUBKA MFO. CO., Dept P, East St. Louis, IU.&#13;
TO CARRY&#13;
dIOfi LINB&#13;
t &gt; DrilK, Ma lottery, Millinery WANT WW arftaeralitsfctrace. Sa«pteboxfftscoatpockat. * w Earneu tiviluo per month commission.&#13;
THE STANDARD RINOCO., R «t&gt; leftMsslsaa St„Cska|»&#13;
UFEOFWM.M'KINLEY bynsttoa'iprom*&#13;
inent Freig hmte np. aid.L aCnrreed, iftu rlilvye nli,l uBitirga ptaeyd .f orE qxturiack t ewrmorsk.. ZOButIfOit LreCaRdy C(FOR.E* ES.2 4S eDndea 1r0b ocerun» S ftu.,rC pholsotaag#e; oto.&#13;
• • i i i ^ ^ ^ — — • » — — — — — — — — — . • • — » — — »&#13;
I V I X W f ^ O • quick relief and wrc* worst&#13;
cases. Book of testftronlaia and ia BAYS* treaOnani&#13;
M.Sl&amp;UUUraaMS.a»ift,Mlaat*.&amp;.&#13;
Wf M **• UfllON MADS,&#13;
f I. For More Titan av Quarter of avCaaSwy&#13;
aTnhde rSe3p.6u0ta tsihoone so ffo Wr s.t yLle. ,D ocnogm-lfaosr t| 3a.0nOd twheeasre hparsio eexs.c eTllheids eaxlel eoltlehnert rmepanktessU soonld h aast sbheoeens w hoanv eb tyo mgievrei tb aeltotenre ,s atwis.f aLct.i Dono utghlaans roethpeurt a$ti3o.n0 0fo ra ntdh «e 3b.5e0s t shS3o.eOsO b aencadu s|e3 .fhiOis shhaose sa lmwauysts bbee emna pinlataciende ds.o Thihgeh stthaantd athrde iwne atrheer rWece.i Iv*e.s Dmoourgel avsa l1u3e .f0o0r shaisd m S&amp;onAeOy shWoe.s L t.h Dano uhgela csa sne lglse tm eolrsee wS3h.e0r0e s. ad _»_3 ._5^0 shoes than any other two manufacturer*.&#13;
W. L Douglas 94.00 QUt E4gt Um _ cannot as equalled at say sfJesv&#13;
lasts* sjpon havtns; Wt d.e aIl-e Drso envge-lraysw ohbeorees. with name ana price stamped en bottom.&#13;
W.N.U.—DETROIT—NO.40-.t901&#13;
worn aottttrtsg Mfs/tlsssmti u » n e&#13;
Heetiot Tab Tsptt&#13;
'•M+V yigjH iHMs IU si&#13;
• • m&#13;
• '.iv. r'"A v'-i ^'" tf £ * ;&#13;
.*'..* '*&#13;
, f » , . - « ' • &gt; • ' • ' ' - . ' • • •&#13;
•• - i ^ „ / : i _ L j l "'A'••• «L-1; •''•.•JO •• '- • • • " . - • • ' ' , • '&#13;
. rf&#13;
&gt; -' .-&#13;
• . ' • * • •&#13;
' • &gt; &gt; • - . .&#13;
'•:,Vi'! '•f.r* '&#13;
waawwsl&#13;
:\&gt; :&lt;&#13;
1«. :'&#13;
Tt»«y drive home the eowt from the pasture,&#13;
j&#13;
Vp through the long. shady lane, . ^&#13;
Where the quail whistle loud la the wheat&#13;
. '• fields • ., ' . ; . " " —-—&#13;
That are yellow with the ripening grain.&#13;
They find In the thick* waving graaees&#13;
Where the scarlet-lipped strawberry&#13;
grows;&#13;
They gather the earliest snowdrops&#13;
. And the first crimson buds of the rose.&#13;
They toss the hay in Jhe meadow:&#13;
They gather the elder bloom white;&#13;
They find where the dusky grapes purple&#13;
In the soft-tinted October light.&#13;
They know where the apples hang ripest&#13;
And are sweeter than Italy's wines;&#13;
They know where the fruit hangs the&#13;
thickest&#13;
On the thorny blackberry vines.&#13;
They gather the delicate seaweeds&#13;
And ouild tiny castles of sand;&#13;
They pick up the beautiful sea shells-&#13;
Fairy barks that have drifted to land;&#13;
They wave from the tall, rocking tree*&#13;
tops,&#13;
Where the oriole's hammock nest&#13;
swings,&#13;
And at night time are folded In slumber&#13;
By a song that a fond mother sings.&#13;
To those who toil bravely are strongest;&#13;
The humble and poor become great;&#13;
And from these brown-handed children&#13;
Shall grow mighty rulers of state.&#13;
The pen of the author and statesman—&#13;
Tha noble and wife of the land-&#13;
Tim sword and the chisel and palette&#13;
Shall be held in the little brown hands.&#13;
Sfcw&#13;
f.e&gt;V&#13;
isisjrftesss«s^BssesB|«&#13;
" . . &gt; / ' ' ' , , . ' •&#13;
and shook- H off. Then I dug a match&#13;
out of my poeteet and etnick t t That's&#13;
/where mr hair bags* t o tnrn wgJte.&#13;
The place w o fw^mbw'wtthtfcaaOo.&#13;
spiders, I t h o u g h brt as the state*&#13;
fiiikered Mdi flared I looked u* at my&#13;
companies; His face was deadly whit*&#13;
and ha hissed at&#13;
" Tarantulas.'&#13;
. "Than I trnderatood In. an Instant&#13;
The horrible thlnipi had boos brought&#13;
fronv some southern eonnti? 1ft the&#13;
ennches of banana*. A bite from any&#13;
one of the ugly creatures meant death.&#13;
I could hear a y companion's teeth&#13;
chaptering and I knew that he was in&#13;
an agony of fear.&#13;
'What's to be done?' he gasped.&#13;
" 'Sit perfectly still,', said I. 'Don't&#13;
move nor brush one of them off, even if&#13;
It. crawls on your face. Have you the&#13;
nerve to do it?'&#13;
" 'No, no. My God, I shall be Insane&#13;
I n T few minutes:&#13;
=C 3&#13;
&lt; M W W W M W W M W M V W W W W V ^ ^ f t ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ W ^ W W M &lt; M M W «&#13;
Whitened Hair.&#13;
BY H. 8. ROGER9.&#13;
(Copyright, 18C1, by Daily Story Pub. Co.)&#13;
Conductor Shaffer of No. 5 let himself&#13;
down from the rear end of his&#13;
train aa it'came to a standstill. He&#13;
cast an inspecting glance along the&#13;
line of cars and at first hardly noticed&#13;
the white-haired man who came creeping&#13;
out from under the car near which&#13;
he has standing. It was evident that&#13;
the stranger had been stealing a ride,&#13;
and he was dirty and begrimed; but&#13;
in spite of the unattractive appearance&#13;
of the man there was something unusual&#13;
in his appearance that would&#13;
cause anyone to look at him a second&#13;
time. The skin had the pink tint and&#13;
smoothness of youth, yet the hair&#13;
above the face waa aa white as winter&#13;
•now. The men looked at each other&#13;
a moment and then the Btranger&#13;
turned quickly as if about to move&#13;
•way; 8aid Conductor Shaffer;&#13;
"Joe Jordon, by thunder!"&#13;
"Hoped you wouldn't know me,&#13;
Shaft."&#13;
"I'd k9ow you in the kingdom come,&#13;
Joe. But, Lord, how you have&#13;
changed!"&#13;
Joe appeared a bit uneasy and moved&#13;
from one foot to the other restlessly.&#13;
"What you doing under that train?"&#13;
"Riding the rods."&#13;
"From where?"&#13;
"Other end of the division/'&#13;
"Where were you going?"&#13;
"Didn't know and didn't care. Just&#13;
got out because I was getting&#13;
cramped."&#13;
"You are a regular bum, then?"&#13;
"Yep, pretty much."&#13;
"Just you get right in the smoker&#13;
there and after I work the train I will&#13;
come in and talk 4o you."&#13;
After Conductor Shaffer had done&#13;
"Joe Jordon, by thunder!**&#13;
bit work be went forward and ant&#13;
down by the side of the queer looking&#13;
tramp,&#13;
"Kind of getting up in the world&#13;
gome, ain't yon, Shaft r&#13;
••How?" v N&#13;
"Kind of elevated from a freight run&#13;
to this."&#13;
"Yep, made up my mind three years&#13;
ago that the old man on the I. N. and&#13;
W. would tfeyer give me a chance, so&#13;
I took the first offer and transferred&#13;
over here. Had not been here six&#13;
months until I got this passenger run.&#13;
You seem~fo"beFTsHir on the slow&#13;
freights In your line, Joe. What on&#13;
earth has happened to your hair?"&#13;
"It's a pretty long story, Shaft, unless&#13;
you have got time to listen."&#13;
"Twenty miles to the next stop."&#13;
"Well, you see, it is like this. Shaft.&#13;
It's five years since I dropped out Not&#13;
one single person that I knew or that&#13;
knew me in the old days has ever seen&#13;
me or spoken to me since then until I&#13;
ran across you this morning. There&#13;
was no one dependent upon me, and no&#13;
one that cared, I guess. You know&#13;
that I was running pretty strong with&#13;
Mary Parr then for a time, and although&#13;
she is married now "&#13;
"What's that?"&#13;
"Well; I ain't ashamed to say that I&#13;
. thought a lot of her and if things had&#13;
gone differently may be I would have&#13;
had a passenger run by this time. One&#13;
evening Mary and I had a little spat—&#13;
didn't amount to much, but we thought&#13;
it did—and that settled it. Then I&#13;
heard that she was going with Henry&#13;
Weber, a machinist at the shops, and&#13;
so I kind of dropped out. Left the road&#13;
and worked all over for a time. Then I&#13;
got to traveling about a bit, and soon&#13;
I was on the bum. You don't know&#13;
how easily a fellow can drop into that,&#13;
especially a fellow that knows railroading&#13;
as I do. I have traveled all&#13;
over these United States without a&#13;
cent It's hard lines some times, but&#13;
I don't know but it ia aa good aa any&#13;
other if a fellow don't care what becomes&#13;
of him.&#13;
"About my white head? Did you&#13;
ever hear that a man's hair could turn&#13;
gray in a night I never took much&#13;
stock in that, but here before you is a&#13;
sample of what can be done by tear. It&#13;
was in this way. I had been wandering&#13;
down through the eastern states some&#13;
three years ago, and one night 1 landed&#13;
at Lancaster, Pa. There waa a&#13;
young fellow hanging around the&#13;
Pennsylvania road's water tank and we&#13;
decided to travel together. It waa&#13;
warm even if it was late winter and&#13;
we began nosing around the cars. The&#13;
young fellow found a car door unsealed&#13;
and called re-me. We climbed in and&#13;
found ourselves in a car loaded with&#13;
bananas. It was pleasant enough and&#13;
we found straw on top of the crates&#13;
and made it a good place for sleeping.&#13;
Before I went to sleep a brakexnan&#13;
came along and I heard him swearing&#13;
because the banana car had not been&#13;
teaied before it left Newa X and then&#13;
? uearu him closing Pi* door. It Jld&#13;
not seem that I had been alseep very&#13;
long when I waa awakened by my companion.&#13;
Said he:&#13;
11 'There is something inOhi* car/&#13;
"'Of course there ia/ said I, and&#13;
about to fall asleep again.&#13;
"'It's something crawling. Dont&#13;
you feet them ?'&#13;
"I knew that he was telling the truth&#13;
and felt that I also had the same to&#13;
tear. Our warm bodies probably attracted&#13;
the creatures, because they be-&#13;
' gan to crawl over us, and to this day&#13;
I have only to close my eyes and I&#13;
can see and feel those hairy legs and&#13;
little claws creeping on my flesh. Suddenly&#13;
my companion gave a scream and&#13;
began beating the air and fighting the&#13;
tarantulas. We were pressed so clo*e&#13;
to the roof of the car that we could&#13;
scarcely move, and as I lay there not&#13;
daring to even turn a hand or foot it&#13;
was fearful. The odor from the insects&#13;
that he had crushed and from the ripe&#13;
fruit was in itself overpowering, and&#13;
It is not surprising that I soon became&#13;
unconscious. And that no doubt&#13;
saved my life and reason.&#13;
"It was some time the next day&#13;
when I awoke, and there was daylight&#13;
in the car. I looked about and there&#13;
was not a tarantula in sight I called to&#13;
my companion, but there was no answer,&#13;
and 1 was too weak to get over&#13;
to him. After a time I heard people&#13;
moving outside and made an outcry&#13;
that attracted attention. At last the&#13;
car was opened and I was released. I&#13;
won't trouble you with all those details,&#13;
but they found the body of my&#13;
companion. It was swollen to horrible&#13;
size and a fearful thing to see. I&#13;
lay in a hospital three weeks and when&#13;
I came out my hair waa like it is now,&#13;
although you know, Shaft, 1 am less&#13;
than thirty."&#13;
"I have had some darned queer&#13;
stories told me, Joe Jordan, but that&#13;
takes the calie. Who told you that&#13;
Mary Parr was married?"&#13;
"Nobody; just knew it was all."&#13;
m*^wmmfi*i ft&#13;
t* t e e ' Qs&amp;esst :'.MH , ^Be. Laesr&#13;
y * ^^ef &gt;9e#eje«stfi;. •:- ""•; •*- "&#13;
Apropoe «r the observation* + t men&#13;
and things made by the bate Preside**&#13;
of the French republic to the. "cblel"&#13;
who took notes, which are sow, being&#13;
published, a good story ia told by a&#13;
writer who bad U direct from the hero&#13;
of this comical adventure. It waa the&#13;
custom for M. Felix Faure to invite&#13;
the officer of the Blytee guard to dejeuner,&#13;
and this particular gentleman&#13;
felt very nervous as he took hie seat&#13;
at table, "During the first part of the&#13;
meal," as he related, "everything went&#13;
well. No one spoke to me, and I did&#13;
not say anything. I waa not even listening&#13;
to the conversation, when, suddenly,&#13;
M. Felix Faure, addressing me&#13;
by my military title, asked me pointblank,&#13;
'Am I popular?'" This wag&#13;
a very embarrassing question for the&#13;
Sooth American Hospitality.&#13;
A young scientist who visited South&#13;
America was teaing of the hospitality&#13;
of the citizens of the far-away repub-&#13;
Well, you are the blamdest Idiot 1 lie -and- their method- ^&gt;f-entertaltting&#13;
That girl has just been sitting around&#13;
Tarantula!'&#13;
waiting for someone, and most people&#13;
think it is you. My wife was saying&#13;
to me only the other day that if Mary&#13;
was pining for that Joe Jordan she&#13;
better look out or she would end up an&#13;
old maid, because the Lord only knew&#13;
whether he was in the land of the living."&#13;
"Reckon most people would think&#13;
she waa losing time waiting around for&#13;
an old whiteheaded tramp. Shaft."&#13;
The Queer looking tramp sat a long&#13;
time watching the scenery rushing by,&#13;
but it is doubtful if he saw any of i t&#13;
When the conductor came along the&#13;
next time-he looked up and remarked:&#13;
"Say, Shaft, do you reckon I could&#13;
get back on the old I. N. &amp; W.?"&#13;
" 'Ain't done nothing to queer yourself,&#13;
have you?"&#13;
"Not that I know of."&#13;
"Well, the old man always spoke&#13;
mighty well of you, and if there ia&#13;
nothing doing tor you on that road,&#13;
I have got a pretty good pull over here&#13;
myself. You drop oft at home with&#13;
me, and we will see about fixing you&#13;
up a bit before'you tackle him."&#13;
s Progress In Ocean Travel*&#13;
In 1840 the Cunard steamship Britannia,&#13;
built of wood, propelled by paddle&#13;
wheels, maintained a sea speed of&#13;
about 8½ knots. Her steam pressure&#13;
was 12 pounds per inch. She was 207&#13;
feet long, about 2,000 tons displacement&#13;
her engines developed about&#13;
750-horse power, and her coal consumption&#13;
was about 40 tons a day, or&#13;
about five pounds of coal per indicated&#13;
horse power per day. She carried a&#13;
full spread of sail. In sixty years&#13;
speed has been increased from 8¾&#13;
knots to twenty-three knots; the time&#13;
on the voyage has been reduced&#13;
shy officer, who had never given the&#13;
matter a thought, and he stammered&#13;
out, "I do not think so, Monsieur le&#13;
President"—feeling ready to sink into&#13;
the earth as soon as the words were&#13;
put of his mouth. "Why do you not&#13;
think so? Exp!ain yourself," the President&#13;
went on to inquire, in a condescending&#13;
way. "'Mon Dleu/ I said,&#13;
'my father told me one day that he&#13;
only recognized M. Thiers' popularity&#13;
when he saw ht3 portrait in gingerbread&#13;
in all the booths at the fair on&#13;
the Place du Trone. I have not yet&#13;
noticed your portrait in this disguise,&#13;
Monsieur le President' Then M. Felix&#13;
Faure exclaimed, very bravely,&#13;
That's true, I thank you; I had not&#13;
yet thought of that/ Th3 gingerbread&#13;
portraits were a revelation to him."—&#13;
A FEARLESS PHYSICIAN.&#13;
Benton. 111., Sept 30th.—Much comment&#13;
has been caused by the action of&#13;
Dr. R. H. Dunaway, a physician here,&#13;
who for over a year past has been recommending&#13;
Dodd's Kidney Pills to&#13;
those of his pauents who suffered from&#13;
Rheumatism, Bright's Disease, Diabetes&#13;
or other Kidney Troubles.&#13;
Dr. Dunaway also published an open&#13;
letter last May stating positively that&#13;
he himself had been cured of Diabetes&#13;
by Dodd's Kidney Pills, and that, after&#13;
he had concluded be was going to die.&#13;
He is a well man today and says he&#13;
feels It his duty to do as he has done&#13;
and is doing because Dodd's Kidney&#13;
Pills saved his life.&#13;
their friends. "I was looking over the&#13;
field in the Interest of the Columbian&#13;
exposition," said he. "At one time I&#13;
was stopping at a town 110 miles from&#13;
the nearest railroad. This town is&#13;
reached only by pack animals, and&#13;
everything Is carried into the place on&#13;
the backs of the patient beasts. On the&#13;
day before I left a leading citizen invited&#13;
me to his house, where he said&#13;
a reception would be given in my&#13;
honor. I found about thirty people&#13;
present We sat down to a bountiful&#13;
feast, at the close of which the cigars&#13;
were brought out, and we enjoyed&#13;
ourselves until daylight, according to&#13;
the customs of the country. A fine variety&#13;
of wine was served during the&#13;
night The next day I learned that the&#13;
party consumed 180 bottles of champagne.&#13;
This wine had been shipped&#13;
10,000 miles by water, 260 miles by&#13;
railway train, and had been packed&#13;
110 miles into the town. The cost of&#13;
transportation was appalling to an&#13;
American, but the natives seemed to&#13;
think it a mere bagatelle. The wine for&#13;
the feast probably cost 81.500. When&#13;
a man Is a guest of a South American&#13;
gentleman, everything in the house belongs&#13;
to the guest.—Denver News.&#13;
t*&#13;
"I did feel something on my hand | A b o u t one-third of what it was In 184«,&#13;
HAMMOCK MEMORIES.&#13;
It was this way: Brown, putting it&#13;
plainly, is fat. Some of his friends&#13;
with cannibalistic imaginations, say&#13;
that he Is fat enough to butcher. But&#13;
let that pass. He is fat, and the other&#13;
night, shirt open at the collar, damp&#13;
hair spread at will, and fan going like&#13;
a pendulum of a grandfather's clock,&#13;
he served notice that he waa going to&#13;
stretch a hammock in the back yard&#13;
and sleep there. Mrs. Brown made the&#13;
foolish suggestions of burglars, croup,&#13;
and neuralgia, but he was fixed in his&#13;
purpose. Brown is the best and most&#13;
reliable sleeper in town. The storm&#13;
came with its deluge. The swaying&#13;
hollyhocks banged him in the face, and&#13;
the swinging branches of the big maple&#13;
tried to bat him out of the hammock.&#13;
But they only rocked him, and&#13;
the rain cooled him. His visions were&#13;
a charm until he dreamed that he was&#13;
Cadillac, standing at the prow of his&#13;
bateau and going for the foot of Randolph&#13;
street as though pursued by a&#13;
sea serpent of the New York yell&#13;
journal breed. All would have^gone&#13;
well, as a nightmare, but he sprang to&#13;
his feet with a valiant etu&amp;t, waved&#13;
an imaginary sword, pitched about Hke&#13;
a dugout In a maelstrom,/went overboard&#13;
head first, and came down hard&#13;
on a sidewalk. Brown is /all right unless&#13;
complications set in,' but one side&#13;
of his scalp is trying to grow on again,&#13;
his left ear aches, he has an arm in a&#13;
aling, and there is a towel over one&#13;
eye; The moral he draws is that once&#13;
in two hundred years Is a great plenty.&#13;
The habit of smoking after&#13;
in tne drawing-room, added t * «•**&#13;
fact that islsnf woiMi. an inks. I I am**'&#13;
other, reason wfcy ft i t so easy to penj*&#13;
a game of cards without gettte*&#13;
of i t tor d e a r s end bridge,ssw&#13;
separable. Bat when bridge eea b *&#13;
played, and both men and&#13;
smoke during its progress, there i s&#13;
disposition on the part of the me* to*,&#13;
go away to their club.—Ladies' ? l s i t |&#13;
• . •• • ( •&#13;
"Our new fleet of torpedo-deatroyetav&#13;
seems to have stirred up our friend tbev&#13;
enemy," remarked the naval chief «1*&#13;
the great European power. "Yes,'* ftV&#13;
plied his assistant, 'it is said they wtn.&#13;
build a fleet of torpedo-destroyejr-4e&gt;-&#13;
stroyers now." "Let 'em. We'll baOs?&#13;
a fleet of torpedo-&lt;leatroyer-destroyerdastroyers."&#13;
• l o o Bew»m e i o e .&#13;
will&#13;
V* „'• ••. &gt; .&#13;
/ ':m&#13;
: • • • - . ^ / - - ^ - ^ ^&#13;
." " •'••• ;t'$.£&#13;
: . -v.y '. r . i j t ^&#13;
teara that there that science has i sb aeet nle aasbtl eo nteo d eruearde eidn dailsle lsaas&gt;e Cstuargee sis, atnhde otnhlya tp oissi tiCvea tcaurrrhe .n oHwa klln'os wOn atote thna*v tmioendaicl adli fsreaatseer,n rietyq.u irCesa taa rcrohn bsteiitnugti aon eaoln tsrttetaat*- amcetinntg. dHiraelcl'tsly C uaptaornr hth Ce ubrloeo ids atankde mn uinotoearsn aawll*y*^- ffoaucensd aotfi onth oef tshyset deimse,a sthe,e arnebdy g idviensgtr tohyaini g the&gt; astsrseisntginthg bnya tbuureil diinn gd ouinpg t hites cwoonrskti.t uTteh ai pporiweteorrss t hhaatv teh esyo omffeurc Oh nfea Hithu nIdnr edit sD oclularrast iWve Taneyst cimasoen tihaalst. it fails to cure. Send for list i&#13;
ABodlddr besys d Fr.u Jg.g CiftHUE 7N6cE Y A CO., Toledo, a Hall's Family Pills are the best.&#13;
Some people help others; others belp&gt;&#13;
themselves.&#13;
Good advice ia like castor oil; easy to&#13;
give but hard to take.&#13;
Take Nature's remedy, Garfield Tea! toexpensive&#13;
and effective; 15 pints or IS&#13;
doses for 26c. It is composed of medicinal&#13;
HERBS, not mineral poisons; it cures constipation&#13;
and sick headache, kidney&#13;
liver diseases. Good for all.&#13;
An ounce of ability is worth a shelfful&#13;
of learning.&#13;
We thank you for trying Wiaarf OH'&#13;
for rheumatism or neuralgia, then yow*&#13;
will thank us. Ask your Druggist&#13;
It's far more Important that a man&#13;
know when to be funny than when to&#13;
FITSPCTBMJwntlyCqrwL IVoflWor&#13;
flm &lt;Ur» «*&gt;»( Dr. KUM'B Grt*« S « w&#13;
Send for F R E E SJS.OO trial fcottto at* .&#13;
DSwR. H. I u » i . LttL.1l AwaSt^railiiiifsssi.&#13;
Opportunit y makes short calls. When ox&#13;
out it leaves a card and moves, on.&#13;
Mrs. Wlnslow** Soothm* Synrsv&#13;
For children, teething, aoftoa* tha gnma radi&#13;
Datamation, aliaya pain, core* wlni colic. Sfc&#13;
They who cannot have what they like&#13;
Uflfn tA Hlffi what". t,h^T hayft&#13;
ALL UP-TO-DATE HOUS&#13;
use RUBS Bleaching Blue. It makes cl&#13;
oiean and sweet as when new. All grocexa.&#13;
A lie feels easy only when it forgets that&#13;
has a truth on its track.&#13;
BE MEN. Zookisoo, tha great lavtgorator.&#13;
st once. Sent for Six pottage paid.&#13;
Zookl Co., 1101 Rusacll St., Detroit, Mich.&#13;
Lovers do the most effective heart-totalking&#13;
we know of.&#13;
I do not believe Piso's Cure for ConsumpSssar&#13;
has an equal for coughs and colds.—JOBS Y.&#13;
Bo van. Trinity Springs, Ind., Feb. 15. 1MO.&#13;
The habit of looking at the bright side •&#13;
things is better than an income of a thousand \&#13;
year.—Hume.&#13;
The Past GUARANTEES&#13;
The Patacd&#13;
The Feet That&#13;
St Jacobs (HI&#13;
Has cared thousands of eases of&#13;
Rheumatism, Gout. Lumbago.&#13;
Neuralgia. Sciatica, Sprains,&#13;
Braises and other bodily aches&#13;
and pains is s guarantee that II&#13;
wiU cure other cases. It is ssfev&#13;
sure and never faUmg. AdaUke&#13;
Conquers Pain&#13;
Price, 2$c a s * 5 0 c&#13;
SOLD BT ALL DsUUDtS XX i Hot Weather Health.&#13;
During the heated terra of July&#13;
August one should be careful to keep all 1&#13;
the organs of the system in free work--&#13;
inpr condition.&#13;
Baxter's Mandrake Bitters taken b e -&#13;
fore meals trill ward off diseases inesV&#13;
dent to this trying season.&#13;
sjarMfes Priceless RstaoSv&#13;
Dft.0. PHELPS BRNOrwirirsi PREOiOVS&#13;
HERBAL&#13;
OMTMB9T II (&gt;iraaTh«oaeJi the Pert*. AddrastSe.O.P.r&#13;
sis. wees, Basa. SMSI Bams. Seres aas afl rl&#13;
us tela Dame, aadSsr&#13;
' '•.'' i ' ''&#13;
ft 'I&#13;
fit-&#13;
- V -&#13;
:t-l&#13;
i;&#13;
' •:?'&#13;
• * ! "&#13;
' '. ' V'f.&#13;
•V •£&gt;'•&gt;&#13;
-., ''"'&lt;•-&#13;
H' y*&#13;
V . I V ' '•&#13;
. V '&#13;
S V&#13;
..A, &gt;.&lt;£:.:X:L:&#13;
;•,•••• V f i&#13;
•+,. •;-;'H't&#13;
•••#y.\&#13;
%&#13;
. v ;&#13;
;..'&#13;
?:4 . . ' . &amp; • . . »/".&#13;
' • * * * • ,&#13;
,..^-.&#13;
•r&#13;
A'&#13;
^ » . f , V ' w . - y v ••-.,. •*:•*+*.&#13;
'• ' &lt; : . , ' "&#13;
•'*R'&#13;
•\-t:&#13;
v , • • ; : v -&#13;
,'V .• „ v •;- '•"''«"&gt;*;":;.-••.* : v , . / ^ .•:•&#13;
, K&#13;
.'Vl"&#13;
\&#13;
fc*-:: ,s&#13;
* •• « . • » ' *\*r • * ! '&#13;
V.',. *&#13;
8.&#13;
W"&#13;
'''•X&#13;
fe&gt;&#13;
./to&#13;
Site fhvtoeg iispaUi.&#13;
F. L ANDREWS'4 CO. paowrroiw.&#13;
wmmmmmmm&#13;
THURSDAY, OCT, 8,1901.&#13;
4n exchange gives the following&#13;
advice: "If yon have a gasoline&#13;
fire, throw flour on it, or meal&#13;
or sand. Never water. Flour,&#13;
meal or sand puts the fire right&#13;
out Water only, spreads it Now&#13;
fix this in your mind so it will be&#13;
handy when you need it"&#13;
What*s Your Face Worth!&#13;
Sometimes a fortune, but never, if&#13;
you have a sallow c o m p l e t i o n a jaundiced&#13;
look, moth patches and blotches&#13;
on the skin, all signs of Liver Trouble.&#13;
But Dr. King's N e w Life Pills give&#13;
Clear Skin, Rosy Cheeks, Rich Complexion.&#13;
Only 25c at P. A. Siller's&#13;
drug store.&#13;
A y o u n g w o m a n p o k e d f u n a t&#13;
t h e e d i t o r o f a Bluffton, I n d i a n a ,&#13;
p a p e r b e c a u s e h i s t r o u s e r s w e r e&#13;
p a t c h e d . I t s o h a p p e n e d t h a t&#13;
]aer f a t h e r o w e d $ 1 0 o n s u b s c r i p -&#13;
t i o n . T h e e d i t o r s e n t t h e d e l i n q -&#13;
u e n t s ' s a c c o u n t t o a n e w s p a p e r&#13;
C o l l e c t i o n A g e n c y i n C h i c a g o .&#13;
E ° 8 u l t ; t h e e d i t o r n o w w e a r s n e w&#13;
t r o u s e r s .&#13;
A Fiendish Attack.&#13;
An attack WH« lately made on C. F&#13;
Collier of Cherokee, Iowa, that nearly&#13;
proved fatal. It came jbrnneh his&#13;
kidneys, flis back got so lame he&#13;
could not stoop without great pain&#13;
nor sit in ohair except proped by cushions.&#13;
No lvmfdy helped, him until he&#13;
tried Electric Bitters which pffected&#13;
^uch a wonderful change that, be&#13;
writes he feels like a new man. Thie&#13;
mrvaelous medicine cures backache&#13;
and kidney trouble, purifies the blood&#13;
and builds up your health. Onlv 50s&#13;
at F. A. S i g l e r ' s d r u g store.&#13;
, A y o u n g m a n r e c e n t l y w r o t e t o&#13;
t h e e d i t o r o f T h e L a d i e s ' H o m e&#13;
J o u r n a l a s k i n g : " W h a t h a v e y o u&#13;
t o s a y , f a i i l y a n d s q u a r e l y , t o a&#13;
y o u n g m a n of t w e n t y - n i n e w h o i s&#13;
a b o u t t o m a r r y ? " I n t h e O c t o -&#13;
b e r J o u r n a l M r . B o k u s e s a p a g e&#13;
for h i s a n s w e r . I t s s a l i e n t p o i n t s&#13;
are t h e s e : t h a t t h e m a n s h o u l d&#13;
m a k e t h e w o m a n of h i s c h o i c e h i s&#13;
c h u m , a s w e l l a s h i s w i f e ; t h a t h e&#13;
s h o u l d s h o w h e r t h e h i g h e s t cons&#13;
i d e r a t i o n a s w e l l a s l o v e h e r ;&#13;
t h a t h e s h o u l d r e m e m b e r t h a t h e&#13;
o w e s h i s w i f e t o h e r m o t h e r , a n d&#13;
t r e a t h i s m o t h e r - i n - l a w w i t h res&#13;
p e c t at l e a s t ; t h a t h e s h o u l d&#13;
k e e p h i s w i f e i n f o r m e d a s t o h i s&#13;
i n c o m e ; t h a t h e s h o u l d g i v e h e r a&#13;
r e g u l a r a l l o w a n c e ' a n d t h a t h e&#13;
s h o u l d h a v e h i s life i n s u r e d i n h e r&#13;
favor. A n d a b o v e all, t h a t w h e n&#13;
a y o u n g m a n m a r r i e s h e m u s t rem&#13;
e m b e r t h a t h e l e a v e s a w o r l d of&#13;
self a n d e n t e r s i n t o a w o r l d o f a n -&#13;
o t h e r a n d self.&#13;
Tot causes night Alarm. '&#13;
"One ni«bt my brother's baby was&#13;
taken with Croup." writes Mrs. J. C&#13;
Snider, of Cittenden, Ky., "it seemed&#13;
it would strangle before we could get&#13;
a doctor, so we gave qnick relief and&#13;
permantly cured it. We always keep&#13;
it in the house to protect our children&#13;
from Croup and Whooping Cough. It&#13;
cured me of a'chronic \. roncbial trouble&#13;
that no other remedy would relieve.&#13;
Infallible for Coughs, Colds, Throat&#13;
and Lung troubles. 50c and $ 1 0 0&#13;
Trial bottle* free at F. A. Sigler's&#13;
drug store.&#13;
T h e e d i t o r of t h e H u m e s t o n&#13;
( I o w a ) A d v o c a t e c l a i m s t h a t h i s&#13;
t o w n h a s t h r e e of t h e s t i n g i e s t&#13;
m e n o n r e c o r d . T h e first will&#13;
n o t d r i n k a s m u c h w a t e r a s h e&#13;
w a n t s u n l e s s \* c o m e s f r o m h i s&#13;
n e i g h b o r ' s w e l l . T h e s e c o n d f o rb&#13;
i d s a n y o f h i s f a m i l y w r i t i n g&#13;
a n y t h i n g b u t a, s m a l l h a n d , a s i t i s&#13;
a w a s t e of i n k t o m a k e l a r g e l e t -&#13;
ters. T h e t h i r d s t o p s t h e clock&#13;
a t n i g h t t o s a v e t h e w e a r a n d tear&#13;
o u m a c h i n e r y . A l l of t h e m r e f u s e&#13;
t o t a k e a n e w s p a p e r o n t h e g r o u n d&#13;
t h a t i t i s s u c h a t e r r i b l e s t r a i n o n&#13;
the spectacles to read&#13;
W. C T. UEdited&#13;
by ths W. C T n.of Pineiro*&#13;
I n S t J o h n s , K a n s a s , a s a l o o n -&#13;
k e e p e r h a s b e e n c o n v i c t e d o n 4 0&#13;
c o u n t s of s e l l i n g w h i s k e y i n v i o -&#13;
l a t i o n o f t h e p r o h i b i t o r y l a w , a n d&#13;
fined H 9 3 0 a n d s e n t e n c e d t o 4 9&#13;
m o n t h s i p jail. I f h e c o n n o t p a y&#13;
h i s fine h e w i l l , u n d e r t h e j a m e&#13;
law, h a v e t o s e r v e i t o u t i n jail a t&#13;
t h e rate of 5 0 c e n t s a day. C h a r l e s&#13;
8 t e t n b r t n 1 r k n o w 8 nuw w h e t h e r *&#13;
p r o h i b i t o r l a w p r o h i b i t s .&#13;
M i l w a u k e e i s t h e c i t y n o t e d f o r&#13;
i t s b e e r p r o d u c t i o n . O n e g r e a t&#13;
firm c o n t i n u a l l y flaunts i t s a d v e r -&#13;
t i s e m e n t s of " t h e b e e r t h a t m a d e&#13;
M i l w a u k e e f a m o u s . " B u t u p i n&#13;
t h a t c i t y t h e r e i s • a w i e e h e a d e d&#13;
o l d l i f e - i n s u r a n c e c o m p a n y w h i c h&#13;
g o e s a h e a d a t t e n d i n g t o i t s b u s i -&#13;
n e s s , a n d r e g u l a r l y t u r n i n g d o w n&#13;
all a p p l i c a t i o n s f o r i n s u r a n c e&#13;
m a d e b y m e n i n t h e b e e r trade.&#13;
T h a t o n e c o n c e r n h a s m o r e g o o d&#13;
s o u n d s e n s e t h a n all t h e m a l t s t e r s&#13;
in t h e n o r t h w e s t — P i t t s b u r g A d -&#13;
v o c a t e .&#13;
Stop tbe €0087% and w o r k s off tbe&#13;
Cold.&#13;
Lsxntive Bromo-Quinine Tablets cure&#13;
a cold in one day. No » ure, no pay.&#13;
Price 25 cents.&#13;
Lute Literary News**&#13;
L i t t l e i s t h o u g h t a n d l e s s i s&#13;
k n o w n b y t h e a v e r a g e m a n c o n -&#13;
c e r n i n g t h e l i v e s a n d a i m s of t b e&#13;
4 0 0 , 0 0 0 m e n a n d b o y s w h o d e l v e&#13;
u n d e r t h e s u r f a c e of t h e e a r t h i n&#13;
p l a c e s of d a r k n e s s a n d d a n g e r ,&#13;
w h e r e hardly a d a y g o e s b y w i t h&#13;
o n t r e c o r d i n g t h e death b y falls,&#13;
o f - r o c k , coal o r slate o f m o r e t&#13;
o n e u n f o r t u n a t e miner. A n a i t i c l e&#13;
e n t h i s s u b j e c t a t o n c e impartial&#13;
a n d v i t a l l y i n t e r e s t i n g i s c o n t r i b -&#13;
u t e d t o t h e C o s m o p o l i t a n for O c t -&#13;
o b e r b y J o h n M i t c h e l l , P r e s i d e n t&#13;
of t h e U n i t e d M i n e W o r k e r s of&#13;
A m e r i c a , w h o m e v e r y o n e recalls&#13;
as t h e m a n w h o o r g a n i z e d t h e m i -&#13;
n e r s a n d carried t h r o u g h t o a s u c -&#13;
c e s s f u l t e r m i n a t i o n t h e g r e a t a n -&#13;
t h r a c i t e s t r i k e of 1900.&#13;
TO Cute a Cold in One D a y&#13;
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets.&#13;
All drugguts refund the money&#13;
if it fails to cure. E. W. Grove's signature&#13;
is on each box. 25c.&#13;
• — P &gt; ^ 1 — • » — MM.I ir m u d — ^ ^ * * — —&#13;
MONTHLY REPORT&#13;
Going- to Buffalo?&#13;
If you are we would take peasure&#13;
in reccomendmg to you a place ot entertainment&#13;
among the people of the&#13;
Rinley Memorial church. These people&#13;
have opened their pleasant homes&#13;
for* the season of tbe Exposition in&#13;
order to pay an indebtednes&gt; on their&#13;
church. They are very kind to quests&#13;
making them feel like Irtends and not&#13;
strangers. Their bouses are easy of&#13;
access, as we found on the eve of our&#13;
arrival. The pastor came to the train&#13;
but in the crowd we missed each other&#13;
so we followed the directions given&#13;
us before leaving home, viz: go one&#13;
block to Main st. take a Main st. car&#13;
to Niagara st. transfer to Niagara car&#13;
fiO north on Niagara st. to Farmer, as&#13;
you get off at Farmer you are on the&#13;
right side ot tbe track, take left side&#13;
of the st. and g o two bLcks to East st.&#13;
as you turn to the left you will see&#13;
the house close by the corner with a&#13;
Sag out to guide you. This is tbe&#13;
home of the pastor. If their rooms&#13;
are filled yon can be accomodated near&#13;
by. On leaving the Exposition&#13;
grounds you can take a car at tbe&#13;
north gate, avoiding the crowd that&#13;
congregates at the other entrances&#13;
and soon be at your boarding place.&#13;
For further directions see:&#13;
LKAL H. SIGLER, A . M. TEEPLE&#13;
Mocco E. TESPLE, M A B T P, TEEPLE.&#13;
Stepped into Lire Coals.&#13;
"When a child I burned my foot&#13;
frightfully," writes W. H. Eads, of&#13;
.Jonesville, Va.. ** which_cau*ed horr!-&#13;
hie leg sores for 80 years, hat Ruck.&#13;
len's Arnica Salve wholly cured me&#13;
after everything else failed. Ioiallible&#13;
for Burnt, Soaldi, Cats, 8ore*t Bruise*,&#13;
and Piles. Sold by F . A . Sigler 2 5 c&#13;
Of the Pracgney Public Schools for the&#13;
month ending Sept. 27,1901.&#13;
HIGH SCHOOL DEPARTMENT.&#13;
Whole number of pupils 35.&#13;
Total days attendance 609'.&#13;
Average attendance 80.&#13;
Aggregate tardiness. ° . 28.&#13;
Number of days taught 20.&#13;
PUPILS NEITHER ABSBNT KOB TARDY,&#13;
Mae Reason. Bernard Glenn.&#13;
Millie Gardner. Fannie Murphy,&#13;
. * &lt; * .&#13;
''Tffifcfl'&#13;
Ellery Durfee.&#13;
^fixJLead&#13;
Laura Lavey&#13;
Glenn Gardner&#13;
Ethel Durfee.&#13;
Fred Read.&#13;
Leo Lavey&#13;
Mae Hanigau&#13;
STEPHEN DURFEE, Supt,&#13;
GRAMMAR DEPARTMENT.&#13;
Number of pupils 13&#13;
Total attendance 210&#13;
Aggregate tardiness 7&#13;
Daily attendance 11&#13;
Number days taught 20&#13;
PUPILS NEITHER AB8ENT NOR TARDY.&#13;
Norma Vaughn.&#13;
C. L. GRIMES, Teacher.&#13;
&lt;- X o » 6 i » a t l o a t H r f n * T H -&#13;
Tbe 8wedes" delight In "Combimwion&#13;
diving," and t w o men wilt perform&#13;
many clever feats together. One of the&#13;
most grotesque of these Is when o n *&#13;
man stands upright on the springboard&#13;
and tightly clasps another man's body&#13;
round the w a i s t holding him head&#13;
downward .and potting his o w n head&#13;
through the man's legs. When the upright&#13;
m a n springs from the board* he.&#13;
throws h i s leg* Into tbe air so that the&#13;
two men, clasping the other tightly,&#13;
round the waist, turn a somersault, and&#13;
when they reach the water the man&#13;
who started upside down arrives f e e t |&#13;
foremost&#13;
- T h e handspring dive is a very effective,&#13;
specialty , of Swedish swimmers.&#13;
Tbe performer takes off from the dtv-&#13;
Ing noara w i t h l i a n d s instead of f e e t&#13;
turning his body In order to descend&#13;
feet foremost or somersaulting to arrive&#13;
head downward. Very graceful&#13;
also Is the back dive, in which the&#13;
spring is made backward, the body&#13;
turning toward the springboard. Double&#13;
somersault dives are made from&#13;
platforms 30 or 60 feet high, the diver&#13;
making t w o turns in the air and entering&#13;
the water feet foremost—Peterson's&#13;
Magazine.&#13;
INTERMEDIATE DEPARTMENT.&#13;
Whole number of days taught 20&#13;
Total number days attendance 595.5&#13;
Average daily attendance 29.77&#13;
Whole number belonging 32&#13;
Aggregate tardiness 29&#13;
PUPIL NEITHER ABSENT NOR TARDY.&#13;
Lloyd Grimes. Orpha Hendee.&#13;
Magolla Smith. Lola Moran.&#13;
Margaret Lynch Edna Webb&#13;
Viola Peters George Roche&#13;
Lucy Cook John Dunn&#13;
Mary Love Glendon Richards&#13;
Mary Lynch Glenn Tupper&#13;
MRS. J. A. GREENE^Teacher.&#13;
PRIMARY DEPARTMENT.&#13;
Whole number of days taught 20&#13;
Total number of days attendance 649&#13;
Average daily attendance 32.45&#13;
Whole number^ belonging 36&#13;
Aggregate tardiness 29&#13;
PUPILS NEITHER ABSENT NOR TARDY.&#13;
Gladys Browa Theo Coute&#13;
Bernardine Lynch Florence Cook&#13;
Earle Tupper Ona Campbell&#13;
Alger Hall John Bates&#13;
Edna Guinan.&#13;
JESSIE GREEN, Teacher.&#13;
Men who though slight, yet reach the&#13;
chest standard, are preferred as recruits&#13;
in the British army to those that&#13;
are stout, the former being considered&#13;
to possess the better frame.&#13;
Butterflies are said to be very sleepy&#13;
headed. Tbey go to bed early and get&#13;
up late.&#13;
The E&amp;rth'a Bendinara.&#13;
Little beddings are in progress all tintime&#13;
the world over. The "Immovable"&#13;
hills are bowing and scraping to each&#13;
other constantly. Every evening, as the&#13;
dew settles In the valleys between&#13;
them, they nod to one another. So likewise&#13;
do the mountains, even to a greater&#13;
e x t e n t Gravity is tugging all the&#13;
time.&#13;
And In London, too, where earthquake&#13;
sensations are practically unknown,&#13;
the earth beuds daily, and the&#13;
buildings, like the hills and the mountains,&#13;
nod to their friends opposite&#13;
when tbe morning traffic begins. On&#13;
Sunday usually their manners take a&#13;
rest excepting in such places as Petticoat&#13;
lane, where business flourishes In&#13;
as lively a fashion as in Paris.&#13;
Heine said that even the trees made&#13;
obeisance to Napoleon I when he entered&#13;
Berlin. This was imaginative, yet&#13;
truthful, for the weight of the crowd&#13;
along Unter den Linden made a tilting&#13;
sufficient for Professor Milne's pendulums&#13;
to have recorded distinctly. One&#13;
might sny the crust of the earth acts&#13;
like a steel spring, it bends so easily.—&#13;
Everybody's Magazine.&#13;
How t o Leant to Like Pletnrea.&#13;
The following suggestions, if you&#13;
please, are not from an artist nor even&#13;
from a connoisseur, the writer being&#13;
nothing more than an ordinary picture&#13;
lover. In general the principle to be&#13;
followed is to get as much in an atmosphere&#13;
of pictures as possible. Always&#13;
go to the museums when you are traveling,&#13;
and if you live near enough&#13;
make occasional picture visits to Boston,&#13;
Chicago or New York. Do not&#13;
make the mistake of staying too long&#13;
in a gallery. You only tire yourself.&#13;
Half an hour is quite long enough. But&#13;
do not endeavor to look at every picture&#13;
in the gallery in that time. Look&#13;
long at a few good ones and let those&#13;
you look at be those you like or at least&#13;
those which you prefer above the others.&#13;
Also ask yourself w h y you prefer&#13;
them. Always get :t catalogue. Sometimes&#13;
the pictures are not marked, and&#13;
yon as a student want always to know&#13;
the painter of your picture.-Frederic&#13;
H Smith in Woman's Home Companion*&#13;
«. - • - - • ••' ....--.-»•-—..- . , .&#13;
An^eseadt;&#13;
. - • • . ; . ' * ; : . ... V '&#13;
M Y I A M '&#13;
. I X M f t l l N O B&#13;
ATENTS&#13;
Tr&lt;Apc MAIMS)&#13;
^ OKtMNS&#13;
ComiOKt*) 4 c&#13;
&gt; . &lt;&#13;
. i • •&#13;
otnnvtoeknlt L&#13;
ltelonnt sfirteref.o jO^lr ctooBntf ridnernetuiacly. tuHealnEdSbSokok on &gt;• Patennottsf MU,k wonit htoburto uehitaar cnV, tnm&#13;
\ &gt;&#13;
nfific Jlmeticdit&#13;
wjattottof *ny Mtentltfe Journal. Terma.M»&#13;
i f f . l J 2 g r f f ^ y f o sold bjraU iMwed^rfT S^JWBw*d»ay, Mg\&#13;
Ofcoe, fa*F eStt,, WWaaeshbitnngittooin , D,&#13;
Not t h e Same Wife.&#13;
The old gentleman had returned to&#13;
the home of his boyhood for the first&#13;
time in ten years or more and, as on&#13;
the last occasions, he had written "and&#13;
wife" after his name on the hotel register.&#13;
Of course the keeper of the hotel&#13;
was glad to see him,and grasped him&#13;
warmly by the hand,&#13;
"Ain't grown a day older than when&#13;
you w a s here last," he said.&#13;
"No?" said the old gentleman half inquiringly.&#13;
"Not a day," returned the tavern&#13;
keeper emphatically. "Your wife seems&#13;
to have changed more'u you."&#13;
"Yes?"&#13;
"Oh, yes. Leastways she does to me.&#13;
Looks thinner than when you w a s here&#13;
last."&#13;
"Indeed?"&#13;
"Yes. She ain't near so fleshy as she&#13;
was, accordin to my recollection. Seems&#13;
like she's taller, too, an her bald don't&#13;
look Just the same to me. an—an"—&#13;
"And," put in the old gentleman softly,&#13;
"she's not the same wife, you know."&#13;
- T i t - B i t s .&#13;
A Youthful Promoter.&#13;
A horseman had an amusing experience&#13;
near the speedway a few days&#13;
*gOT He called to an idle newsboy to&#13;
hold his horse while he made a call on&#13;
a client. On leaving the house he was&#13;
surprised to see another boy in charge&#13;
of the horse. So he asked:&#13;
"How's this? You are not the boy I&#13;
left my horse with."&#13;
"No, sir. I jist spekilated and bought&#13;
him of the other boy for 10 cents. He&#13;
said as how y o u were only worth a&#13;
nickel, and I says you were good for a&#13;
quarter. See?'&#13;
. The boy got the quarter and went&#13;
around the corner, where the first boy&#13;
was waiting under an open window in&#13;
the home of the horseman's friend.&#13;
"That's the way ter work the swells,"&#13;
said the young speculator to his companion.&#13;
"Ef you had staid, he woulder&#13;
coughed up a dime. The bluff made&#13;
him ershamed to hand over less than&#13;
the two bits. You gets 12 cents, and I&#13;
keep the extry cent for permotin dis&#13;
scheme. See?"—New York Times.&#13;
&lt;S&amp;£&#13;
This •Jg&amp;atare is on every box 1 the genuine&#13;
Laxative Bromo-Quini^e Tablets&#13;
the remedy that core* a eoM te mm&#13;
S u b s c r i b e f o r D i s p a t c h .&#13;
T h fik POSTAL 4 MOUSY,&#13;
• I I I p*o»nirroii«. Griswold&#13;
House ftref&#13;
class,&#13;
modern,&#13;
up-to-date&#13;
Hotel, located&#13;
In the heart el&#13;
DETROIT. *•&lt;»*•&#13;
Rites, $2, $2.50, $3 per Day.&#13;
Oee. OMM*O HIVCH 4 omewoie e t .&#13;
JUOA M1N&#13;
" O D ns »ie w* £ii-sutii&#13;
n V D » K 3 H X&#13;
UJCUJ | i r a Xq JO *UM«I pov Xm Ai9A9 A]mu uj pjog i»»tjj JOJ n*y&#13;
jaq*!H »uou—ipis t)u»3 Si put 01 i\uo&#13;
•wen NtMas pst muta m&#13;
TTW5M&#13;
'snoewj Jed**! •nmijs.-ujejjejf&#13;
Aiowtosqy pu« i«oiniouooa *»)*?&#13;
-o»-dQ 'ajdiojs '•Will**! kR«ll*&gt;8&#13;
••UU9J jojpuac paiu«M tiiMft Xprt&#13;
*ao3 »i»»| JO; af puat 'JQ &lt;A*p-oi »«)U3fl&#13;
•qng ojo 'uopay ! i)um pfoi|«tMq ! JMO*&#13;
A)U«| ! taiuiouo3&gt; 3ui&gt;t«uiiiajp iiuoiqrai&#13;
)M»«I !i»4i|d pajO|oa {iij|iR»»q SWBJ y&#13;
•3MZVDVW &amp;mr\ v&#13;
3NIIVDVW&#13;
SftTOSN&#13;
How to Treat a Cook.&#13;
"Into no department in life," says&#13;
Yuan Mei, a Chinese authority on&#13;
cooking, "should indifference be allowed&#13;
to creep; into none less than into the&#13;
domain of cookery. Cooks are but mean&#13;
fellows, and if a day is passed without&#13;
either rewarding or punishing tbem&#13;
that day is surely marked by negligence&#13;
or carelessness on their part If&#13;
badly cooked food is swallowed In silence,&#13;
such neglect will speedily become&#13;
a habit. Still, mere rewards and&#13;
punishments are of no use. If a dish is&#13;
good, attention should be called to the&#13;
why and the wherefore. If bad, an effort&#13;
should be made to discover the&#13;
cause of the failure,"&#13;
A R e t l a r y .&#13;
A retlary was the name of a Roman&#13;
gladiator armed in a peculiar way. H e&#13;
was furnished with a trident and net,&#13;
with no more covering than a short tunic,&#13;
and with these implements he endeavored&#13;
to entangle and dispatch his&#13;
adversary, who was called a secutor&#13;
(from sequi, to follow) and w a s armed&#13;
with a helmet a shield and a sword.&#13;
The name of the first is pronounced as&#13;
if spelled re-shi-a-ry, the accent on the&#13;
first syllable.&#13;
Good Hearted*&#13;
Mlnnlck—I thought you said Scribbel&#13;
was a good hearted fellow.&#13;
Sinn i c k - Well?&#13;
Mlnnlck—Well, I hinted pretty strongly&#13;
that I'd like to haver a copy of his&#13;
latest book, but he studiously ignored&#13;
the request&#13;
SInnick—That's where he proved bis&#13;
Undly nature.—Exchange.&#13;
Remorse.&#13;
L a w Notes tells of a trial In which&#13;
the following remorseful letter appeartd&#13;
in evidence:&#13;
Mr. Bidwtl):&#13;
Deer Sir—Tint Is what I a r m expert to QOSM&#13;
to. But It is trouble, sad no one to help awe eat,&#13;
So I want jron to hart this young woman Kills a,&#13;
Bat ttMs,lst a s lay top of ground, for tat Tarts?&#13;
Sward* te sat) ter I have did&#13;
. . — . . i n &lt; i i i —&#13;
•qns•**•* * slow off *i»o '»qi»t XJOAO O) (norp9ies aao JBOJC) rwaiivti aavi v j&#13;
Railroad Guide.&#13;
&gt; AND 9TBAM9HIP UNE9*&#13;
Popular route tor Ann* Arbor, T o -&#13;
ledo and points East, South, and for&#13;
Howell, Owosso, A l m a , Mt Pleasant&#13;
Cadillac, Manistee, Traverse City a n d&#13;
points in Northwestern Michigan.&#13;
W. H . B E N N E T T ,&#13;
G. P . A . Toledo&#13;
U] JUKI&#13;
a»«Uroevd,,Tswa. 1 . 1 © 0 1 .&#13;
' Trains leave South Lyon as follows:&#13;
For Detroit and £est,&#13;
10:36 a. m., 3:04 p. m., 8:68 p. m.&#13;
For Grand Rapids, North and West,&#13;
9:46 a. m., 2:08 p. tn, 6:20 p. M.&#13;
For Saginaw and Bay City,&#13;
10:86 a. m.,,8:04 p. m., 8:68 p. n .&#13;
For Toledo and South, 10:36 a. m,&#13;
F»AKKBAT, H.F.MOfcLUBK,&#13;
Agent, South Lroo. , a, p. A., DetrotU&#13;
trrand Tmak Railway aystosi.&#13;
j» 0.44 a.m. Taoluon. Detroit, sad&#13;
* 6:46p.&#13;
2 4t46p.n. intermedJatssteUons 7M a.**. -I&#13;
The »16 a. a\. and 6:46 p, s i trains ha™ through&#13;
ooeeahstweeaJaoksoaatd Detroit.&#13;
( W.J.aUsk.&#13;
v&#13;
/ v&#13;
* &gt; •' *&#13;
4 *•'.;&#13;
W-&#13;
: . : : * • • • " •&#13;
ym*}fiTp&#13;
'*•'.' :'*'*y&#13;
&lt;!'%&#13;
' . " v ' - f ' - ' -*»&#13;
/&gt;•&gt; ..*&#13;
v -/&#13;
.&lt;&gt;.&#13;
-vss.&#13;
v ' \&#13;
,, &gt; • . &lt; • '&#13;
SJf m&#13;
/%'&#13;
•--s ¥-.. ' &lt; . # ' - r i f" ' i ' ' y* ^ v w**f • * » P**£&#13;
**P&#13;
^..&#13;
*&#13;
from&#13;
-"&lt;",.&#13;
^wtjas*&#13;
JEWEL&#13;
STOVES&#13;
STWEPIAWTIWTHI&#13;
makes Happy Home»fe^&amp;^&#13;
The perfect Stove and Range is&#13;
distinguished by above trade mark.&#13;
Jewel N * T « are M U fcy&#13;
TEEPLE #&gt; CAD WELL.&#13;
A Card.&#13;
I, the undersigned, do hereby airree&#13;
to. ratund the money on a 50 cent, hot&#13;
tie of Green's Warranted Syrop of&#13;
Tar if it failes ro cure your cough or&#13;
cold. I also guarantee.a 25-cent bottle&#13;
to prove satisfactory or money refunded.&#13;
t*23&#13;
Will B. Darrow.&#13;
A J o k e o n a P r o f e s s o r .&#13;
Among some intensely amusing college&#13;
scrapes told by "A Graduate" in&#13;
The Ladies' Home Journal is the story&#13;
of a certain professor not much liked&#13;
by his pupils who was to be married.&#13;
The lady lived in Cleyeland. And the&#13;
students that loved (?) him were not&#13;
of course invited. But they determined&#13;
that in some way he should hear&#13;
from them. And he did. On the day&#13;
appointed the professor took the train&#13;
at 10 a. in,', due to arrive at Cleveland&#13;
at 12:30 p. m. About 11 o'clock Jim&#13;
Townsend rushed, to the telegraph office&#13;
and sent off this dispatch:&#13;
"Chief of Police, Cleveland: Man&#13;
coming on train No. 6, tall, well dressed,&#13;
frock coat, silk hat, side whiskers.&#13;
Escaped lunatic. Hold. Shrewd, therefore&#13;
beware. Strange case. Will say&#13;
name Finalli. Mistake. Thinks he fs&#13;
professor in a college. Delusion. Escort&#13;
to home of friends at No. Euclid&#13;
avenue."&#13;
This message reached its destination&#13;
long before train No. G reached Cleveland,&#13;
so that when Professor Fiimlli&#13;
alighted it was to walk straight into&#13;
the custody of three detectives. They&#13;
would listen to no words of reason. &gt;&gt;'.* t&#13;
escorted him out to the house on F ^ ' i l&#13;
a&gt;enne,"the home of his intended L..,:&#13;
I n ( h o Soliool of 'Work.'&#13;
Charles A. Dana of the New York&#13;
Sun was a man of extensive learning&#13;
and attached great importance to college&#13;
training, but was quick to recognize&#13;
the value of the practical education&#13;
that a man of good pa its may pick&#13;
up in this workaday world outside of&#13;
university walls.&#13;
A young man went to The Sun office&#13;
one day and asked to see the editor In&#13;
chief. He would not be rebuffed by the&#13;
subordinates and after some delay was&#13;
admitted. He stated bis business without&#13;
a moment's loss of time.&#13;
"Mr. Dana." he said, "I believe 1&#13;
coqld be of some use on this paper, and&#13;
I want you to give me a trial. If 3-ou&#13;
don't find me of any use, you needn't&#13;
pay me any salary, and if you do I&#13;
shall want a good salary. If I don't&#13;
find my proper groove in a month, you&#13;
can drop me out."&#13;
Mr. Dana looked him over.&#13;
"Young man," he said, "I like your&#13;
looks. Have you ever attended any institution&#13;
of learning?"&#13;
"Yes, sir. I am a graduate of two&#13;
newspaper offices, one a country weekly&#13;
and the other a daily paper in a city&#13;
of 100,000 inhabitants."&#13;
"I'll take you. Go and report to the&#13;
managing editor."&#13;
And Mr. Dana turned again to his&#13;
work.—Youth's Companion.&#13;
Does It pay to buy cheap.&#13;
A cheap remedy for coughs and&#13;
colds is all ritfht, but you want something&#13;
tb^at will relieve and, cure the&#13;
more severe and dangerous results of&#13;
throat and lun^ trouul^. What&#13;
shall &lt;ve do? Go to a warmer and more&#13;
regular climate? itw, it possible?; if&#13;
not possible for you, then in either&#13;
case take the ONLY remedy that hns&#13;
been introduced in all civilized counties&#13;
witb success in severe throat and&#13;
lung troubles, "Bosdiee's German&#13;
Syrup." [t not only heals and stimulates&#13;
the tissues to d^troy the genu&#13;
diseases, hut allays inflamation, causes&#13;
eaay expectoration, give* a good o i g h s&#13;
rest, and cures the patient. Try one&#13;
bottle. Recommended many years by&#13;
all druggists in the world. Get&#13;
Green's Prize Almanac. For sale by&#13;
F. A. Sitfler. -&#13;
Q u e e r T h i n g s t o E a t .&#13;
Just before the Franco-German war&#13;
a traveling quack iu France4 employed&#13;
as his clown, after the fashion of the&#13;
day, a man named Tore, who testified&#13;
to the excellence of his master's cure&#13;
for indigestion by swallowing corks&#13;
and pebbles. After leaving the quack&#13;
he enlisted and in the presence of Dr.&#13;
Lorentz tore open a live cat, sucked&#13;
Its blood and devoured it. He also&#13;
ate in the fcame y,-ay living snakes,&#13;
grinding their heads between his teeth.&#13;
During the war he conveyed secret information&#13;
for the French army by&#13;
swallowing a small box with a written&#13;
paper inside it,- but he was at last&#13;
detected by the Prussians and punished&#13;
as a spy.&#13;
The' welt' known brown pigment&#13;
callii sepia 1» obtained fro* a ten&#13;
armed octopus found principally to the&#13;
Mediterranean and more especially, at&#13;
the bead of the Adriatic sea, where it&#13;
is caught,, by the natives for food;&#13;
The sepia is contained in a bag and&#13;
la really the black fluid of. which we&#13;
have all read as being discharged by&#13;
the creature to cover its-escape. Some&#13;
natnra^sta say that the fluid Is brows*&#13;
ish, # c h becomes more credible when&#13;
we know that this is the source of&#13;
sepia.; /&#13;
The pigment is really a powder which&#13;
dissolves in water; its strength may be&#13;
estimated by the fact that it will color&#13;
1,000 times its own bulk. When the&#13;
octopus has been killed, the sack or&#13;
^ 1 . . 1 , 1 1 ^ , . Jbm &gt;*»*. s e a *&#13;
•wbag&#13;
is removed and dried to prevent&#13;
putrefaction. The sepia is treated with&#13;
ammonia or caustic soda, washed and&#13;
dried. It is one of the most durable of&#13;
paints, except when fully exposed to&#13;
the fierce rays of the sun, and an even&#13;
surface can be obtained with it more&#13;
easily than with most paints. Sepia&#13;
has been obtained from a fossil cuttlefish&#13;
thousands of years old and found&#13;
to be quite good for paint.&#13;
T h e P o w e r o f S u p e r s t i t i o n .&#13;
"I wish I wasn't superstitious," said&#13;
a well known young man. "I'd have it&#13;
taken off."&#13;
"Have^what taken off?"&#13;
"Why, this great big mole on my&#13;
nose."&#13;
"What aro you afraid of about i t -&#13;
bleeding to death?"&#13;
"No, no; it's Just bad luck to have a&#13;
mole taken off. It's worse than having&#13;
a black cat across your path or even&#13;
to have a hooting owl light on the&#13;
roof."&#13;
"I don't know why it,is bad luck, but&#13;
my black mammy used to say, 'Chile,&#13;
don't yo' nebber let 'em try to take dat&#13;
mole off'n your nose."&#13;
" 'What'll happen, Aunt Sarah, If I&#13;
do?' I used to ask her.&#13;
" 'I dunno, chile. Some folks say as&#13;
the place won't nebber get well, and&#13;
some say as two mo'll come back.&#13;
Dotft nebber pester what the Lord has&#13;
gin yo', or he mought make It wo'se/&#13;
"The old negro woman's doctrine&#13;
was too deeply embedded In my early&#13;
education for* me to outgrow it, even&#13;
after 20 years."—Memphis Scimitar.&#13;
S c h o o l b o y D e f i n i t i o n * .&#13;
Q. " W h o discovered the l a w of gravity&#13;
from the fall of a n apple?" A.&#13;
"Paris." =&#13;
Q. " W h a t is a s a r c a s m ? " A. "A sore&#13;
on your body."&#13;
A n "antiquarian" Is "a place for&#13;
a n i m a l s , " "harlequinade" "a kind of&#13;
drink," "a dilemma" "a medicine,"&#13;
"citadel" "a sort of chief policeman,"&#13;
"neutral" "a kind of reptile," and&#13;
"eulogy" "a c h a p w h o feels b u m p s on&#13;
our head."&#13;
"Juggernaut, a m o u n t a i n in Switzerland;"&#13;
"glacier" is *a mender of wind&#13;
o w s " "prig" is "a little boat," and&#13;
the ostrich is "distinct."&#13;
"Sapphira w a s a high priest."&#13;
"Chamois are a kind of big fleas."&#13;
"The milky w a y " is " t h e thick&#13;
c r e a m y stuff on the t o p of t h e milk."&#13;
"Tableaux v i v a n t s " m e a n s "hotel&#13;
dinner."&#13;
"Elopement" is "the opposite to allopathy."—&#13;
Collection M a d e by a London&#13;
School Principal.&#13;
The popular idea that tn$ act of dying&#13;
la a painful procete of ten causes a fear&#13;
of death. But death from evens the&#13;
moat painful mortal diseases is, usually&#13;
preceded by a period of cessation from&#13;
Buffering and partial or complete insensibility&#13;
resembling falling asleep or the&#13;
pleasant gradual unconsciousness caused&#13;
by an ansesthetic.&#13;
The common phrase "death agony'' is&#13;
not warranted by what occurs in natural&#13;
death, which is a complete relief&#13;
from all pain. When death is owing to&#13;
heart failure or syncope, it is sudden&#13;
and painless—perhaps pleasant. Death&#13;
by hanging, there is reason to believe,&#13;
is attended by a voluptuous spasm.&#13;
Death by decapitation or electricity is&#13;
paly a'momentary shock, hardly felt.&#13;
Death by porsontag varies in painful&#13;
ness according to the poison employed.&#13;
Opium and other narcotics probably&#13;
give a painless, perhaps a pleasant,&#13;
dreamful death. Hemlock, as we know&#13;
from the account of the death of Socrates,&#13;
causes gradual insensibility&#13;
from below upward. On the other&#13;
hand, arsenic, strychnine, carbolic and&#13;
mineral acids, corrosive sublimate, tartar&#13;
emetic and other metallic poisons&#13;
inflict slow and torturing death. Prussic&#13;
acid and cyanide of potassium cause&#13;
quick and painful death.—Humanitarian.&#13;
W i l l i n g t o O b l i g e .&#13;
The young man was from town and&#13;
was spending a Sunday in the suburbs.&#13;
He knew far more about horses and&#13;
carriages than the local livery salesman,&#13;
and so his interview with the latter&#13;
when he sought to hire a "rig" for&#13;
the afternoon was tinged with a gentle&#13;
air of patronage on his part. "Oh, have&#13;
you a trap you can let me have?"&#13;
"Yes; certainly."&#13;
"One that will hold two?"&#13;
•— "Yes, or 20," from the obliging countryman.&#13;
"Oh, really! Have you a stylish road&#13;
wagon?"&#13;
"Yes."&#13;
"Perhaps you have a. spider or a&#13;
Brewster buggy, or on second thought&#13;
I might prefer a rubber tired hansom.&#13;
You can accommodate me?"&#13;
"Yes; all kinds cheerfully furnished."&#13;
"Can you give me a lash whip?"&#13;
"Yes; with a fancy tassel."&#13;
"Oh, well, what kind of a horse can&#13;
you turn out—a short tailed one?"&#13;
"I think so," came gently from the&#13;
wearied proprietor; then in stentorian&#13;
tones to his man: "Jake, can you give&#13;
this gentleman a short tailed horse? If&#13;
not, cut-one at once:"—Short Stories.—&#13;
D a n g e r In D a m p P a p e r .&#13;
Most of the paper now used is made&#13;
from wood and other vegetable fibers&#13;
which are chemically not very different&#13;
from the material of which a hayrick&#13;
is composed. Consequently if paper&#13;
is stacked damp heating is likely&#13;
to take place just as it does with&#13;
prematurely stacked hay. and at any&#13;
time flames may burst out as the result&#13;
of spontaneous combustion.&#13;
Cm- r;' "V&#13;
iTaUiir; : ;•• n*&#13;
nf her :' '&gt;&#13;
:-.i.ld at •'.'..&#13;
ties to ' " •'&#13;
one of i!:tgcew,&#13;
r.ml '&#13;
ally rii-'.i vs. '.&#13;
Oalx.i \v.\b\,:&#13;
hie w'.erv no&#13;
; \:\ i&#13;
:-,1 :&#13;
hi» 1&#13;
:o.&gt;t vali&#13;
state is r&#13;
is n w t !&#13;
I:-, f ::•;-:;:. M^.s:|&#13;
!•; •::.-• yet v:r;:'::i. |&#13;
:'..-• of tile v:•;••- j&#13;
U. T h a t ' l r e e is'&#13;
';&gt; that e v e r '&#13;
ire than usv. i&#13;
.- luOestrucil-&#13;
-.lor-ed i-&gt; r.;e eletneats&#13;
•re. 1 r..^-".i that o a i &gt;&#13;
T h e H e a r t l e s s Drnjrfflat.&#13;
Flossie Panastar—Fred, what it that&#13;
the papers say the butcher uses? 1&#13;
want to keep dear Fldo's meat from&#13;
spoiling.&#13;
Brother Fred—Formaldehyde.&#13;
Flossie—That tot what the druggist&#13;
told me.&#13;
Brother Fr«*—What did he say?&#13;
Fiossie*-Pr»fat« acid.—Indianapolis&#13;
News.&#13;
H a r d l y .&#13;
Kindly •toltor— Mrs. A., what do&#13;
fan mptfOle makes you suffer so?&#13;
iM»i^JLr-I don't know, I am sure,&#13;
M d i..Ibeliovc nothing but a post mor-&#13;
InnVirfll ever show.&#13;
^Sfcdly Visitor—You poor thing! You&#13;
More L a u g h t e r , L«a* S u i c i d e s .&#13;
The physiological benefits of laughter&#13;
Cannot be overestimated. It shakes up&#13;
the diaphragm, sets the pulses beating&#13;
to a lively measure, stimulates the&#13;
blood corpuscles, enlivens the brain and&#13;
sometimes produces dislocation of the&#13;
Jaw when Indulged in too heartily by&#13;
a man with a large mouth. Tsed with&#13;
discretion, laughter is as inspiring as a&#13;
sea breeze, as refreshing as an August&#13;
shower. Its moral effect is beyond&#13;
computation. It has killed more ridiculous&#13;
superstitions by its rollicking roars&#13;
of unbelief than any other agency.&#13;
What can be more derisive than a&#13;
laugh? The man who laughs never&#13;
kills himself. This is the reason so few&#13;
Irishmen commit suicide.—Literary&#13;
bra.&#13;
T o o S n r g i c a l .&#13;
A little Lewiston boy at Old Orchard&#13;
who has long, curly hair was told by a&#13;
lady that he ought to have if "shingled."&#13;
"Shingled! I guess not," was his reply.&#13;
"I ain't going to have nails drove&#13;
in my head!"—Lewiston Journal.&#13;
T h e H u m a n E a r .&#13;
T h e h u m a n ear is an organ the true&#13;
I n w a r d n e s s of w h i c h the p h y s i c i a n s&#13;
h a v e never been able to get at. T h e y&#13;
c a n e x a m i n e the interior-of the e y e&#13;
w i t h e a s e by t h r o w i n g Into Its dark&#13;
c h a m b e r a ray of light reflected from&#13;
a little mirror, and they found it possible&#13;
e v e n to see the pray m a t t e r of t h e&#13;
brain by looking through the little&#13;
canal by which the optic nerve enters.&#13;
T h e c a v i t y behind the nose they ins&#13;
p e c t w i t h the aid of a light placed far&#13;
back in t h e mouth.&#13;
T h e y h a v e no difficulty In s e e i n g into&#13;
the s t o m a c h by an electric apparatus;&#13;
t h e intestines l i k e w i s e are readily&#13;
e n o u g h investigated, and the bladder&#13;
also. But the ear as to its internal&#13;
a r r a n g e m e n t s is unapproachable. It is&#13;
impossible to disroot it satisfactorily&#13;
after death, for the reason that t h e&#13;
parts collapse at once w h e n the vital&#13;
spark l e a v e s the body.&#13;
mm+fjm^„p„i, H I . I . , . . . n i. .I &lt;tk i i "&#13;
« t&#13;
VTa tp# ttnder^ttod 4rof0;|^it offer&#13;
a vewaid af &amp;0 oentiB toaoy person&#13;
who purchases of ua, two $5e boxs*&#13;
of Baxter's Manlrake BitAars Tablats,&#13;
if it fails to cure constipation, bUipas*&#13;
ness. eick-headscbe, jaundice, loss- of&#13;
appetite, soar stoajache, dygpapsit&#13;
liver complaint, or any of tna disaassr&#13;
for which it is recommended* Prion&#13;
25 cent» for either tablets or liquid.&#13;
We will also refund the msney on .on*&#13;
package of either it it fails to giv*&#13;
satisfaction,&#13;
F. &lt;*. Siglerv&#13;
vtr. B. Darrow,&#13;
•®&#13;
&lt;' m&#13;
,A&#13;
ghc %iuchtt(.M gbpatiH.&#13;
F R A M K L A N D R E W S dfcCQ.&#13;
EWTORS AMD PROfftlETOM.&#13;
8abterlptloa Price $1 In Advance&#13;
Snterea at the Poatoffice at Plnelcaay, Kicainaa&#13;
M aecowl-iflaaa matter.&#13;
Advertising ratea made known on application.&#13;
Boalneaa Carda, $4.00 per year.&#13;
Peain and marriage-notices published ire*.&#13;
Ajanouncement*of entertainment* may fra paid&#13;
for, if desired, by presenting the office witb ticketa&#13;
of admission. In case tickets are notbrou&lt;n»&#13;
to tne office, regular rates will be charged.&#13;
All matter la local notice eolamn will be cn&amp;ried&#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;
wUl be chaiged for accordingly. SS^All chang**&#13;
of advertisements M UST reach this office as early&#13;
as TUESDAY morning to insure an Insertlqn tha&#13;
same week.&#13;
JOS 3*SI.\2IJVG t&#13;
In all Its branches, a specialty. We baveall kinds&#13;
and the latest fetylet of Type, etc., which enablaa&#13;
as to execute all kinds of work, such as Books,&#13;
Pamplets, Posters, Programmes, Bill Heads, Not*&#13;
Heads, Statements, Cards, Auctlou Bills, etc., in&#13;
superior styles, upon the shortest notice. Prices as&#13;
o'v as good work can bn done.&#13;
-LL BfLLS PATABf.7 yiaST OtT KVSaif XOXta..&#13;
THE VILLAGE DIRECTORY.&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICERS. *&#13;
PBBBIDBNT ..^, «.« C. L. Slgler&#13;
THUSTJSKB R. Baker, K. H. Erwiu,&#13;
P. G, Jackson, Geo Reason Jr.&#13;
Cbas. Lore, Malachy Ajcue.&#13;
CLBRK.... ........ ...... .......^, 13. ft. B:r.7»&#13;
TKEASUHSR „., „ . . j , A.C*l*rjll&#13;
A»8B8SOtt ^ . . J i B . A.Greene&#13;
STKEETCOMMISSIONSti.... J. Parker&#13;
HKALTHUrFioaa Dr. H. r*. 61*1«&#13;
ATTORNEY „ „ ^. „ w. A. Carr&#13;
MABSHALL S. Brogan&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
Vf fiTHODJST EPISCOPAL CHUKCH.&#13;
i U Kev. H. W . Hickd, pastor. Services every&#13;
Sunday morning at L0:3u, and every Sunday&#13;
evening at 7:00 o'clock. Prayer meetinif Thursday&#13;
evenings. Sunday school at close of morning&#13;
service. CHA3, HENBY Supt. ^&#13;
CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH.&#13;
Rev. C. W. Kice pastor. Service every&#13;
Sunday morning at 10:30 and every Sunday&#13;
evening at 7:0C o'clock. Prayer meeting Taura&#13;
day qveninge. Sunday school at close of nv&gt;rn&#13;
ineeorvice. JJrd. Tboa, Iie&lt;td, Supt,, Mocao&#13;
Teepie Sec&#13;
C'f- MARV'S 'JATUOLlC ULiUltCa.&#13;
O Udv. M. J. Comuiirlord, Pastor. Services&#13;
every Sunday. - Low mass at 7:30o'clock&#13;
high mass with sermon at 9:30 a. m. Catechism&#13;
at 3:0o p. in., vespers ana benediction at 7^0 p.ui&#13;
SOCIETIES;&#13;
fphe A. o. H. SDcietv of tui* i&gt;U'&gt;j, i\x&lt;m&amp; ev*rv&#13;
I tniH H IM i iv i'i tt\e H*r. &gt;l itt:i-*.v .[ill.&#13;
John ruoinay au t &gt;[. T. lv-lly,0M ity »&gt;t Writes&#13;
U [&#13;
Mite&#13;
^PSVORTH LEAGUE. Meets every Sunday&#13;
leveuint; at ti:iK) oclock in t!i-' M. K. Cnurch. A&#13;
cordial invitatioa is extended to everyoue, especially&#13;
you ug people. F. L. Andrews. Pr&lt;»«&#13;
C' HRISTLAN' EyOSAVOR soJLiiiY:—.'^&#13;
Ia^d everv Sua.liy *Vr3uin j ut »'.:;&gt;. . eail.-a&#13;
Miss L. M. Ooa; Seoretary, .Mis^ Hittle Carp a ice&#13;
of tLc :..11)0.-:^&#13;
timber tv-:» ^ sLiliraer^-ti-ln the j j j o n w l i ^ j ^ w e a k t h a t c a n n e y e r g t a n d&#13;
or burlod In the .writwv^wlu're ^ ^ ^ ^ . fltet—Tlt-Blt9&#13;
moaphere tlaes uot^ffput It, nud it t t t J I ^ "&#13;
last for so many years that the iuaH j&#13;
who bad put It there is doad and for- &gt; Hla Sympathr Arooaed.&#13;
gotten by the time It has decayed. * £ne met him at the door, all breath&#13;
It is a growing favorite, and desart«j lent with excitement.&#13;
edly so, in many ways of raanufactnKt . •Ufoho," she cried, "baby's cut a tooth."&#13;
ing furnnlittaurree and In finishing t n e "Poor little fellow!" he returned comhouses.&#13;
The price on it is always arm,! mlseraUugly. "Is it a bad e u t r - € h i «&#13;
and every t now and then It ma)Mi a also Post&#13;
spurt and climbs up a point from fNtfen&#13;
it never will fall. If tfte forests qftbis&#13;
tree to be found In Tennessee todafuire&#13;
A B l c S h a d o w ,&#13;
__ __ _ We a/e told that the "smallest hair&#13;
jtae of the richest states In the&#13;
KnoxYlUe Sentinel.&#13;
throws a shadow over your, appetite&#13;
fwhen yon And It in your food.—Bxvchanga.&#13;
m 3f&#13;
'• W A. TV T E X&gt; "&#13;
Weak m»fn, weak women, pale&#13;
men, jalft women, n9r«ous men, nervous&#13;
women, debilitated men, debilitated&#13;
women, to take Knill'* Red Pills&#13;
for Wan People. They restore Health,&#13;
Strength and B«\uty. Wake up,&#13;
brace up by taking them before the&#13;
hot weather. They aro the great body&#13;
builder and developer, Sprinpr Tonin&#13;
and Blood medicine, 25c a box.&#13;
Knills White Liver Pills are the&#13;
great Liver Inviaorator, Dowel Hegulater.&#13;
25 doses 25c.&#13;
KnilPs Blue Kidney Pills cure&#13;
l^aokacb« and Kidney troubles. 25c&#13;
a l?ox. . x&#13;
"Wonderful C o n t r a s t .&#13;
Brevity may be the "soul of wit." but&#13;
the laughable effect is sometimes the&#13;
very thiug the speaker doesn't mean.&#13;
In the following case a. word or two&#13;
more would have made a clearer description,&#13;
but it would not have been&#13;
half so funny.&#13;
The head master of au English girl's&#13;
high school is describing to the class j&#13;
the beauty of the Alps, which he has&#13;
visited during his vacation, and ends&#13;
h.s lecture in these words:&#13;
"And there, with one foot I stood on&#13;
the ice of the glacier, while with the&#13;
other I was plucking the most beautiful&#13;
flowers." V .&#13;
L a u d a n u m Drinking:.&#13;
It is surprising what oue's constitution&#13;
can be made to stand in the way&#13;
of narcotics. From small beginnings it&#13;
Is possible to go on increasing the&#13;
doses until a quantity can be taken&#13;
which would kill two or three persons&#13;
unaccustomed to anything of the sort.&#13;
In the course of a coroner's investigation&#13;
at Sheffield. England, it was shown&#13;
that a mau had been a constant laudanum&#13;
drinker for ten years. Commencing&#13;
with a pennyworth at a time, he&#13;
had gone on until he had taken fully&#13;
an ounce a day.&#13;
P u r e Suarar.&#13;
A San Francisco chemist says there&#13;
is only one refinery in the world that&#13;
makes absolutely pure sugar. The&#13;
manufactory is in Germany, and it&#13;
supplies chemists and druggists with&#13;
sugar for solutions which must be unclouded.&#13;
This chemically pure article&#13;
would not .find much sale for table use,&#13;
as it is a dirty grayish white in appearance.&#13;
When dissolved, it gives a&#13;
Hear solution, there being no artificial&#13;
coloring matter In suspension.&#13;
IUiK W. C. T. U. uieeta the first Friday of eacl&#13;
month al£:%p. m. at tne home of Or. H. b&#13;
Sigler. Everyone interested in temperance&#13;
cuadially invited. Mr^. 'weal Sisjler, JPres; Mr*&#13;
Ktta burfee,Secretary.&#13;
The C T. A: and U. society of this place, u»»»*&#13;
every third Saturaay evening in the Ft. Matthew&#13;
Hail, John Dunohue, President.&#13;
IT-NIGHTS OF MACCABEES.&#13;
fVMeeceverv Friday evening on of before fall&#13;
ol the mooD at their hall In the dw&amp;rthout bldg.&#13;
Visiting brothers are conliallv invited.&#13;
CHAS. Utxpsaxx, &amp;it Kaiuht Commandai&#13;
Livingston Lodge, No.I*?, P . 4 A, M. Kegu'tr&#13;
Communication Tuesday evening, on or before)&#13;
the fall of the moon. Kirk Van Winkle, W. 3£&#13;
ORDER OF EASTERN STAR meets each month&#13;
the Friday evening following the regular F.&#13;
A A.M. meeting, MKS. MARY RBAD, W. X.&#13;
ORDER OF MODERN WOODMEN Meet the&#13;
first Thursday evening of each Mouth in the&#13;
Maccabee nail. C. L. Grimes Y. C.&#13;
• • W W • • • • «1 ! • II • • I l l M W W N P — * ^ M W ^ X k W W * &gt; a i f c ^ — — ^ a ^ f LADIES OF THE MACCABEES. Me*t every Is&#13;
and 3rd Saturday of eacbmonth at 3:30 p m. a&#13;
K.o. T. M. hall. Visiting sisters cordially iu&#13;
vited. JULIA SIOLSU, Lady Com.&#13;
\i&#13;
KNIGHTS or TUB LOYAL GUARD&#13;
meet every second Wednesday&#13;
evening of every month in the K. O.&#13;
T. M. Hal) at 7:30o'clock.. All visiting&#13;
Guards welcome.&#13;
F. L. Andrews P. M.&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
J. W. MONKS.&#13;
DOCTOR OF DENTAL SURGERY&#13;
PINCKNEY, MICH.&#13;
OFFICE OVER SIOLER'8 OfiUO STORE.&#13;
1 . i II i I I | i ~ ~ w w n a&#13;
H. F. SIQLER M. 0. C, L, SIOLCR M, D&#13;
DRS. SIGLER &amp; SI5LER,&#13;
Physicians aad Surgwons. Ail oails pxomptl&#13;
attended today or uight. OiMce on Maiastr&#13;
Plnckney, Mich.&#13;
J. F. MlL+YS*&#13;
VET£RIN*;^Y SUrtQSON.&#13;
Graduate otOut*rio VaUfinary Ci»ii««&lt;», ai«s&#13;
the Veterinary thmlmf CviisM&#13;
TotostcriUsMda. - '-;T'- *.&#13;
Will promptly attea'l tfi&amp;k tiUwises et^Uw te&#13;
meaticated animal at a reaftoeaUfepride.&#13;
Horese teeth axamined &gt; &gt; e a i ^ ' \&#13;
ornccat mL^l¾l¾cK^c^&#13;
&lt;r :&gt;'&lt;•&gt;-•&#13;
•:•'&gt;* v * ^&#13;
. . . ',,., .rV,&gt;„&#13;
: C.'•&lt;&lt;.• iff - ;m&#13;
'• • • • • • &amp; £&#13;
'.••; M)&#13;
/&#13;
' &lt;.. /..&#13;
• • ' • . ! &gt; • • ; • •&#13;
— - - • &gt; • - '&#13;
. JiXi.'tf.i.T*1 *&gt; W v *&#13;
liplipliiii JTJF.&#13;
4*&#13;
« * • : « * • • •&#13;
- . • • * . ' . • • • • •&#13;
' * • • . •&#13;
tf&#13;
&gt; . - • .&#13;
to* :•&#13;
-V;&#13;
**-&#13;
ft&#13;
&amp; •&#13;
*&#13;
X7&gt;&#13;
Smtyeu §®!*M.&#13;
V B A V K L. AHDBBWS, Publisher*&#13;
PINCKtfEY, - * •" MICHIGAN.&#13;
Tne smallest bird Is the humming&#13;
bird of Brasil. It U a lttUe larger than&#13;
the common hooey bee, and weighs&#13;
about five grains.&#13;
V*'. " * , * •&#13;
&gt; : * - . • a. 4 &gt;'&lt;&#13;
&gt;^-":&#13;
* . • » »&#13;
/,*''&#13;
.-(5¾&#13;
C.*"'&#13;
V* '&#13;
A pot which cannot boll over ha*&#13;
been invented by a Berlin machinist.&#13;
It baa a4 perforated rim, and the overflowing&#13;
liquid returns to the utensil.&#13;
i i.l H I • ' i '&#13;
Smuggled goods i n large quantities&#13;
are brought from WindsorT Ontario, to&#13;
Detroit Most of this work is done by&#13;
women, who secrete the smuggled articles&#13;
under their skirts. I n some of&#13;
the Windsor stores are private dressing-&#13;
rooms for the patrons, where they&#13;
carefully prepare themselves t o elude&#13;
the vigilance of Uncle Sam's customs&#13;
officers.&#13;
The millionaire Gravil Solodovnikoff,&#13;
who recently died at Moscow, left&#13;
all his possessions, valued at 25,000,000&#13;
rubles, for the founding of high&#13;
schools for girls, training schools for&#13;
workmen and cheap lodging houses for&#13;
the poor. During his life h e had already&#13;
spent large sums for a music&#13;
school and a hospital, yet he was not&#13;
esteemed wealthy because in private&#13;
life he was known as a miser and a n ,&#13;
inexorable creditor.&#13;
A County Treasurer Loses a Rich&#13;
Plum.&#13;
W0THER KILLED, BABY ESCAPED&#13;
Thin** That Hava B N B Doae! «*W and&#13;
Happened Darin* the P u t Weak to&#13;
the Good State or Mlaalaaa Briefly&#13;
Told.&#13;
Smallpox in T w o T&lt;j%rne.&#13;
The second fatal case of smallpox&#13;
fn Graud Traverse county ended Tuetfdny&#13;
night when the little daughter of&#13;
Frank Vinton, of Williamsburg, died.&#13;
The family has been quarantined&#13;
three weeks. Vinton got the disease&#13;
at Mancelona. An Indian family a t&#13;
Bates has contracted the disease aud&#13;
one person has died.&#13;
The public schools at Three Rivers&#13;
are closed because a case of smallpox&#13;
happened in the tenth grade of the&#13;
First ward school. A boy named&#13;
Clyde Avery, a son of Oliver Avery,&#13;
has been ill several clays. The schools&#13;
are temporarily closed, and the lessons&#13;
given oat through the papers.&#13;
Other children of the same family are&#13;
in the first, third anil ninth grades.&#13;
Much apprehension is felt.&#13;
Napoleon Pierre Gulch eveau, 113&#13;
years old, died recently at Brfteux&#13;
Bridge, La. Gulcheveau was born in&#13;
France in 1788 and emigrated to America&#13;
at the age of 65. After a short residence&#13;
in New York city b e came t o&#13;
Louisiana and settled at Breaux&#13;
Bridge, where he married, and during&#13;
his phenomenal years of life retained&#13;
the respect of the community. Up to&#13;
the hour of his death Guicheveau retained&#13;
hiB sight, hair and all his faculties.&#13;
. Wisdom i s not the same as understanding;&#13;
nor is it talent, or capacity,&#13;
ability, sagacity, sense, or prudence;&#13;
neither will all these together make it&#13;
up. It i s that exercise of the reason&#13;
into which the heart enters—a structure&#13;
of the understanding rising out oi&#13;
the moral and spiritual nature. It la for&#13;
this cause that a high order of wisdom&#13;
—tnat is, a nighTIy Intellectual wisdom&#13;
—is still more rare than a high order&#13;
of genius. When they reach the very&#13;
highest order they are one; for each&#13;
includes the others, and intellectual&#13;
greatness is matched with moral&#13;
strength.&#13;
In n Serious Position.&#13;
Rosa P. Smith, of Howell, a guest at&#13;
a Frankfort hotel, gave birth to a child&#13;
Monday forenoon. The hotel proprietor,&#13;
upon her non-appearance for&#13;
breakf.isT^broke into her room and&#13;
found the Infant in a satchel. Investigation&#13;
by the coroner's jury showed&#13;
that it had been born alive and that&#13;
the child had bled to death. The jury'e&#13;
verdict held that the woman was responsible&#13;
for its death. No wan-ant&#13;
has been issued for her as yet, but she&#13;
is kept under surveillance. Rosa P.&#13;
Smith is a prominent-young woman of&#13;
Howell, a graduate of the high school,&#13;
active in church circles, and has been&#13;
In the employ of the Livingston Republican&#13;
for seveu years. A prominent&#13;
young man of the village is said to be&#13;
the father of her child.&#13;
According to advices from Kiel, Germany,&#13;
the new high school there for&#13;
the teaching of shipbuilding and construction&#13;
of machinery will be opened&#13;
in 1903. The school will be wholly in&#13;
the hands of the state, but the cost&#13;
will only in part be borne by the&#13;
state, the town of Kiel contributing&#13;
£3.000. There will be one department&#13;
for the learning of shipbuilding, each&#13;
course lasting one year, and another&#13;
department for machinery, the course&#13;
of instruction being divided into four&#13;
quarters of the year, classes being held&#13;
in the evenings and on Sundays for&#13;
shipwrights, locksmiths and smiths,&#13;
The Krupp German!a wharf has al«&#13;
ready promised as much a s £250 annually&#13;
for the next ten years towards&#13;
the expense.&#13;
SltocklnK FataTITy.&#13;
Mrs. Andrew J. Gies, of Detroit, was&#13;
accidentally shot and instantly killed&#13;
Monday while returning from an outjng&#13;
"north of the city. She imd been&#13;
in the woods in Greenfield with her&#13;
5-year-old son. her sister, brother-inlaw&#13;
and a young man. One of the&#13;
party had been using hio shotgun and.&#13;
supposed it w a s empty when they&#13;
Rtarted to return. One cartridge remained,&#13;
however, and the gun, which&#13;
was resting in the front sent with the&#13;
muzzle pointing upwards and towards&#13;
the rear of the carriage, was in some&#13;
manner discharged. The charge tore&#13;
its way through the back of the seat&#13;
and square Into Mrs. (ties' face, tearing&#13;
away the flesh in a horrible manner&#13;
and killing her instantly.&#13;
Jnatlfiable Homicide.&#13;
A Jackson jury, in the case of Frank&#13;
R.. Blery, returned a verdict of not&#13;
guilty. Biery w a s remarried last&#13;
spring and, a s it was a second marriage"&#13;
of both parties, the event occasioned&#13;
excitement in the quiet village&#13;
of Minard. On the night following&#13;
the wedding a crowd of neighbors originated&#13;
an old-fashioned charivari&#13;
party, with the usual accompaniments&#13;
of horseplay and unearthly racket.&#13;
Biery ordered them to desist, and upon&#13;
their failure to do so. opened a&#13;
promiscuous fire with a horse-pistol.&#13;
Archie Whltehouse, a cbarivarist, was&#13;
struck and killed by one of the bullets&#13;
*ired. No attempt was made to disprove&#13;
the facts of the shooting.&#13;
In many of the western and midland&#13;
counties of England t h e nineteenth&#13;
century closed with the most terrible&#13;
J o o d s within living memory. Happily&#13;
few lives were lost, but hundreds ol&#13;
folk—mostly poor—were washed out oi&#13;
hearth and home. Farmers, small and&#13;
great, lost cattle, sheep and poultry,&#13;
and immense damage was done to all&#13;
kinds of property. One comic incident&#13;
was remarked at Alcester in Worcestershire.&#13;
When the water fell the rector&#13;
took his walks abroad t o see what&#13;
loss b e had suffered. As h e passed&#13;
through a n orchard h e was greeted&#13;
with t h e piercing squeals of a perplexed&#13;
pig, which had got mixed up In&#13;
the boughs of a damson tree. Probably&#13;
it had been borne into the branches by&#13;
the rising flood. When the waters&#13;
went down it was left high, and possibly&#13;
dry, but terrified out of its wits.&#13;
Less than one hundred dollars, spent&#13;
by the Improvement League of Montclair,&#13;
New Jersey, has done more t o&#13;
cleanse and beautify the place, gays&#13;
the town council, than the thousands&#13;
of dollars the town has expended in&#13;
conventional ways. The league began&#13;
by offering prizes for clean and orderly&#13;
back yards and alleys, and wen* on t o&#13;
give prizes for the best vine-covered&#13;
fence, the finest vegetable plot and the&#13;
most beautiful flowering plant. Then&#13;
it organized the children to pick up&#13;
waste paper from the streets, keep the&#13;
school yards neat, and "tidy up'r the&#13;
vacant lots. In six months Montclalr&#13;
became a noticeably attractive place,&#13;
and a wholesome one, too, for the&#13;
death rate had perceptibly lessened.&#13;
Like methods will yield similar results&#13;
In any other town, and i t will not be&#13;
necessary t o spend much money provided&#13;
a few people are willing to use&#13;
''inspired common sense."&#13;
Cat off a Rich Plum.&#13;
The overruling l&gt;&gt; the Supreme Court&#13;
of Judge Wolcott's decision, giving&#13;
county treasurers the right to loan the&#13;
county's money as their own funds,&#13;
will deprive Kent county's treasurer&#13;
of about $18,000 extra salnrv. there&#13;
being in the neighborhood of $9,000&#13;
interest each year retained by the&#13;
treasurer. Former treasurers have&#13;
returned this money, and last fall,&#13;
when County Treasurer Proctor w a s&#13;
criticised by the newspapers for retaining&#13;
his interest money, he became&#13;
very sensitive and committed suicide&#13;
under the impression that he was being&#13;
accused of a grave charge.&#13;
Valuable Hor»e« Killed.&#13;
A peculiar and serioiw accident occurred&#13;
on the Pere Marquette Railroad&#13;
at Plymouth Friday morning. A&#13;
freight train was backing to the siding&#13;
just west of the station, when&#13;
one of the ears suddenly tipped over.&#13;
The ear contained a lot of valuable&#13;
race horses and a pnrty consisting of&#13;
two women, two girls and eight men&#13;
and boys. The women and girls escaped&#13;
without injury, but the men and&#13;
boys received severe cuts and bruises.&#13;
The horses did not fare so well. T w o&#13;
of them are dead, two ofhers cannot&#13;
live, and the remainder are twidly cut&#13;
up. One of the horses killed is said to&#13;
have been worth $10,000.&#13;
Xhuraftar** W a r * FrjMwttMteA&#13;
Between St and ft o'clock Saturday, _ ..... . . . ^ , . -,* ^ AWnwmistg&#13;
the. vWage of A r m s d s w * # 4 Jujfc l t - w s * 4 « &amp; i ^ *nd th«&#13;
startled by an explosion, followed ' a " '" -*- • •—-* —&#13;
fusillade of pistol Bhota. A n ravestfg*&#13;
tion BOO wed that burglars bad ente&#13;
t h e D. H. B a r r o w s general store,&#13;
where t h e poatoffice i s located, a n d&#13;
exploded dynamite to cracking t h e&#13;
safe. The charge w a s s o heavy that&#13;
the door was blown off, tearing its&#13;
w a y through' the celling and out into&#13;
the Btreet, a distance of about fifty&#13;
feet. Right opposite the pastutttce; i s&#13;
the drug store of E. F . BhilUps, Who&#13;
lives upstairs. Mr. PoiUlpe realised&#13;
Immediately what wan up and grabbed&#13;
his revolver. Then be commenced&#13;
to pour lead into the store across the&#13;
way. Having emptied his revolver h e&#13;
seized iiis shotgun, the burglars now&#13;
being in the street, where t h e y o p e u -&#13;
ed tire on ~tHe~citwens a s tuey run,&#13;
PhlUips raised his gun and tired a t&#13;
the retreating forms. One of the&#13;
crooks was seen to f a l l but hid companions&#13;
picked him u p quickly and&#13;
started for the railroad track. Again&#13;
the man fell, and It w a s concluded&#13;
that he w a s seriously wounded. T h e&#13;
other two men, however, managed t o&#13;
get him on board a handcar, and while&#13;
one of them kept up a fusillade on&#13;
their pursuers, the other worked the&#13;
lever, and In a little time they had&#13;
got out of range. The burglars reached&#13;
Richmond, t o which place notice&#13;
had been sent by phone. When t h e&#13;
handcar came along It w a s fired at by&#13;
Sheriff Batty and Marshal Fenton, the&#13;
two unhurt burglars escaping by running&#13;
ncrow* the fields.&#13;
When the officers got to the car they&#13;
fouud one man. badly wounded, whom&#13;
the,others had brought this far and&#13;
lessened their own chances of escape&#13;
by so doing. The fellow was taken t o&#13;
the lockup aud given medical attention&#13;
and was told that his wound was fatal.&#13;
At first he refused to say anything&#13;
about himself or pals, but this&#13;
morning be told Rev. Fr. Ktlroy and&#13;
others who he was. He says his name&#13;
Is John Graham and his age is 22. He&#13;
said his father, who bears the same&#13;
name, lived at 112 Root street. Cleveland.&#13;
O., three years ago, when he was&#13;
home last. H e gave a description of&#13;
his associates and said he did not&#13;
know their right names, but that they&#13;
went by the names of Bob. Jim and&#13;
Woodsy, the latter being SO years old&#13;
and having- a heavy black beard. H e&#13;
has evidently told the truth about&#13;
himself;—aTTTTtetPRTffin sent to fatsfather's&#13;
address was Returned undelivered,&#13;
with the information that the&#13;
family had moved. Although posses&#13;
were sent out to scour the country,&#13;
the other burglars escaped.&#13;
'•p*Mi."J,'tiji?&#13;
-i'9lar*itM Poti, of 5fe» JRoatpn, had&#13;
* etovolvet lu his reta* while '&#13;
vfojmd. ' . *&gt;•»-.&gt;•• 1*&#13;
%'tiliam Fairbanks, a'student i t the&#13;
A&amp;ieulttrifef o^Ue^e. eotttyed with another&#13;
wheelman and" fractured b i s&#13;
skWtf - There ore- prospects for his recofery.&#13;
.&#13;
f h s s t e r A. Record; of Bafimvw, w a s&#13;
d e t p M t t ^ ^ r s * :W****be *t»ti**"ttt b e&#13;
loaded. The weanpn went off ami. the&#13;
bullet struck b,lmlri, the abdomen. May&#13;
recover, ' \ " ; " ,"'"v ',&#13;
'Fred Hetman, aged-5U w a s choked&#13;
to death Friday while endeavoring t o&#13;
swallow a piece of meat during t h e&#13;
supper hour at the American house,&#13;
Sebewaing.&#13;
Dominlck Tassl. a 0-year-old Italian&#13;
boy, of Irou Mountain, was accidentally&#13;
shot through the~hMd by * com-&#13;
. • • A&#13;
Branch County A»*e»»iirtent».&#13;
The state t a x commissioner* have&#13;
nxei TTtue-Trf-n-sifflffr of stock in&#13;
the Southern Michigan National Bank&#13;
at $154. which makes the total assessment&#13;
$U(S0,iWK&gt;: the Coldwater National&#13;
Bank at $117. the total being $189,000;&#13;
the Blanch County Savings Bank at&#13;
$1117. the total being $158.500. The Coldwater&#13;
&amp; Quiucy Cement Co. have been&#13;
assessed $500.000, which is more than&#13;
double former assessments. The&#13;
Coombe Milling Co. have been raised&#13;
from $07,000 to $75,000. The Futon&#13;
City Cement Co. was raised $20,000. .7.&#13;
B. Branch &amp; Co.. dry goods merchants,&#13;
were increased $10,000: Woodward &amp;&#13;
Sons, also dry goods merchants, were&#13;
raised $5,000. The Coldwater Gas&#13;
Light &amp; Fuel Co. was lowered some&#13;
$3,000.&#13;
MINOR M I C H I G A N M A T T E R S .&#13;
/&#13;
A Bad Brake.&#13;
W. J. Gray, a brakeman on the Pere&#13;
Marquette railway, w a s arrested at&#13;
Saginaw by the local police and taken&#13;
to Pontiac, charged with forgery. For&#13;
some time pay checks Issued to employes&#13;
of the Pere Marquette road&#13;
h a t e been missing from the tram*&#13;
master's oflce nt Saginaw. It is&#13;
claimed that over 4ft50 worth of them&#13;
were cashed at a bank In Pontiac, the&#13;
name of the person in whoso favor&#13;
they were drawn being forged a s an&#13;
indorsement. It is alleged Gray passed&#13;
the checks.&#13;
Three thousand students have registered&#13;
at the F. of M. this-yeisr.&#13;
Manistee has invited the state troops&#13;
to camp there again next summer.&#13;
Burglars stole all the blankets and&#13;
bedding in the (irnnd Marias pest&#13;
house.&#13;
Rosa P. Smith, of Howell, is in custody&#13;
at Frankfort, charged wilb infanticide.&#13;
Lumbering operations have beeu&#13;
commenced around Standlsh for the&#13;
coming winter.&#13;
Judge .lere Wilson, Schley's leading&#13;
counsel before the court of Inquiry,&#13;
was burled Thursday.&#13;
Frank Peuowski. of Bay City, aged&#13;
12, fell into the river Saturday morning&#13;
and was drowned.&#13;
Aid. Frank Rhead, of Lapeer, w a s&#13;
thrown from his buggy Friday night,&#13;
receiving a broken leg.&#13;
Joseph Dupoir. of Chicago, a victim&#13;
of the Flint accident. Is now reported&#13;
to be out of Immediate danger.&#13;
The Methodist Protestant society of&#13;
Flint has lu* the contract for its new&#13;
church, which will cost $5,000.&#13;
The condition of ex-dov. Cyrus (J.&#13;
Luce has improved so much the doctors&#13;
believe lie may pull through.&#13;
Five large stacks of beans belonging&#13;
to Francis'&lt;»5 Morrlce. north of Perry,&#13;
were destroyed by lire. Loss, $2,000.&#13;
Mart F. Barber brother of E. W.&#13;
Barber, of the Jackson Patriot, was&#13;
drowned while fishing at Virginia.&#13;
Minn.&#13;
Sophia Hawkins, aged 32, daughter&#13;
of A..M. Hawkins, of Convis township,&#13;
was killed lu a street car accident at&#13;
Pittsburg.&#13;
Sophia Hawkins, aged 32, daughter&#13;
of A. M. Hawkins, of Convis township,&#13;
was killed in a street car accident at&#13;
PIttsbarg.&#13;
Earl Tarbell, of Nashville, stumbled&#13;
and fell, running a sharp corn stubble&#13;
Into hi« tight eye, which will probably&#13;
be destroyed.&#13;
John M. Messner, on old resident of&#13;
Calumet, w a s found dead In bed Saturday&#13;
morning with a pistol wound&#13;
in his breast.&#13;
The St. Joseph excursion business&#13;
came to an end Sunday and the marriage&#13;
license record for the season&#13;
foots op 1,200.&#13;
panlou while at target practice. Tassi&#13;
cannot live,&#13;
A stranger leaped from the deck of&#13;
the steamer City of Milwaukee as she&#13;
was entering St. loseph harbor and&#13;
was drowned. He made no attempt to&#13;
save himself.&#13;
Judge Chester sentenced George&#13;
Swaney, of Hillsdale, for forgery to&#13;
six years a r Jackson., and A. B. Cummins,&#13;
ex-register of deeds, to the same&#13;
place for five years.&#13;
Justus Stearns h a s lenfeed a residence&#13;
In Grand Rapids aud with his&#13;
family will move there the latter part&#13;
of October. The residence is one of&#13;
the iinest in the city.&#13;
The state tax commission has finally&#13;
triumphed In Its controversy with&#13;
the city comptroller of Bay City, who&#13;
refused to turn over the tax rolls of&#13;
the city for review.&#13;
A Battle Creek mterurban conductor&#13;
got Into a dispute with three passengers&#13;
over a question of change and one&#13;
of the men bit the conductor's ear off.&#13;
The men were arrested.&#13;
Bv n decision of the Supreme Court&#13;
Flint will have to nay-out $10,490--fora&#13;
sidewalk damage* case which could&#13;
have been settled at one time for $1,-&#13;
500. The plaintiff is Rebecca Wllklns.&#13;
Nathaniel Vernon, of Owosso. is under&#13;
arrest charged with beating his&#13;
wife, who is confined to her bed as a&#13;
result. He claims she attacked him&#13;
and that he was compelled to fight for&#13;
his life.&#13;
Theodore \ Burke, of South Bend.&#13;
* * ' • ' • &gt; • • m,)t&amp;*m^Amm&#13;
S l j J ^ Q F REMORSE SHOWHr&#13;
s£.*r «;&gt;• *a**fi*^*i •• tht&#13;
Auburn Pr!»on-B*vt»*il #ft&amp;' Brandy&#13;
- I n . fO* C»U Wttli j&amp;m D«*ta Wat^h.&#13;
Awaiting MM Date &lt;rf HtoSCtoc^ayirt'lon&#13;
f&#13;
s ^*L&#13;
vfoH1 *.'&gt;.*v&#13;
Leon P. Csolgoss/ President McKb&gt;&#13;
ley's assassin, occupies a ceil in m w v&#13;
derer's row a t Attborn prison. Hero&#13;
he will-remain: under t h e constant&#13;
watch of t w o guards.puillOetobefr 0&amp;&#13;
Ind., who has been resorting l u - S t .&#13;
Joseph, was accidentally shot In the&#13;
stomach by a younger brother while&#13;
hunting. The victim is in a critical&#13;
condition.&#13;
The fifty-second annual Michigan&#13;
state fair opened a t Pontiac Monday.&#13;
The show promises to surpass all previous&#13;
ones, both in point of attendance&#13;
lTnd~Trr*ftie~excellenrce and variety- ofthe&#13;
exhibits.&#13;
The houses of Dr. .1. B. Bradley and&#13;
John Birney, of Eaton Rapids, were&#13;
visited by burglars. They became&#13;
frightened nr. Bradley's place, but secured&#13;
a gold watch and chain and $15&#13;
from Birney's.&#13;
Finery Barrelt. a prominent machinist&#13;
of CJrand Haven. Is dead from&#13;
cancer. In the seventies the deceased&#13;
was one of the lending oarsmen of&#13;
Michigan and competed with many&#13;
leading scullers.&#13;
Lucy A. Pike and Flmer Holman&#13;
quietly left Lapeer recently and were&#13;
married. A license was procured about&#13;
two years ago, but Miss Pike's mother&#13;
objected on account of her daughter's&#13;
age which was 18.&#13;
C. Butcher, aged 1(5. of Dover townvhip,&#13;
and Harry Bascom, of Adrian&#13;
township, are under arrest charged&#13;
with being the parties w h o fired&#13;
through t h e windows of a train a t&#13;
Cadmus Inst Friday.&#13;
B. G. Stockton, of Flint, who has&#13;
been blind for 18 years due t o cataracts&#13;
ou the pupils of his eyes, is a&#13;
happy man again. A Saginaw surgeon&#13;
successfully performed an operation,&#13;
and he can see.&#13;
Steps have been taken to reorganize&#13;
the West Michigan Fair Association&#13;
by getting men In Grand Rapids and&#13;
vicinity interested. It Is proposed to&#13;
make it a permanent feature in strong&#13;
opposition to the state fair.&#13;
An unknown assailant struck Deputy&#13;
County Treasurer Fred \V. Kent,&#13;
of Saginaw, over the head with a&#13;
club Monday night. *Kcnt was near&#13;
his house and sneceefled in getting to&#13;
it, while the thug took to his heels.&#13;
A special election will be held in&#13;
Charlotte Sept. 30 to vote on the proposition&#13;
to bond the city for $50,000 and&#13;
if it carries. $30,000 will be spent for a&#13;
sewage system and $20,000 for the improvement&#13;
of the water works system.&#13;
William H. Dickinson w a s struck&#13;
by a Michigan Central train at Battle&#13;
Creek last wfeter and sued the company&#13;
for 18.000 * damages, claiming&#13;
negligence on tfee Jlftrt of the railroad.&#13;
A Jury brought JeY..sV verdict of n o&#13;
eaikse for actio*.&#13;
William Lippstt, t f Menominee,&#13;
aged 45. victim o f a tfcrittroke, who&#13;
was adjudged i n s s s * Tnssday. broke&#13;
away from Deputy Marsha* Nelson at&#13;
Marinette and made a &lt;Hv«-under n&#13;
street car. meeting instmat death. H e&#13;
leaves a widow and fowr children.&#13;
Employes at the Port Huron locomotive&#13;
shops made arrangements .Friday&#13;
night to organize a co-operative&#13;
store company. They are bucking the&#13;
coal combination and buy their coal&#13;
in Chicago, which Is delivered for&#13;
$5 85 a ton. Port Huron dealers ask&#13;
S'«&#13;
Grand Trunk Agent Covey heard suspicious&#13;
sounds In the Owosso station&#13;
dining-room at a late hour Monday&#13;
night and approached stealthily with a&#13;
gun, suspecting burglars were at work;&#13;
When within range he heard a man&#13;
praying for the destruction • of t h e&#13;
anarchists. , When he had con*5*ded&#13;
the fellow dusted off his* knees a n d&#13;
left by the back door.&#13;
when he will be marched J o the death&#13;
chamber am} put to death. Until that&#13;
time CzolgoHfc will unpermitted to see&#13;
no one except a priest, whom he has&#13;
consented to receive.' J&#13;
l u anticipation of the arrival of the&#13;
murderer at Auburn, a crowd numbering&#13;
nearly 1,500 people surrounded the&#13;
prison Thursday n i g h t At the time of&#13;
the prisoner's arrival, however, shortly&#13;
before 3 o'clock, only about 300 men&#13;
and boys remained. Pale and trembling,&#13;
Czolgosa w a s dragged from t h e&#13;
train by- the brawny guards. He was&#13;
handcuffed between two deputies.&#13;
Twenty local policemen attempted to&#13;
keep back the crowd which surged&#13;
about the assassin, clamoring for his&#13;
life. The onslaught was s o sudden&#13;
*thut the police scarcely had time to&#13;
draw their clubs and revolvers. The&#13;
prison gates swung open and the assassin&#13;
was pushed! through, but not&#13;
before some of the crowd bad rained&#13;
blows on the officers and their prisoner.&#13;
The distance between the gate and&#13;
prison steps was quickly covered. Aa&#13;
the assassin reached the steps his legs&#13;
gave way, aud, moaning and shrieking.&#13;
he was drugged Into t h e office aud&#13;
placed upon a settee, the most miserable&#13;
wretch In the world.&#13;
Scant ceremony was accorded him.&#13;
The handcuffs were quickly removed&#13;
and he w a s dragged into Warden rf&#13;
Mead's office. H e was in a state of&#13;
absolute collapse. Dr. John Gauln, the&#13;
prison physician, was summoned. He&#13;
arrived in ft few minutes and gave the &lt;&#13;
assassin a drink of brandy. This revived&#13;
him s o m e w h a f and two keepers&#13;
told him to stand up. He tried to rise,&#13;
but fell to the floor. He w a s up In a&#13;
moment, however/ and t w o keepers&#13;
stripped him of his clothing, replacing&#13;
It with a suit of prison stripes. Five&#13;
keepers then hustled him t o his cell,&#13;
where he will remain until marched&#13;
to the death chair. Upon reaching his&#13;
cell, the prisoner partially recovered&#13;
"fro~nr~hiH fright and by morning had —&#13;
*.&lt;,&#13;
assumed h i s manner of stolid indifference.&#13;
On his w a y from Buffalo to Auburn,&#13;
Caolgosz is said to have expressed regrot&#13;
for his deed. He still maintained,&#13;
however, that he was alone .In the plot&#13;
To B e Electrocuted Oct. 28.&#13;
Leon F. Czolgosz was brought Into&#13;
court Thursday afternoon for sentence.&#13;
In answering the formal questions the&#13;
assassin stated that h e was ..born in&#13;
Detroit. His replies were s o low that&#13;
they were scarcely audible.&#13;
"Have you any legal excuse why&#13;
sentence should not be pronounced&#13;
against you?"&#13;
Czolgosz could not or pretended he&#13;
could not hear the question put by the&#13;
clerk. It was repeated to him twice,&#13;
and then he said something in an&#13;
inaudible tone. The judge Intervened&#13;
and explained what was meant by the&#13;
question. •&#13;
"First, you may claim you are insane.&#13;
The next is have you good cause&#13;
to offer against sentence being pronounced&#13;
against you?"&#13;
The judge also stated legal reasons&#13;
the prisoner might have against sen-v&#13;
tence being pronounced.&#13;
"I have nothing to say about that,*'&#13;
was the reply.&#13;
Justice Titus then asked that the&#13;
prisoner be allowed to say something&#13;
In exculpation of his crime.&#13;
The prisoner began to speak. H i s&#13;
,voice was so low that he could scarcely&#13;
be heard. Judge Titus w a s obliged&#13;
to repeat it sentence by sentence, so&#13;
that the court might hear.&#13;
"I have nothing to say,'* whispered&#13;
Czolgosz.&#13;
According to the law of this state,&#13;
Oct. 28 i s the earliest date that could&#13;
be fixed for the execution of Czolgosz.&#13;
Accordingly Judge White sentenced&#13;
Czolgosz to lie electrocuted during the&#13;
week beginning October 29, 1901.&#13;
A F o r g o t t e n Ttovrn,&#13;
Dalevllle, a town of about 1,000 Inhabitants&#13;
m Delaware county, is probably&#13;
the only town In Indiana which&#13;
was not included in. the last census.&#13;
For some reason it ha9 been entirely&#13;
overlooked and ts^nof even'meutloned,&#13;
although the township in which it i*&#13;
located is given.&#13;
William J. Bryan says free speech&#13;
is not responsible for anarchy and opposes&#13;
any limitation of t h e right t o&#13;
talk.&#13;
Immigration inspectors at the port of&#13;
New York are exercising a greater degree&#13;
of vigilance now than formerly a s&#13;
a result of the general demand for t h e&#13;
exclusion of anarchists.&#13;
The governor hag been appealed t o&#13;
for troops to bold in check the turbulent&#13;
coal mine strikers a s t h e result&#13;
of an armed attack by a sqtiad of&#13;
strikers a t Madlsonvflle, Ky., Monday.&#13;
New York police have again arrested&#13;
Johann • Most, anarchist whom they&#13;
caught at a meeting in Corona. L. I.&#13;
There w a s a crowd of 500 gathered&#13;
around^ him. An attempt w a s made to&#13;
rescue Most but the police got a w a y&#13;
with theh* prisoner.&#13;
i i / ^ t t i d ^ A j i t f , ^ , . . * •! i t i iJ ^^mm^^^M^^i^&#13;
'i»&gt;f &lt;y»f iwi^.m'-y.w. ?'•;-^ :•• wflwr.iap^rjii&#13;
*.';.&lt;('J'&#13;
.-• ,. &lt; • / • . &gt;••-&#13;
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gpilt.jrrniiJV •«M«Mpa&#13;
t^tji y»,t*&#13;
Ufln *bow«d her head upon her&#13;
hw^t; «ad could' thi iartlnctlv*&#13;
«MHaipttnsi df her b««vt at vthtt- moa%&#13;
«at h«Ve been read, tbty would oftve&#13;
verealed a secret aotmuoa to \* wondered&#13;
a t&#13;
"I thtnk/ aald Baabel, alter a pause,&#13;
"that y?a have hid some opportunity&#13;
to study Juliaaftr charfccter^&#13;
?l iave seen attoiigh to assure-«»&#13;
that be it. a'n^bie, generous man,"&#13;
returned Ulin, raising her bead.&#13;
"And," added Ezabel, "if you eould&#13;
know him better you would nnd your&#13;
impressions strengthened. But-he will&#13;
not be here long. As soon as he recovers&#13;
from his wound he will leave&#13;
us,»*&#13;
"If I am not mistaken," ventured&#13;
our heroine, "Julian is at home in this&#13;
place."&#13;
"Most certainly he is, my daughter.&#13;
From his earliest childhood he knew&#13;
no other home but this."&#13;
"And he was on bis way hither&#13;
when he overtook me in the hands of&#13;
the Arabs "&#13;
"Yes."&#13;
"And will my presence cause him to&#13;
leave you?*'&#13;
"I think not, lady. But you will&#13;
give yourself no uneasiness on that account&#13;
If Julian feels that he had better&#13;
be away from you, be will go for&#13;
his- own sake. And, remember—the&#13;
truly noble soul finds joy in the generous&#13;
sacrifices which it may be called&#13;
upon to make. I hear Ben Hadad's&#13;
voice. He is calling me."&#13;
She arose and left the chamber; and&#13;
when she returned sne was followed by&#13;
Ben Hadad. Now that Ulin saw the&#13;
hermit by the light of the day she was&#13;
awe-struck by his venerable appearance.&#13;
All that could be noble and&#13;
honorable and lovable in old age&#13;
xed in him; and as he&#13;
and t!ft white brow offered a strange&#13;
contract to the waving mases of golden&#13;
hair. The maiden's smile faded away&#13;
when she met the earnest gas* that&#13;
was fixed upon her, and her hand&#13;
trebled before she withdrew i t He&#13;
spoke to her a few words of cheer, expressed&#13;
his gratitude' that she. had&#13;
found a place- of safety; and hoped&#13;
that the future might have no more&#13;
clouds for her. ,&#13;
bent bis gaze upon her and extended&#13;
his hand in welcome, she felt her heart&#13;
go to him with all its trust and confidence.&#13;
"My child,'" he said in tones of tenderest&#13;
solicitude, "Ezabel has told me&#13;
your story and I have come to bid&#13;
you an affectionate welcome to my&#13;
cave. Rest here- and feel that you are&#13;
at home. Your mother paid me for&#13;
this long ago. Come—follow me to&#13;
where the air is fresher, and where&#13;
the sunbeams can greet you."&#13;
The maiden thanked Ben Hadad as&#13;
well as Bhe was able and then rose to&#13;
follow him. He led her to the main&#13;
cave, where she found Hobaddan and&#13;
the slaves.&#13;
"This is my home," said the old&#13;
man, as he led the maiden to a seat;&#13;
"and here have I lived more years than&#13;
go to fill up the allotted age of man.&#13;
All these trees and shrubs I have&#13;
trained up from the tender sprout, and&#13;
these vines I have taught to clothe&#13;
the gray old recks. And I.have been&#13;
most fortunate in my life. I have been&#13;
able to protect many who needed protection&#13;
and my days have been lengthened&#13;
out to protect more."&#13;
Ulin was touched by the deep pathos&#13;
of the hermit's words, and for a whole&#13;
hour she sat and listened to his conversation.&#13;
At the end of that time he led&#13;
her back to the cave where Ortok, the&#13;
black slave, had prepared dinner. -She&#13;
did not feel hungry, but she sat down&#13;
with Ben Hadad and Hobadden and&#13;
Ezabel—she and Albla—and partook&#13;
with them.&#13;
Thus passed three days; and Ulin&#13;
had become so used to the place that&#13;
it already seemed like home. She had&#13;
learned to love the hermit; and she&#13;
had learned to love Ezabel; and she&#13;
had learned to respect and esteem the&#13;
stout-hearted Hobaddan and to converse&#13;
with him freely. Once she asked&#13;
the lieutenant what had become of&#13;
Julian's band. Would they not be&#13;
seeking him?&#13;
And he explained to her that he had&#13;
communicated with them—that they&#13;
knew of their chieftain's safety and&#13;
had gone away into the mountains of&#13;
Lebanon, where comfortable abiding&#13;
places for them were plenty.&#13;
When UHn retired to her own apartment&#13;
she sat by herself, with her head&#13;
bowed upon her hands, taking no notice&#13;
of her serving-maid. At an early&#13;
hour she retired; but it was a long&#13;
time ere she slept; and when she did&#13;
sleep she was troubled with strange&#13;
dreams. She dreamed of the unfortunate&#13;
Helena, and awoke with a cry&#13;
of pain. And then she dreamed a more&#13;
pleasant dream—a dream of something&#13;
that had haunted her waking thoughts&#13;
—a dream of the Scourge and Damascus.&#13;
"Or my mistress," cried Albla, when&#13;
she and Ulin were alone, "how noble&#13;
a man he is!"&#13;
"Who?" asked the princess, Btarting&#13;
out from a deep reverie.&#13;
"Julian^ I mean," returned the maid,&#13;
quickly and with enthusiasm. "Does&#13;
he not look handsomer than ever?"&#13;
Ulin bowed her head and made no&#13;
reply.&#13;
"Is he -not beautiful to gaze upon?"&#13;
pursued Albia, without seeming to notice&#13;
her lady's abstracted mood.&#13;
"Hush, Albia, say no more now. I&#13;
am busy with my own thoughts."&#13;
"Pardon, sweet mistress. I meant&#13;
no wrong. I thought—we owed him&#13;
so much—and he has suffered in our&#13;
behalf—that you might—"&#13;
"Albla, say no more. I know you&#13;
meant well. You mistake me if you&#13;
think I am not grateful. There—say&#13;
no more. I love you, and would not&#13;
hurt your feelings. Go out into the&#13;
grove and walk awhile."&#13;
Ulin bowed her head again as she&#13;
spoke, with her,hand upon her brow—&#13;
upon her brow for a moment—and&#13;
then pressed upon her bosonf. And&#13;
thuB Albia left her.&#13;
When the freed girl reached -the&#13;
grove in front of the cave she found&#13;
Julian and Osmir in close conversation&#13;
and before they noticed her she&#13;
had heard enough to excite her curiosity;&#13;
and with a freedom that was&#13;
natural to her, she asked them what&#13;
had happened.&#13;
"Osmir thinks," said Julian, with a&#13;
smile, "that one of the Arab robbers&#13;
has followed us and tracked us to&#13;
this place; but I laugh at him."&#13;
"I may be mistaken," rejoined the&#13;
other,**"but still I think I am right.&#13;
I have seen the fellow twice; once by&#13;
*, At noon Julian did not appear whet&#13;
the resT'iW'thefir ttftttffr. HT wns'ont&#13;
by the river/ Late ia the afternoon&#13;
UJiu ,»et Bsabel again and ta» latter&#13;
seemed and and dejected.&#13;
^'Julian ia going to leave MM," exclskned&#13;
the woman, in answer to an&#13;
inquiry fromUlln.&#13;
-*&amp;eave us!" repeated our heroine,&#13;
with a start.&#13;
"Yes; so he told me only an hour&#13;
since," ,&#13;
"When will he go?''&#13;
"Early jra the morning:"&#13;
"But he will shortly return?"&#13;
"I fear not. I asked him that and&#13;
he only shook his head."&#13;
"Does he give any reason for his&#13;
going away?"&#13;
"None that you need to knew, my&#13;
child. In fact, he gives me no reason&#13;
directly. I am left to draw my conclusions&#13;
from accidental remarks."&#13;
9 iMTTgiiiSi&#13;
CHAPTER XVni.&#13;
Something More Than a Dream.&#13;
On the following morning, when&#13;
Ulin entered the main cave, Julian&#13;
was there to greet her. She extended&#13;
her hand to him and smiled as she&#13;
spoke. The youthful chieftain waa&#13;
somewhat pale, hut his large, lustrous&#13;
exes burned with a deeped intensity&#13;
the river atthe entrance of the wood,&#13;
and once further away. It was one of&#13;
the rascals wao escaped us."&#13;
"And if it is the Arab, what can he&#13;
want?" asked Albia.&#13;
"If it be one of those fellowa," returned&#13;
Julian, "he may wish to join&#13;
our ranks."&#13;
"Oh," added Osmir, "he may hope to&#13;
steal something."&#13;
"Very likely," assented the chieftain.&#13;
"However," he concluded, after a brief&#13;
pause, "we may as well keep a sharp&#13;
lookout."&#13;
"Sellm and I are on the watch," said&#13;
Osmir; "and if we catch the rascal,&#13;
we'll secure him."&#13;
Albia fancied that Julian had&#13;
t h o u g h t s Which &gt;&gt;*&gt; waa nnt w i l l i n g to&#13;
expresa in her presence, but she did&#13;
not mean to fret herself; and before&#13;
she rejoined her mistress she had almost&#13;
forgotten the circumstances.&#13;
At noon, and again in the evening,&#13;
did Ulin meet Julian; but they did&#13;
not converse freely together. She&#13;
could not meet the gaze of those lustrous&#13;
eyes without tremb.ing, and she&#13;
sought to avoid that which so much&#13;
moved her. If he had approached her&#13;
and spoken freely with her on some&#13;
subject of general interest she would&#13;
have joined him rendily; but he did&#13;
not do so.&#13;
Morning came again, and again the&#13;
maiden met the man who had saved&#13;
her from the Arabs. This time he&#13;
greeted her in few words, and soon&#13;
turned away to speak with Hobaddan.&#13;
He did not seem well. He looked&#13;
paler than on the day before, and&#13;
there was an expression of pain about&#13;
the mouth and eyes. Ulin was unoasy.&#13;
Perhaps his wound was giving him&#13;
new trouble. \As soon as the morulng's&#13;
meal had been eaten, she nought&#13;
Ezabel and asked her If Julian w:is&#13;
suffering from his wound.&#13;
"No," replied the old woman. "I&#13;
do not think it is his wound. I bave&#13;
noticed his appearance and have asked&#13;
him what it meant; but he puts me&#13;
off with a smile and a blessing and&#13;
tries to assure me that all is well I&#13;
do not like to see him suffer. He is&#13;
like a child to me and I love him tenderly.&#13;
Ah, the world -^httle knows&#13;
what a noole, generous soul dwells&#13;
within that manly form."&#13;
"If I thought he was suffering from&#13;
my account" said Ulin, VI should be&#13;
most unhappy." ,&#13;
"How on your account?" said Ezabel.&#13;
quickly.&#13;
"I mean in consequence of the wound&#13;
he received while flghtns; for my deliverance."&#13;
"I hardly thtnk it is that. Something&#13;
beside the wound troubles him.&#13;
It may be that the short captivity in&#13;
Damascus worries him. He may have&#13;
heard something there that gives him&#13;
unpleasant thought"&#13;
When Ulin retired to her chamber&#13;
she was in a frame of mind not easily&#13;
analyzed. She spoke to Albia concerning&#13;
the chieftain'8 unexpected departure&#13;
and the girl expressed the&#13;
opinion that he felt himself to be ia&#13;
the way.&#13;
"What do you mean by that?" asked&#13;
Ulin.&#13;
"Well," replied Albia, "I think Julian&#13;
feels that there are enough dwellers&#13;
in the hermit's cave without him.&#13;
I may be mistaken; but his manner,&#13;
for a day or two past, has seemed to&#13;
indicate that he was not perfectly at&#13;
ease here,"&#13;
The princess asked no more questions,&#13;
but busied herself with her own&#13;
thoughts.&#13;
As the sun was sinking from its&#13;
daily course, Ulin wandered out into&#13;
the grove alone, and as she approached&#13;
the spot where she sometimes sat with&#13;
the hermit, she saw Julian, seated&#13;
upon a bench beneath an orange tree.&#13;
At first she thought of turning back,&#13;
and retracing her steps; but an impulse&#13;
which was no result of her will,&#13;
hut rather an instinctive emotion, as&#13;
\ though some secret force, led her on;&#13;
and almost before she was aware of it&#13;
she came so near that the youth&#13;
heard her stop and looked up. He&#13;
started when he saw her and a flash&#13;
of joy, like a quick passage of sunlight,&#13;
wa3 upon his face. In a moment,&#13;
however, the look Was gone, and a&#13;
shade of sadness succeeded. The&#13;
maiden could not now have withdrawn&#13;
even had she been so disposed in the&#13;
first place. Following the strong impulse,&#13;
Bhe aavanced to the shadow&#13;
of the orange tree and'placed her hand&#13;
upon Julian's shoulder; and it thrilled&#13;
the youth like an electric shock.&#13;
lAne*%n&gt;» CmmUt 09«a**V&#13;
Despite the protest ef^hteonJy Ilvinfl[&#13;
cWJd, Jthe cottteet of Abraham Ltoeoln&#13;
was opened Thursday in the presence&#13;
of a small assemblage* headed by&#13;
state officers in their capacity of trustees,&#13;
and was then reseated and eonsigned&#13;
to what ta.intended to be its&#13;
last resting place in a bed of iron and&#13;
mortar below the shaft of the Springfield,&#13;
111., national monument&#13;
Fourteen years ago, the last previous&#13;
time when the body was exposed to&#13;
mortal gasse, the face of the first martyred&#13;
president was black. It was&#13;
white Thursday. ^Tlie transformation&#13;
was so unexpected and the fumes so&#13;
overpowering that the casket was&#13;
quickly shut.&#13;
All of those present, sixteen in number,&#13;
were pledged to secrecy, but it is&#13;
known that the proposition to open the&#13;
casket was vigorously opposed by&#13;
several, and now the act is denounced&#13;
as sacrilegious and due only to a de*&#13;
sire to satisfy morbid curiosity.&#13;
Col. Robert T. Lincoln was not present,&#13;
or his protest would probably&#13;
have been respected.&#13;
C o l o m b i a W i n * F l r « t R a c e .&#13;
In the closest and most soul stirring&#13;
race ever sailed for the old America's&#13;
cup, the white flyer Columbia beat&#13;
the British challenger over a windward&#13;
and leeward course of 30 nautical&#13;
miles by the narrow margin of 39&#13;
seconds. As Lipton's latest aspirant&#13;
for cup honors must allow the defend-&#13;
Rr 43 seconds on account of the extra&#13;
833 square feet of canvas in her sail&#13;
mca, the official record, under the&#13;
rules, gives her the victory by 1 minute&#13;
and 22 seconds. As a spectacle&#13;
the contest was superb. From the&#13;
time the two sky-scraping racers croFtf-&#13;
*»d the starting line until they fled&#13;
across the finish line four and a half&#13;
hours later the result was in doubt,&#13;
and the excitement aboard the excuraion&#13;
fleet increased until the men became&#13;
frenzied and women almost hysterical.&#13;
^T"&#13;
The miners' strike t t -Madlsonvili%&#13;
Ky., ha* beeoiae.scriom etat* troop*&#13;
are ordered out, and bloodshed may re/-&#13;
suit The union camp) Is situated in&#13;
sight of the mines and from territory /&#13;
adjoining this camp there baa been directed&#13;
a desultory, but harassing rffl*&#13;
Are at the deputies guarding the Beinecke&#13;
property Almost daily. There&#13;
are 300 or more men in the union camp&#13;
at Bakersport, 13 miles east of MacHsonville,&#13;
on the edge of the adjoining&#13;
county. They are provided with guhe,&#13;
keep sentries guarding the approaches&#13;
and conduct the camp in military style.&#13;
One of their officials is an ex-army&#13;
a.an.&#13;
Seta Low Co»flAeat.&#13;
Seth Low, president of Columbia nnlrerslty,&#13;
has announced that he will resign&#13;
from the university as soon as he&#13;
is notified of the action of the Citizens'&#13;
union and Kepubllcan committee in&#13;
-nominating him for jnjiyor of New&#13;
York. He believes that chances foran&#13;
nnti-Tammany victory were never BO&#13;
bright before. Already checks are being&#13;
sent in by men prominent in business&#13;
and finance. Men who contributed&#13;
to the large fund of the Citizens*&#13;
union four years ago are again coming&#13;
to the front.&#13;
A s k Shaffer t o E x p l a i n .&#13;
Samuel Gompers, president of the&#13;
American Federation of Labor, and&#13;
John Mitchell, president of the United&#13;
Mine Workers, are out with an open&#13;
letter to President Shaffer, of tho&#13;
Amalgamated Association, inviting&#13;
that gentleman to prove the assertions&#13;
lie made in connection with his statement&#13;
as to the settlement of the steel&#13;
strike—to wit. that Gompers and&#13;
Mitchell extended no aid. aud neglected&#13;
to interest themselves in the affairs&#13;
of the steel workers.&#13;
"Kind sir," she said, scarcely able&#13;
to speak above a whisper wlien she&#13;
commenced, "Ezabel tells me you are&#13;
going away."&#13;
"Yes, lady," Julian replied, rising&#13;
as he spoke; "I have so determined."&#13;
"And you go soon?"&#13;
"In the morning."&#13;
"This is sudden, sir."&#13;
"No, lady; no more so than my&#13;
movements are apt to be."&#13;
CHAPTER XIX.&#13;
Ulin and Julian.&#13;
Ulin hesitated and trembled, and&#13;
finally sat down upon the bench from&#13;
which the chieftain had arisen. In a&#13;
few moments she had recovered herself&#13;
so that she could speak without&#13;
faltering.&#13;
"Good sir, I have one question to ask&#13;
you." She went on hurriedly, as&#13;
though the old impulse still led her;&#13;
"You had not planned to leave the&#13;
cave so soon?"&#13;
"I had planned nothing about it,&#13;
iady."&#13;
"But—if I had not been here, with&#13;
my servant, you would have remained&#13;
longer?"&#13;
"Lady, do not ask me such questions."&#13;
"I must ask them, sir, for I want&#13;
to know. If I thought that my presence&#13;
here had caused you to leave&#13;
your old home, I should be most unhappy.&#13;
When I came here I did not&#13;
know how near and dear this place&#13;
was to you. If one of us must go,&#13;
let me find some other resting place."&#13;
Julian started and trembled like an&#13;
aspen. A moment it was so, and then&#13;
he turned upon the maiden a look so&#13;
earnest and so deep and so full of&#13;
tumultuous feeling, that she shook beneath&#13;
i t&#13;
"Lady," he said, speaking almost in&#13;
a whisper, "you shall know the secret&#13;
which I had purposed never to&#13;
reveal to mortal being. The words&#13;
are forced from me. Let me speak&#13;
them now; and then let them be forgotten.&#13;
When I heard that the king&#13;
of Damascus had shut up a fair maiden&#13;
within the Palace of Lycanlus, and&#13;
that he meant to make that maiden&#13;
his wife, I felt my heart grow sick&#13;
within me and I resolved, if the fair&#13;
one was held against her will, that I&#13;
would set her -free. I led my brave&#13;
men to the palace and overcame the&#13;
guard which the king had set Heaven&#13;
was opened, but in the blessed realm&#13;
I was offered no abiding place. I saw&#13;
the loved spirit cf light within the&#13;
cave which had been the home of my&#13;
childhood; but my love I dared not&#13;
speak. How could I. the enemy of&#13;
Damascus, and the branded robber,&#13;
tell my love to the daughter of the&#13;
king's prime mlnlater. Lady, I dare&#13;
not trouble yon more."&#13;
(To be continued.)&#13;
W a s It a P l o t 7&#13;
The Cleveland police have run on&#13;
the startling possibility that a plot to&#13;
assassinate McKinley was laid a year&#13;
or more ago in peaceful Orange township,&#13;
where the Czolgosz family lived.&#13;
The fact that Czolgosz had money&#13;
Impelled the detectives to try to learn&#13;
whence he got it. His brother Waldeck&#13;
Czolgosz, confesses to having sent it&#13;
to Leon under the name of Frank Snyder,&#13;
at West Seneca, X. Y.&#13;
In his search for clues. Detective&#13;
Schimmk learned from the neighboring&#13;
farmers that the Czolgosz boys, Leon&#13;
and Waldeck, have been readers of socialist&#13;
papers for several years.&#13;
•It. Is said that Leon's father, sister&#13;
and "brothers are fjoing to Buffalo&#13;
shortly, and the police believe when&#13;
they confront Leon that he will break&#13;
clown and reveal all that is now a&#13;
Tirrstury hi regard-to tfae~shoottng-i&gt;f&#13;
the president.&#13;
At Shelbyville. Ky.. William Hart, a&#13;
printer, was found dying in a path&#13;
leading to the house of Anna Field, a&#13;
colored woman. The woman and two&#13;
colored boys have been arrested, and&#13;
now the jail Is being guarded to prevent&#13;
a Threatened lynching.&#13;
The German Lutherans are building&#13;
a fine church at West Branch.&#13;
AMTDSEWRNTS IX DETROIT.&#13;
WEEK ENDING OCT. 5.&#13;
AVENTTB TBEATBE—Vaudeville—Prices: afternoon,&#13;
10,15, &amp; :b; evening. 10.20,2 c; renertf. sOo.&#13;
LYcatm THEATER—Quo Vadis—Wed. and Sat.&#13;
Mat. 23c; evenings. 15. 2~\ 50 and 75 cents.&#13;
WHITNEY GBAND—At Cr;pp!e Creek—Matinee&#13;
10c. 15 and 25c: evenings. 10c, 'J0o and 30c.&#13;
It W i l l R e t i r e H i m .&#13;
Col. William M. Van Home, of the&#13;
Twenty-ninth United States Infantry,&#13;
commander of the garrison at Fort&#13;
Sheridan, will probably be retired from&#13;
active service on the ground of physical&#13;
disability. Only two days after&#13;
the funeral services for the president&#13;
had been held at Canton, and while&#13;
the whole nation was in mounting,&#13;
there was a dar.ee at Fort Sheridan.&#13;
It was the regular weekly dance at the&#13;
fort, and Col. Vau llJrne permitted it.&#13;
apparently without any feeling of its-&#13;
Impropriety. Army officials were&#13;
shocked at'the disrespect, not ouly of&#13;
the soldiers who danced while their&#13;
tlag was'at half-staff, but still more&#13;
at the attitude of the officer who permitted&#13;
it. The colonel is reported to&#13;
have said when questioned about the&#13;
propriety of the dance: "If I did not&#13;
think it wa»« all right I would not have&#13;
permitted it."&#13;
B A S E B A L L .&#13;
B e l o w w e p u b i i s a t h e standing" of&#13;
the N a t i o n a l l e a g u e c l u b s u p to a n d i n -&#13;
c l u d i n g t n e g a m e s p l a y e d on S u n d a y ,&#13;
Septernber 'J9:&#13;
NATIONAL LSAGUi.&#13;
~ ; Won. EoV7r~Fe"r'cTr_&#13;
Pittsburg 87 47 .6rt&gt;&#13;
Philadelphia 77 5d .579&#13;
Brooklyn 77 57 I&gt;73&#13;
S t Louis 7J 63 .537&#13;
Boston «7 67 .500&#13;
NewYork 53 81 .»1.&#13;
Cincinnati... 51 80 .389&#13;
Caicaxo 52 85 -3»)&#13;
T U B M A R K E T S .&#13;
T h e Engineer's* F a u l t .&#13;
Extra passenger train No. 1&lt;». southbound,&#13;
and freight Xo. 35. northbound,&#13;
on the G. R. &amp; I. railroad, met head&#13;
on at Bonds Mills, six miles north of&#13;
Cadillac. Sunday night. The engineer&#13;
of the freight was so badly injured he&#13;
died in two hours. Six trainmen and&#13;
passengers were mere or loss seriously&#13;
injured. The accident was- the result&#13;
of Engineer Zimmerman's failure to&#13;
obey orders. He had instructions to&#13;
pass the passenger train at Missaukee&#13;
Junction, two miles south of where&#13;
the wreck occurred. Zimmerman's dying&#13;
words were: "It is my fault; l forgot."&#13;
Both engines and the baggage&#13;
car were smashed, and several freight&#13;
cars and coaches were piled up.&#13;
XtivK i n B r i e f .&#13;
The story to the effect that former&#13;
President Kruger is destitute is denied.&#13;
His funds are adequate and receive&#13;
frequent contributions.&#13;
Xebraska and Xorth Dakota have&#13;
had a severe wind storm. Buildings&#13;
were blown down and trees uju'ooted.&#13;
but so far as known no lives were&#13;
lost.&#13;
While addressing the Young People's&#13;
Society of Christian Endeavor at the&#13;
Disciple church at Lima. 0., Wm. Abbott,&#13;
an elder in the church, dropped&#13;
dead.&#13;
A dispatch from Shanghai states&#13;
that the Chinese imperial court has decided&#13;
not to return to Pekin for two&#13;
years. The court, according to the dlspatch/&#13;
wlll remain at Kai-Fong-Fu.&#13;
It is reported from Canton that more&#13;
than 10.000 people visited the tomb of&#13;
McKinley Sunday. Mrs. McKinley&#13;
again went out for a drive, and according&#13;
to Dr. Itlxey is doing very well&#13;
indeed.&#13;
In order that the appointed 30 days&#13;
of mourning for the late President Mc-&#13;
Kinley may bo observed the Ohio Republican&#13;
Jeaders have decided to postpone&#13;
the^openlng of the fall campaign&#13;
tn that state.&#13;
Detroit.—Cattle—Good butcher steers,&#13;
$4 60@5; light to good, $3 750*4 50; light to&#13;
good butcher steers and heifers, $3 404*&#13;
4 50;_ mixed butchers and fat cows. $2 7»&#13;
&lt;ai 85; earners and common thin butchers,&#13;
$1 5*f?2 60. Bulls—Light to good butchers&#13;
and sausage, 12 50^3 3); stockers and&#13;
light feeders. $&amp;ft;3 80; veal calves lower:&#13;
saies at $5^6 50 per too lbs. Sheep and&#13;
Lambs—Best lambs. U 60^4 85; light to&#13;
good and good mixed lots, $3 75^4 50; fair&#13;
to good mixed and butcher sheep, $2 75^&#13;
3 75; culls and common. $1 75&lt;a2 60. Hogs&#13;
—Mixed and butchers, $6 60^6 75; bulk of&#13;
sales at $6 To; pigs and light Yorkers,&#13;
Pi 30^tJ GO; stag*. 1-3 off; roughs, 16 650&#13;
6 75.&#13;
Chicago.—Cattle—Good to prime steers,&#13;
$6{&lt;6 40 poor to medium, $4&lt;S5 75; stockers&#13;
and feeders. $2 2S-&amp;4 30; cows. $1 50fl&gt;4 75;&#13;
heifers, $2@4 75; canners, Jl 50@2 25; bulls,&#13;
SI 7i@4 75; calves, $3^0 2T&gt;; Texas steers,&#13;
$3&lt;g4, western steers, $3 BortiS 25. H o g s -&#13;
mixed and butchers. $6 70^7 10; good to&#13;
choice heavy, $6 80@7 25; rough heavy,&#13;
$6 40®6 75; light. $6 45@6 95; bulk of sales,&#13;
$6 65@6 95. Sheep—Good to choice wethers.&#13;
$3 60S4; fair to choice mixed, $3 30@&#13;
3 60; western aheep. $3 25$3 85; native&#13;
lambs, $3Ji5; western lambs, 13 750)4 75.&#13;
Buffalo—Cattle - Prices unchanged.&#13;
Hogs—Grassers and Michigan, $8 70@7 10;&#13;
pigs. $6 70@6 75; roughs. ¢6 25@6 50. Sheep&#13;
and Lambs—Market steady; lambs, )4 40»&#13;
4 45: Canadas7-$4 55^14 60; sheep, mixed, |2&#13;
@4; wethers and yearlings, $4^4 25.&#13;
Pittsburg.—Cattle — Choice. $5 75@S:&#13;
prime. $5 50(?i5 70: good. f5 20®5 E0: fair, «&#13;
m 50; heifers, $2 60(^4 25; oxen, $2 50@4 TO;&#13;
fat cows, u 60y4 25; bulls and stags, $20&#13;
4; common to (fresh cows, $20^35; good&#13;
fresh cows. $33¾50. Hogs—Prime heavy,&#13;
ST 25@7 30. assorted mediums, |7 20@7 25;&#13;
heavy Yorkers, 17 15*f7 20; light Yorkers.&#13;
$7©7 10; grassers. S6 80@7; pigs, $6 50®« »9;&#13;
skips. $4 75^x5 75; roughs, $5@S 90. S h e e p -&#13;
best wethers. $3 80@4; good, $3 5003 75;&#13;
mixed. $3®3 25; culls and common, $1 25©&#13;
2 25; yearllnes. $2 50@4 50.&#13;
Cincinnati.—Cattle — Heavy steers,&#13;
choice to extra. $5 25&lt;&amp;5 &lt;K, nominal; fair&#13;
to good, $4 50®5 15; oxen. $1 75®4 25; butcher&#13;
steers, choice to extra. $4 60®4 90; fair&#13;
to good. $3 50@4 50; heifers, good to&#13;
choice. $3 50&lt;?T4; common to fair, $2 25@3 40;&#13;
cows, eood to choice, $3 35^4: fair to medium.&#13;
$2 25^3 25; canners, $1 2&gt;®2 25; scalawag&#13;
cows. $l{gn 50; stockers. $2 25®3 75;&#13;
tops, $3 85fti4. Hogs—Good to choice packers&#13;
and butchers. Pi 95®7 15; mixed packers.&#13;
$6 3»©6 98: stags and heavy fat sows,&#13;
$4 50&lt;S6 40; tight shippers. $6 25^« 85; pigs,&#13;
110 lbs. and less. $4 50@6 20. Sheep—Extra.&#13;
$3 W$3 25; good to choice. $2 5003;&#13;
common to fair. $1 25«2 25; lambs, extra,&#13;
$4 WM 75; fancy. $4 85; good to choice,&#13;
$3 75'g4 CO; common to fair. $2 5003 25.&#13;
Grain. Etc.&#13;
Detroit.—Wh«r at—No. 1 white. 72»4c; No.&#13;
3 red. 70%c; mixed winter. 72*c. C o r n -&#13;
No. 3 yellow. 59%c. O a t s - N o . 2 white.&#13;
iPAc; No. 3 white. 38¾.&#13;
, New York.—Wheat—No. 2 red. 74%c, f.&#13;
o, b. afloat: No. 2 red. 75%c. elevator; No.&#13;
1 northern Duluth. 76c f. o. b. afloat; No.&#13;
1 hard Duluth. 80%c f- o. b. afloat. C o r n -&#13;
No. 2. 62*ic elevator, and 6 3 ^ f. o. b.&#13;
afloat. Oats—No. 2 white, 41@4l%c; No. S&#13;
white. 40»iC; track white 3*W0c: options&#13;
quiet and barelv steady with corn.&#13;
Cincinnati.—Wheat—No. 2 wb.lt*&gt; red,&#13;
firm At 74 c. Corn—No. 2 white, «te;'No. 3&#13;
vellow. 62c; mixed. 61\4c on track. O a t s -&#13;
No. 2 white. *fc; No. 2 mixed. 3Sc on&#13;
Chicago— No. 3 spring wheet. e7%OS9e;&#13;
N o 2 r«d. 70¾c; No. 2 yellow corn. &amp;V&amp;*&#13;
\9c; No. 2 oafs. » * « 3 7 c : No. 2 white,&#13;
iSVfec; No. 3 white. 37%©3JHe.&#13;
'&amp;&gt;*'' -:i&#13;
• &lt; * $&#13;
I'.-ifd&#13;
• " V F . k&#13;
• 'A&#13;
!.:J&#13;
**j&#13;
! ^ 1&#13;
i&#13;
'••' Jt:,;&#13;
, « • • ' . ~ ' . , • -&#13;
™: -r (i&#13;
••• • • ' •• ^ • - • • • * . / - * • - : x &lt; . . . - ' : • - " . - ' , • . . • .- • • . &gt; • • - ' ' &gt; . - - - ^ - - ' . - - • '- A ' . -&#13;
* w &gt; V •••-•••&#13;
.&gt;. 4&#13;
„ » • • * &lt; &gt; ' * - ' • • • • . ' ~ ' &gt; ' - . . ; • • » • ' • " &gt; • • .&#13;
- / - ^ : - . / • • . - • . : v-'&gt; .1* , - • : • • , • - - r . . - &gt;• • ' ; ' - , . ; • • •&#13;
. . " . ^ • - " - . . - - • • • • - ' ' . - - . . : . - . - . - ; " • ' • • • - . „&#13;
± • " • • . ; • ' • • &gt; ' . - v .&#13;
•l*&gt;&#13;
'ii-./&#13;
1 . ^ 7&#13;
SOUTH MARION.&#13;
Albert Drake began work this&#13;
week for Enoa Burden.&#13;
Miss Ida Clements returned to&#13;
her work again the first of this&#13;
week.&#13;
Several from this way attended&#13;
the fair last week, and all report a&#13;
good time.&#13;
F. G. Randall Visited friends&#13;
here over Sunday.&#13;
L. Whitod is assisting E. ft fall?&#13;
* • • *&#13;
^ * v&#13;
£ *&#13;
Wm. Caskey.&#13;
Kose Bland returned, Monday,&#13;
from Canada where she has been&#13;
visiting relatives about five weeks.&#13;
Miss Clara Witty is assisting&#13;
Mrs, Ella Docking with her house&#13;
work. Mrs. Docking is reported&#13;
better at this writing.&#13;
EAST PUTNAM.&#13;
Albert Mills spent Sunday at&#13;
Lakeland.&#13;
Miss Nellie Fish is home for a&#13;
•few weeks.&#13;
Geo. Pearson was in Ann Arbor&#13;
Thursday last.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Bert Hicks spent&#13;
Sunday in Hamburg.&#13;
Alex Pearson arid wife have returned&#13;
so Ann Arbor.&#13;
Mesdames G. W. and E. D.&#13;
Brown are visiting relatives in&#13;
Stockbridge.&#13;
Chas. Hicks and son Glen, of&#13;
Jackson, visitecH:elative8. in this&#13;
place the first of the week.&#13;
Mrs. B . W. Lake and daughter&#13;
Grace are spending a week at the&#13;
County farm while her son Fred&#13;
and wife are at the Pan American.&#13;
Mr. C. Wing, of Jacksonville,&#13;
Fla., and Miss May me Fish, of&#13;
Bancroft, were guests at the home&#13;
of E. G. Fish irom Thursday until&#13;
Monday.&#13;
UNADILLA.&#13;
Gertrude Webb spent Sunday&#13;
under the parental roof.&#13;
• Francis Farmer, of Stockbridge&#13;
spent Sunday at John Webb's.&#13;
Lester AVillians and wife, of&#13;
WilliatBsville, visited at Wm. Pyper's,&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Win. Stvenson, of&#13;
North Lake visHed Mrs. Janet&#13;
Webb, Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. A. C. Watson and daughter&#13;
Ruth, and Jean Py per were in&#13;
Ohe'sea, Tuesday.&#13;
Parties from Leoni are putting&#13;
up a new steel arch bridge over&#13;
jtbe Portage north of town.&#13;
Mrs. Janet Webb who has been&#13;
spending the summer at Bay&#13;
View, returned to her home here&#13;
last week.&#13;
Jake Westfall and Gertrude&#13;
Mills, of Stockbridge, spent Sunday&#13;
with her parents, Perry Mills&#13;
and wife.&#13;
Geo. Hoyland and, wife of Howell,&#13;
are visiting his daughter, Mrs.&#13;
Wm. Pyper, and other relatives&#13;
at this place.&#13;
Miss Jean Pyper who has been&#13;
spending several weeks visiting&#13;
relatives in Britton, returned to&#13;
her home Saturday.&#13;
Misses Ida, and Myrtle Smith&#13;
are visiting relatives and friends&#13;
in White Oak, this "week, and attending&#13;
the Mason fair.&#13;
ANDERSON&#13;
Paul and Mary Brogan called&#13;
on f rieuds here Sunday.&#13;
*&#13;
Mr. Capen visited friends in&#13;
Pontiac and took in the State&#13;
Fair.&#13;
The 7:30 train engine broke&#13;
fast o! Anderson, Friday -night,&#13;
btlt managed to get to Gregory&#13;
With much difficulty. An engine&#13;
telegraphed from Pontiac.&#13;
Jeffrey in the elevator.&#13;
Nearly every one from here is&#13;
going to take in the Stockbridge&#13;
fair.&#13;
Miss Minnie Hoff, of Lansing,&#13;
is spending a few weeks with her&#13;
parents in this place.&#13;
Geo. Black and son Ken neth&#13;
and Miss Black left for a two&#13;
weeks visit in Canada, Monday.&#13;
Mrs. I. J» Abbott and daughter, Mesdames, C. M^ . Wood and&#13;
man, spent Sun4ay-^ith^ if ^ Edwa,id Brownia-seriously&#13;
day for a visit with their son and&#13;
brother, Dwight Wood at Caro.&#13;
PETTYSVILLE.&#13;
P. W. Coniway and son Ruel&#13;
were at the county seat Satur day.&#13;
Chas. Rolison and family visited&#13;
at H. H. Swarthouts Sunday.&#13;
Miss Iva Placeway was nome&#13;
from Oceola over Sunday. She&#13;
was accompanied by Miss Loa&#13;
Reed.&#13;
Hiram Gardner will attend&#13;
school in Albion this year, niak*&#13;
iug his home with his uncle, Mr.&#13;
Horning.&#13;
Rev. J. D. Howell, of North&#13;
Adams, will preach at the North&#13;
Hambuig church on Sunday, Oct.&#13;
6, at the usual hour.&#13;
The Hamburg and Putnam&#13;
Farmers' Club met at the pleasant&#13;
Who ever saw so many worms&#13;
and bugs around as there is this&#13;
P. A. QUnn had a bean ataok&#13;
tip over, Saturday night. So&#13;
beans have taken a fall at last.&#13;
Mrs. Wood returned home&#13;
Thursday, her daughter Mrs.&#13;
Leatoh having recovered from her&#13;
recent illness.&#13;
Mrs. Betsy Green of Pinckney&#13;
and grandson J. Carlton visited&#13;
at Henry Johnson's and other&#13;
friends her las„ week.&#13;
C«««t tfce Tts*M • m*r— M i s *&#13;
* To tee a torse when out at pasture&#13;
rolling on the ground and endeavoring&#13;
*v.,'&#13;
to turn over on bis back \* a conHDonlJv*** M»&gt;**•* otiiglrt^YjUaf* el&#13;
•lirht. hut how manv DMHIIA havft/no. «*°&#13;
ill&#13;
with in flamation of the stomach&#13;
and bowels. Dr. Palmer of Chelsea&#13;
is attending him.&#13;
Interesting Heme.&#13;
Howell opens its lecture course&#13;
this season Oct. 17. They have a fine&#13;
course of lecture and entertainment&#13;
for the season for only $1,50.&#13;
Of those who took thn civil service&#13;
examination at Washington recent'y&#13;
77 percent of the women passed while&#13;
only 62 per cent of the men got&#13;
through.&#13;
The law to prevent the docking of&#13;
horses, which went into efiect Jaly 7,&#13;
requires owners or users of docktd&#13;
horses to register snch horses with&#13;
county clerks after the fifth of October&#13;
under penalty of not less than $50&#13;
nor more than $250, or imprisonment&#13;
sight but bow many people fcavft noticed&#13;
that In doing this horses observe&#13;
an Invariable rule! ' ,&#13;
The rule ts that be always roUe over&#13;
either at the first or third attemptnever&#13;
at the «econd—and more than&#13;
three attempts are never made. In&#13;
other words, If tbe horse succeeds in&#13;
rolling over at the first try, well and&#13;
good—that satisfies him; but If tbe&#13;
first attempt Is a failure, the second&#13;
one always Is. Then he either rolls&#13;
-quite over at the third or gives It up.&#13;
'He never makes a fourth.&#13;
If horses are rolling on sloping ground,&#13;
tbey usually roll up hill. This Is more&#13;
easy of explanation tban tbe strange&#13;
custom regulating ~tEe number&#13;
tempts. As to this no adequate reason&#13;
has ever been offered. Will those Ingenious&#13;
people who tell us why a. dog&#13;
turns round before lying down, and&#13;
why ducks walk behind each other in a&#13;
string instead of abreast, explain1 why&#13;
a horse never makes four attempts to&#13;
roll over and never succeeds at the&#13;
second?&#13;
in the county :;jail for not less than&#13;
and hospitable home of Mr. and j ninety days.&#13;
Mrs. James Nash, last Saturday, i On Sidney Griffin's farm, north of*&#13;
Notwithstanding the busy season, I Chesaning,-a bean *talk was found&#13;
there was a good attendance, and&#13;
an excellent program was renderee,&#13;
the discussions beintz thorough&#13;
and earnest, tind a very enjoyable&#13;
containing 110 perfect pods and a dozen&#13;
poor pods. Prom the srood pods&#13;
were shelled 475 perfect beans, Al&#13;
these camn from the planting of one&#13;
day was spent. The club has re- ! „• u&gt; *i - ^ ^ ^V**. p a n e 'n&#13;
cei.ve, d. i.ts„ fir, st. i,ns, ta„ llment, of• itih e. i Michigan this year had borne accordtarveling&#13;
library and Miss Flota&#13;
Hall will act as librarian.&#13;
* WEST PUTNAM.&#13;
Carrie Erwin visited at H. B.&#13;
Gardner's Sunday.&#13;
Mae Hacket of Detroit visited&#13;
at D. Monks' last week.&#13;
Harrisou Bates and family of&#13;
Giegory visited G. W» Bates Sunday.&#13;
John Murphy was home the&#13;
past weefr shaking hands with old&#13;
friends.&#13;
Mabel Tripp is spending a couple&#13;
of weeks, with relatives in&#13;
Jackson.&#13;
Mrs. Noah of North Lake visited&#13;
at Wm. Gardner's the first of&#13;
the week.&#13;
The Misses Ethel Graham and&#13;
Grace Huntington of Pinckney&#13;
visited Alice Barton last week.&#13;
John Conner was called to&#13;
Jackson one day last week by the&#13;
death of his brother Chas. Conner.&#13;
Jas. Randall and wife of Monett,&#13;
Mo. are spending a couple of&#13;
weeks visiting at Wm. Murphy's&#13;
and other relatives here.&#13;
Those who attended the State&#13;
fair from here were: Wm. Gardner&#13;
and son, H. B. Gardner and&#13;
daughter, S, E. Barton and&#13;
daughter, Nellie Gardner and&#13;
Wellington White.&#13;
NORTH LAKE.&#13;
Mrs, O. P. Noah was in Pinckney&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Hemy Hudson and wife were&#13;
at Henry Ishams Sunday.&#13;
Jessie Brown is visiting her sis*&#13;
ter Mrs. Lester Hunt of Iosco.&#13;
Wm. Brown and wife of Howell&#13;
were home the last of the week.&#13;
O. P. Nt&gt;ah has purchased the&#13;
Milo Green farm of eighty acres.&#13;
Beans are turning out from 8 to&#13;
20 bushel to the acre around here.&#13;
Hagerty Bros, have sown 120&#13;
bushe) of good wheat in- the last&#13;
two years and threshed 126 bush- j not hurt the tress sad may prove in&#13;
inffl^ they would not be worth a $1 50&#13;
per bushel.&#13;
The monthly blotter issued from the&#13;
DISPATCH offine are becoming well&#13;
known, we havinar bad calls the past&#13;
week for samples from several printers&#13;
id the United States ranging from a&#13;
few miles to Texas. We are also receiving&#13;
returns from our constant advertising&#13;
in securing jobs from out of&#13;
town cutomers without other solicitation&#13;
than the "blotter."&#13;
Tbe Legal Information Quarterly&#13;
for October published by W. H. S.&#13;
Wood of Howell, contains the speech&#13;
made by Mr. Wood before the state&#13;
board of equalization. It is well&#13;
worth the money 15c for the&#13;
copy. Every farmer ought to take&#13;
this legal information as it will keep&#13;
them informed on all law points.&#13;
Yearly subscription 50 cent?.&#13;
Tbe speech of W. H. S. Wood be&#13;
fore the state board of equalization&#13;
had the effect of changing our stats&#13;
taxes three-tenths per cent. This&#13;
county has formerly been paying one&#13;
and three-tenths per cent of the entire&#13;
state taxes and now we only pay one&#13;
per cent. This is certainly a victory&#13;
for Mr. Wood and the county.&#13;
A business men1? association has&#13;
been formed here in Howell and several&#13;
meetings been held. It is decided&#13;
as a first proposition to do something&#13;
to benefit the roads leading into Howell.&#13;
Money will be needed and forthcoming&#13;
and a grand co-operative effort&#13;
made to secure good results. W,&#13;
H. 8. Wood was out on the Marion&#13;
town line yesterday and found all the&#13;
farmers enthusiastic to aid, and there&#13;
is a prospect of a grand three days,&#13;
bee in the near future. Other roads&#13;
will receive attention later.—Democrat&#13;
A northern Michigan farmer unwittingly&#13;
struck an idea this year&#13;
which may revolutionize fruit growing&#13;
in tbe future. He piled well&#13;
packed snow over tbe roots of his&#13;
trees to preserve tbe trunks from tbe&#13;
damge inflicted by rabbits. The snow&#13;
remained over the trees long after&#13;
the ground was bare. The compress&#13;
retarded the growth until after the&#13;
frost. Hs will have about 400 bushel&#13;
of apples, while bis neighbors report&#13;
a virtual fnlkire. The scheme will&#13;
"Hand to Mouth" Liver*.&#13;
One of the paradoxes of waste Is that&#13;
the persons most addicted to it are not&#13;
men and women of independent means&#13;
who can support themselves In spite of&#13;
their extravagant expenditure, but tbe&#13;
poorer classes. There is hardly an ablebodied&#13;
laborer who might not become&#13;
financially Independent If he would but&#13;
carefully husband his receipts and&#13;
guard against the little leaks of needless&#13;
expense. But unfortunately this is&#13;
the one thing which tbe workingman&#13;
finds it the hardest to do. There are a&#13;
hundred laborers who are willing to&#13;
work hard to every half dozen who are&#13;
willing properly to husband their earnings.&#13;
Instead of hoarding a small percentage&#13;
of their, receipts so as to provide&#13;
against sickness or want of employment&#13;
they eat and drink up their&#13;
earnings as they go, and thus In the&#13;
first financial crash, when mills and&#13;
factories, "shut down" and capitalists&#13;
lock up their cash instead of using it&#13;
In great enterprises, they are ruined.&#13;
Men who thus live "from hand to&#13;
mouth." never keeping more than a&#13;
day's march ahead of actual want, are&#13;
little better off than slaves.—Success.&#13;
Why the Boy W u Sure.&#13;
A certain officious bead nurse in the&#13;
accident ward of, a local hospital re-&#13;
-eeived aa-uaexpeeted -call down'- recently.&#13;
An unfortunate young man of&#13;
the age of 10 had been practicing "with&#13;
a cartridge pistol several sizes too large&#13;
for him, and the result was unpleasant.&#13;
The doctors and nurses had cleansed&#13;
and dressed the wound, and be was&#13;
resting easily.&#13;
Then the nurse, who had not been&#13;
present and who bated to miss a trick,&#13;
walked over to the* little boy's bed,&#13;
around which the attendants were still&#13;
standing, and asked him solicitously:&#13;
"Are you sure that the bullet Isn't&#13;
sticking there still?"&#13;
"Sure." s&#13;
"What makes you think so?"&#13;
"It was a blank cartridge."&#13;
There was a sharp decline in that&#13;
nurse's stock of pride, and tbe laughter&#13;
failed of unanimity,by one dissenting&#13;
voice.—New York Commercial Advertiser.&#13;
Our Daughters.&#13;
The household blessed with noble&#13;
daughters ought to be a happy one.&#13;
Ruskin says that most parents forget,&#13;
however, to Imbue them with a love of&#13;
nature which is so invigorating and&#13;
healthful.&#13;
"Give them," says he, "not only not&gt;Ie&#13;
teachings, but noble teachers, and give&#13;
them the help which alone has sometimes&#13;
done more than all other influences—&#13;
the help of wild and fair nature.&#13;
You cannot baptize them rightly&#13;
in inch deep church fonts unless you&#13;
baptize them also in the sweet waters&#13;
which the great Law Giver strikes&#13;
forth from the rocks of your native&#13;
land. You cannot lead them faithfully&#13;
to those narrow, ax hewn church altars&#13;
while the azure altars in heaven re*&#13;
main, for you, without inscription; altars&#13;
built not to, but by, an unknown&#13;
God."&#13;
els of a very poor quality. valuable to fruit raisers. e&#13;
The Japan PITUB.&#13;
The Ioquat, or Japan plum, sometimes&#13;
erroneously called "medlar/* belongs&#13;
to the family rosacte. Its botanical&#13;
name is Eriobotrya japonlca. The&#13;
Cyclopedia of American Horticulture&#13;
says of it: "The Ioquat Is native to&#13;
China and'Japan, but is much planted&#13;
in the gulf states and westward. It&#13;
blooms from August until the approach&#13;
of winter and ripens its clustered fruit&#13;
in very early spring. It is a profuse&#13;
bearer in congenial ollmates. It may&#13;
be grown from seed. The fruit Is often&#13;
seen In northern markets." -&#13;
The Bowery Beate the Worl4.&#13;
In a small two story building with a&#13;
basement on the Bowery are three aspiring&#13;
occupants, although tbe space&#13;
occupied by each is not much larget&#13;
than health requires. Over the en*&#13;
trance to the store Is this sign:&#13;
"Cheapest hardware store on earth."&#13;
Over the entrance to the basement Is&#13;
this sign: "Cheapest barber shop in&#13;
the world." Over the entrance leading&#13;
to the seoand story la this: "Cheapett&#13;
restaurant on the pUneV'-^New York ana.,. — v..-_:.&#13;
*lip«j I&#13;
MM*&#13;
?£&#13;
..;•{&#13;
•J" s T A « ofXMagttea&#13;
at a mskm of&lt;»Vi»tob*UXJbtttf ftrisiA OeaaowtU,&#13;
oa MowUj fee a** lay 6t a*****, i*&#13;
tbe Teas oae taeu, aod nias SM4|*i sift to*.&#13;
Preaeat, Sayeee A. OtowtfUmii ftjebefs, in&#13;
toe ytttfxVlba Beta* ot V&#13;
oaia B, jAjpMgar, baseaaea.&#13;
On mdiaf 4*1 tOlng U» petition dalj rerlftedoi&#13;
Kiln If. JaekMJ^lfrartagtoat * entsta Instrument&#13;
now on flje ia toit oonrt, porperU&gt;g to be'&#13;
the left WUI end Testament of Mtd sweated, nujr&#13;
be admitted to prohete.&#13;
Thereupon it ia ordered that Tuesday tbe nth&#13;
day of October neat, atti) o'eiuck. in the forenoon,&#13;
at said Probate Ottcet be assigned for the&#13;
bearing of said petition.&#13;
It 1« further ordered that a copy of iMs order he&#13;
pnbliebed In the PIMOKHBY DISP-CTCK, a newspaper&#13;
printed and elreuJatinR in ask! nonety, three&#13;
aacoeteive weeks pi evioat to • said usjp of tteariag.&#13;
Eoami A STOWS.&#13;
t-43 .. Judge of Probsts&#13;
Business Pointers.&#13;
If you. want your piano tuned&#13;
right, drop a card 10 F. N. Monroe,&#13;
Howell, Mich. t-48&#13;
Pettysville cider mill is now ready&#13;
and will make cider whenever there&#13;
are apples to grind.&#13;
W. HOOSBR.&#13;
Will the person who stole tbe wheel&#13;
barrow from tbe residence of H. F.&#13;
Sigier please return it as there are&#13;
others who would like to steal tbe&#13;
same. 40tt&#13;
These cool days remind us that winter&#13;
is approaching and our wood supply&#13;
is low. Any of our many subscribers&#13;
who wish to help us out along&#13;
this line we would be pleased to have&#13;
them do so immediately.&#13;
For ttalo.&#13;
Anyone in need of a well pump will&#13;
do well to call on us. Desiring to&#13;
put in a force pump we have a good&#13;
second band pump in good running&#13;
order. It was working well in a 58&#13;
foot veil when changed for the force.&#13;
The pump may be seen at Teeple &amp;&#13;
Cad wells.&#13;
If a person has anything to sell, be&#13;
he merchant or larmei, it does not&#13;
pay to wait until your competitor has&#13;
tbe start of you before you let the&#13;
buyer know you have it for sale. The&#13;
DISPATCH is the best medium in this&#13;
vicinity through which to let your&#13;
wants be known.&#13;
STEWART'S ROOFING&#13;
A N D&#13;
ROOFING MATERIALS&#13;
for naking MEW ROOFS and repairing&#13;
OLD ROOFS of all kilns, Bast ia tie&#13;
market. Send for Catalogue.&#13;
W. Ha STEWART,&#13;
1 0 5 JOHN S T . , N. Y .&#13;
JUST&#13;
What You Want&#13;
Dust Proof&#13;
i&#13;
Letter Pile&#13;
For Sale at&#13;
tt THE pISPATeti OFFICE."&#13;
',. *&#13;
' ..&lt;&#13;
.'".' *&#13;
« * - »&#13;
' • * * '&#13;
/ •&#13;
T,&#13;
•?'M&#13;
" *,' • ' ' • &gt; '&#13;
V * j &gt;&#13;
£&lt;JM&#13;
.&#13;
:&#13;
M&#13;
&lt;</text>
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              <text>Use the Windows Snipping Tool to capture the area of the document you want to save. If you want multiple pages printed please see staff to print the pages you want. &lt;a href="https://howelllibrary.org/technology/#print" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View the library's printing information.&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch October 03, 1901</text>
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                <text>October 03, 1901 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>No Copyright - United States</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="7039">
                <text>1901-10-03</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>y:/«fc©^*lW»&#13;
^ • • v S - ' - ' v&#13;
v&gt;&#13;
(hity a Uttte Oii»r i«&lt;&gt; wwks before&#13;
the Harvest Home festival.&#13;
3iatty"#ae do aot barn coal are beginttlag&#13;
to t»y in * a tock of wood. We&#13;
nave robmTfor several more ooros that&#13;
have been promued as.&#13;
Mr. Fetersw giving the mUl at thU&#13;
place a thorough over-hauling, having&#13;
the roils re-ground ttfi. l i e is also&#13;
getting ready fc&gt; make buckwheat&#13;
four ot fae oest quality.&#13;
Uns FinebY Sunday school class&#13;
will hold an experience social at her&#13;
home on CnadjUa street on Friday&#13;
evening Oct. 18, to which all are welcome.&#13;
Admission 10 cents.&#13;
All members of the Ooug'l church&#13;
and society are requested to meet at&#13;
the church at 11:80 a. m, sharp, nest&#13;
Sunday, Oct. 13, for the purpose of deciding&#13;
on the selection of a pastor.&#13;
' By order of Trustees,&#13;
N a s i week will about close up the&#13;
The' sqairrel season opens nest&#13;
Tuesday, Oct. 15« — — - — —&#13;
town Tuesday.&#13;
Messrs tfrenfc Shields and Biuce&#13;
M c ^ r s e n of ilowetl' *Were ia* town&#13;
Monday on bntinass.&#13;
DAY, OCT. 1CK 1901.&#13;
Dw^isifti&#13;
;.&lt;•&#13;
•r&gt;&#13;
r-rr *rr&#13;
Edward A. Bowman, ti e * -tv&gt;u &lt;•*&#13;
DEPARTMENT&#13;
STORE&#13;
HOWELL MICHIGAN&#13;
4 »«•:&#13;
Special Sale oft&#13;
Battenberg and Art Needle&#13;
-Goods,&#13;
ALSO&#13;
Big New Stock of China.&#13;
jLowep Price* than e l s e w h e r e&#13;
Trade «1 B o w m a n ' s «P»y»&#13;
The Busy Store,&#13;
Howell, Mich.&#13;
A' fittle tarry of snow was perceivable&#13;
in the air Oct. 8, at this fclace.&#13;
fl. G. Briggs and wife visited&#13;
friends in Howell the last ot last week.&#13;
Geo. Bougbton and wife of Flint&#13;
Are visiting his brother-in-law £ . P.&#13;
Campbell.&#13;
B. F. Andrews of Parsballville&#13;
spent Friday night with his son F. L.&#13;
and family.&#13;
Mrs. Margaret Roberts of Iosco visited&#13;
Pinckney friends last Saturday&#13;
and Sundav,&#13;
The Misses Kittie Grieve and Carrie&#13;
Erwin were callers at the school Monday&#13;
afternoon.&#13;
Ed Oahili and wife of Bushton&#13;
were guests of B. Culbane and&#13;
family Sunday.&#13;
Communion service will be held at&#13;
the Methodist church Sunday morn&#13;
ing at the usual hour.&#13;
r'J :&#13;
Mrs. Wolfer of Munith was /the&#13;
guest of her daughter, Mrs. J. A.&#13;
Cad well the past week.&#13;
The attendance.at the State fair&#13;
was so large that the small local and&#13;
county fairs are snnering.&#13;
A! number of young people from&#13;
here attended the Dunlavey-Tiplady&#13;
wedding at Dexter Tuesday.&#13;
A move is on foot to have a beet&#13;
sugar factory at Howell. The plant&#13;
would cost somewhere near $500,000.&#13;
Tuesday Oct. 8, at St. Joseph church&#13;
Dexter, occurcd the marriage of Miss&#13;
Mary Duulavey and Will J." Tiplady.&#13;
Ledrn Hunter, of Green Oak is certainly&#13;
in luck. He has sold his apple&#13;
crop this year for an even $1,000 and&#13;
does not have to, touch it. As he has&#13;
only a nine acre orchard there must&#13;
be a mammoth crop. Mr. Hunter&#13;
sprays his trees every year.&#13;
Just Received,&#13;
At JACKSON'S,&#13;
A fine hue of Black Dress Goods&#13;
at 50c, 75, 85c, $1.00 and $1.25 per )'d.&#13;
A large line of Bed Blankets and Comfortables.&#13;
A fine line of Plain and Figured Tennis Flannel&#13;
at 5c, 8c, 10c and 12c per yd.&#13;
A complete line of Men's, Ladies', Misses'&#13;
and Children's Cotton and Wool Underwear&#13;
at prices in reach of all.&#13;
T o C l o s e S a t u r d a y , O c t . 1 2&#13;
&lt; 2fr pair Ladies' Shoes at&#13;
15 pair Misses' Shoes at&#13;
Cotton Batts&#13;
Linings&#13;
On and after Oct* 10 oar store will close at 8 p. m.&#13;
120th Century Stove Greeting.&#13;
The old reliable firm that have built up their trade with&#13;
your valuable assistance, are happy to inform yon that&#13;
thej ate-in better position to serve your wants than ever&#13;
th^wtoia the 19th XJentary, and cordially invite you&#13;
to ror store and investigate the truth of the statement&#13;
that we have the best line of *&#13;
$1.00 and It49&#13;
50c 75c and $1.00&#13;
9c per roll&#13;
5c per yard&#13;
Goal and Beating- Stoves&#13;
ever sjeei* in IMnokney&#13;
*eft. r******f*.?!?™%&#13;
Always Yours, v&#13;
TEEPLE &amp; CADWELL&#13;
Mr*.B. E Pinch and Mrs. E. B.&#13;
Brown and daughter Gladys vieited&#13;
relatives in Waterloo the la*t of last&#13;
week. *&#13;
There were 23,295 marriages in this&#13;
Btate last year and 2,418 divorces, an&#13;
increase in the number ot both over&#13;
the preceding year.&#13;
One man, F. P. Glazier, of Qbetaea,&#13;
pays over one-sixth of the village taxes.&#13;
The tax was on his personal property&#13;
and the stove works.&#13;
Mrs. H. A. Kick of Gregory was in&#13;
towq Saturday. She brought Miss&#13;
Villa Martin home* who has been&#13;
spending the past week with her.&#13;
'•The Oaks" published at Three&#13;
Oaks, Mich., came to our table the&#13;
past week in its new form of 18 pages.&#13;
It is a newsy paper and will please&#13;
many m.its new foim.&#13;
Mrs. Root. Erwin and daughter&#13;
Carrie left this week for their new&#13;
home at Alma. Houses are so scarce&#13;
tor rent there that Mr. Erwin had to&#13;
buy in order to get a place to live.&#13;
It has been a great cry all through&#13;
lower Michigan that potatoes would&#13;
be hardly w r t h digging this fall owing&#13;
to the hot dry spell in Aug,, but&#13;
the farmers are receiving many sur&#13;
prises while harvesting them as they&#13;
find the tuber of a fine quality.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Obas. White of West&#13;
Putnam morn thelossof their-babyT&#13;
Beulah Lucile, who died last Saturday&#13;
aged 2 months and 3 days. Funeral&#13;
services were conducted by RAV. air.&#13;
Hicks at the house, Sunday afernoon&#13;
and the burial was in the Sprout cemetery.&#13;
A man bad a plow to sell and informed&#13;
two or three of bis neighbors&#13;
and the blacksmith. He still has his&#13;
lplow. Another man had a plow to&#13;
Teen. He sent an ad. to the village&#13;
paper and in less than four days sold&#13;
his plow and had the chance to sell six&#13;
more.—Linden Leader,&#13;
O. W. Sexton, of Ghilson, attended&#13;
a meeting of the members of the Cement&#13;
Co., at Detroit, on Tuesday ot&#13;
this week. The company are now&#13;
preparing to erect their factory near&#13;
Lakeland, at the junction of the A. A.&#13;
atnd G. T. railways, and it is expected&#13;
the will be in operation in 1902.—Livingston&#13;
Herald.&#13;
It is said that the farmers who contracted&#13;
this year to grow sugar beets&#13;
for the Lansing factory are contracting&#13;
now for an increased average next&#13;
year,.and the indications now are that&#13;
there will be farmers willing to raise&#13;
more beets next year than the factory&#13;
can handle.—Leslie Local.&#13;
Emuel H. Byer, who has lived three&#13;
miles north of town near the Benjamin&#13;
schoohoo.se tor the past seventeen&#13;
years, has traded fums with Mr. Arnell,&#13;
just north oV Pinckney. Mr.&#13;
Byer says he wished to get on to a&#13;
larger farm. He will not move to his&#13;
new home until spring*—Brighton&#13;
Argus.&#13;
A man who is working a farm on&#13;
shares in ; Independence township,&#13;
Oakland eonnty, got quite a ways toward&#13;
independence the other day by&#13;
selling his share of the. apple erop to&#13;
owner of the farm for $2,599. The&#13;
latter expects to pick up about $6,000&#13;
plunks for thai whole yield.—Northville&#13;
Record.&#13;
John HeuVaaa, who graduated&#13;
from a veterinary college last spring&#13;
and who has bees MsMsiee i s Ann&#13;
Arbor the past se*scjgp|*s received a&#13;
government appom&#13;
mm am mmmmmmmmmimm&#13;
».&#13;
'•H^'i JJi1.1,,&#13;
' rc\,-:.rt •••'•v.*:,,nr.';"-•!!*•*-•••• - .•/. ,&#13;
if - w v . . . Of course you are coming to the fair and uaturafer voir&#13;
will bring along a little spare change m case of emergency.&#13;
To persuade you that it will be worth your while t&amp;pring&#13;
a little more with you and call on us while here, we quote a&#13;
few of tbe best "fair" bargains ever offered to the people of&#13;
this vicinity.&#13;
$100 a pr&#13;
One group of Boys' Oil Grain and Kangaroo Calf shoes,&#13;
sizes 2J to 6J at&#13;
One group of Boys' and Youths* Oil Grain and Ca f&#13;
skin shoes, sizes 12J to 5J at 75c. a pr&#13;
One group of Youths' Calf skin shoes, sizes U to \\ at 00c a pr&#13;
One group of Boys' Calf, Congress shoes, sizes 13J to 5¾ at 25c a pr&#13;
Several lots of Children's and Misses' shoes at 50c and 75c a pr&#13;
Jackets&#13;
One lot of Ladies' Jackets, sizes 82 to 40, at&#13;
One lot of Ladies' Jackets, sizes 82 to 42, at&#13;
One lot of Ladies' heavy, warm Jackets, sizes 32 to 40, at&#13;
One lot of Ladies' heavy, warm Jackets, sizes 32 to 34, at&#13;
W e a l s o h a v e q u i t e a n a s s o r t m e n t o f l*adfes*&#13;
N e w e r a n d B e t t e r s t y l e J a c k e t s a t 2 5 p e r c e n t d i s -&#13;
c o u n t f r o m t h e r e g u l a r p r i c e .&#13;
50c each&#13;
$1.00 each&#13;
2.00 each&#13;
3,00 each&#13;
Suits and Overcoats&#13;
In Men's and Boys' Suits, Overcoats and Ulsters, we can still show&#13;
yon quite an assortment at the extreniely large discount of 25 per&#13;
cent from the regular price.&#13;
O u r l a t c h s t r i n g i s a l w a y s o u t a n d y o u a r e a s w e l -&#13;
c o m e a s e v e r t o m a k e o u r s t o r e s y o u r h e a d q u a r t e r s&#13;
w h i l e i n t o w n . *&#13;
5. S. Tivtta,fcss ^) Co.,&#13;
Drugs,&#13;
Medicines,&#13;
Books:&#13;
Stationery,&#13;
Fancy and&#13;
Toilet&#13;
Articles.&#13;
A Full Line of the Finest Candies&#13;
We sell you more Stick Candy&#13;
for the money than others dare&#13;
offer.&#13;
GI¥E OS A CALL&#13;
Yours for trade,&#13;
F. A. SIGLER.&#13;
* &gt; *&#13;
BOOK BIN DING.&#13;
\ \ ,&#13;
ary in the army i&#13;
He will leave for t&#13;
ot the week and&#13;
tation and $100 per&#13;
time be starts. W&#13;
jo* tbapjpointmeat&#13;
at veteria&#13;
Hilippiaes.&#13;
the last&#13;
trasaper*&#13;
from tee&#13;
late aim&#13;
Hating fttftd domn to km'tmi in mtr&#13;
quarto*. eteii/W At* foefe, ttodt, •fc., m&#13;
etfer prtpwd ikon ertr to do book bimiiafof&#13;
oil kind*.&#13;
Magazines,&#13;
Pamphlets,&#13;
Receipts,&#13;
Blank Books, Etc.,&#13;
m leafier, fM*&#13;
mdm&#13;
3. &amp;fe*tam VC**&#13;
#.3&#13;
•*-OT&#13;
.#'&#13;
i V f ' ^ ' ;&#13;
••, » * , ; • • " J I ,-r,&#13;
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}&amp;$&amp;&#13;
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T,&#13;
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sP&#13;
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• -1 "St :s&#13;
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£ # • • • ' •&#13;
6$.v r&#13;
r-: •&#13;
If1 -&#13;
» • ' • *&#13;
• • * . • •&#13;
- • * ' • , . '&#13;
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tfffru&#13;
B: .-ij.**. '&#13;
Jt*:."!'&#13;
mm,. :W^;iBi«t&#13;
J T J ^ 1 ^ ^ ^ ^prelBje^eie^B^Pe1 ^S»ej^ ^te^B^^e^BBa^T^als^eT* • • B ^ B B j a e j ^ P d ^ B ' 1 ¾ i&#13;
&lt;€StrUt»&#13;
CCopKlfht. l«tt. to *•*•» sBafeek, W. T.J&#13;
Washington, Get* «.—•»• oaero of&#13;
m* exalted raUffW » i ^ J ) f . Talmtfe&#13;
An this discourse ffiaatrased aad comattended;&#13;
text, Job xxrfli. IT. "The cry-&#13;
*el cannot equal i t -&#13;
Many of the nreeJeoa stoaes of the&#13;
Bible have come to BruasBt recognition.&#13;
But for the press** I take up&#13;
the leas valuable crystal. JOB, ia my&#13;
text, compares savins; wisdom with a&#13;
specimen of topas. An. fafldel chemist&#13;
or mineralogist would pronounce the&#13;
latter worth more than las former,,&#13;
but Job makes an intelligent compari-!&#13;
•cm, looks at religion and t i e * looks&#13;
«t the crystal and araavcnacea tho&#13;
former as of far superior value to the ;&#13;
latter, exclaiming, in the words of my&#13;
text, "The crystal cannot e*oal it."&#13;
New, it is not a part of say sermonic&#13;
design to depreciate the crystal,&#13;
whether it be found im Cornish mine&#13;
or Harz mountain or Msmseoth cave&#13;
or tinkling among the pendants of the&#13;
-chandeliers of a palace. The crystal&#13;
4a the star of the mowatata; it is the&#13;
queen of the cave; it ia the eardrop of&#13;
the hills; it finds its heaves ia the&#13;
diamond. Among all the pages* of&#13;
natural history there ia ao page more&#13;
interesting to me than the pass crystallography.&#13;
But I waat to show you&#13;
• that Job was right when, taking religion&#13;
in one hand and the crystal in&#13;
-the others, he declared that the former&#13;
is of far more value aad beauty&#13;
than the latter, receaameadteg It to all&#13;
people and to all the acta* declaring&#13;
"The crystal cannot equal ft**&#13;
God's I m m t e M * Earn*.&#13;
In the first place, I remark that re-&#13;
• X * . s ^•n5i!,» ,m«»±Wt&gt;¥S*V m&#13;
destiny, IT^ M&lt;jk a t Opd and yon&#13;
hase something of # * gnw.o&gt;ur of Mb&#13;
Q^e^ter/ £ ^ £ t i * p a ^ ^&#13;
inidel* tell ua it la ^tque,; Bo you&#13;
know why they,m&gt;M 4 t . \ 9 M &amp; » * *&#13;
It lar because they are bliadu ^'Tfre&#13;
natural man receivah not the things&#13;
of ©pd becauta Uioy a/e spiritually&#13;
discerned," There is no tspUe. with&#13;
the crystal. The trouble^* with the&#13;
eye» which try to look through i t Wt&#13;
pray for vision* l&gt;or4, that our- eyes&#13;
might be opened! Whea the eye salve&#13;
cures par o!indnees, theft WJ find that&#13;
religion la transparent&#13;
Harmony and Symmetry,&#13;
tlglon is superior to the cryatai fa-ex—I—Beautiful In its symmetry. Win&#13;
• actness. That shapelesa flaass of crystal&#13;
against which you accidentally&#13;
dashed your foot ia laid oat with more&#13;
exactness than any earthly city&#13;
There are s x styles of crystal 1 nation&#13;
and all of them divinely ordained.&#13;
Bverv crystal haa laatheaaatteal precision.&#13;
God'sgeometryreaches tnrougb&#13;
It and it is a square, or U is a rectangle,&#13;
or it is a rhomboid, or in some&#13;
way it has a mathematical figure. Now,&#13;
religion beats that in the simple fact&#13;
that spiritual accuracy ia more baautiful&#13;
than material accuracy. God's attributes&#13;
are exact God's Iaw3 exact,&#13;
•God's decrees exact, God's management&#13;
•of the world exact. Never counting&#13;
wrong, though he counts the grass&#13;
blades and the stars aad the sands and&#13;
the cycles. His providenc«3 never&#13;
dealing with us perpendicularly when&#13;
those provinces aught to he oblique,&#13;
nor laterally when they onght to be&#13;
vertical. Everything ia oar life arranged&#13;
without any posBftHtty of mistake.&#13;
Each'life a six-hearted prism.&#13;
Bern at the right time; dying at the&#13;
xfgfct time. There are n» "happen&#13;
ao's" in our theology. If I thought&#13;
this was a slipshod narrfrae; I would&#13;
tie in despair. God is not an anarchist.&#13;
Law, order, symmetry, precision, a&#13;
perfect square, a perfect rectangle, a&#13;
perfect rhomboid, a perfect circle. The&#13;
edge of God's robe of government never&#13;
frays out There are no loose&#13;
screws in the world's machinery. It&#13;
did not just happen that Napoleon was&#13;
attacked with indigeation at Borodino&#13;
ao that he became incompetent for the&#13;
day. It did not Just happen that John&#13;
Thomas, the missionary, ox a heathen&#13;
island, waiting for an outfit and orders&#13;
for another missionary tear, received&#13;
that outfit and those orde.a in a box&#13;
that floated ashore, while the ship and&#13;
.the crew that carried the box were&#13;
'never heard of. I believe In a particular&#13;
providence. I betters God's geometry&#13;
may be seen la att onr lite more&#13;
beautifully than In- crystallography.&#13;
Job was. right "The crystal cannot&#13;
equal it."&#13;
Mora Trmm***nm4 Tama Ctyatal.&#13;
Again I remark that religion is superior&#13;
to the crystal ha taasparency.&#13;
We know not when or by whom glass&#13;
waa first discovered. Beada of It hare&#13;
&lt;bsan found in the tomb of Alexander&#13;
•Severus. Vaaea of ft are brought up&#13;
;trom the rains of Hercalaaenm. There&#13;
:were female adornmenta aaade out o!&#13;
it 3,000 yean ago—those adornments&#13;
-found now attached to the mummies&#13;
iof Egypt A great many commentators&#13;
believe that nay text meana glass.&#13;
./What would ire do witnont the crystal?&#13;
The crystal in taw window to&#13;
^keep out'the storm and let ia the&#13;
*day; the cryctal over the watsh, deifending&#13;
its delicate Kscamery yet ali&#13;
lowing us to ate the hoar; the crystal&#13;
•of the telescope, by which the astrono-&#13;
;mW bring* djstaat worida ao near he&#13;
•can inspect them. Oh the trhnapbn of&#13;
tjthccrystaja im the celearafted windows&#13;
Iof kouea-amf ewHeharj* KQxt there is&#13;
nothing to traaapartat hi enrstal as in&#13;
.holy religion, ft-ls avtrasmiparent&#13;
^ M paa&gt;fc«a&gt;ra«r ey» aad&#13;
Fiwpaiattoa lor ataveai T H U W M , :&#13;
The nrovldenca . that was dark&#13;
before becomes pellucid. Now yon&#13;
find God is not trying to put you down.&#13;
Now you understand why you . lost&#13;
that child and why you lost yaw&#13;
property. It waa to piepare you for&#13;
eternal treasures. • And why sicUam&#13;
came, it being the precursor of immortal&#13;
juvenescence. And now you understand&#13;
why they lied about you and&#13;
tried to drive you hither and thither.&#13;
It was to put you in the glorious company&#13;
of such a man as Igiatius, who,&#13;
when he went out to be destroyed by&#13;
the lions, said, "I am the wheat, and&#13;
the teeth of the wild beasts must first&#13;
grind me before I can becoxnd pure&#13;
bread for Jesus Chr s:." Or the company&#13;
of such m^n as "that ancient&#13;
Christian martyr" who, when standing&#13;
in the midst of the amphitheater waiting&#13;
for the lions to come out of their&#13;
cave and destroy him and the people&#13;
la the gallerisa jeiring and shouting,&#13;
"The liont!" replied, ' ^st them come&#13;
on!" and then, stooping down toward&#13;
the cave, "where the wild* basts ware&#13;
roaring to get out, again cried, "Let&#13;
them come on!" Ah, yes, it is persecution&#13;
to put you ;n glorious company,&#13;
and while there are many things' you&#13;
will have to postpone to the future&#13;
world for explanation I tell you that&#13;
it Is the whole tendency of your religion&#13;
to unravel and explain and Interpret&#13;
and Illuminated and Iradiate. Job&#13;
was right It is a gorious trasparency.&#13;
"Tho crystal cannot equal it."&#13;
,\ !" H&#13;
make the stars o* the ktavaa hia butt&#13;
and have (feef eveainf^ oloqd for, $ •&#13;
sandals of htr feet, tot he does not&#13;
w h i t that ddora^ant^ He' wilr'iibt&#13;
*ave $hat' Jt^thgr^ When God MX*&#13;
lf[0ff;,lL9 mm town and.digs it^ut&#13;
or the depths aoa darkneu of "sin.&#13;
These souls are ajl crystaUlaationa of&#13;
present him as having love like a great&#13;
protuberance on one side of his nature,&#13;
but makes that love in harmony with&#13;
his justice—a love that will accept all&#13;
those who come to him, and a justice&#13;
that will by no means clear the guilty.&#13;
Beautiful religion in the sentiment it&#13;
Implants! Beautiful religion In the&#13;
hope it kindles! Beautiful religion in&#13;
thp fact that it proposes to garland&#13;
and entnrone and emparadise an immortal&#13;
spirit. Solomon says it is a&#13;
lily. Paul says it i3 a crown. The&#13;
Apocalypse says it is a fountain kissed&#13;
by the sun. Ezekiel says it is a&#13;
follaged cedar. Christ says it is a&#13;
bridegroom come to fetch home a&#13;
bride. While Job in the text takes up&#13;
a whole vase of precious stones—the&#13;
topax and the sapphire and the chrysoprasus—&#13;
he holds o\*t of this beautiful&#13;
vase Just one crystal and holds it&#13;
up until it gleams in tho warm light&#13;
of the eastern sky, and he exclaims,&#13;
"The crystal cannot equal it."&#13;
Oh, it is not a stale religion; it is&#13;
not a stupid religion; it is not a toothless&#13;
hag. as some seem to have represented&#13;
it; it is not a Meg Merrilies&#13;
with shriveled arm come to scare the&#13;
world; it is the fairest daughter of&#13;
God, heiress of all his wealth; her&#13;
cheek tne morning sky. her voice the&#13;
music of the south wind, her step the&#13;
dance of the sea. Come and woo her.&#13;
The Spirit and the Bride say come,&#13;
and whosoever will, let him come. Do&#13;
you agree with Solomon and say it is,&#13;
a lily? Then pluck it and wear it over&#13;
your heart. Do you agree with Paul&#13;
and say it is a crown? Then let this&#13;
hour be your coronation. Do you agree&#13;
with the Apocalypse and say it is a&#13;
springing fountain? Then come and&#13;
slake the thirst of your soul. Do you&#13;
believe with Ezekiel and say it is a&#13;
follaged cedar? Then come under its&#13;
shadow. Do you believe with Christ&#13;
and _say it is a bridegroom come to&#13;
fetch homo a bride? Then strike&#13;
hands with your Lord and King while&#13;
I pronounce you everlastingly one. Or&#13;
if you think with Job that it 1B a&#13;
jewel, then put it on vour hand like&#13;
a ring, on your neck like a bead, on&#13;
your forehead like a star, while looking&#13;
into the mirror of God's word you&#13;
acknowledge, "The crystal cannot&#13;
equal it."&#13;
8npotior to Crystal.&#13;
Again, religion is supuerior to the&#13;
crystal in its transformations. The&#13;
diamond is only a crystallization. Carbonate&#13;
of lime rises till it becomes&#13;
calcite or aragonite. Red oxide of&#13;
copper crystallizes into cubes and&#13;
octahedrons. Those crystals which&#13;
adorn our persons and our homes and&#13;
our museums have only been resurrected&#13;
from forms that were far from&#13;
lustrous. Scientists for ages have&#13;
been examining these wondenul transformations.&#13;
But I tell you in the gospel&#13;
of tho Son of God there is a more&#13;
wonderful transformation. Over souls&#13;
by reason of Fin black as coal and&#13;
hard as iron God, by his comforting&#13;
grace, stoops and says, ".They shall he&#13;
mine in the day when I make up my&#13;
jewels.*' . ^&#13;
"What!" say you. "Will God wear&#13;
wT . woo i*e tsan—hh si*, bis JQP4, h i ^ Jewelry?" If he wanted it, he could&#13;
He weara them on&#13;
the hand thkt was nailed, over the&#13;
heaitthej was idero^d, 0¾ the; N a -&#13;
ples-that were stung. "They shall be&#13;
mine/* saith the Lord, ^m the day&#13;
when I make up m/ jewels," Wonderful&#13;
transformatiba! •! Where" lih&#13;
abounded grace shall much more&#13;
Abound. The carbon becomes the solitaire,&#13;
"The crystal cannot equal' tt."&#13;
Now, I have no lHting for those people&#13;
who are always enlarging in Christian&#13;
meetings about their early disiipatioiL&#13;
Do not go into the particulars,&#13;
my brothers. Simply say you&#13;
were sick, but make no display of&#13;
your ulcers. The chief stock In trade&#13;
of some ministers and Christian workera&#13;
seem to be their early crimes and&#13;
dissipations. The number of pockets&#13;
you picked and the number of chickens&#13;
you stole make very poor prayer&#13;
meeting rhetoric. Besides that, it discourages&#13;
other Christian people who&#13;
never got drunk or stole anything. But&#13;
it is pleasant to know that those who&#13;
were farthest down have been brought&#13;
highest up. Out of infernal serfdom'&#13;
into eternal liberty. Out of darkness&#13;
into light From coal to the solitaire.&#13;
"The crystal cannot equal i^"&#13;
Power of the Gospel*&#13;
But my friends, the chief transforming&#13;
power of the gospel will not&#13;
be seen in this world, and not until&#13;
heaven breaks upon the soul. When&#13;
that light falls upon the soul, then&#13;
you will see the crystals. What a&#13;
magnificent setting for these jewels of&#13;
eternity! I sometimes hear people&#13;
representing heaven in a way that is&#13;
far from attractive to me. It seems&#13;
almost a vulgar heaven as they represent&#13;
it, with great blotches of color&#13;
and bands of music making a deafening&#13;
racket. John represents heaven as&#13;
TttRSSapWffWW*!^^ mummer", "•''i1*1*&#13;
^-. f&#13;
»i JM 3 - France, the united debts of Great&#13;
sTha lamrsnfls.etdamaigjasUra Balers Britain and Iraland stood at the enorj,&#13;
- . moas figure of «902,000,000, Involving;&#13;
2 HmkmTm&amp;^m^tM-ttm&amp;Wfi^V^AW&amp;ot £84,045,000, write*&#13;
''^•'••'IW ••;•;-•- ^ ' --^- v .. th^ British wtio^rdebt'* JTrom 1*1*&#13;
«vaii whea ICia* i p d ^ ^ ^ ^ a d 1 l l t a . ^ i t i ^ l ^ i ^ l s i ^ w ,3*.&#13;
hie title to tinkered jWl ,ft V « la- &gt; Pthditure ufrm; !%*&gt;uth Af.Hcan war&#13;
elude thi lonorou* phrase, &lt;'&amp;pi of all began,there vmti^mr^^y reductha&#13;
British dominions;...getm^ici •", tlaia. .00¾^^. j^a^.VMBmi^tMyt' - — —&#13;
" " he strtl w i | not fce S^Um , h«nilf. «rst. In tha ^&#13;
tn high-sounding titles as many, o|ther&#13;
sovereigns. Uhe Sultan df Turkey aft&#13;
fecto the "style and title" pt/JCom.-&#13;
mander of the f aithiuV* and the Emperor&#13;
of Morocco is "l^lnce of True&#13;
Believers," while the Shah of Persia&#13;
and the Emperor of Abyssinia both&#13;
call themselves "King of Kings." But&#13;
exceptions&#13;
W d M l V&#13;
w^en JB30(WO,000 waa; borrowed to&#13;
compensate the owners or alive* 8«^:&#13;
^ritUh,.couples, and, .secondly, ta tho -&#13;
yeara 1S|5 %nd 19^, whe^]$Melrt waa -¾&#13;
increased by '£ 35,000,000 on account of&#13;
the Crimean war. At, the close of the &gt;&#13;
Crimean war the debt stood at £849,* '&#13;
000,000, involving an annual charge of&#13;
1 &gt; • ' •&#13;
exquisitely beautiful. Three crystals!&#13;
it presents God's character, it does not ^ M t e - T r t s c e - ^ - m * r f S * * l &amp; L * n f \ ward need not take "a bnokseat-w&#13;
like a precious stoue, clear as crystal."&#13;
In another place he says, "I saw a pure&#13;
river from under the throne, clear as&#13;
crystal." In another place he says,&#13;
"Before the throne there was a sea&#13;
of glass clear as crystal." Three crystals!&#13;
John says crystal atmosphere.&#13;
That means health. Balm of the eternal&#13;
June. What weather after the&#13;
world's east wind! No rack of stormclouds.&#13;
One breath of that air will&#13;
cure the worst tubercle. Crystal light&#13;
on all the leaves, crystal light&#13;
shimmering on the topaz of the temples.&#13;
Crystal light tossing in the&#13;
plumes of the equestriaus of heaven&#13;
on white horses. But "the crystal cannot&#13;
equal it." John says crystal river.&#13;
That means joy. Deep and ever rolling.&#13;
Not one drop of the Potomac or the&#13;
Hudson or the Rhine to soil It. No&#13;
one tear of human sorrow to imbitter&#13;
it. Crystal, the rain out of which it&#13;
was made. Crystal, the bed over which&#13;
it shall roll and ripple. Crystal, its&#13;
infinite surface. But "the crystal cannot&#13;
equal it." John oayo crystal sea.&#13;
That means multitudinousiy vast. Vast&#13;
in rapture. Rapture vast as the sea,&#13;
deep as the sea, strong as the sea,&#13;
ever changing as the sea. Billows of&#13;
light Billows of beauty, blue with&#13;
skies that were never clouded and&#13;
green with depths that were never&#13;
fathomed. Arctics and Antarctica and&#13;
Mediterraneans and Aftantics . and&#13;
Pacifies in crystalline magnificence.&#13;
Three crystals! Crystal light falling&#13;
on a crystal river. Crystal river rolling&#13;
into a crystal sea. But "the crystal&#13;
cannot equal it."&#13;
Open the Door to ChrUt.&#13;
"Oh," says some one, "it is just the&#13;
doctrine I want. God is to do everything,&#13;
and I am to do nothing." My&#13;
brother, it is not the doctrine you&#13;
want. The coal makes no resistance.&#13;
It hears the resurrection voice in the&#13;
mountain and it comes to crystallization;&#13;
but your heart resists. The trouble&#13;
with you, my brother, is the coal&#13;
wants to stay coal.&#13;
I do not ask you to throw open the&#13;
door and let Christ in. I only ask&#13;
that you stop bolting it and barring it.&#13;
My friends, we will have to get rid of&#13;
our sins. I will have to get rid of my&#13;
sins, and you win have to get rid of&#13;
your sins. What will we do with our&#13;
sins among the three crystals? The&#13;
crystal atmosphere would display our&#13;
pollution. The crystal river would be&#13;
befouled with our touch. Transformation&#13;
must take place now or no transformation&#13;
at all. Give sin full chance&#13;
in your heart and the transformation&#13;
will be downward.instead of upward.&#13;
Instead of crystal it will be a cinder.&#13;
What Secretary Boot Said.&#13;
"Senator, you seem to forget thai&#13;
war itself is a hard, a dreadful thing;&#13;
yet our old men clamor for it and&#13;
our young men rush into it as if it&#13;
were a holiday amusement The executive&#13;
does not declare war. Whn our&#13;
wise men and popular leaders in the&#13;
Congress of the Halted States plunge&#13;
us into It, do they pause to think, of&#13;
the age4 mothers and their tears and&#13;
their breaking hearts?"—Bottoa Evening&#13;
Transcript&#13;
these are modest when compared' to £25.942,000 for interest and manage*&#13;
the Emperor of China, wuo styles' him- ment.. By tho year. ^ 0 the capital&#13;
scf "Son of Heaven." The Emperor had,been reduced to aT83$,O0O,G&amp;O and&#13;
of Japan has a most curious title, bo- the corresponding /annual charge to&#13;
ins styled the Mikado, or "Honorable&#13;
Gate/' Thebaw of Bur man, the wicked&#13;
old fehow~ who was overthrown by&#13;
the British, used modestly to call himself&#13;
"His Most Glorious, Excellent&#13;
Majesty; Lord of the Ishaddan; King&#13;
of Elephants; Master of Many White&#13;
Elephants; Lord of the Mines of Gold,&#13;
Silver, Rubies, Amber and the Noble&#13;
Serpentine; * Sovereign of the Empire&#13;
of Thunaparantha and Tampadipa and&#13;
other Great Empires and Countries,&#13;
and of the Umbrella Wearing Chiefs;&#13;
Arbiter of Life, the Great Righteousness,&#13;
the Sun-Descended Monarch,&#13;
King of Kings, and Possessor Of&#13;
Boundless Dominions and Supreme&#13;
Wisdom." For obvious reasons the&#13;
modest Thebaw had no visiting cards.&#13;
The Amir of Afghanistan calls himself&#13;
"The Light of Union and Religion."&#13;
The Emperor of Austria is "His Apostolic&#13;
Majesty"; the King of Spain,&#13;
"Hi* Most Catholic Majesty," and the&#13;
Bourbon kings of France were "Most&#13;
Christian Majesties"—at least in title,&#13;
thtough they were sometimes quite the&#13;
other way in reality. But King Edit&#13;
comes to religious titles, for is not&#13;
that pious man "Defender of the&#13;
Faith"? The King of Portugal is also&#13;
possessed of a religious title, being&#13;
"His Very Faithful Majesty." King&#13;
Oscar of Sweden calls himself "King&#13;
of the Goths and the Wends," and the&#13;
German "War Lord" calls himself&#13;
"Duke of the Wends." The King of&#13;
Denmark, like his royal cousin of Sweden,&#13;
calls himself "King of the Goths&#13;
and the Wends." This i3 very confusing&#13;
to an amateur in the king business&#13;
and their majesties of Denmark and&#13;
Sweden ought to toes up to see who&#13;
keeps the title. It must make the Sultan&#13;
of Turkey smile to see how many&#13;
monarchs, reigning and dethroned, pall&#13;
themselves "King of Jerusalem." This&#13;
title is borne by the King of Spain and&#13;
the Emperor of Austria, by the Bourbon&#13;
claimant of the throne of "Naples&#13;
and the two Sicilies," as well as by&#13;
Don Carlos, the claimant of the Spanish&#13;
throne. The Sultan calls himself&#13;
"Servant of Jerusalem," which is more&#13;
modest, and as he has the city the&#13;
other fellows can quarrel over who IS&#13;
"king" thereof. The King of Portugal&#13;
has a set of titles for "private circulation,"&#13;
as it were, in which he especially&#13;
delights, calling himself, when&#13;
he feels particularly "cocky," "King&#13;
of the African Sea, Lord of Guinea and&#13;
of the navigation and commerce ot&#13;
Ethopia, Arabia, Persia and India."&#13;
Little King Alphonso of Spain, not to&#13;
be outdone by his neighbor, calls himself&#13;
"King of the East and West Indies,&#13;
of India and the Ocean Continents."&#13;
The President of the United&#13;
States came very near having a title.&#13;
When they were fixing up the Constitution&#13;
it waB proposed to insert the&#13;
clause, "The President shall be called&#13;
His Excellency." Benjamin Franklin&#13;
offered an. amendment which read,&#13;
"And the Vice President shall be called&#13;
His Most Superfluous Highness." Jn&#13;
the latter which followed the title&#13;
clause was lost.&#13;
PlS In Trees Branch**.&#13;
In many of the western and midland&#13;
counties of England the nineteenth&#13;
century closed with the most terrible&#13;
floods within living memory. Happily&#13;
few lives were lost but hundreds of&#13;
folk—mostly poor—were washed out of&#13;
hearth and home. Fanners, small and&#13;
great lost cattle, sheep and poultry,&#13;
and immense damage was done to all&#13;
kinds of property. One comic Incident&#13;
was remarked at Alcester, ia Worcestershire.&#13;
When the water fell the rector&#13;
took his walks abroad to see what&#13;
loss he had suffered. As he passed&#13;
through an orchard he was greeted&#13;
with the piercing squeals of a perplexed&#13;
pig, which had got mixed up&#13;
in the boughs of a damson tree. Probably&#13;
it had been borne into the&#13;
branches by the rising flood. When&#13;
the waters went down It waa left high,&#13;
and possibly dry, but terrified out of its&#13;
wlta.&#13;
In the last century geese were raised&#13;
in Russia and Poland in vast flocks;&#13;
almost entirely tor the sake of their&#13;
quilli.. .&#13;
£17,600,000. A year later, in consequence&#13;
of the South African war, tho&#13;
capital had risan to £703,000,000«&#13;
STILL TALKING ABOUT IT.&#13;
Bryant, Mo., t :t. 7th,—Tho case* of&#13;
Mrs. M. A. Goss, continues to&lt; be the&#13;
chief topic of conversation la this&#13;
neighborhood. Mrs. Goss was a cripple&#13;
for a long time with Sc/^ica; sbo&#13;
was so bad she couian't turn over in&#13;
bed and lor four months she lay o»&#13;
one side.&#13;
She had tried everything without&#13;
getting a^y relief, till • at last she&#13;
heard of Dodd's Kidney Pills. She is&#13;
strong and-well today, and has not a&#13;
single ache or pain. /&#13;
(, Mra,, Goss says; "I don't know id&#13;
Dodd'a Kidney Pills will cure any*&#13;
thing elso or not, but * do know they&#13;
will cure iatlca, for they qqred me,&#13;
and there couldn't bo.?. worse case&#13;
than mine."&#13;
tVlieat an Animal Food.,&#13;
Elaborate experiments In feeding;&#13;
wheat to farm animals and swine have&#13;
been made this year at the Kansas ex-^&#13;
pertinent station/ and also in other&#13;
states of the corn belt. The'experts&#13;
conclude that wheat has greater nutritive&#13;
value than corn, and may be used&#13;
Cither crushed, mixed with oats ot&#13;
corn, or in connection with straw in&#13;
time of extreme scarcity.&#13;
STATS OV OHIO, CITT OV TOLBDO, »._&#13;
LUCAS COUNTV, f8*&#13;
Frank J. Cheney makes ontb tbat he In the&#13;
senior partner of thu Arm of F. J. Chonev &amp;Ca.&#13;
doing DUSIDOSH in the City «f Toledo, Count?&#13;
and State aforesaid, and that said firm will par&#13;
the sum or ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for&#13;
each and every case or Catarrh that cannot he&#13;
cured by the use of Hall's Catarrh Cure.&#13;
PRANK J. CHENEY.&#13;
Sworn to before me and subscribed la&#13;
presence, this Cth day ot December, A. D. 18&#13;
r o I 1 L l A. W. OLEASON, l s , A U J Notary Public&#13;
Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally, and&#13;
acts directly on the blood and mucotifl feuriace*&#13;
of the system. Send for teNtimonials. tree.&#13;
F. J. CHJ5NEY &amp; CO., Toledo, &lt;X&#13;
Sold byDrturRlftt*. 7ic.&#13;
Hair i Family PUls are tho boat.&#13;
While playing with some comrades,&#13;
youug Charles Harshburger, of Nashville,&#13;
ran into a barbed wire fence,&#13;
lacerating his face ond Injuring one&#13;
eye.&#13;
Are You Ufttaff Allen's Foot-Rasa?&#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, Le Roy* X Y.&#13;
A man never tries to convince you&#13;
that he is perfectly sober unless he ia&#13;
partially drunk.&#13;
ofB trhoeo krleymn,a rNka. bYle. . sSuecpcet.s s6 othf .-tThefc *G asrefcierledt bHye atdhaec hGea rPfioelwdd eTresa, Cmoa.,n ulifeasc tiunr etdh e hfaecrte tlhivaet; tpheeoyp lea rhe ahvea rcmonlefsids eansc ew ienll thaesm e.f teo*&#13;
The inventor of • pins did more for&#13;
the world than the builder of the pyramids.&#13;
Why experiment with untried remedies&#13;
for pain? Use Wizard Oil at once&#13;
and be happy. Your druggist has it.&#13;
The only faith to die by ia the one&#13;
you live by.&#13;
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES color&#13;
more-goods, per pack age, than any other.&#13;
Sold by druggists, 10c per package.&#13;
Loose liviag-and fast living are the&#13;
same&#13;
WHsTN »OU BOY BLOBtKO&#13;
tt&amp;akftetaaie efac elaeptltminlgta UBuotsu* BAleUa oghrtoneae nB,l uwee. , Boat&#13;
Attaatps the end. aad oerev stand-to dombt;&#13;
nothlat so hard bucaearch win and it out. *&#13;
SAVE FUEL HEAT ADDITIONAL ROOMS&#13;
* aaacM* BtBTOKS /US. KOMMR0I » .&#13;
yaor *ov# fist. Stm «W4*M fu* Price*&#13;
* 4 ^ ¥ow*«l*rw«iufplyy«* tf rat,*** ;&#13;
eMt tmn ia,&#13;
W.J. »URTQN4CO.&#13;
avatar. atTeorr.sHaH&#13;
* ,&#13;
% - ' • " &lt; : ,*,;S&lt;?rr*^ . ¾ ^&#13;
^ . , , ? 5 ^ i&#13;
* • * , - * • •&#13;
.. 4. ;&#13;
"T»T • 0 - W »r-&#13;
^ ' • * &lt; * ' \ .&#13;
•&gt;*W-&#13;
/* :.jfVfLfTmm: W 5S o • ? • • * • : "&#13;
- • &gt; * '&#13;
&gt; ; • £»J»J&#13;
:\i :«&gt;. r f f !&#13;
"4i-)i&gt;f..*fe .»»:&gt;-&lt;*;£/*&#13;
A&#13;
A r^v *&#13;
*&#13;
Eft&#13;
1 ^ *u&#13;
'.•jwSiR&#13;
• * * * * •&#13;
.JNR000 ' SswaW^S&gt;&#13;
••O)ojrtslrteaissj W, tf* ••'*» • nl .V* •*• i» a *i*&#13;
•vt.&#13;
He Had&#13;
4»aly drew k&#13;
akmimJM- l^U • l ' : K fr'rf&#13;
1 put away ail bis wives toe th* 4a«gb«&#13;
t#r of Aioul Ca»«in» and how ah* hod&#13;
betrayed Mm eadttedfMan him. Ana*&#13;
,&lt;&#13;
U^fVhOt she&#13;
from him.'&#13;
'K"; '..&amp;" *'Not no! ad!" aha n u n i i i M&#13;
£:The: tone ^ - f t * ^ K W ^ V 7 ^ ,;&#13;
^ h ^ « l j a a r % l ? ^&#13;
A-';,&#13;
W&#13;
She rwt«4^cr frwd W d upon his&#13;
arm, and gaxed. up Into uls facie. Her&#13;
«yea were streaming with tears and&#13;
Jb-er bosonv heaved convulsively.&#13;
''JtallAo!—O, in this hour of helplessness&#13;
and.need {turn to thee with ail&#13;
my trust and faith. If the love of this&#13;
poor heart is worth the cherishing,&#13;
take, it, and keep it always. I have no&#13;
power—I have no choice. .The light&#13;
of thy face, beaming in lore upon me,&#13;
repeals to me that I am bound to thee&#13;
by chains. which I cannot break."&#13;
^ha rested her head upon his bosom;&#13;
and no, winding his stout arms about&#13;
her, pressed her to hia heart as a treasure&#13;
the most precious that earth could&#13;
bestow.&#13;
The son sank to its evening rest,&#13;
and the shades of twilight deepened&#13;
brer the' fiver and over the grove.&#13;
The stars came out, one by one, in&#13;
their celestial stations, and anon the&#13;
silver moon, lifting its face above the&#13;
hills of Hobah, cast its soft light into&#13;
the valeT 8till the lovers sat beneath&#13;
the orange tree; and there they might&#13;
have sat late into the night, had not&#13;
Osmir come to interrupt them.&#13;
What'did the guard want at that&#13;
hour and In that place. He sought his&#13;
master. "Julian arose and went to him&#13;
*nd they whispered hurriedly together;&#13;
and then Ulin was sure that she&#13;
heard the Arabs mentioned.&#13;
' "Ulin," said the chieftain, coming&#13;
back and faking her hand, "you might&#13;
gaudth_JOft_to_^e cave. I am called&#13;
in another direction.*'&#13;
"What, is it? Yon tremble. Ah,&#13;
Julian—there is danger."&#13;
"No, no, sweet love; harbor not that&#13;
fear. I go to ward off danger. 0, I&#13;
have something more than life to care&#13;
for now."&#13;
At this point Selim came running&#13;
up, all oat of breath; 'but~betOT8 ~he&#13;
could «$eak his master stopped him.&#13;
"I understand, good 3elim. Osmir&#13;
has told me—"&#13;
"But—my master—"&#13;
"1M a , moment. Wait till I come&#13;
back."&#13;
And thus speaking Julian led the&#13;
maiden to the cave.&#13;
"Excuse me now," he said, raising&#13;
her hand to his lips. "I will be back&#13;
shortly. You will not fear?"&#13;
«?&#13;
CHAPTER XX.&#13;
A Ktng's Story.&#13;
The first person whom Ulin met&#13;
after entering the cave was Ezabel,&#13;
who stood by a table upon which a&#13;
lamp was burning.&#13;
"My dear child, I was just coming&#13;
in search of you. We were anxious.&#13;
What—have you. been in tears? Ulin,&#13;
what is it? What has happened?"&#13;
The maiden, in memory of the great&#13;
event of the evening, forgot the cause&#13;
of fear that had been with her. It&#13;
was a secret she could not keep—a secret&#13;
she had no wish to keep; and&#13;
resting her head upon Bsabel's shoulder,&#13;
she told tae story of her love.&#13;
"Dearest Ulin," said the aged matron,&#13;
kissing the maiden upon the&#13;
brow, "he is worthy of the trust you&#13;
have reposed in him!"&#13;
At that moment Albla come in from&#13;
the grove wnere she had been in&#13;
search of her mistress; and very soon&#13;
see, too, had heard the story. She&#13;
gased into Ulln's face a moment, and&#13;
then, with a tear glistening in her eye,&#13;
she murmured:&#13;
"I shall be very happy now, for&#13;
henceforth I can serve and love you&#13;
both!"&#13;
As Albla spoke, and before any reply&#13;
could be made, Julian came hurrying&#13;
Into the cave. He was much excited&#13;
and Ben Hadad saw a fear upon his&#13;
lace such as had never been seen there&#13;
before; '&#13;
"My son," spoke the hermit, "what&#13;
means this? Your manner betokens&#13;
danger."&#13;
"And there is danger," cried the&#13;
young chieftain, moving instinctively&#13;
to Uhn's side. "I fear that I have been&#13;
much to blame. I should have been&#13;
warned by the words of Osmir and&#13;
Bellm. Those two Arabs have evidently&#13;
discovered onr.abjdjnt. place."&#13;
"Well—end what then?- asaed Ben&#13;
H a d a d , • • «'«•&gt;&gt; ^ &gt;'•--"&#13;
"I think tuey have brought a large&#13;
force against us."&#13;
"What—pf Arabs? Do they meanto&#13;
rob us?"&#13;
"Perhaps," suggested Abia, Mthey&#13;
hope t* recapture* what* Uhry; *ave&#13;
l o s t , - , • *• &gt; . / S 7&#13;
Ulin moved to Julian's side, and&#13;
leaned upon hit stoat arm. He kissed&#13;
her upon the brow and bade Her be&#13;
of good eomrags; aad then he said to&#13;
the others, in anawtr to what had been rvfti J . V J T&#13;
mt ft tfos Arabs are coming, as I&#13;
**&gt;prebend, there may be soother S9|»r&#13;
tioti to the nrbbleSJ Thosalwo rascals&#13;
who escaped, us could easily bave&#13;
followed us to tnls ptace. Wtf were&#13;
not looking for such a thing, and so&#13;
da not guard against, i t They knew&#13;
that the maiden who bad been&#13;
snatched from them was the daughter&#13;
of the king's prime minister; and may&#13;
they not have known that she was the&#13;
king's affianced? At all events, It is&#13;
not unreasonable to suppose that they&#13;
may have anticipated some gain of reward&#13;
by carrying intelligence to Aboul&#13;
Cassem. if they have done this, then&#13;
they must also have revealed the&#13;
whereabout of the Scourge of Damascus."&#13;
A low cry of pain from Ulin told&#13;
how directly the fear had touched her;&#13;
and again her lover sought to calm&#13;
her.&#13;
"We must leave this place," he said,&#13;
"and seek shelter in the wood. You&#13;
and I and Albia will go, and the guards&#13;
will join us outside. I know where&#13;
there is safety, so have no fear. Should&#13;
the rascals come they will hot harm&#13;
these old people; they will not dare to&#13;
do it"&#13;
Ulin had drawn a mantle about her&#13;
shoulders, and Julian had turned to&#13;
speak apart with Ben Hadad, when&#13;
Qsmlr came rushing into the cave,&#13;
with terror depicted most painfully&#13;
upon his ebon features.&#13;
"They are coming!" he cried. "They&#13;
have sprung upon us from a hidden&#13;
cover."&#13;
Who. are coming?"&#13;
"They are the king's soldiers, led&#13;
by the captain, Benonl!"&#13;
On the next instant the clash of&#13;
+arms^was iteard_ai^lhe_entrance.&#13;
"Back, back, sweet love," said Julian,&#13;
gently pushing the maiden towards&#13;
her chamber. "There may yet&#13;
be hope."&#13;
He grasped a sword as he spoke, and&#13;
leaped toward the entrance; but he&#13;
was too late. Already a score of armed&#13;
meu^weTe~n[sh"tgg7tn7s: number or&#13;
them bearing flaming torches in their&#13;
hands.&#13;
"Come, gcod Osmir," the chieftain&#13;
cried, bracing himself for the work.&#13;
"Capture for us is certain death. We&#13;
can do no better than to sell our liveshero."&#13;
One—two—three—four of the royal&#13;
soldiers fell beneath the lightning-like&#13;
strokes of Julian's trenchant blade;&#13;
and in the same time Osmir had slain&#13;
two; but it was net in the roll of fate&#13;
that two were to overcome the force&#13;
that came pouring into the cave. A&#13;
flaming torch was hurled upon the&#13;
chieftain, and while he staggered beneath&#13;
the blinding 6troke he was&#13;
drawn over backward* and his arms&#13;
Quickly pinioned. The next movement&#13;
was to , secure Ulin and Albla.&#13;
after which Ben Hadad and Ezabel&#13;
were taken.&#13;
"Will you lay violent hands upon&#13;
me T demanded the hermit.&#13;
•*1 am ordered to bring you all before&#13;
the king," replied Benonl; "all&#13;
whom I might find in this cave. I&#13;
mean to offer you no harm, so if you&#13;
have complaint to make, save it for&#13;
those who command me."&#13;
While the captain was searching&#13;
other apartments, to see if more prisoners&#13;
were to be found, Julian felt a&#13;
hand laid upon his shoulder, and on&#13;
looking up he beheld Judah.&#13;
"So, my noble chieftain, you are&#13;
fast once more. The guard played us&#13;
false. It seems, and I came near losing&#13;
my head in consequence; but my royal&#13;
master will pardon me when he sees&#13;
yon again."&#13;
CHAPTER XXI.&#13;
Innocence of Helen.&#13;
The king of Damascus had grown&#13;
very old and very sour, within those&#13;
last few days. Rage and chagrin had&#13;
so shaken his frame that he seemed&#13;
stricken with palsy; and his voice,&#13;
from its bowlings and moanings, had&#13;
t&gt;ecome hoarse and cracked. But he&#13;
-had promise of sweet revenge. His&#13;
soldiers were upon the track of the&#13;
fugitive*, and he believed they would&#13;
bring them back. 0, hew he would&#13;
gloat over the sufferings of his victims&#13;
when they came within his&#13;
power!&#13;
1 tell thee. Aboul Cassem," he said,&#13;
addressing his minister, "the fair, frail&#13;
Ulin must suffer for this. She is no&#13;
longer your child; I shall not regard&#13;
her as such.&#13;
Aboul bowed hit need, and answered&#13;
that he was content.&#13;
Omar could not help noticing that&#13;
his friend was in trouble, aad he took&#13;
the liberty to ask' what had gone&#13;
wrong.&#13;
"Alas!", cried Horam, "everything&#13;
goes wrong." And he told how hxJiad&#13;
by St. *»•*•*• oo.&#13;
Gentlemen: A short time ago I&#13;
then, he tm now he had o*cs caofar* severely wienched my foot and emkle.&#13;
O* the treachery of his slaves. ,&#13;
nave, seen most sorely afflicted." ;&#13;
Biit the worst "|» yet to *e *oU.*&#13;
jnirsned Horam, clenching his, hands,&#13;
axwi arisahing hi* t^eth- "The robber&#13;
aad ihe isdy UUm^ wsnt off. on the&#13;
same nigb^ and f nave every reason&#13;
to believe that she corrupted my&#13;
slaves t» set him free. In ff*M * »&#13;
sure she did- I think they w#i be all&#13;
within, my. power by, tomorrow. 0,&#13;
Omar, you have known much of , my&#13;
sorrow. I have,' grown old since we&#13;
las* met—very old. ft years I am. but&#13;
the passing of two harvests ahead of&#13;
you; but in trial and trouble I have&#13;
left you far behind. The last time you&#13;
were in Damascus the first great trial&#13;
of my life came upon me. You remember&#13;
it"&#13;
"Of what do you speak;?"&#13;
"Why—of my wife—of the first wife&#13;
I ever had—of her whom I made my&#13;
queen."&#13;
"Do you mean the Lady Helena?"&#13;
"To be sure I do. Mercy! have you&#13;
forgotten?"&#13;
"No," said Omar, shaking his head,&#13;
"I remember Helena very well. She&#13;
was the most bautlful woman I ever&#13;
saw."&#13;
"And as false as she was beautiful,"&#13;
added Horam.&#13;
"Is it possible? r did not think she&#13;
would come to that"&#13;
"How!" exclaimed the king of Damascus.&#13;
"Does your memory fail&#13;
you?"&#13;
"What mean you, Horam? My memory&#13;
is good."&#13;
"Then why do you wonder when I&#13;
speak of the faithlessness of my first&#13;
queen? Was it not yourself that gava&#13;
to me the proofs of her infidelity? Did&#13;
you not show to me that she had&#13;
fallen?"&#13;
."You speak in riddles," said' the&#13;
king of Aleppo. "I remember that we&#13;
once suspected the young queen of bestowing&#13;
her love upon a captain of&#13;
your guard—I think hfs name was Jaruai^&#13;
—&#13;
The injwy wa* •sry pnisdal, and toe&#13;
ceaseqeemt inconvenience * (beta*&#13;
obHgsd to keep to business), was very&#13;
trying. A friend recommended S t&#13;
Jacob's Oil, ajad % take great pleasure&#13;
• |sj informing you that QM appbeation&#13;
was sufficient to effect a complete care.&#13;
To a busy man, fie simple and effeetrrt&#13;
a remedy is invaluable, and I shall&#13;
lose s o opportimifcy of nifuniting the&#13;
use of fit Jacob's Oil. Yours truly,&#13;
Henry J. Doirs, Jtjtnager the Cyelas&#13;
Co*. London. EnslasML&#13;
St Jacob's Oil is sate and sure sad&#13;
never-bailing. Conquers pain.&#13;
"Yes," responded Horam. "Jabal was&#13;
the man, and I slew him. It r as your&#13;
evidence that convicted both him and&#13;
Helena."&#13;
"And was the queen guilty after&#13;
that?"&#13;
—^-Guilty-after tha^^-r reper.ted&#13;
ram, slowly and irresolutely. "What&#13;
mean you? Do you imagine that I&#13;
allowed her to live to commit more&#13;
crime?"&#13;
"In mercy's' name," cried Omar,&#13;
"what do you mean by this speech? Do&#13;
you remember Sanballad and Ben&#13;
Huram?"&#13;
"Yes," replied Horam. "They were&#13;
two of my chamberlains, who accompanied&#13;
you to Aleppo at the time of&#13;
which we have spoken."&#13;
"No," said Omar, "they did not quite&#13;
go to Aleppo. I sent them back before&#13;
I reached, my capital. They&#13;
brought to you my message?"&#13;
"I never saw them again after they&#13;
went away with you," returned Horam.&#13;
"Never—saw—them. Good spirits of&#13;
morcy! Are you in earnest, Horam?"&#13;
"Aye. If they started oh their return,&#13;
they must have been robbed and killed,&#13;
for I never saw them after they&#13;
left in your retinue."&#13;
The king of Aleppo clasped his&#13;
hands In agony.&#13;
"O, Horam! Horam!" he exclaimed,&#13;
"what a fearful mistake was that!&#13;
Bear with me—forgive me!"&#13;
"What is it. Omar?"&#13;
"Your beautiful queen was innocent!"&#13;
"Innocent!" gasped Horam, starting&#13;
to his feet and then sinking back&#13;
again.&#13;
"Yes, my brother," replied Omar, in&#13;
trembling tones, "she was as innocent&#13;
as in that natal hour when first she&#13;
rested upon her mother's bosom. At&#13;
Balbec we found a woman whom&#13;
some of my officers brought before me&#13;
supposing her to be the queen of Damascus.&#13;
She was very beautiful, and&#13;
so nearly did &amp;he resemble the queen,&#13;
Helens, thst even I was at first deceived.&#13;
Her name was Jasmin, and&#13;
she told me that she had just fled&#13;
from Damascus and was waiting for&#13;
her lover to join her. She said that&#13;
Jabal was her lover, and that he was&#13;
a captain of Horam's guard. The&#13;
truth flashed upon me in a moment I&#13;
conversed with her until I had gained&#13;
her whole story; and then I knew that&#13;
yonr queen was innocent .It waa all&#13;
proved to me, as clear as the sun at&#13;
noonday. At first I had a thought of&#13;
returning myself, and hearing to you&#13;
the joyful tidings-; but business urged&#13;
me on, and I sent Sanballad and Ben&#13;
Huram."&#13;
"And they did not come!" uttered&#13;
Horam, with hia hands working nervously&#13;
in his bosom. "They did not&#13;
come—and my queen died."&#13;
"God forgive me!" ejaculated Omar.&#13;
"I woukThave given my own life—&#13;
Horam!"&#13;
(To be eonBnnedJ&#13;
WKNCHEtTTOOT A W&#13;
in*" *i' lfrm^*Xm^'&#13;
• X , ; THINK IT OVER •1- .¾¾&#13;
not, well fern a ftw word*&#13;
witli .&lt;??•••.&#13;
%&#13;
A'-T&#13;
Country folk are firmly of the opinion&#13;
thst the tumble bug (geotrypea&#13;
stercorarins) is an excellent, barometer&#13;
and that it takes flight only "when&#13;
a season of fair weather Is coming.&#13;
M. Fabre, a French naturalist has investigated&#13;
the question thoroughly and&#13;
has come to the conclusion that this&#13;
insect is, in fact, more sensiuve than&#13;
the best barometers, and that it can&#13;
veritably be used to predict fine weather.&#13;
It is to changes of electric tenficn&#13;
that the insect is sensitive.&#13;
Death levels down,&#13;
up.&#13;
but love levels&#13;
{hen; ttepgiot wiflbe ja*t «»v&#13;
good; mnMii*t be better, »»*&#13;
guaJce better.&#13;
Adwke Wben you paint*&#13;
Deroe for revolts.&#13;
MjwiQtiag ftes*&#13;
»K;*.*&#13;
" , ' • • • %&#13;
v -V -r .&gt;(. •••- "if- ":"&gt;J&#13;
• ' %&#13;
jfittltef;&#13;
Ifype GooD^PAiarr BSVOE, CHICACMX&#13;
" ^ ' • • • ' M J&#13;
.4--¾&#13;
Hot Weather Health;&#13;
Purine; tUst siesneil term of July ami,&#13;
August was ssjiieii beearefnl tokeepeli&#13;
the orgasm cs? the system in free workin?&#13;
eooditum.&#13;
Baxter's Meidiahe Bitters taken bar&#13;
fore misie mWl ward off .diseases inetdent&#13;
to this Uyisut f«s*oe.&#13;
^mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmfm'mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmiim'immmmmmmm •&#13;
LIFE OF with;&#13;
Intat *ao*&#13;
' . ' • . -f' •'."•.'(* Y ' ^ " : - ' ' ^&#13;
..;/ -V'-.. rr&amp;V-W&amp;k&#13;
ZBI&#13;
d. Extra tmas&gt;&#13;
Bif wf twr quick vWfcv&#13;
IS et«M for "&#13;
Sera St.,&lt;&#13;
DROPSTS&#13;
Sozodont&#13;
' ' ' • ' • " ' * i&#13;
•\r/-; &gt;•''.''••*"%{&#13;
•'•/* rt&#13;
Good for Bad Teeth&#13;
Not Bad for Good Teeth.&#13;
,-x. * f •*' SSoossooddootsastt Too•t mh 'P o• wde•r&#13;
All store* or by mail for the price. Sam&#13;
*&#13;
IN CASH PRIZES! Wn i m niklfc &gt;iinwws jgJBssS *rtM&gt; to our soileitacs&#13;
besides giving tEem W% commission. Men.Women. Bojw aadPGMgJB^^tbrcei&gt;noo of • lifetime.&#13;
McKINLEY MEMORIAL PICTURES ON CREDIT.&#13;
Send your came and address, write us agreeing to»eU t h e n * a J n*m vm Urn ™o**JJ*»*J2ff&#13;
oommisslon, and we will Rend you the picture* free. aittttaanP»PMB«M. f « « 0 * M f i P . ^ 5 * * g »&#13;
$1,000; 2nd PRI2B. SSOO; Sri PRIZB,J250. ™JVg2*~Z*2Sm tt*. W M S S 1 l l ^&#13;
pictures. Write to-Sif. It «•} swan $1,000 te joa. aeilSFWI,S&gt; SJMsT CSJ, teat. a. CHICMO. ILL.&#13;
Unlqo* Use of Baroque Pearl.&#13;
One of the most unique ways in&#13;
which the baroque pearl has been used&#13;
li in a ctick pin. The design is the&#13;
head of a Moor, a black face with,&#13;
above It, the big bulging white cat&#13;
which is found by the pearl. It is&#13;
charming.&#13;
IfaOTtt.**&#13;
aom-av tl^filsMpita's Eft Wat*&#13;
Ladle* Can Wear&#13;
One size s m a l l e r after using1 Allen's&#13;
Foot-Ease, a powder. I t ' m a k e s tight&#13;
or n e w s h o e s easy* Cures s w o l l e n , h o t ^ ahoeahw&#13;
s w e a t i n g , a c h i n g 4s«t, i n g r o w i n g natfci.&#13;
corns and b u n i o n s . A l l d r u g g i s t s and&#13;
s h o e stores. 25c. Trial p a c k a g e F R E E&#13;
by mail. A d d r e s s A l l e n S. Olmsted,&#13;
L e Roy, N . Y.&#13;
T h e b a c h e l o r w i l l find a h o l e i n h i s&#13;
s t o c k i n g Christmas m o r n i n g a s usual.&#13;
A g e n t s and solicitors s h o u l d n o t fall&#13;
t o read adv. o f H o u s e h o l d Guest Co., i n&#13;
t h i s paper. T h e i r offer i s very liberal.&#13;
I t t a k e s a g r e a t deal of s t r e n g t h&#13;
s o m e t i m e s t o hold one's t o n g u e .&#13;
$ 3 OO P E R D A Y A N D E X P E N S E S&#13;
To mun witb rig to mtroduos our stock and&#13;
poultry foods. Advancement when ability is&#13;
shown. Address, with stamp, for part culars.&#13;
Border Food Company, 9 Monon Block.,&#13;
Chicago, 111.&#13;
All tne world's a stage—and most of the occupants&#13;
are supers who play, thinking parts.&#13;
The&#13;
and S&amp;SO&#13;
wear b a s e&#13;
aCeatavy*&#13;
W . T+ Donelse S&amp;OQ&gt;&#13;
far atria, comfort amd&#13;
a n o s i e r makes sold&#13;
; ! '&#13;
?' *'j&#13;
*m&#13;
other sajfJO&#13;
r e p u t a w m S a r&#13;
ahoea znsa* few&#13;
aaa a l&#13;
JOO a a d&#13;
The&#13;
high&#13;
• a r o a f c r his&#13;
S3.00 s a d&#13;
S3.00 and&#13;
manufaeta #aew est Edffl Urn&#13;
' mt mv/ trie*.&#13;
'T&gt;1&#13;
Brooklyn, N. T.. S e p t 6 t h . ~ a A R P I E U &gt;&#13;
HEADACHE POWDERS H A V E GAINED&#13;
T H E RIGHT OP WAY! They are the&#13;
kind people want—simple, harmless and&#13;
ALWAYS effective. The Garfield Tea Co.&#13;
of this city will bend sample powders upon&#13;
request.&#13;
If you really mean well, as an evidence&#13;
faith ycu should most assuredly do well&#13;
A fellow who wears classes doesn't always&#13;
make a spectacle of himself.&#13;
RTJ88 BLVACBIXO BLCB&#13;
should be ia every home. Aide your crooer for&#13;
it aad take no substitute. 10« a package,&#13;
Murmur at nothing; if our ills be reparable,&#13;
it is foolish; if remedyless, it Is ia vain.&#13;
BEMTCT. Eooklsoo, tae great mTtgorator, sets&#13;
at oaea. Seat for Stf pastes* peM.&#13;
Saokl Co., i.oi SaMtll at., Detroit, stick.&#13;
Dontmarrya girl who isn't induatrieua&#13;
you have no oiher measa of support.&#13;
r«r eMMrea taetaiat. »eftea» tk» aa&#13;
•U«7«pMftiM .&#13;
Obeauritj on earth will sot .keep anybody&#13;
from beeommg f aSMua m heaves.&#13;
I am sure Pise** Care for OoasumpV on saved&#13;
my Wfa three y e a n aao,—Mrs. Taos. Rossnta,&#13;
Maple Street. Norwich, N. YM Ft*. It, 190m&#13;
DoettaiakbecauaaaJodgaU ssaaU that he&#13;
l e n t s a«js&gt;impoaiat&#13;
Xtre. Wtatalow*a SooihutB* 8 m »&#13;
Sftasatte.&#13;
• 1 » ' « ^ jJL.&#13;
— -; ••*'',&#13;
^ W - &gt; JL.&#13;
&amp; "\,\r.'. •&#13;
&amp;1 ' V''.'.',.&#13;
«1&#13;
• * * *&#13;
• * • &lt; " ¥ WPP&#13;
fr.'«&amp;4.?'&#13;
S&#13;
11¾&#13;
^i'r' \&#13;
W&gt; '&#13;
S^v&#13;
SU»A';.. • ,&#13;
**£•&#13;
m&#13;
W:^&#13;
Wfii&#13;
f*&gt;&#13;
•A:'--'-&#13;
%&#13;
THUM«EI4f, OCT. 10; iO&amp;lv&#13;
,,A, Mecosta county ^arjner tried&#13;
aowW a barrel of air slaclted&#13;
$m$oaMmmof;wheat, appljM.&#13;
ing it jast as the wheat came oat&#13;
of the ground, repeated the dose&#13;
a week later, and applied another&#13;
barrel etill a week later. The result&#13;
waa he had a good crop of&#13;
wheat while that of his neighbor&#13;
was badly damaged by the Hessian&#13;
fly. The experiment is inexpensive&#13;
and'the lime a good fertilizer,&#13;
and would be good no&#13;
doubt for the ground.&#13;
Vast's Your Face Worth!&#13;
. Sometimes a fortune, but never, if&#13;
you have a sallow complection a jauu*&#13;
dlued look, moth patches and blotches&#13;
on the skin,all signs of Uver Trouble.&#13;
But Dr. King's New Life Pills give&#13;
Clear Skin, Rosy Cheeks, Rich Complrxion.&#13;
Only 25c at P. A. Siller's&#13;
d» og store. *&#13;
' I t has always been supposed&#13;
that the AUport heirs retained a&#13;
one-quarter interest in the famous&#13;
Minnie Healey mine in Montana,&#13;
but that their interest was&#13;
sold on contract two yeass ago.&#13;
The mine has been in veiy serious&#13;
litigation siuce that time and i t&#13;
was only this week that the heirs&#13;
received $25,000 purchase price.&#13;
This amount will hardly pay for&#13;
the expense that they have been&#13;
to in the litigation^afte? the attorneyB&#13;
receive their share. The&#13;
mine is a first class one—in fact&#13;
one of the best in Montana. They&#13;
are taking out 16,000 a day.&#13;
: A Fiendish Attach: —-&#13;
An attack was lately made on C. F&#13;
Collier of Cherokee, Iowa, that nearly&#13;
proved fatal. It came through his&#13;
kidneys. His back got so lame he&#13;
could not stoop without great pain&#13;
nor srt in chair except proped by cushions.&#13;
No remedy helped him until he&#13;
tried Electric Bitters which effected&#13;
such a wonderful change that he&#13;
writes he feels like a n«w man. This&#13;
umaelous medicine cures backache&#13;
and kidney trouble, purifies the blood&#13;
and builds up your health. Only 50c&#13;
at F. A. Sigler's drug *tore.&#13;
A German spoke as follows at a&#13;
temperance meeting; ' 1 s h a l l tell,&#13;
yon how-it vas. I put my band&#13;
on my head; there vas one big&#13;
pain. Then I pot my hand o n&#13;
my body;and there was another.&#13;
There vas very much pains in all&#13;
my body. Then I put my hand&#13;
in my pocket; and there vas nothing.&#13;
Now there is no more pain&#13;
in my head* The pains in my&#13;
body are all gone away. I put&#13;
mine hands in my pockets and&#13;
there ish twenty toilers. S o 1&#13;
sty mit de temperance.".&#13;
The following order has been&#13;
issued by the treasury department&#13;
"There shall not be admitted on&#13;
board vessels of the revenueoutter&#13;
service any distilled spirits, except&#13;
upon the order of the commanding&#13;
officer, aud then for medical&#13;
purposes only; and all such so ordered&#13;
shall be placed in charge of&#13;
the medical officer attached, or. if&#13;
there be no medical officer, it will&#13;
be placed in charge of an officer&#13;
to be selected by the commanding&#13;
officer, who shall be responsible to&#13;
him for its use aud safekeeping."&#13;
Professor W. S. Hall, of the&#13;
Northwestern university medical&#13;
schocl of Chicago, in an address&#13;
before the Chicago academy of&#13;
sciences on foods and foodstuffs,&#13;
gave a very striking series of reasons&#13;
f o m o t regarding alcohol -a»&#13;
a true food, as Prof. Al water tried&#13;
to argue. As to alcohol, Prof.&#13;
Hull says: "More and *more required&#13;
to produce a given effect&#13;
on a person. Its habitual use is&#13;
Will He Chancre the Line?&#13;
There is a report comiurf from&#13;
Dexter that the latest plan of the&#13;
Boland people is to leave Ann Arbor&#13;
in the cold aud run the electric&#13;
railroad from Dexter via&#13;
Whit more Lake to Salem aud&#13;
Plymouth. This, it i9 claimed,&#13;
would greatly shorten the distance&#13;
between Jackson and Detroit. A&#13;
prominet citizen of Dexter was in&#13;
the city yesterday. When asked&#13;
about this report he said that it&#13;
was true there would be a lot o r&#13;
kicking iu Dexter. The people&#13;
there wanted to come to Ann Arbor.&#13;
They did not care about&#13;
reaching Chelsea or Wbitmore&#13;
lake. He also said there was&#13;
much objection made by Dexter&#13;
citizens to the proposed grading&#13;
of main street by Boland. I t&#13;
would leave the school house very&#13;
much elevated and fill up considerable&#13;
in front of some fine residences.&#13;
He says if the Boland&#13;
people insist on doning the grading&#13;
the people will get out an injuuctiou*—&#13;
A. A. Argus.&#13;
Tot causes night Alarm.&#13;
"One night ray brother's baly was&#13;
taken with Croup." writes Mrs. J. C.&#13;
Snider, of Cvttenden, Ky., "it seemed&#13;
it would strangle before we could get&#13;
a doctor, so we gave quick relief and&#13;
permantly cured it. We alway* keep&#13;
it in th* uou*« to protect «"ir children&#13;
trow Croup and Wiioopitiy Cough, it&#13;
eared »ut of a ithr««ni»' mnduai trouble&#13;
?U*l n*M*t«W*«»&lt;ipni^&lt;**«*«lu relieve&#13;
iatajlifct* Uu- Cnuub*, Cold*, Throat&#13;
and Lo&lt;Hf.T.«Vut,|»i. ,60e,ai&gt;d $1.00.&#13;
Trial%&amp;!eV I V ^ ' t r ' T : ^ . glgler »&#13;
drugatoWv&#13;
likely to induce an uncontrollable&#13;
desire for more in ever-iincreasing&#13;
amounts. After its habitual use&#13;
sudden stoppage may derange the&#13;
central nervous system. I B oxidized&#13;
rapidly in the body. I s not&#13;
stored in the body. Is a product&#13;
of decomposition of food material&#13;
with living protoplasms and in&#13;
the absence of or scarcity of oxygen.&#13;
I s a poisonous secretion,&#13;
which may be beneficial in certain&#13;
phases of disease, but is never&#13;
beneficial to the healthy body.&#13;
Phyaidans advise healthy persons&#13;
to avoid it altogether. Everyone&#13;
advises people to avoid taking alcohol&#13;
into the empty stomach.&#13;
The young developing individual&#13;
is always advised to abstain from&#13;
alcohol. The use of alcohol, as&#13;
with narcotics in general, i s followed&#13;
by a reaction. The use of&#13;
alcohol is followed by a decrease&#13;
in the activity of the muscles and&#13;
brain cells. As to food, on the&#13;
contrary: The same quanity always&#13;
produces the same effect.&#13;
Its habitual use does not induce a&#13;
desire for more in ever-increasing&#13;
amounts. Sudden abstainene&#13;
from food never deranges the central&#13;
nervous system. All foods&#13;
are oxidized slowly. All foods&#13;
are stored in the body. All foods&#13;
are products of constructive activity&#13;
of protoplasms in the presence&#13;
of abundant oxygen. A l l&#13;
foods are wholesome aud benefical&#13;
to the healthy body; and they&#13;
may injure the body in certain&#13;
phases of disease. Physicians&#13;
never advise healthy persons to&#13;
avoid food altogether. People are&#13;
invariably advised to take*food into&#13;
the empty stomach. T h e&#13;
young are advised to take bountifully&#13;
of food. The use of food is&#13;
not followed by reaction. T h e&#13;
use of food is followed by an increase&#13;
iu the activity of the muscle&#13;
and brain cells."&#13;
A lot of potatoes are being&#13;
brought into &lt;3adillae by fanners.&#13;
%$ p r ^ * ^ ^&#13;
withaalow aala k It. k'thongh't £ far mors are inclined to dig&#13;
ir potatoes a,little' early aathey&#13;
fear the phc* will fall The potatoes&#13;
would be&gt;aH the better lor&#13;
iemaimng in the ground a few&#13;
weeks longer. The prospect for&#13;
future prices is much canvassed&#13;
at present among buyers and/ far*&#13;
mere. '^Potatoes" the buyer, said,&#13;
"certain to go down to 90 and 25&#13;
cents per bushel before many&#13;
weeks, and the tendency will be&#13;
downward from now until the&#13;
close of the buying season." This&#13;
opinion, whatever value i t may&#13;
have, is based upon reports t h e&#13;
buyer claimed to have received&#13;
relative to the potatoe yield i n&#13;
western and eastern states. One&#13;
Michigan buyer who recently&#13;
made a trip through many of the&#13;
countys of Michigan, estimates&#13;
the potatoe yield in this state at&#13;
23,875,000 bushels. Wexford&#13;
county, according to his estimate,&#13;
will market 230,000 bushels, Manistee&#13;
county 170,000 bushels and&#13;
Grand Traverse county a half million&#13;
bushels. Of course, the Cadillac&#13;
buyer's opinion may be biased,&#13;
and yet the farmer who has&#13;
potatoes to sell will be justified in&#13;
making a thorough investigation&#13;
relative to market and price prospects.&#13;
TO 4'me N CoM In One l &gt; * j&#13;
Take LMXHUV* tfiuiiio Quinine Tab*&#13;
l«U. All druggnt* refund the money&#13;
it it faila to cure. £. W, Urove's .signature&#13;
is on each bos. 25c.&#13;
party.&#13;
*Ka. tfcaaka." aatd tneakd laced man rt»afirWe3*» _ ^ji l couldn't .afford It so I aware&#13;
o * I Iambic o r ^ e r t ^ a i V H t t d in&#13;
the weal. I was doing well, and I bad&#13;
a bansr»e^octt£ that I wat proud o4V&#13;
Seeing a euance t a j M t i r m y fwney, \r&#13;
warm one, ana, Deconung twisty,&#13;
stopped to take a glass of something&#13;
caal I didn't waste-mote than Ave:&#13;
mmutea^JUid wai'soohla line at the&#13;
payiLg teller's' window. The' party&#13;
ahead c* me v M ^ o M U M M « £ ? ! ,&#13;
was shoring m r i w m ' w o u g h wet*&#13;
window whan the £sj*r putod it down&#13;
and announced that tbe^bauk has sua*&#13;
pended payment I believe that the&#13;
receiver declared a* dividend* year or&#13;
sflater, but the am«urfr«was s*small&#13;
that I never bothered to collect mine.&#13;
It was a pretty expensive drink -tor&#13;
me. n&#13;
"Do I understand, sab," said a Kentncklan&#13;
who was present, 'that you&#13;
took that drink alone?"&#13;
••Certainly."&#13;
"It was the judgment of heaven,&#13;
•ah," remarked the Kentuckian solemnly.—&#13;
Detroit Free Press.&#13;
Stop tbe Congtt a n d w o r k s off tbe&#13;
Cold.&#13;
Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets cure&#13;
a cold in one day. NcT^ure, rio pay,&#13;
Price 25 cents.&#13;
One Hundred a Good Many.&#13;
The manufacturer and the doctor&#13;
wore having a Qqiet-lttfle^aEoXe^Aj&#13;
middle aged man sauntered in, spoke'&#13;
Aa Baa?lUa Coaatry BaaJc&#13;
Rural customers attach great Importance&#13;
to the hank'8 outward appearance.&#13;
A thrifty tradesman, having&#13;
opened a deposit account with a bank&#13;
distant some 30-miles from his home,&#13;
the cashier had the curiosity to ask&#13;
why he traveled so far when there was&#13;
a branch of the same bank almost at&#13;
his door. The depositor smiled knowingly&#13;
and replied, "I lodged opposite&#13;
here all the time while this bank was&#13;
being built, so I know it's safe." Balance&#13;
sheets to the rustic are a meaningless&#13;
and arbitrary arrangement of&#13;
figures. Iron bars he understands.&#13;
In a northern city there is a bank&#13;
widely known for the artistic merit of&#13;
Its doors. Designed by an eminent&#13;
sculptor, they are executed in relief&#13;
in copper or bronze and appear to represent&#13;
tableaux from ".SSsop's Fables"&#13;
and Greek history. About a week after&#13;
they were unveiled an old man who&#13;
had been a depositor for many years&#13;
thdrew his balance and took it to a&#13;
rival bank almost opposite. Questioned&#13;
as to his reason for changing, he&#13;
replied: "I don't hold wi' them doors of&#13;
theirs. Punched tin ain't businesslike,&#13;
and it ain't safe."—Longman's.&#13;
genially to both gentlemen and passed&#13;
on.&#13;
"Doc, who was that?'&#13;
"Why, that was James Brown of—&#13;
"Do you know," the manufacturer&#13;
said by way of reply, "I meet men,&#13;
scores of them, Just like that every day&#13;
whose names I can't recall?"&#13;
With just a shade of superior ability&#13;
the doctor replied, "Well now, among&#13;
all the men and women I know I call&#13;
most all by name as I greet them.&#13;
Itell you it's a trick of the profession."&#13;
"That may be, doc—but I doubt If&#13;
you can write down in fifteen minutes&#13;
100 names of people you know personally."&#13;
The doctor jumped to his feet and&#13;
said, scornfully, "Jingoes! I can."&#13;
"All right. I'll bet a box of cigars on&#13;
it."&#13;
The doctor, pencil in hand, was soon&#13;
hard at work. "Time!" The manufacturer's&#13;
watch snapped shut, and as he&#13;
looked over the doctor's shoulder he&#13;
counted 63.&#13;
They finished their cigars in silencebut&#13;
the next morning the manufacturers&#13;
friends chuckled audibly over the&#13;
doctor's professional knowledge of applied&#13;
psychology.—Milwaukee SentineL&#13;
A Dlekeaa Letter.&#13;
Fenn is the possessor&#13;
of a sheet of old fashioned blue&#13;
wire woven note paper, which had its&#13;
habitation for years upon the bill file&#13;
of tbe tradesman to whom it was sent.&#13;
It tells its own tale:&#13;
"Mr. Charles Dickens is much obliged&#13;
to Mr. Claridge for the offer of Lord&#13;
Byron's flute. But, as Mr. Dickens&#13;
cannot play that Instrument himself&#13;
and has nobody in his house who can,&#13;
he begs to decline the purchase, with&#13;
thanks. Devonshire Terrace, twentieth&#13;
June, 1848."&#13;
There is no visible mark of a smile&#13;
upon the paper, says Mr. Fenn, but&#13;
there seems to be one playing among&#13;
the words, and one cannot help thinking&#13;
that when Dickens wrote that he&#13;
could not play the flute he must have&#13;
recalled a certain flute serenade played&#13;
at "Mrs. Todgers' Commercial Boarding&#13;
House," written by him in, 1844.—&#13;
New York Tribune.&#13;
The Sin* of Nutrition.&#13;
To overload the stomach with food is&#13;
not less unhealthy than to indulge It&#13;
with beverages. The more nutritious&#13;
the food the more hazardous are the&#13;
consequences when excess is habitual.&#13;
Of all the sins of nutrition, the Immoderate&#13;
use of meat is certainly tbe most&#13;
grievous. It gives to the body in a&#13;
form that is favorable for easy assimilation&#13;
the albumen that is absolutely&#13;
necessary to life, and hence tbe&#13;
earliest effect of its excessive use must&#13;
be to surcharge the body with nutrients.&#13;
The chief point here Is the critical&#13;
examination of what is called hunger.&#13;
Many persons believe that any and every&#13;
sensation of hunger must be satisfled&#13;
immediately, but this Is a great&#13;
mistake. An equally great If not&#13;
worse mistake is the opinion that one&#13;
must eat until a sense of satiety arises.&#13;
Excessive nutrition injures the mental&#13;
capabilities also. Of the particular consequences&#13;
of excessive nutrition, such&#13;
as hypochondria* (the very name of&#13;
which refers the reader to the region of&#13;
the abdomen) and -the gout. It is hardly&#13;
necessary to speak.—Blatter Fur&#13;
yolksgesundbeltspnege.&#13;
Stepped Into Lire Coals.&#13;
"When a child I burned my loot&#13;
rriffhtfnlly." writwj W. B. Bads, of&#13;
.lon*8vit|n. VH.. •* which canned horr-&#13;
M* intf *.&gt;r«* for SO y*ar*. but Hack*&#13;
Isn't Arnica Salve wholly cured me&#13;
alter "very'Ding else failed. Infallible&#13;
for Barns, 8cald&lt;s Cuts, 8ore#, Bruise*&#13;
And Piles. Sold by F. A. Siffler 25c.&#13;
P e r f u m e s W e r e Popalar.&#13;
The rage for perfumes reached Its&#13;
height during the reign of Louis XV.&#13;
Throughout the continent his court was&#13;
known as the "scented court." It was&#13;
then the custom when giving a large&#13;
entertainment for the hostess to Inform&#13;
her guests what particular odor she&#13;
would use for perfuming her rooms,&#13;
and each guest would use that odor in&#13;
making her toilet. At court a different&#13;
perfume was used for each day of the&#13;
week. Much more attention was paid&#13;
to the use of the perfume than to soap&#13;
and water, and cleanliness was not&#13;
numbered among the virtues of that&#13;
age.&#13;
How P e a r l s Are Sorted.&#13;
The average diver ihinks it a fair&#13;
day's work to secure 100 pearl oysters&#13;
in 50 feet of water. After being taken&#13;
ashore the inollusks are allowed to die-,&#13;
when their shells open of their own accord.&#13;
The pearls are classified by passing&#13;
them through -a series of sieves,&#13;
which assort them into different sizes.&#13;
Those which are very small or defective&#13;
are sold to make a preparation&#13;
for sore eyes and nervous complaints&#13;
that Is very popular in tbe east—Pearson's.&#13;
Superstition* About Saeeilac&#13;
Xenopbon, Promotheus, Themistocles&#13;
and Cicero regarded a sneeze as a favorable&#13;
omen. Among the Hindoos and&#13;
Persians, however, sneezing aud yawntog&#13;
were ascribed to demoniacal possession.&#13;
The Hindoo snaps his tbnmb&#13;
and finger and repeats the name ot-one&#13;
of his gods. The Moslems .believe that&#13;
the devil may leap Into a gaping mouth,&#13;
and hence when he yawns he draws&#13;
the back of his band over his month&#13;
and mutters this prayer, "I seek refuge&#13;
With Allah from satan, the accursed."&#13;
Many a man has found, after mixing&#13;
politics with his business, that he has&#13;
no business to mix with big pctftftcsv--&#13;
ChicagoNews.&#13;
TWsetgaatuetooaererybox* Vttogeaajas&#13;
Laxative BrawHjuifliie nut*&#13;
the remedy that wi— i&#13;
Subscribe for Dispatch.&#13;
TKA POSTAL a MO***,&#13;
• l i r . paoftHtveaa. Griswold -4.&#13;
House nodsrm,&#13;
np-to-dst*&#13;
HotikKaisi&#13;
tetseheaftei DETROIT. * • « *&#13;
Rates, $2, ixso, $3 per Day.&#13;
« • * . Siuui* Rtvc* 4 Sen&#13;
I A FREE PATTERN&#13;
(yotur owa selection) to every sab*&#13;
•crib«r. Only 50 easts a year.&#13;
MS CALLS&#13;
:r:\ff:t&#13;
A LADIES' MAGAZINE.&#13;
A Mia; beautiful colored pittas; lain*&#13;
f Mfiioaa; 4r«Mm«klng economies ; faacy&#13;
work) hovMaold hints; aciion, ate. Su»&#13;
"»• to-day, of, Mad w. for latest eoay.&#13;
ky aetata wanted. Sand for terau.&#13;
Stylish, Reliable, Simple, Up-todate,&#13;
Economical and Absolutely&#13;
Perfect-rittiug Paper Patterns.&#13;
MS CALL&#13;
* * BAZAR* L PATTERNS' Al SMtlaM B AMettaataa 1a nrti SPtwertafear fUtlarint .•&#13;
Oa|* 10 end 15 cants each aoae Signer.&#13;
Ask for these. Sold in.acertr every dty&#13;
and town, or ay nuUl frees&#13;
THE MoCALL CO..&#13;
riM15-inWa«t31etet,&#13;
Railroad Guide.&#13;
%ase»®&#13;
&gt; A.YO *TEAM*HIP U/VaTSV -J&#13;
Popular ronte tor Ann Arbor, Toledo&#13;
and point* East, South, and for&#13;
Howell, Owosso, Aluaa, Mt Pleasant&#13;
Cadillac, Manistee, Traverse City and&#13;
points in Northwestern ^ichtgsja. *&#13;
" • H . ttsVHBTT,&#13;
G. P . A. Toledo&#13;
s&#13;
Ul&#13;
aa-aUroaa, Tatx, 1, 1 9 0 1 .&#13;
Trains leave Sooth Lyon as follows:&#13;
For Detroit and Eett,&#13;
10:36 a. »., 3:04 p. m., 8:58 p. m.&#13;
For" Grand Rapids, North sod tyeaL&#13;
d:45 a. m., 8K» p. m. 6:20 p. a .&#13;
For Saginaw and Bav CJty,&#13;
10:8« a. m„ 8:04 p. m.', 8:68 p. a*&#13;
For Toledo and South, 10:86 a.m.&#13;
FaU»**4Y, H.*.M01TLU&amp;*i ••' •&#13;
Ageo^Seath LfS*. «*, p. A., n*trolu&#13;
Nrasa m i s lUtTwraT^sliewa-&#13;
•4 a. as.lJaeaaoa, * &gt;woit, aaa v:ie a. aa—Zl&#13;
;&lt;5 y, as. Utenoefttie.uttar.s , ¾ ^ . ¾ f&gt;&#13;
. maUaedexft. •-• *&#13;
ii«p.m$^\S$&amp; 7 » a.i&#13;
Tbetusa.m.aaat^^am.t^i^^^ ^ , ^&#13;
* *&#13;
W.J.RaeajA&#13;
- iiirnisii' .SlSfill isi'Tii m&#13;
,4#- •-.&gt;*''&#13;
.•*•-;&#13;
r^»'r^ ^?-&#13;
3 * ffttrouf PC HoJbancry rrom every&#13;
Jf the wrtfc^ ^tidMUe W *&#13;
an* New # n w peojrte f tB.visit&#13;
n t ™ ^ * ^ AA^ Ottt. i l jblantle Cttv&#13;
A^aaka! flay, o n , ^ J ^ ^ M H H ^ I x v m ^ a p there all by tbemselrea with.&#13;
=5&#13;
•yf[&#13;
l i Oh;the oppoM* ntte &lt;ir ^ T r t ^ * ' # # tlie mfcr***'1*,' d&lt;&gt; herebe&#13;
luntmal Bridgele*the .Wooded I s l a u d U - , ^ - . . ^ - . 1 ^ «-» - , « « . „ „ - v»&#13;
W h e r e one roams amid old W t f o H H ' ^ f f i ^ S ^ ^ T ^ , ™ * J ?&#13;
B W s ^ _ . gardener and hie corpt of assistant*.&#13;
•aldn»«bt mi"W&amp;***4 w e * m I Bot oftCQOJ^ tl^'t U w t the wue, TJjf&#13;
fiT«ry qfcy fi»m Oct 1 *othe«l«t « « 1 studied tareteetneae of the gardening"&#13;
out any aa«4stanceiron the l a n d a c w j e a w h * w t a r o a t trf&gt;i**s*r: • W* *l»«&#13;
TEKFLE &amp; CADWELL.&#13;
. A s - A y f l * P i e B o a .&#13;
An "apple pie bed" Is oue In which&#13;
tl*e sheet* are BO folded that a person&#13;
cannot get his legs down, the foot u n d&#13;
ef *tn* sheet being brought op to tfto&#13;
bead end of the bed. This "head to&#13;
foot" arrangement being implied, the\&#13;
expression may have spuing from a'&#13;
ooiffoption of :car&gt;a-plGd\ or cap-a-pie, |&#13;
ituUtla frequently written.&#13;
The Jnuet s u s p e n s i v e H a t .&#13;
The most expensive hat in the world&#13;
is undoubtedly the one which was presented&#13;
to General Grant while he was&#13;
in Mexico in 1SS2. It cost ¢1,500 and Is&#13;
now to be seen In the National museum&#13;
at Washington and Is the finest specimen&#13;
of a Mexican sombrero ever made.&#13;
S 0 U D r e a m i n g .&#13;
"I feel now quite satisfied that there&#13;
Court liOfrie.&#13;
V tawyer-JMy client your honor, has&#13;
confessed that V committed the burglary.&#13;
You will admit this an eloquent&#13;
.proof of my client's love of truth and&#13;
of his upright conscience, and* your&#13;
(honor, a, man with such delicate cjbn-&#13;
:science should not be accused of hayms&#13;
broken Into a house to steal. Never!—&#13;
New York Times. . •&#13;
! li no life so happy as a married one."&#13;
"And how long have yon been mar-&#13;
'ledr&#13;
"Since last.Wednesday."&#13;
A D a m p e n e r .&#13;
'"Tell me." «he sighed—"tell me, beauteous-&#13;
aiaMen* what is In your heart"&#13;
-Miss Henrietta Bean of Boston, gave&#13;
him a lop* of ley disdain and then&#13;
vouchsafed the monosyllabic reply:&#13;
J*!WjpOlir—Baltimore American;&#13;
A Card.&#13;
I, the anderaifrried, do hereliy «*.'!•»•«&#13;
*0;jrehinri th« money on a 50 CHP\J hut&#13;
tie o* Green's Warranted. 8ym|&gt; i.f&#13;
Tar if it fables ro COTH your conirti "i*&#13;
.;6ld. I a'so iruai'Hiittte a 25-ceriti M -&#13;
Meto prove aausfnetory or mon^y refunded,&#13;
, ,2?*&#13;
Will B. Dsrrow.&#13;
Question Answered.&#13;
Y*s, Auuust Flower still has the&#13;
largest Rale of any medicine in the&#13;
otvilizad world. Your mothers' and&#13;
grandmothers' never thought of usinp&#13;
aliv jibingeii^far-indigestion or ffiliou*&#13;
ness. Doctors were scarce, and&#13;
th«*y seldom beard of Appendicitis,&#13;
Nfryons Pro-tration or heart failure,&#13;
etc. They used August Flower lo&#13;
&lt;-le«n out »h« system and ftop fermentation&#13;
of unditeftstd »ood, regulate the&#13;
action of UIH liver, stiinnlate~ttre~&#13;
vous and organic action of the system,&#13;
ai*d that is ull tb^y took .when fueling&#13;
dull and bad with headaches and other&#13;
ai.'h**s. You only need a few doses&#13;
of Gratis. Auunst. KIOWHV, in form, to&#13;
mtikM you s»»tijihed there is nothing&#13;
sH.ion^ Hi« matter• with you. (let&#13;
tiiv**n's Prize Almanac. Sold Uy F.&#13;
A. Siu'l»*r, Pi'ic^nrvpostponement&#13;
of some of&#13;
the special days has crowded&#13;
many great events into&#13;
the month of October. Toronto&#13;
day opened the month&#13;
&lt;vith many thousand visitors from C?.nuda&#13;
on the 3d. Pennsylvania day. on&#13;
&gt;ct 4. with Governor William A. Stone,&#13;
.lis stalt and&gt; several regiments of tlie&#13;
t lational Ritard, made a splendid show-&#13;
Sg. New York day comes Oct. 0. folnwlng&#13;
Brooklyn day. These two days&#13;
•vill be the ocension for reunions • of&#13;
by sixteen out 07 town organizations&#13;
in addition to the three located in Buffalo.&#13;
Over 3,000 men will be in line,&#13;
composing one of the largest and most&#13;
Imposing porades which has ever taken&#13;
place in times of peace. All branches&#13;
of service will be represented—infantry,&#13;
cavalry, artillery, naval and signal.&#13;
An elaborate programme has been arranged&#13;
for the Temple of Music and a&#13;
reception in the New York State building&#13;
with magnificent fireworks in the&#13;
evening.&#13;
Illinois day. on Oct 7, to to be one&#13;
people west and east as New Yorkers ] 0f the great days of the Exposition.&#13;
are found all over the Union. 4 TMrCitizens* Committee of Brooklyn&#13;
lias been hard at work for several&#13;
;adlalhs" preparinjr for Oct, S, and ihe&#13;
programme which has been arranged&#13;
promises a rare treat for those who aire&#13;
tortunate enough to gain admission to&#13;
the Temple of Music during the time&#13;
,t&gt;f its presentation. The special oration&#13;
»f the day will be.' delivered by the&#13;
Hon. Bt* Clair SlcKelway, editor of the&#13;
Brooklyn Eagle. The Hon. Ludwlg&#13;
.Tlaaen will preside at the fatherlug*&#13;
nod other addressee will be delivered&#13;
Uf Mayor Dlehl of Buffalo, WUliam C.&#13;
3ryan$, 1ch*Jrman of the Brooklyn Cltiseat*&#13;
Committee, and Hen. W. L Buchanan,&#13;
director general Q( .the. Etpoelrton.&#13;
The music Incidental to th* occa- !&#13;
.loii^ffi f^'furnitW V tnTlniM-^&#13;
Uand 9f Mew York city. Elaborate ¢ ^ ^&#13;
worka hate bee« planned for the even-&#13;
On Mew fork day Governor Odell I&#13;
wm be sa^Misi toth^Tam^ of Mueic'&#13;
While the death of President McKlnley&#13;
made it necessary to postpone the day&#13;
from Sept. 10, Governor Yates and the&#13;
State commission have determined that&#13;
the day shall be an event of great importance&#13;
at the Exposition. Thousands&#13;
of Illinois people are coming. The&#13;
great middle west Ohio, Indiana and&#13;
Illinois, with Michigan, have sent great&#13;
crowds already to the Pan-American,&#13;
and there is every indication that the&#13;
attendance from that section will be&#13;
greater than ever during the1 month of&#13;
.October.&#13;
Buffalo will have a great day on Oct&#13;
10. At the Chicago fair Chicago day&#13;
whs the crowning event of the Exposition.&#13;
So Buffalo people are laboring&#13;
hard to make Buffalo day the ciliuax In&#13;
point of attendance.&#13;
Mnuy marhy cities will hate special&#13;
d;iys» in^'Vtohor. notably Erie* Pa« on.&#13;
OVL U&gt; ttutt Dunkirk. N V.. oa Oct. 10.4 KnHP* Bin* Kidney Pills&#13;
T ? j f l.«i ^ fv&gt;!&gt;^M'r!*&#13;
/ ' •&#13;
ii&#13;
MM rt&lt;Ul«*«t to.&#13;
be replete wMb krterei^ fwan.CarBlTal&#13;
week, whleh opeae the montb with the&#13;
lorgeooi fioata of King Bex and'the&#13;
fcepUcft of Mardl Qrt» pageantry* to the&#13;
magnificent pyrotechnic display on the.&#13;
I night of the last day of the month. (&#13;
No exposition ever held hi the United&#13;
States so ippealedte the American&#13;
public as has the- Pan-American Expoaition&#13;
in its architectural beauty and&#13;
symmetry, its gorgeous flowers, now In&#13;
the fine beauty of fall' bloom; Its gardens&#13;
and fountain* and its special&#13;
amusements, music and carnival features.&#13;
"No person," said Secretary of&#13;
Agriculture Wilson during a visit on&#13;
Sept. 10, "should miss seeing the Exposition.&#13;
U is magnificent beyond compare,"&#13;
Never again will the world see&#13;
such an illumination. Not every city&#13;
has the wonderful electric plant driven&#13;
by Niagara Falls, and without some&#13;
such plant It will be impossible to reproduce&#13;
the solemn grandeur, the glorious&#13;
beauty, the impressive radiance&#13;
of this City of Light&#13;
There are yet a few more weeks in&#13;
Which to see this vision with all Its&#13;
attendant beauties.&#13;
a c r u B ^ H FLOWERS.&#13;
T h e r e - I s * B e a u t i f u l D U p l s r o l&#13;
T h e m a t t h e P a n - A m e r i c a s — T h e&#13;
G a r d e n s of t h e C i t y o f L i g h t Are&#13;
One of I t s Most A t t r a c t i v e F e a t u r e * .&#13;
A r t i s t i c S c e n e s ' W h i c h t h e L o v e r of&#13;
B e a n t r S h o u l d Hot F a i l t o S e e .&#13;
The Pan-American is one of the&#13;
greatest flower shows that ever was.&#13;
but there are so many other things in&#13;
which it~is great that the rarity and&#13;
beauty of its floral features are perhaps&#13;
apt to be overlooked. If people&#13;
would take more time to allow the artistic&#13;
and beautiful features of the Exposition&#13;
to Impress their senses and&#13;
permeate their inmost being instead of&#13;
racing from one part of the grounds to&#13;
another, trying to see every exhibit&#13;
and every show on the Midway, they&#13;
would go home feeling greater benefit&#13;
from their siay In the Rainbow City.-&#13;
The Pan-American is full of gardens&#13;
which tempt the visitor to rest awhile&#13;
and drink in the beauties of nature. It&#13;
may seem surprising that in the month&#13;
of October there are flowers worth&#13;
looking at, but such is the fact The&#13;
rains of the past few weeks have kept&#13;
the landscape as fresh and beautiful as&#13;
In May and June, and as one flower&#13;
goes out of the scene another takes its&#13;
place. On opening day the hyacinths&#13;
filled the air with their dainty fragrance,&#13;
in June tulips lifted their proud&#13;
beads, later In the month of brides and&#13;
sweet girl graduates came roses, with&#13;
their rich perfume, and as the summer&#13;
passed the other flowers in their season&#13;
sprang up as if by magic to take&#13;
the place of those which had done their&#13;
blossoming and served their turn in the&#13;
entertainment of the visitors to the&#13;
City of Light And now one sees the&#13;
tall canna. the gay geranium and such&#13;
old fashioned flowers as grandmother's&#13;
garden had—the phlox, the pink, the&#13;
begonia, the petunia and other posies&#13;
which are no less beautiful because&#13;
they do not happen to be noveK&#13;
In entering the grounds by the Elm •&#13;
wood gate visitors pass two tall and i&#13;
curious looking trees, which perhaps&#13;
few in their anxiety to reach the heart J&#13;
of the Exposition stop to notice, it&#13;
they realized that they were century&#13;
plants Just budding, a thing which, as&#13;
all know, century plants only do once&#13;
In a long, long time, they would doubtloss&#13;
stop and look with open mouths'&#13;
and wondering gaze. It is a sight&#13;
which one cannot see very of ten. anywhere&#13;
else. One of these century plants |&#13;
is nearly forty feet in height,&#13;
The Rose Gardens around the Woman's&#13;
building, having for their background&#13;
the outlines of the Spanish&#13;
renaissance buildings about the main&#13;
court and the Electric Tower looming&#13;
up at its north end, with the Mirror&#13;
Lakes and the Triumphal Bridge and&#13;
the groups of statuary abounding, form&#13;
a scene whose artistic aspect must appeal&#13;
to even the least aesthetic visitor.&#13;
The cannas are very effective decorative&#13;
plants, with their tall leaves in&#13;
green and red and brown. A rich canna&#13;
one sees here is named Governor&#13;
Roosevelt It would seem appropriate&#13;
now to change Its name to President&#13;
Roosevelt&#13;
** W Jk. IS T E r&gt; ••&#13;
W**k m*n, weak women, pale&#13;
men, j ale women, ner»ous men, nervous&#13;
women, debilitated men, dehilitsted&#13;
women, to take KnHfft R*d Pills&#13;
lor VVsn People. They restore Heatrh*&#13;
Strength and Benuty. Wake up,&#13;
hrace UP by taking them before the&#13;
hot weather. They'are the great hody&#13;
builder and develop*?. Spring Tonic&#13;
and ftlo&gt;&gt;d medicine, 25c a box.&#13;
Knills White Liver Pill* ar* the&#13;
great Liver lovitmrator, Bow,«l Kegnlat&#13;
r. 25 dose* 25c&#13;
of thfa intend la only one of the pretty&#13;
deceits^ empioyed to produce the in*.&#13;
ceatboUUof Down's Elixir if it does&#13;
not tore any «cagtt» colov.wbo&lt;&gt;pina&#13;
guarantee Downs »Vi*»r to core con&#13;
•omptioov when aaed eijae^jtag to di?&#13;
rectiona, or money back, ' i full dose&#13;
ongoing to Mand'smaU oV&gt;set dorpreaaioninat&#13;
It is aU the work ©* Moth- Uag"tha day wilt our* tjaa- #o*i severe&#13;
er Nature herself. .» ^ Icold. and stea the nwit dittrea*intf&#13;
Have you seen the fairyUke effects;^1 ^.*** Bl in the garden about the Fountain of "P **• , -™Wj . 1 ? f ~&#13;
Abundance at night? It is one of .the&#13;
new things* This small garden is very&#13;
beautiful, by day, and at night electric&#13;
lights of different colors have been hidden&#13;
among the flowers and planks, so.&#13;
that one sees the surface of the ground&#13;
dotted with these little spots of light&#13;
bringing out the beauty of the flowers,&#13;
and all forming a scene Impossible to&#13;
describe, but very charming indeed to&#13;
witness. It is quite a,pretty surprise&#13;
even to old Pan-American visitors.&#13;
Did you ever notice In crossing the&#13;
Court of Lilies, sooth of the Machinery&#13;
building, a heavy vapor arising from&#13;
the basin in the center of that court?&#13;
Sometimes it has so much the appearance&#13;
of smoke that, people think something&#13;
must be afire In the garden, but&#13;
it is only the steam or vapor created&#13;
by the beating of the water In that basin&#13;
for the benefit of the tropical lilies&#13;
which grow therein. These lilies, which&#13;
are known as the Victoria Regia, have&#13;
enormous leaves, some of them three&#13;
feet in diameter.&#13;
Other gardens where there are flowerVln&#13;
bloom during this month of October&#13;
are those In front of the United&#13;
States Government building and the&#13;
Horticulture group, where the gay geraniums&#13;
and sweet petunias contrast&#13;
their colors with the green flags growing&#13;
In the basin and with the white&#13;
statuary disposed along their slopes.&#13;
There was a floral fete at the Exposition&#13;
during the first week of October,&#13;
and this in tts way. of course, was an&#13;
affair of much beauty and magnificence;&#13;
but. as a matter of fact there&#13;
have been floral fetes at the Pan-American&#13;
since opening day.&#13;
C o n T o n t l o n e a t B u f f a l o .&#13;
cough.&#13;
W. B.Barrow,&#13;
MJifUJtlt'r site ftoduwji §ypm*&#13;
avsusaas tvnsYnwa**AY4t&gt;*«UH» w .&#13;
FRAMK LANOaiWi^ Q(i&#13;
" CMTOM M» fSqMNfTOSt,&#13;
Subscription Priest*la Adnuc*&#13;
Entered utto PoctoSUe s t Mack**/, Xfchi*M&#13;
AdTwtlslag fit—made iuwwiaaaaellcsitoa.&#13;
Bosissea Cards, $440 per jresn&#13;
resth sad aMrruks aotieea imblU&amp;«4 true.&#13;
AasooaceiMstooteotofUiamsaU rosy &lt;M p***&#13;
for,if daiired. bj pr &gt;*eatiog(lie ot&amp;oa iritoties*&#13;
etc of sdmlssloft. iacaae tickets*™ auturouttn'&#13;
to the offlce, fegaisr rates will ot eiurrf**.&#13;
All natter i s local notice coUmawill bo d a r t -&#13;
ed at 5 eeata per Use or f racttoa thereof, for each&#13;
t&amp;ewrttaa. where DO Uioe la specified, all aoUoat&#13;
will be Inserted oatil ordered aiacoattAoed,aad&#13;
viUbeehargMforaceordiBgly* £4r^Ueoaajiea&#13;
of adverUseaests MUST reach this office as earlj&#13;
M TOBSDAY moralng to insure an laaertloe the&#13;
Moia week.&#13;
JO* rsixiixG t&#13;
In all ita branches, a specialty. jrenafealU&gt;nd»&#13;
andtbeliiteatstTieeof Type, eto^ which etmbiee&#13;
as to execute all kinds of work, such aa Hooka,&#13;
Pamplcte, Poetera, Programmea, BUI H«ada, Note&#13;
Ueads, SuueiueoU, Cnrda, Auction Bills, etc, in&#13;
aaperier styles, upon the shortest notice. Prices as&#13;
cv as good work can b* aooe.&#13;
•LL BILLS PATAS•L 7 tlSiT O%f *Vi*T * &gt;*r4.&#13;
THE VILLAGE DIRECTORY.&#13;
October will be a great convention&#13;
month at Buffalo. Thousands of members&#13;
of organizations will take this opportunity&#13;
of visiting the Exposition at&#13;
that time. Beginning with the International&#13;
Cremation congress from Oct.&#13;
1 to 3. the month closes with the AmericanLasgshan^&#13;
club^n^cjL^B^&#13;
R a t i o n a l G r s n g e Day*&#13;
Thursday, Oct 10. will be National&#13;
Grange day at the Pan-American Exposition.&#13;
At a meeting in the city of&#13;
Washington held In 1000 the National&#13;
Grangers adopted resolutions setting&#13;
aside this day, and a great assemblage&#13;
Of Tatrons of Husbandry and farmers&#13;
generallj is expected.,&#13;
Casta No B l a m e o n t i l s A n c e s t o r s .&#13;
Mrs. Goodsale—To what do yon attribute&#13;
your appetite for strong drink?&#13;
Is it hereditary?&#13;
Wragson Tatters—No. lady; It's&#13;
thirst—Philadelphia Press.&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICERS.&#13;
PassisBMT ..—.....~~.~. . . . . . C . L.Slglsr&#13;
TMUBTBKS R Baker. K. H. Brwio,&#13;
f. U. Jacksoo, Geo. Heasoa Jr.&#13;
Chas. LJTB, Jlalachy Bocae.&#13;
OLSRK.... ...in— *•—— — ••«••... .........J*, tt. Df^WV&#13;
TaSASOKMK.....^. «~M..^—.. J. A. Csivr ill&#13;
AssassOH «— w w j t t . JUimwt&#13;
^UfKnAsLsTTBC UomrriiicBi sioBSit - J . Parfcir&#13;
ArruRKjty..&#13;
MA usui LL,&#13;
....Dr.H. K. dialer/&#13;
.^--. W. A. 0*rr&#13;
.»MMS. Brogan&#13;
CHURCH E8.&#13;
Mj&amp;rUOUl8TBPlSOOPAbOUUBCU.&#13;
Itev. H. W • Hicks, pastor. 6crrices erery&#13;
Sunday morning at 10:SJ, and &gt;fsry auadey&#13;
evening at 7:00 o'clock. Prayer meeting Thornday&#13;
evenings. Sunday scbool at close of norn&gt;&#13;
ing service. CHAS. MBMBY 8upt.&#13;
CUNtiHKQAi'lOMAL CHUUCU.&#13;
Hev. O. W. Bice pastor. Serviee every&#13;
Suadsy roorninj at 10:80 and. every Sunday&#13;
•veuiuit at 7:0C o'ci jck. Prayer meeting There&#13;
day evenings. SUoday acaool st close of nsnrn&#13;
in&lt;rs«*rviu». Mrs. Taos. Real, duut,, Mocco&#13;
1 e«p'e 3ec&#13;
CT. MAitr»'jAmoLic uHUHoa.&#13;
O itev. M. J. Coiamjrford, Pastor. Services&#13;
every Sunday. Low mass at7:9Uo'eleck&#13;
high mass with sermon at 9:80 a. m. Catechiem&#13;
atS:0Up. m., veaperaana benediction at 7:4UkK in&#13;
SOCIETIES:&#13;
An Irishman in speaking of an acquaintance&#13;
said ho was condemned to&#13;
be hanged, but saved his life by dying&#13;
the day before he was executed.&#13;
A hopeless man is deserted by himself,&#13;
and be who deserts himself la&#13;
Boon deserted by his friends.&#13;
A c c o u n t i n g ; F o r I t .&#13;
"It-may be merely fancy," remarked&#13;
Mrs. Selldom-Holme. "but since my&#13;
husband began drinking the water&#13;
from that iron spring be has seemed to&#13;
be ten times as obstinate as he used&#13;
to be."&#13;
"Perhaps," suggested Mrs. Nexdore, 4*the water is tinctured with pig iron/*&#13;
—Chicago Tribune.&#13;
Tlie P e n a l t y .&#13;
Jinks—How much do yon think a&#13;
minister ought to get for marrying a&#13;
couple?&#13;
Filklns—Well, If wholly unacquainted&#13;
with them perhaps he might be let&#13;
off with six months.—Exchange.&#13;
rphe A. U. li. Stictdty .&gt;f emu |)lvw, nest* every&#13;
I third 4&gt;in U/i-itu* *'(. "•! itf.-n v 'lilt.&#13;
John Tuomey ani •*. T. K my, 0 n »tf O »1 &lt;gatee&#13;
Li^PWOHTH LEAGUE. MeeU every duaday&#13;
C^eveninff st MO oclock lo the 41. &amp; Church. A&#13;
cordial invitation is ezteudei to everyone, ea&#13;
eiallyyuuug people. F. L. Andrews, Pre*.&#13;
OUBISTIAN ES"l)EVV&gt;n SOJiaClf- I M&#13;
in^a everv *i»&lt;Uy evenin; «t 6:1». Pres. ten&#13;
JtllssL. ii. OJJ; soofJtary, \l;4i LiutU 0*r;&gt;«ote&#13;
rpUK W. C. T. U. meets the first Friday of eael&#13;
L month at 2:91 p.m. at the home of Dr. H. fr.&#13;
Sigler. Everyone interested in temperance&#13;
coadially invited. Mrs. l^sal Midler, Pres; Mr*,&#13;
Ktta Dnrtee, Secretary.&#13;
The C. T. A. and B. JH)-w»y ol thta place, o*^e&#13;
every third Satnraay evening in the fr. i » t -&#13;
thew Hall. John Donohne, Fresident.&#13;
MUUTSOP MACCABBBS. ""*•&#13;
Meet every Friday evening on or before toll&#13;
uf the inoon at their hall in the swarthout hldg.&#13;
Visiting brothers are cordially invited.&#13;
CHAS. Oaapasix, Sir anight Commander&#13;
Livingston Lodge, No.7«, P A. A, M. Kegnlar&#13;
Communication Tuesday evening, on or before&#13;
the fun of the moon. ' Kirk VanWmkle, W. M&#13;
0BOBB OP EA8TEBK STAR meetaeaca month&#13;
the Friday evening following the regular P.&#13;
AAM. meeting, Mas. aUnr BSAD, W. M.&#13;
T a e T w o C h a n s a t o n a .&#13;
It la said that the roar of a lion can&#13;
be heard farther than the sound made&#13;
by any other living creature. Next to&#13;
that comes the note of a woman who&#13;
has found a mouse In her bureau.—&#13;
Boston Transcript&#13;
The trunk of the elephant has no&#13;
fewer than 4.000 muscles—at least so&#13;
said Cuvier. the famous comparative&#13;
anatomist. The whole of the muscles&#13;
of a man's body added together only&#13;
number S27.&#13;
Backacb* and Kidney trouble*,&#13;
•k.box. .. .&#13;
core&#13;
24c&#13;
Hat K n t l r e l y M a t e .&#13;
He—What I feel for you, Muriel, I&#13;
can never tell you in words. True lore&#13;
la silent '&#13;
Muriel—Oh, no, I aaaure you, Ii&#13;
apeaha to papa,&#13;
0KDER OF MOOBBN WOOOMJN Meat toe&#13;
first Thursday evening of each Xoota in the&#13;
M uccabee nail. C. L. Grimes V. C.&#13;
LA DIES OK TUB MACUABEJCS. Meet every Is&#13;
aad trd Saturday of each month at &lt;:80 p m.a&#13;
K. o. T. M. halt Visiting sisters eordially in&#13;
Julia diobss. Lady Com.&#13;
KNIGHTS or ram LOYAL. GUARD&#13;
meet every second VYidamaay&#13;
eweittg of every month in the a . O.&#13;
T. M. Hall at 7*) o'etoek. AU visiting&#13;
Guards welcome.&#13;
K. L. Andrews P. M.&#13;
vi ted.&#13;
^ J&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
.J. W. MONKS.&#13;
DOCTOR OF DENTAL SURGERY&#13;
nNOKNaY, MICH.&#13;
ornct ovsn a m w s oaoa rroes.&#13;
M. F.SWLtR M.r&gt; 0,U8SOAaRM,0&#13;
DRS. SIGLER &amp; SIGLER,&#13;
PhyskdausaadSerjreona. AU eaUs nreeapil&#13;
attended to day er night. OfiUe o a M a U s i r&#13;
Plnckney, Mich.&#13;
J. eft MIM*#9*&#13;
V E T E R I N A R Y S U R Q E O N&#13;
Oradnate ef Ootarto Veterinary Oellege, acta&#13;
the Veteriaary Dentmtry Orllaji&#13;
Will promptly attend to all d&#13;
- ^ - ^ at a&#13;
P :&#13;
OTTKXmttMLU9VKKM&gt;&#13;
• f t .&#13;
/¾¾&#13;
,:Sw,'&#13;
, ^ '&#13;
.•' rri&#13;
&amp; • • !&#13;
M&#13;
W ' y *'••&#13;
• ••J&#13;
, / • •&#13;
^f.-:'&#13;
• ^ 1&#13;
• y l&#13;
'W,&#13;
:**&gt;&#13;
* '&#13;
:*-.&#13;
vi&#13;
ifl&#13;
: $ • • :&#13;
3&#13;
1^&#13;
*•-...&#13;
/&#13;
Tnr*j '''.'.wj. ^ * ^ ••ujmff*1 mvw&#13;
$ $ &amp; " ' • '&#13;
$ &amp; ; , :&#13;
i&amp;*'&#13;
IF:&#13;
fmy&#13;
K.&#13;
» •&#13;
^.;-&#13;
J *&#13;
Ps'.-'-l&#13;
;i v&#13;
" ffcurjc L&gt; Ampiumff Publisher.&#13;
' &lt; • • ' • . • ' ' • . &gt; . '&#13;
PLKCKKEY. . ' •" MXCHlOAlf.&#13;
T h « w * y to speak and writ* what,&#13;
ahail not go out of fashion Is to speak&#13;
«*d writs sincerely.&#13;
Hxplorers have approached within&#13;
1 » miles of-the north pole, but the&#13;
nearest ap$£tcb' to the south has been&#13;
172 milts.&#13;
The most curious cemetery is situated&#13;
at Luxor, on the Nile. Here repose&#13;
the mummed bodies of millions&#13;
of sacred cats. Their remains are side&#13;
by side with the bodies ot kings and&#13;
emperors in mausoleums.&#13;
In the centre of Liverpool there is&#13;
one large roof'garden. It forms the&#13;
hobby of a lady who has at present in&#13;
successful cultivation currants, gooseberries,&#13;
and a fine show of outdoor&#13;
flowers, besides exotics in a greenhouse.&#13;
The earth was taken up to the&#13;
Uies by means of a ltrft, and the garden&#13;
is efficiently drained and free from&#13;
despoilers.&#13;
Corunna a Sufferer by * Coftty&#13;
Blaze,&#13;
—~&#13;
TERRIBLE ACCIDENT AT ADRIAN&#13;
A Farmer LMM HI* life Tfyta* •• flaws&#13;
HU Stodt-CyelonM Work Havoe sa.4,&#13;
Destroy Ptop#r%r-A PttisMe o«*eS&lt;&#13;
Maadofl-Otfcer News*&#13;
An expert says of the discovery of&#13;
coal in India: The development of the&#13;
steel and iron trade in Bengal is only&#13;
a matter of months, and Calcutta in a&#13;
year or two will become the Cardiff&#13;
of the east With all the advantage*&#13;
of an Asiatic population at hand, an&#13;
unlimited output and the enterprise&#13;
controlled by Englishmen, there is no&#13;
fear 0» competition, and a new era of&#13;
prosperity is well in sight&#13;
ft}'- .&#13;
&amp; • • ' , ft*. 4&#13;
Sanger's circus recently caused a&#13;
little scare in Ramsgate. A horse&#13;
-drawing- a-ceverfd van of_ tigers mad*&#13;
a wild dash down the High street and&#13;
west through the windows of a drapery&#13;
establishment The horse was Injured&#13;
and the van overturned. Two fine&#13;
tigers sprang out of the van as the&#13;
folding doors thaw open, and the crowd&#13;
of sightseers was terrified; but some&#13;
of the showmen were soon on the&#13;
scene, and the tigers were quickly recaptured.&#13;
A tflOTr to K&amp;runun.&#13;
Corunna was visited; Wednesday&#13;
night by a fire causing a heavy loss&#13;
of property and serious 'Injury to three&#13;
firemen. The furniture factory of FOX&#13;
&amp; Martin was totally destroyed, the,&#13;
fire being first discovered in the varnish&#13;
room, possibly caused by spontaneous&#13;
combustion. The blaze had&#13;
twenty minutes' start of the fire department.&#13;
An explosion while the firemen&#13;
were fighting the flames resulted&#13;
in the injury of Chief Charles Wilcox.&#13;
He will probably die. George&#13;
Brands and William 8. Eveleth were&#13;
seriously injured. The men were on&#13;
a ladder throwing a stream into the&#13;
second story window when the wall&#13;
suddenly flow into a thousand pieces&#13;
from an explosion within. Wilcox was&#13;
buried beneath tons of brick, and was&#13;
taken out bleeding and unconscious.&#13;
Doctors give but little hope for his recovery.&#13;
Brands was badly cut on the&#13;
head by flying brick, and Eveleth was&#13;
cut and brained. The senior member&#13;
of the firm, S. C. Fox. is in England,&#13;
where the firm conducts a wholesale&#13;
busluess. Geo. D. Mason, the junior&#13;
member, says the factory will probably&#13;
not be rebuilt until spring, whieh&#13;
is a hard blow to Corunna. as 125 men&#13;
will be out of employment. The factory&#13;
burned four years ago. and was&#13;
- r e b u i l t b y t h e a i d of ^abomtsrCortn**-&#13;
na has no water wofks, and a poorly&#13;
equlp-jed department. The loss is&#13;
placed at $40,000, Insurance $19,000.&#13;
Two W»rf TtrrtWr Ctwsfce*&#13;
AteWltole accident occurred at the&#13;
wot^*r«%oA»e.: &lt;&gt;' '***•'•*«••":**»#&#13;
W o r m Adrian, Saturday* A gang of&#13;
mtm-wn*. employed piling coils of wire&#13;
earn* thjcee f eftt4u*di*»«*« IjpHiid Iftto&#13;
a mass about the •!»* of a stove-piue&#13;
am* weighing about 200 pounds ea&lt;3».&#13;
Dr. Colmette, head of the Pasteur&#13;
Institute in Paris, and discoverer of&#13;
the anti-venomous serum which bears&#13;
his name, has just had a narrow escape&#13;
from death, which he owes to his own&#13;
Invention. Dr. Colmette was collecting&#13;
some serpents' venom, when one-of&#13;
the reptiles bit him severely on the&#13;
finger. A moment's hesitation would&#13;
have been fatal, for the poison was a&#13;
deadly one, whose action is immediate.&#13;
Fortunately one of Dr. Colmette's colleagues&#13;
at once injected a strong dose&#13;
of the anti-venomous serum, and the&#13;
worst result so far has been a high&#13;
fever and a swelling of. the hand and&#13;
wrist&#13;
tier that the trust might have no op&#13;
position. "If they can succeed in the&#13;
Missouri Valley," said he. "they will&#13;
then turn their attention to the beet&#13;
sugar factories'in Michigan and other&#13;
sections, and by the power of concentrated&#13;
capital crush out successively&#13;
and Individually the beet sugar producers.&#13;
The trust tries to deceive the&#13;
Trnbrtc-bx-riaimlTTj: that the lfeeT~iW3r&#13;
,ducers can still make money nt the&#13;
low price it is trying to establish. This&#13;
is false, and if It had been true, thou&#13;
the trust would have tried to establish&#13;
still a lower price. They are not&#13;
sacrificing one-half per cent in the Mis&#13;
xonii riv^r markets to make a price&#13;
that will still be profitable to the l:eet&#13;
sugar men.&#13;
Among the villagers on the Volga&#13;
In the Russian province of Samara a&#13;
curious sect of women has made its&#13;
appearance. It was originated by an&#13;
elderly peasant woman in Soznavo,&#13;
called the "Blessed Mother." These&#13;
women have fled from the villages&#13;
around into a remote district, where&#13;
they live singly in holes dug out of&#13;
me face of the hill. They lead a life&#13;
of fasting and prayer, and believe&#13;
themselves called from the world,&#13;
which they think is shortly about to&#13;
perish in a general conflagration. The&#13;
"Blessed Mother" has "ten wise virgins"&#13;
as a. sort of bodyguard, and the&#13;
sect believes that these eleven women&#13;
are possessed of miraculous power.&#13;
George Arnold, 82 years of age, who&#13;
had been missing from the home of his&#13;
granddaughter, Mrs. F. J. Warne,&#13;
Syracuse, N. Y., was discovered in a&#13;
field three miles from the Warne&#13;
homestead. He was sitting under a&#13;
tree and had nothing to eat but some&#13;
green leaves and not a drop of water&#13;
had passed his lips. Although' very&#13;
weak he is expected to live. The old&#13;
man had lived in Toronto, Ont., up to&#13;
a short time ago, when his wife died.&#13;
He frequently said that he wanted to&#13;
go nome and had been acting in a&#13;
peculiar manner. One mile from the&#13;
place where the man was found his&#13;
wooden leg was discovered. He had&#13;
unstrapped it and crawled on his&#13;
hands and knees over stone and barbed&#13;
wire fences.&#13;
During the funeral of David Lindshog&#13;
in Chicago, a few days ago, what&#13;
threatened to be a panic, in which&#13;
many would have lost their lives, was&#13;
prevented by the prompt action of the&#13;
pastor, Herman Lindskog. Jt occurred&#13;
in the S t Ansgarius Swedish church.&#13;
The church was crowded, and hundreds&#13;
of people were outside awaiting&#13;
an opportunity to view the remains of&#13;
the pastor's son, who was shot by Policeman&#13;
James P. Wiley during a&#13;
scuffle. Just as the burial service was&#13;
concluded^,a loud report and crashes&#13;
as of splintering beams sounded in&#13;
front of the edifice. The flooring bent&#13;
several inches, and a number of persons&#13;
started a rush for the entrance.&#13;
In the crush at the door three women&#13;
fainted., The collapse of the floor was&#13;
canoed by the splitting of a wooden&#13;
post i s the basement* which allowed&#13;
**• foor to jfefc.&#13;
CAD T h e y Do It?&#13;
Commenting on the reduction of the&#13;
price of sugar in the Missouri market&#13;
by the sugar trust, Henry T. Oxnard.&#13;
president of the American Beet Sugar&#13;
Association, defined it as a move to&#13;
crush out beet sugar production in cr-&#13;
The rows were piled on the east side&#13;
and four tiers were befctip on the west:&#13;
side. The tier neSrt the Wall W si* J&#13;
teen feet High. T h e eeeoad tier was •&#13;
some lower; the third tier half war&#13;
up, and the fourth tier about four feet&#13;
high. The force was iu ch*rge of John&#13;
Handgen, and the JBOJIB .were vllod* In&#13;
the same way as had. been the custom&#13;
Always, gome were plllug on to the&#13;
second tier, .standlug ion. the first, and&#13;
one was on a scaffold piling on the&#13;
third tier. Wltlumt any warning, the&#13;
wire of the first tier began nrpping&#13;
aud immediately toppled over upon&#13;
the .rami Wlliard &lt;.&amp; , Bowen and&#13;
Thomas Bee wore caught and buried&#13;
beneath a mass of tons of wire, both&#13;
being crushed nnd instantly killed.&#13;
.Tack Maddux, or Mattpx, who had&#13;
been working but two days, was&#13;
caught and one leg broken. Michael&#13;
Fruley was slightly hurt. Frank Wickhum&#13;
somewhat bruised. The most iutense&#13;
excitement prevailed and busy&#13;
hands soon removed the heavy coils&#13;
from the crushed men.&#13;
Sfcockimrlr Mana?le»l hy m&amp;*.&#13;
Mrs. Ansel &lt;»reon, of Scbewa township,&#13;
was attacked by hogs aud so&#13;
frightfully mangled she will die. Mrs.&#13;
Green was hunting for "eggs in the&#13;
barnyard, when three hog* suddenly&#13;
turned upon her and knocked her&#13;
down. The animals apparently became&#13;
frenzied aud began to tear at&#13;
the woman's arms and body. Mrs.&#13;
Orr*n became ^unconscious, nnd then&#13;
the hogs moved away. When she regained&#13;
consciousness Mrs. Green managed&#13;
to get to her feet and started to&#13;
ruu for the gat«\ She had taken only&#13;
a lew steps when she was again attacked&#13;
and knocked down. Her&#13;
screams dually brought help and the&#13;
hogs were~drlVRir-nw^ry-by-her—sonr&#13;
The flesh was stripped from Mrs.&#13;
Green's right nrm and it had to be&#13;
amputated. Her left arm and hand&#13;
was also terribly torn. One side of&#13;
her face was torn to shreds. The unfortunate&#13;
woman's body was also&#13;
shockingly mutilated. There is no hope&#13;
of her recovery. Mrs. Benj. Trobnseo,&#13;
n sister of Mrs. Green, in going to the&#13;
hnter's ixHlslde. was thrown from a&#13;
buggy -and seriously injured,&#13;
He Pnlmed If All R l s b t .&#13;
An aged Port Huron woman named&#13;
Mrs. Km ma Hastings called on "Frof."&#13;
Wymnn. Wyman had recently been&#13;
convicted of practicing palmistry nnd&#13;
fined, but appealed the case. Mrs.&#13;
Hastings had heard of the wonderful&#13;
.thing* thnt AVvmfln wflS ncwprijjgd&#13;
Cyclone* do Damage.&#13;
A cyclone struck Ed. Hubbard's&#13;
clover miller, on Sam Allen's farm,&#13;
four miles west of Midtlleville, picked&#13;
it up nnd turned it once and a half&#13;
over, and when it struck the ground&#13;
completely demolished it. Wagons&#13;
were overturned and teams ran away.&#13;
A barn In the neighborhood was unroofed.&#13;
The top was torn from a passing&#13;
carriage, the horse ran awav and&#13;
the occupants thrown out. A heavy&#13;
shower accompanied the wind.&#13;
A heavy rain and terrific wind storm&#13;
struck Turner, wrecking buildings&#13;
and scattering lumber and staves for a&#13;
long distance. The roof of D. Dolan's&#13;
house was carried away and some of&#13;
the furniture cannot be found. At&#13;
Maple Itidge several barns were unroofed&#13;
and part of one house destroyed.&#13;
with accomplishing, and asked him to&#13;
find a fortune for her. She says be&#13;
told her that it would be necessary to&#13;
bring ten »20 bills to him. She did so,&#13;
and seated herself at a table with the&#13;
professor. He insisted that she place&#13;
the money in an envelope; then i&gt;o&#13;
placed five stamps on it. and after a&#13;
few mysterious passes under the table&#13;
handed the package to her. telilng her&#13;
to take it home and place it in the family&#13;
Bible, letting it remain there until&#13;
Wednesday of this week. But Mrs.&#13;
Hastings' womanly curiosity got the&#13;
better of her and she opened the package,&#13;
only to find a number of pieces&#13;
of brown paper where her money&#13;
should have been. Wyman's whereabouts&#13;
is unknown.&#13;
Burned to Death,&#13;
John Dillon, aged 00. was burned to&#13;
death iu the barn on his farm in Merritt&#13;
township, niue miles southeast of&#13;
Bay City. Dillon was milking the&#13;
cows, and it is supposed a lantern exploded&#13;
and set fire to the building, and&#13;
that he died while trying to lead the&#13;
cattle to safety. After the fire the&#13;
neighbor* found his charred body in&#13;
the ruins. Dillon Is survived by his&#13;
widow and two small children. The&#13;
fire destroyed nearly all of Dillon's&#13;
stock and well tilled grain barns. The&#13;
loss will amount to several thousand&#13;
dollars.&#13;
A Triple Funeral.&#13;
The principnl business streets of&#13;
Kalamazoo were the scene of an impressive&#13;
funeral procession Wednesday,&#13;
when three funeral cars abreast&#13;
moved slowly on their way to Riverside&#13;
cemetery. The cars contained the&#13;
remains of Isaac Van Hoist. Mrs Peter&#13;
Kromdyk nnd Edith Wand, the victims&#13;
of the sailboat accident on West lake&#13;
last Sunday. The center hearse was&#13;
white snd the other two were black.&#13;
No ears were run while the procession&#13;
passed through the streets. There&#13;
were hundreds of mourners in carriages.&#13;
A Pitiable Case.&#13;
Undertaker Schoonmaker, of Mendon,&#13;
was called upon Wednesday to&#13;
fulfill his duty in a very sad case. It&#13;
was at a farmer's home, a few miles&#13;
from here, the residence of Edward&#13;
Eatinger. Hnddled together In a&#13;
miserable little shanty, 12x16 feet, he&#13;
found the father and two children, ill&#13;
nnto death with typhoid fever. In the&#13;
other comer jay the corpse of the wife&#13;
and mother, while In a neighbor's&#13;
boose another of the family was HI&#13;
with the same disease. .&#13;
• i * - 1 * .rum. ,&#13;
M I N O R M I C H I G A N M A T T E R S .&#13;
Charlotte has voted to bond for $50,-&#13;
000 for public improvements.&#13;
The Marlette State Bank nas been&#13;
authorized to do business* with a capital&#13;
of S2o,OH&gt;.&#13;
The Eleventh Michigan cavalry will&#13;
hold its annual reunion at Howard&#13;
City this year Oct. 9 and 10.&#13;
Smith. Thorndyke &amp; Brown Co.'s&#13;
big warehouse nt Marinette was destroyed&#13;
by lire. Loss $70,000.&#13;
Ed. Plunkct. a Muskegon telephone&#13;
lineman, fell from the top of a pole, n.&#13;
dlstaucc of 40 feet. He will live.&#13;
-\u effort is l&gt;eing made to organize&#13;
a clerks' union in Houghton nnd Hancock.&#13;
Early closing is the object.&#13;
Dpwaglnc has a mad dog scare, and&#13;
the city council has ordered every&#13;
canine in the place tied up for 12 days.&#13;
Snow fell In both peninsulas of the&#13;
state Thursday. It was quite general&#13;
in Berrien, Kalamazoo, Eaton and several&#13;
other counties.&#13;
Robert Barber, a farmer living near&#13;
Schoolcraft, was attacked by ;• vicious&#13;
bull and so badly injured that he died&#13;
a few hours later.&#13;
A company has been organised to&#13;
drill for oil at Berrien Springs, where&#13;
Indications of the existence of the&#13;
fluid have been found.&#13;
John Car mer. aged 0/) years, a farmer&#13;
living north of Flushing, dropped&#13;
dead. He attended the fair and was&#13;
just leaving for home.&#13;
Charles Hlnson. colored, of Big Rapids,&#13;
waived examination on the charge&#13;
of criminal assault, and was remanded&#13;
to jail in default of $3,000 ball.&#13;
The heavy gale destroyed the Bay&#13;
City detention hospital on the outskirts.&#13;
Luckily there Is no smallpox&#13;
4n( the city at the present time.&#13;
The house of Ed Laura, a farmer Of&#13;
Sumpter township, Monroe county,&#13;
was burned. Loss about 1806. Insured&#13;
for $350 in Fanners' Mutual.&#13;
The unprecedented industrial activity&#13;
at Flint has created a veritable&#13;
house famine, workingmen being unable&#13;
to find shelter-for their families,&#13;
M. R. Wood, general manager of the&#13;
Port Huron Salt Co., has resigned and&#13;
It Is rumored that he will «tart a soda&#13;
ash plant Just south of the salt Wock.&#13;
Mrs.;James K. Fatti, aged SO, a&#13;
i p t e f c r ror Ontenagoo, Is dead,f «he&#13;
was' the tost Michigan1 woman j pe».&#13;
siouer of the Blnohbaw* war o f l S t t .&#13;
Jttdge A. J. Mills, mayoe of KAlamagoo.&#13;
admits that he h a s gubernategiaV&#13;
osytattoM «jsd ,srt«J&gt;*m «h* ta***or.&#13;
the nomination, n e x t , year / asyfrat&#13;
(Joy. jBUost t .•••'.•,'. r^".-'d •'-. •&#13;
i . Ctmrsss A. Udy*bohi by fta* Itatrelt&#13;
police, pwy^beArantad by the auttmtl-&#13;
'Mmr JoM C r e n e l * : of 1¾^¾ who * charged with s#a^te,}emjg*4i,&#13;
poison, was adjudged insane in fbe&#13;
Circuit Court and eommltted to the&#13;
state«syfem atIom4aV v v; ;&#13;
Judge MiH§; of Kalaraasoo, denied&#13;
that.ha announced himself a candidate&#13;
to succeed Gov. Bliss. He declares ho&#13;
wouldn't accept the nomination even&#13;
if it were tesdeyed him,&#13;
James Murphy, of Jackson, was arrested&#13;
|u Toledo. He bad a vajise filled&#13;
with tools In Ills possession, and&#13;
conkt not explain iu a satisfactory&#13;
manner how, he, dUne by the^.1;;&#13;
A. V. Freeman,-of Menominee; under&#13;
arrest 'upon,:,* eharaje ; of embezzling*&#13;
$20,000, im been rearrested pn&#13;
a second charge of embexsiing fujkd*&#13;
belonging to Raber &amp; WUsoiC&#13;
The Mason fair is a winner. The&#13;
Leslie Midway Co, was simply coining&#13;
wealth and an Investigation of its&#13;
show by the association officials caused&#13;
them to order lis doors closed.&#13;
Blythe Honey, aged 8, daughter of&#13;
W. N. Honey, of Staudish, fell through&#13;
a skylight in her father's store, striking&#13;
on the edge of a large barrel: The&#13;
chances are against her living.&#13;
John Graham, the burglar who died&#13;
of wounds received while attempting&#13;
to rob the postofflce at Armada was&#13;
burled in potter's field at Richmond,&#13;
Thursday, no one claiming his body.&#13;
A farmer near Burr Oak rented a&#13;
farm for $4 an acre and thought he&#13;
-»*iia_paylug too big a price for the&#13;
land. He"iilfir^ttst-aold*lils crop of&#13;
potatoes for $1,200 and has 200 bushels&#13;
left.&#13;
Bnptiste Viola, an Italian miner, employed&#13;
nt the Calumet &amp; Hecla mine,&#13;
met instant death by falling 500 feet&#13;
down No 2 shaft of the Hecla branch.&#13;
Viola left a widow and several children.&#13;
Fr. P. J. Slane was wanted in Dur&#13;
(MtU&#13;
' • ' &amp; *&#13;
*y&gt;&#13;
••'V&#13;
ff^P" " W r f W - 9fvfP' ^ f f * ^ ^ ^ ^ ^^&lt; ^V&#13;
^^•^^W1 ^ff*,'Wi*p^•^^R^P^sJ &lt;pawsr^s£0j^ VW^nMSis^^&#13;
WiW^Si'S'SS^S'S'WSSP , Wp ASS^V 9f StWS^SS' ^^SSSS^^ •^P^B^P^P^PS^B^ rS(plS^BSBBSBJ• *\\ .%&#13;
c * l « w l i U Wisjt&#13;
In the closest and most soul stirring,&#13;
w e s -ever wHed for JtbeoH? .AjawteaW&#13;
cm* the white flyeV/jDolwmhla Ueotv&#13;
the British challenger *vor a. wind*&#13;
ward and leeward course of 3&lt;* n««ti* V&#13;
col tulles by the harrow nvughj of 80 •&#13;
seconds. A s LiptonV latest aspirant&#13;
04: c^bofcors must iUlow t;Ue defend..,*&#13;
&gt;r 48 secx&gt;udi onaecQu^t pf the.extra&#13;
area; the efltetntf wbjpuV; nude* *b*&#13;
rules.:gives iiet: th$&gt;yinp&amp; b y % m^-&#13;
utt and 22 seconds. As. a spectacleth&gt;&#13;
contest was superb, from the&#13;
time the two sky-scraping racers crossed&#13;
the starting line ,w»til tfcey fled&#13;
across the finish line four and a half&#13;
hours later the result was in doubjt,&#13;
and the excitement aboard the excursion&#13;
fleet increased until the men became&#13;
frenzied and'women almost hysterical.&#13;
' Celajnbia W i n s gec«itd J*»ce.&#13;
The second race for the coveted cun&#13;
between Columbia aud Shamrock IL&#13;
was sailed Thursday, and won by&#13;
the Columbia by two minutes and o n e&#13;
second, corrected time. The coursewas&#13;
triangular. It was a magnificent&#13;
nnd blood-stirring race to the first&#13;
mark. They lifted the firs* turn a s&#13;
though the stakeboat itself was coming&#13;
to meet them, the Shamrock still&#13;
holding the lead. Both swept away on&#13;
the starboard tack. Shamrock leading;&#13;
Uy nUoitrn nunrtertirn thtitrofirmlle.&#13;
Still scudding in the strong wind, the&#13;
big white racer* fetched the second&#13;
mark. Shamrock ropndtng it first, and&#13;
with tlattcniug sheets. It was the first&#13;
windward work of the race. a»nd the&#13;
result of the contest depended on the&#13;
respective merits of the two boats in&#13;
the thrash to windward, at the end of&#13;
wldch was the finish line. The wind&#13;
nnd to see a dyinguian. Eugineer was all that yachtsmen could&#13;
William Ryan took the~prtest aboard&#13;
his locomotive, threw open the throttle&#13;
and made the distance. 13 miles, in 10&#13;
minutes.&#13;
A handcar was abandoned on the&#13;
Michigan Central rallrond at Battle&#13;
Creek Monday, and it Is believed it&#13;
was used by the two Armada postofflce&#13;
j!oJ&gt;bjer^^yho_escaped from the Macomb&#13;
county officers.&#13;
The River Raisin Club, of Toledo,&#13;
celebrated its first clambake nt Monroe,&#13;
about 40 members enjoying a trolley&#13;
ride to the club house on the river&#13;
and spending the day Iu eatiug, hunting&#13;
and fishing.&#13;
R. A. Brockwny. of Jamestown. N.&#13;
Y.. who robbed the Vernon Grand&#13;
Trunk depot in August, was released&#13;
by Judge Smith on suspended sentence.&#13;
The judge decided to give him&#13;
another chance.&#13;
Probate Judge John Vanderwerp, of&#13;
Muskegon, has resigned. It is understood&#13;
he will join the law firm of&#13;
Smith. Nlnis, Hoyt &amp; Erwln. The&#13;
Judge lins three years yet to serve at&#13;
a salary ot $2,500.&#13;
The elty council of Xiles has issued&#13;
a call for a special election to be held&#13;
on Oct. 18, at which time the people&#13;
will vote on a proposition to bond the&#13;
Acity for $20,(KX) to be expended for&#13;
public Improvements.&#13;
The Hlnchman two-story brick&#13;
building on Broad street, Hillsdale,&#13;
has been purchased by the publisher&#13;
of the Democrat, and the office of thnt&#13;
paper will be removed to its new home&#13;
about the middle of the mouth.&#13;
The Owosso Manufacturing Co. believes&#13;
in rewarding its employes for&#13;
faithful services, and President Bentley,&#13;
of the firm, distributed $11,000&#13;
among them. He says the distribution&#13;
will be an annual event hereafter.&#13;
The balance in the state treasury at&#13;
the close of business Monday night&#13;
was $3,117,240. The distribution of&#13;
primary school money to be made&#13;
among the counties next month,&#13;
up about $1,200,000 of this balance.&#13;
W. F. Ward, superintendent of t&#13;
Owosso Coal Company, has discove&#13;
a good vein of coal at a aenth of 1&#13;
feet in Owosso township. The vein&#13;
about three and one-half feet in thlc&#13;
ness and the coal is of good quality.&#13;
The mother of W. C. Martlndnle, s t&#13;
perlntendent of Detroit schools, was&#13;
severely burned by the explosion off a&#13;
gasoline stove nt her residence )in&#13;
Greenfield township last Sunday aft*rnoon.&#13;
It Is not thought thnt her injuries&#13;
will prove serious. '&#13;
Miss Elizabeth Scates. a professional&#13;
nurse, of Detroit, was ridden down by&#13;
Howard C. Gilchrist, who was riding&#13;
a wheel. She was picked up unconscious&#13;
and removed to Harper hospital,&#13;
where it was found her skull had been&#13;
fractured. Her recovery is doubtful]&#13;
An auction safe of public lands will&#13;
be held at the office of the state l.ind&#13;
commissioner November 14, .when&#13;
Commissioner Wlldey will offer [the&#13;
reappraised lands of the State Agricultural&#13;
College, a large number'of&#13;
acres of primary school land, swamp&#13;
and other lands for sale.&#13;
Deputy Game Warden Fisher, of/Detrolt&#13;
is causing a reign of t&#13;
among Monroe game dealers. Yesterday&#13;
he seised SO pounds" of black base&#13;
belonging to one firm, and raided the&#13;
store of another and canoed the proprietor's&#13;
arrest on a charge of catch*&#13;
ing black bass with a n e t&#13;
wish.&#13;
and a fair test of—t thetwo&#13;
boats was made.&#13;
T h e Third Race W o n .&#13;
That silver cup Is to remain In'the**'&#13;
United States unless Lipton or some&#13;
other English yachtsman can bring&#13;
over a better boat to contest for it.&#13;
That the Columbia; defeated the Shamrock&#13;
II. iii three straight races, added&#13;
to the fnd~ that rhbHs-the seceud time&#13;
she has saved the cup, does not soften&#13;
Die loss to the Englishmen who had&#13;
real nnd great hopes of winning this&#13;
year. The races were close, the yachts&#13;
Well handled, and the Columbia proved&#13;
for a second time the better yacht.&#13;
The first part of the race was a hummer,&#13;
with a pood wind, and the outer&#13;
mark WHK turned by the Shamrock&#13;
first, but when the last half was suiled&#13;
the admirable handling of the Columbia,&#13;
in a slightly lighter wind, told&#13;
against her competitor. There was all&#13;
the excitement in this third and final&#13;
race that, yachtsmen could wish. It&#13;
was in the run before the wind In tbo&#13;
first part of the race that the Shamrock&#13;
did her best, turning the outer&#13;
mark first. Then begun the petit to&#13;
windward, and superb work with the&#13;
Columbia en this home stretch did the&#13;
busluess.&#13;
&gt; ' : •&#13;
Horrible Detail* G i v e n .&#13;
TJie latest news from the Island of&#13;
Samar gives harrowing details of the&#13;
slaughter of the members of Company&#13;
C, Ninth United States Infantry, at&#13;
Balangiga. It seems that the presidente&#13;
of the town, claiming to be&#13;
friendly, led the assault in person.&#13;
The tight was long premeditated and&#13;
the Filipinos were called to commit&#13;
the slaughter by the ringing of church&#13;
bells at daylight. They got between&#13;
the soldJers. who were breakfasting,&#13;
and their quarters. On henring of the&#13;
slaughter. Col. Isaac D. Derussy, of&#13;
the Eleventh Infantry, started for the&#13;
scene immediately with a battalion.&#13;
The body of Capt. Connell had been&#13;
saturated with kerosene qpd partly&#13;
burned. Forty-five bodies * have been&#13;
burned in a trench, leaving seven unaccounted&#13;
for. The charred remains&#13;
of many were recovered., Jft numerous&#13;
instances the lwdJes had been badly&#13;
mutilated. Three hundred Macftbebes&#13;
will also be dispatched to the scene of&#13;
the masxacre on board the Legaspi,&#13;
which is delayed by a.typhoon. .&#13;
The A«trolo«er'» Warninsf.&#13;
Gustave Meyer, the youthful astrologer&#13;
of Hohokeu. N. J„ who warned&#13;
President McKinley fast; spring to&#13;
bewar»» *»f nn attempt to tissassinnte&#13;
him during June or September, now&#13;
issues a warning to President Koosovolt.&#13;
"President Roosevelt,** says&#13;
Prof. Me.ver, "should )&amp; very' careful&#13;
of himself during the next six weeks,&#13;
especially on Nov. 3 and 4. An accident&#13;
or sickness Js indicated for him&#13;
about that time, and It may be avoided&#13;
by proper care. He, and his rdriser*&#13;
will bo called upon to settle some Important&#13;
Question about the Jatter part&#13;
of October. It will concern a considerable&#13;
expenditure of money ami&#13;
may have to do with foreign ^transportation."&#13;
Charles A. Johnson, who wrecked&#13;
the First National Bank, of Sile&lt; will&#13;
be tried nt Grand Rapids next month.&#13;
The Interior departmem0 la rapidly&#13;
completing plana for the opening of&#13;
the Fort HalL Idaho. Indian reservation&#13;
of 400,000 acres within a few&#13;
WO«1IBV,N f. .-'... -• •; - ..&#13;
..*;&#13;
M r&#13;
&lt;m&#13;
a:...&#13;
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•'*•••'. i.'vAv&#13;
1¾&#13;
*r 7*7?&#13;
•Vhs*the w ^ ^ h ^ . ^ . ^&#13;
. ,&gt;-/•,&lt;• / B l i t t , ^ ^ '_ . . ..-.,.&#13;
•^'&gt;;- 3^1X4n B4r sahhomuats s tia£n»S*uu o»ntyt tfv oDteasr?a ^^yTar*d' m™OF*? •;&#13;
y ys-Judjps, everybody by bla**ft. ,^a4,&#13;
* the-fact, that he had; attother womaa&#13;
wttl* hl» -won't &gt;ma*e * • Wt of differ*&#13;
taftswHtaiTrtm.,- If, bit mm^a«rAWli !l&#13;
.Uiiipr; i f«0Lth*Lli*ilJi4r^b*l at home.&#13;
*ow, ^tts#ttoaki#*»M»e4skJ He ataraj*&#13;
d ^ s*MC b * find* * e oat'of the house1,&#13;
DP matter wfcera I am, nor how abort&#13;
« = »&#13;
2F1 ¾¾¾¾¾¾¾^^ kss?*** ^ **"* •**••'***&#13;
J*, r&#13;
VWjth«u*~&lt;adotrtrt**rau do-o.**&#13;
again,&#13;
And the Bantam takes^he cut:&#13;
J&#13;
r*18 ^&#13;
M:.&#13;
C&#13;
^; 4¾M¾a ktbea ^AnMk af^giur. nil p*«» alonft y/ ThGeo tw*o ornkt otfo -'t thtUe kda tfyc »b e*o*wws*i a-sabv • **XA fnede lt hbee trteoro sttheriss- mcaolrl -arnnlenwg:," "Without—a doubt—you do-o."&#13;
•ft:&#13;
B#!::&#13;
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V&#13;
I -&#13;
The Problem of Life,&#13;
BY ETKBL, M. COLSON.&#13;
jCCopjrright.lSM, by Pally Story Pub. Co.)&#13;
If there was one particular characteristic&#13;
or quality for which the Rev.&#13;
€barle* BilHnjsa was especially distintfuiBhed&#13;
it wa&amp; that of truthfulness.&#13;
Be was." truthful, moreover, for reasons&#13;
quite apart and side from his&#13;
calling. As a slim and pallid youth&#13;
•t hoarding school he had been famous&#13;
—and popular—-because of hla exceed-&#13;
• lag candour. Later, as tbe devoted&#13;
and conscientious rector of tbe Angelican&#13;
Catholic Church of the Atonement,&#13;
he was popular and beloved in&#13;
raptte-of-K,- i a d Hrever tbe^aeek aadtowly~&#13;
minded clergyman knew a SUBpicion&#13;
of spiritual pride it was because&#13;
of tbe absolutely spotless and unstained&#13;
condition, of his life-record in&#13;
tbe matter of truth-telling.&#13;
To have expected the Rev. Charles&#13;
Billings, therefore, to have deliberately—&#13;
albeit unwillingly—yielded to tbe&#13;
temptation to give utterance to an unequivocal&#13;
He would have been manifestly&#13;
outrageous. And yet-^—&#13;
The door of the church -study opened,&#13;
one evening, to admit a woman—a&#13;
woman tall, slender, of good figure,&#13;
and expressive face, mirroring just&#13;
then numerous unpleasant emotions.&#13;
The Rev. Charles Billings knew her&#13;
sol^d John Brewster, merchant of the&#13;
old-time Chicago, and a man who was&#13;
popularly suspected of being a better&#13;
business man than husband. Certain&#13;
It Is, tne fine eyea of his wife had long&#13;
since acquired a look of weary and&#13;
patient resignation.&#13;
Straight up to the table at which&#13;
the priest'jsat hurried the woman, in&#13;
her eagerness and agitation she never&#13;
saw the surprised but soothing gesture&#13;
which beckoned her to a chair. But&#13;
as she sank into it mechanically it became&#13;
evident that she had been crying.&#13;
"Oh Father Billings!" she exclaimed,&#13;
wildly—the gentle little priest being&#13;
so designated by his High Church congregation—&#13;
MOh Father Billings do help&#13;
me! If you do not—" but it was some&#13;
minutes before she could go on.&#13;
"I met an—an old friend this afternoon,",&#13;
*he explained, subsequently,&#13;
"and we—we had an ice together, Just&#13;
to talk of—of old times. There wasn't&#13;
a shadow of harm In it, although we&#13;
used—we used to love each other. Perhaps,"&#13;
with a sudden accession of recklessness,&#13;
"I love him still. At all&#13;
events, someone—my husband," her&#13;
[With toarj^ suddenly%4» thouglx.be bad&#13;
wltnetaed anotaer'i downfall But,&#13;
o w tad tfwatajrf *)4# iltfc** wai aft&#13;
*fetf acml ol'tbia mwnan*~*a* her partL&#13;
U n / ^sjtntoaee and temarsa,!*&#13;
dUfcbT^rf t^at I haven^ hat* Jaftkitfr ^ ^ ¾ ¾ ^ '*»)«**;* n*S&#13;
tgtfmH totejidea. fcrf^b^U—fce'l*&#13;
tt^w me-aside Ulfe aa M istey^ 6V&#13;
a|t aj^weted. letfafc Ob, I w e t b^».M&#13;
aj the^prfflat looked ^padjityia, "and&#13;
I know wbM.aa^ 4«. AiuMr* 4&lt;»'t&#13;
know—ah yes, Go* bojp met 4 da&#13;
kAaw^wbat;W4n,&gt;e«x&gt;m«^^iaA And&#13;
I haven't a relative, scarcely a frten*&#13;
p ^ n f tba vary tboutbt o e t a a sin&#13;
(nr contemplaUo|LV #or b»f—li&gt; case&#13;
iher fea^ wore .Tet^ed^lp Dlace at&#13;
ftOly, wttb tears.,&gt;•' f&#13;
-And, rl«hi or WToftg, ^be uftaeinab&#13;
unpiilM'ti'iuaApbed.&#13;
- "Ko; air/' he heard himaelf saying,&#13;
dittia^tlr, after so brief an fnterrai&#13;
that eyen ^he angry husband, noticed&#13;
no heaftaUon, rab«^baa ndu t did hoi&#13;
jaaa bes untU aftey ^aobeon. But tbU&#13;
attarneon she ^accompanied ma on a&#13;
round of charity calls, and, alnea our&#13;
return* aba baa been busily engaged la&#13;
miking ont her report to the Charity&#13;
Calls Committee of tbe Woman's Auxiliary.&#13;
She will be ready to accompany&#13;
you home so soon as this la tin*&#13;
tehed."&#13;
Fcr this lie Father Charles Billings&#13;
presently—and xong—repented, and be&#13;
will never cease to be anxious concerning&#13;
its moral effect upon Mrs.&#13;
Brewster—now slowly acquiring the&#13;
habit of a negative happiness by utter&#13;
self-forgetting. Also, the recurrent&#13;
torture of his wretched inability to&#13;
solve the problem of 'whether or not&#13;
he did right in telling the lie will always&#13;
serve the purpose* of an exquisitely&#13;
painful hair-shirt to the .man who&#13;
told i t But there are rare moments,&#13;
now and then, when the problem and&#13;
the repentance alike cease to trouble&#13;
him—when he is glad in the conviction&#13;
that tbe lie saved not only a woman's&#13;
body from perdition, but also tbe woman's&#13;
soul.&#13;
"No, sir," he heard himself saying.&#13;
in the world, with the exception of&#13;
yourself, Father Billings, if you_don'l&#13;
help me, I'm—I'm afraid I'm lost forever!"&#13;
"What do you want me to do, my&#13;
child?" asked the priest, quietly.&#13;
For answer, she sank on her knees&#13;
beside him, catching at his hand with&#13;
small, beseeching fingers that burned&#13;
like lire.&#13;
"Tell him that I have been making&#13;
charity calls," she said, hoarsely. "He&#13;
won't believe me, but he'll believe you,&#13;
if you tell him. Everybody knows,"&#13;
without a suspicion of grim humor,&#13;
"how invariably truthful you are."&#13;
"But, my child," said the priest,&#13;
gravely, "that would be a lie, a Bin."&#13;
"I know it would be a lie," she made&#13;
^or one of his parishoneifl,-the wife ©f-| answer^but. would lL.be a sin if you&#13;
did it to save another? And there&#13;
are worse sins than lying, Father, and&#13;
some of them are hard to avoid, i&#13;
don't know how to tell you, but—I've&#13;
no money, Father, I've no friends or&#13;
relatives, and if ray husband throws&#13;
me aside there's only one person to&#13;
whom I can turn'for assistance—and—&#13;
and—I do not want to go to—him."&#13;
The face of the priest was pale and&#13;
puzzled. As a clergyman he knew lying&#13;
to be sinful. As a man and a&#13;
gentleman he hated lying on general&#13;
principles. Ho was firmly convinced&#13;
of the wickedness of doing evil that&#13;
good may corao. And yet—&#13;
It was all so clear before him. if&#13;
this woman did not still love the—&#13;
the other man—she would not so fear&#13;
and dread being thrown aside by her&#13;
unloving, unloved husband. And, if so&#13;
thrown aside, to whom else could she&#13;
turn? That she was speatting the&#13;
truth in regard to her husband's&#13;
harshness and her own penniless condition&#13;
the clergyman knew well. He&#13;
knew more about solid John Brewster&#13;
than most people, and for a hard man&#13;
and exceeding close with, his money&#13;
all men knew him. That he would refuse&#13;
to believe the meeting between his&#13;
wife and the lover from whom he bad&#13;
parted her, by unfair means, solitary&#13;
and a* innocent as accidental was also&#13;
tolerably certain.&#13;
Then, certainly, the problem lay between&#13;
this woman's soul and his own&#13;
—the priestly soul which had never yet&#13;
been stained by lying.&#13;
Heavy steps sounded along the passageway&#13;
leading from the street The&#13;
woman, springing to a chair on the&#13;
other side of the table, looked at the&#13;
priest beseechingly and bent hurriedly&#13;
over some papers. A moment later&#13;
and solid John Brewster himself strode&#13;
into the room.&#13;
At sight of his wife the hard face&#13;
changed, the expression faltered. Tbe&#13;
priest, rising to confront him, caw in&#13;
his eyea both doubt and hesitation. MI see my wife is with you," tbe&#13;
man said, sullenly. "May I inquire&#13;
if she has been with you all day?**&#13;
For a moment the priest struggled&#13;
'Oh, Father BUMng*!" against a moat human impulse, the&#13;
Tolce and face all concentrated bit-[mad, natural, all but uncontrollable&#13;
ternesa, "plotted and cams between us.&#13;
Than I married—Mr. Brewster. 1—l&#13;
fait so helpless; I didn't know what&#13;
alia to do. And I've tried to ba a good&#13;
wife to him, a tar better wife than he&#13;
baa beaft-a husband. I've never saaa&#13;
—the other man—since I wag married,&#13;
nntll today.&#13;
**Wt came upoji each other quits by&#13;
accident and we only-^we only talked&#13;
a ttttls of—of that other time. But at&#13;
m% left the cohfectioner'i by one door&#13;
Any husband came in at another. If be&#13;
saw ma—and I &gt; almost aura ha did—&#13;
4e*U believe ti» worst to a moment&#13;
iii«i t'i at&#13;
/&lt; Nay; watAr not- ali^aJdy' re-&#13;
GA8 KILLS FLUSHING TREES.&#13;
l*akft Out of the Main* and Affects&#13;
tlift True Roots.&#13;
The people cf Flushing, which has&#13;
become famous for the beautiful shade&#13;
trees which line its streets, have noticed&#13;
recently that many big, sturdy&#13;
trees have withered and become lifeless&#13;
without apparent cause or injury.&#13;
These trees were not confined to any&#13;
one variety nor was any single locality&#13;
alone affected. Horticultural&#13;
experts examined the dead trees to see&#13;
if they had become affected by insects&#13;
or rust, but nothing of the kind was&#13;
found. Then Samuel B. Parsbns, a veteran&#13;
nurseryman, was asked .to make&#13;
an investigation. He reported: "The&#13;
condition of the trees Indicates that&#13;
9hl»Ba«r war, in tw» TV nsoae,&#13;
jnrm ha*e latted-twe years&#13;
|C&gt;r^^tfair»; ^ r e S g n e k&#13;
r It is aai4 that Japan is coming to&#13;
,thp TJ»tte4 States for a loan of 6^,000,-&#13;
0P0 y w i . , Y ; \ : /•''.: ./..,- . :.\'.'.',..&#13;
Twe^ty-f our parson* WKS- fcittect iiiW&#13;
bitndjiMte iaior«4 In Hungarian elee*&#13;
tion.rUjtf. ..-,- ,&gt;.,, ..•._..,",,, ,.-...,...„ .. ,• .&#13;
Disorders have arisen to tbe Yang&#13;
Tse valley of China, retraltani upon&#13;
tbe floods. ••&#13;
The Cuban constitutional contention&#13;
has notified Gov.-Gen. Wood that it is&#13;
ready to adjdurn.&#13;
Th£,sultan of Turkey is preparing a&#13;
Fan-lsjamitic encyclical* 'calling on the&#13;
woria to,embrace Mohammedanism.&#13;
It U now said that President Kruger&#13;
is slowly growins) weaker physically&#13;
and mentally. His hotrod of Great&#13;
I'rirajn nerves him to continue.&#13;
Emperor William paid the bills of&#13;
Prince Chun, of the explntory missiou&#13;
from China. nn,1 the bills of all hi*&#13;
suite while they were in Germany,&#13;
Venezuela is guarding her frontiers&#13;
against Colombia, and has put Colombian&#13;
revolutionists in charge. Colombia&#13;
Is doing the same on her side of&#13;
the border.&#13;
Xo'official-return has been made&#13;
for a Ions time of the numerical&#13;
strength of the British army in South&#13;
Africa. It is customarv to estimate&#13;
it at 20,000, but these figures, it is&#13;
claimed, are grossly exaggerated.&#13;
Count Tolstoi says on the Franeo-&#13;
KussJsn alliance that the true Russian&#13;
people do not know t&gt;f the existence&#13;
of tbe alliance. Count Tolstoi&#13;
says the object of such alliances is&#13;
war or to menace war; that their influence&#13;
must be mischievous generally&#13;
and that they can produce only the&#13;
greatest mischief to the nations forming&#13;
them.&#13;
Nevrs In B r i e f .&#13;
« — » • * » -&#13;
» - if -., ., r. |MMjfc,Q«* t*« Ltaali, ,- .,.&#13;
William M. Batts. bookkeeper for&#13;
Aha Worden Grocery Co., convicted a.&#13;
year ago of ^ej»be«aleme,nt of funds&#13;
of,, amounting ,to fflUwtJ. returned froas&#13;
C^eveMndJVohintarily in response to&#13;
summons from tbe court and receive&#13;
sentence of *re yeara • ajk-1 lie""""&#13;
Butts was formerly one-of the&#13;
bnowsv men of tbe city. He was a&#13;
high flyer, but his•, arrest caused a&#13;
great sensation as he was a son-in-law&#13;
of the lata Justice Cbfln^pJln, end&#13;
every effort was made to dear,-him*&#13;
Further Investigation into Butts*&#13;
methods showed that he had made&#13;
away with 130.000 of tbe firm's money&#13;
during his riotous career, but be was&#13;
tried and convicted on the charge of&#13;
embezzling but S9j000,of it. He was:&#13;
given tbe most scathing lecture ever&#13;
beard in this city, the judge telling&#13;
him be was a disgrace to the city and&#13;
to his family, ending by giving him&#13;
the limit. Butts thanked the court&#13;
sarcastically, and was led away to jaiL&#13;
T h e B o e r W a r .&#13;
The London Standard says: The&#13;
Boers are fighting with a determination&#13;
and a contempt for their owu&#13;
lives such as were seldom shown 1TI '&#13;
the early period of the war. Tbeir&#13;
plan is to keep Kitchener's army busy,&#13;
in the north and to give tbe roving&#13;
commandoes of .Cape Colony an opportunity,&#13;
to raise the Cape Dutch&#13;
against Britain.&#13;
li is bplfeved that the government&#13;
at last recognizes the necessity of&#13;
meeting the renewed Boer activity.&#13;
Preparations are being made to replace&#13;
Kitchener's ex unlisted men by&#13;
fresh drafts. An order has been issued&#13;
rendering it impossible to obtain&#13;
discharge by purchase from any of the&#13;
array reserves, sections of which are&#13;
being prepared for mobilisation.&#13;
It is now «ald that if Prince Chun&#13;
visits the United States it will be unofficially.&#13;
The JlcKinley will has been probated&#13;
at Canton. It disposes of an&#13;
estate aggregating about $200,000.&#13;
The new oil "gusher" near Welsh,&#13;
La...throws un rocks, oil and debris to4 the bight of 250 feet, it is claimed.&#13;
The* strike of the linemen of the various&#13;
telegraph' and telephone companies&#13;
in Chicago is said to be spreading.&#13;
Postmaster General Smith will ask&#13;
congress to appropriate $0.250.000 for&#13;
the extension of the rural free mail&#13;
service.&#13;
Reports to the marine hospital service-&#13;
from all parts of the world show&#13;
they have been killed by fflu"slnattHgH~«—continued spread-of—the buboniy&#13;
gas which has escaped through the&#13;
mains in the streets and has found its&#13;
way to the roots. In several cases&#13;
where the-dlriJias_bccn dug up around&#13;
the roots of the dead trees there has&#13;
been a strong odor of gas. If a similar&#13;
test was made with all the dead trees&#13;
plague in most sections.&#13;
Mrs. Louise Xostz. (50 years old. of&#13;
Astoria. L. I., killed herself and her&#13;
grandson. Willie Colletti. 0 years old.&#13;
some time Wednesday night.&#13;
The body of Arthur Venvllle. one of&#13;
Lieut. Gilmore's ill-fated troop, has&#13;
Must L e a v e F r a n c e .&#13;
The Jesuits have published a long&#13;
address on the eve of their departure&#13;
from France. They explain that they&#13;
cannot submit to the law of associations&#13;
and apply for authorization under&#13;
it. as by so doing they would&#13;
have to admit of the existence of a&#13;
power higher than the church. The&#13;
law was .specially aimed at the Jesuits&#13;
and PassJonists. It is sera {-officially&#13;
stated that communities not applying&#13;
for authorization under the law&#13;
and not dispersing, will be prosecuted&#13;
immediately.&#13;
AHUSElffCNTS IV DETROIT.&#13;
W£EK E.NDtflG OCT. VI.&#13;
AVENUE THEATRE—Vaudeville—Prices: afternoon.&#13;
)0.15, &amp; ^5: evening. 10, 20, ij*c; retterr. sOc.&#13;
LYCECM Tn BATER-Put Me off at Buffalo—Wed&#13;
and Sat. Mat. -Joe; evenings. 15. z &gt;, 50 and75c&#13;
WHITNEYGHAND— "Humaa Spiders"'-Matinee&#13;
lye, lb and 23c,- evenings. ioo. -Vc and 30c&#13;
T H E M A R K E T S .&#13;
Of&#13;
AV . , . . ., . „ been found near Manila and will bo&#13;
the same odor would be discovered. I is e l l t homc t0 rortlaml. Ore., for burial..&#13;
do not know of anything else that&#13;
would kill the trees." Most of the trees&#13;
were planted more than fifty years&#13;
ago. At the present rate, however,&#13;
Mr. Parsons says he fears that all of&#13;
them will be killed within five or six&#13;
U'err Panzer, anarchist, editor&#13;
r-prlin. !s to be prosecuted for utterances&#13;
In his pjrper in eonueetion with&#13;
Hie assassination of President Mc-&#13;
Kinley.&#13;
John XeviUs. of New York, the man&#13;
years. The same cause hs says has [ who invented th? international cable&#13;
killed many of t!ia trees plantad in I «™d telegraphic code, in use the world&#13;
Manhattan. Another nurseryman said °™1'- w n * k " l e d b*' a freight-train at&#13;
that there is no doubt about the gas E t r i l r a - N *&#13;
killing the trees in Flushing. "Last , A s ^ ^ ^ V V - l ^ mo,\10r5" o f t n e&#13;
sspnrriinnge, " ssaamid nhee, "wwee pWlaanntteedd ssiixx ttrreeeess leaotuem &lt;Pi ir eosfi dUenuty MC iotlyv inhlaesy . e itihnen f fcwo!m mt hoen in front of a residence here. *«•-»--&#13;
trees budded, but just as they were j McKinley avenue,&#13;
about to put forth leaves one of them] The steamer Humboldt has arrived&#13;
died. We replaced it, but when we i m Seattle from Skagway with 210 pasdug&#13;
the dead tree up there was a| sengcrs and over $1,000,000 in gold. It&#13;
strong smell of gas. The second tree is the second largest shipment of the&#13;
planted also died. Then we made a season from the Klondike.&#13;
All tbei n n n i o 0f Eighth street in that city to&#13;
inclination to- knock down this in&#13;
timidator of a woman and trample&#13;
upon him. Then he remembered that&#13;
be waa a priest, and that there seemed&#13;
but one way of helping the intimldator'i&#13;
victim. Ha turned h.s eyea toward&#13;
her down-bent head, momentarily,&#13;
and again the Problem of the Lie&#13;
lifted Its double-headed torment and&#13;
regarded him. He saw, aa if in vision,&#13;
tbe Recording Angel who was so real&#13;
a personage to him take down, with&#13;
sorrowful sternness, the white scroll of&#13;
hla unstained veracity and degrade It,&#13;
degrade it to t,ha d^f. His eyas filled&#13;
complaint to the gas company and&#13;
found that not fifty feet away there&#13;
was- a leak in the gas main."&#13;
The managers of the Flushing gas&#13;
plant declare that th^y are not to&#13;
blame for the destruction cf the trees.&#13;
They say that there are d&amp;ad trees&#13;
on streets&#13;
Former United States Senator Chas.&#13;
H. Farwell, in the hope it would beuetit&#13;
his health, has submitted to a critical&#13;
surgical 'operation at St. Luke's&#13;
hospital. Chicago. He is resting easily.&#13;
Maj.-Gen. Otis is of the opinion that&#13;
there really was an assault committed&#13;
. ,. , on the guard at the McKinley tomb at&#13;
mains. Thew Fhleurseh itnhger eA ssaorcei atnioon ghaass c . l l l t o n ami that the midnight prowlers&#13;
promised to employ one of the best&#13;
experts in the ccuntry to examine the&#13;
trees1.—New York Sun.&#13;
A Bemarkable Australian.&#13;
Sir George Dibba, who has just presented&#13;
King Edward with a walking&#13;
stick of his own make, is one of the&#13;
remarkable men of Australia. He is&#13;
probably the only man in the empire&#13;
who has passed through the-two extreme&#13;
experiences of a prime minister&#13;
and a prisoner in jail. Sir George has&#13;
twice been premier of New South&#13;
Wales, and has held many other posts&#13;
of the highest importance in the&#13;
colony; and it waa while he waa a&#13;
prominent-public man that he had the&#13;
courage to refuse to pay what he&#13;
thought an extortionate blU. of coats.&#13;
He waa committed to Darllnghurst&#13;
jail, Sydney, fpra year, and served&#13;
the sentence throttglf to the end.&#13;
Hi Henry's xninlstrel company gave&#13;
performance at the Alhambra Saturday&#13;
night and Sunday afternoon and&#13;
evening, and gave good satisfaction tc&#13;
the audiences which gathered in Man*&#13;
ager Miller's theater for a preliminary&#13;
bit of enjoyment before the reguiai&#13;
season of the Grand avenue nous*&#13;
opens neat Sunday afternoon witt&#13;
"Hutting for Hawkina."&#13;
were escaped prisoners from the Canton&#13;
jail.&#13;
The coroner's jury at Wayne in the&#13;
ease of Charles D.eLong. Joseph W.&#13;
Sweeney ami George Leopold, killed in&#13;
a wreck Sept. 20, returned a verdict&#13;
that they came to their death through&#13;
their own negligence while stealing a&#13;
ride.&#13;
The Ohio state board of equalization&#13;
has decided thnt it has no power to&#13;
increase the assessed valuation of the&#13;
railroads of the state, and it Is now&#13;
up to Tom Johnson to bring mandamus&#13;
proceedings, according to his&#13;
original threat.&#13;
Geo. M. Pullman, of Chicago, .has&#13;
married Mrs. Sarah L. Brazeli. one of&#13;
the three beautiful West sisters of&#13;
San Francisco. The ceremony was&#13;
performed by a justice of the peace at&#13;
Carson. Nev. Another of the West&#13;
sisters married Sanger Pullman.&#13;
At Fez a Portuguese subject who&#13;
does not speak Arabic, had recently&#13;
arrived in the city and approached&#13;
the tomb of a local saint. There was&#13;
nothing to show that'tbe thoroughfare&#13;
was forbidden to Christians. He was&#13;
attacked by a fanatical crowd. His&#13;
recovery Is uncertain.&#13;
The official appraisement of the estate&#13;
of Jacob S. Rogers, tbe locomotive&#13;
builder of Paterson. X. J., who left&#13;
his millions to tbe Xew York Metropolitan&#13;
Museum of Art. has been filed&#13;
at the surrogate's office in Peterson.&#13;
It shows that bis estate is valued at a&#13;
little more than 35.500.OOA.&#13;
Cincinnati. - Cattle. — Demand light.&#13;
Jieavy ste«*s, choice to extra |&amp; 2¾^¾ qs,&#13;
nominal: fair to good, *4 6 ^ 5 15; oxen.&#13;
51 ityni 2o: butchers, choice, to extra,&#13;
U hlhf?5; fair to good. $3-50(34 50; heifers,&#13;
Mood ^to choice, $3 50(54 10: common to&#13;
i , £,~*2 -&lt;&gt;^« -3: cows, footl to choice,&#13;
*?2*£:!: ..t a , r t o 800*1- «2 2»?ia25: canners.&#13;
H : ¾ 2 ^ scalawags. tt&lt;&amp;i &amp;&gt;; stockcrs.&#13;
JiL'SftSiw; tops. $3 SOft: 1. Hogs—Selected&#13;
-butchtrs and heavy shipp*r«», W 80S* 85;&#13;
good packers and butenrrs, IS 65&lt;$C"2»;&#13;
mixed packers, $8 25^0 0): stags and&#13;
ht-avy fat sow?, $4 -3VC 15; few fancy,&#13;
$i;20'u6 25; light shippers. $ti lDTud 65; pigs,&#13;
IV) lbs nnd less, $1 50T.-J. Sheep—Extra,&#13;
S3 10v&lt;/3 15; uood to choice. |2 4iKU)3; comn&#13;
u n to lair, $1 25^x2 25; lumbs, extra. $4 50&#13;
&lt;CA W; good to choice. *} 50:04 50; common&#13;
to fair, 12 25^3 25&#13;
Detroit.—Cattle-Good to choice butcher&#13;
sttTra, 14 604/5; light to good. IS 75^4 60;&#13;
li'-'ht to good butcher steers and heifers.&#13;
.*U40fl4 40; mixed butchers and fat cows.&#13;
$2 13^3 SU; cannert and common thin&#13;
butchers, $] 5»K.-2 60. Hogs—Mixed ami&#13;
butchers. $&lt;i Mi* 45; bulk tales at $6 4V®&#13;
0 45; pigs and iigiu Yorkers. pardH :iS; stags.&#13;
1-3 off; roughs. ?G -WaH 55. Sheep—Best&#13;
lambs. S4 2S/&lt;?4 50; Uahi tn good and good&#13;
mixed lots, &amp;} 5«"34 15; fair to good mixed&#13;
an.} butcher sin eo, $2 u0-|i3 50; culls and&#13;
common. $1 5(Kt2 40.&#13;
Chicago.—Cattle—Good to prime steers,&#13;
?ti ir.fJ6 tio; poor to medium, 13 75&lt;r?5 90;&#13;
sto^kors and feeders*. $2 'Si'n4: cows. | l 2»&#13;
fiA CO; heifur*. S2&lt;t4 75; canners. 51 25*12 25;&#13;
bulls, $1 75^14 Co; calves, $2 WaG 5t&gt;; Tfixas&#13;
steers. J3-93 90; western steers, 13 7505 25.&#13;
Hog3—Mixe-i and butchers. 36 25@0 «B;&#13;
Procd to choice heavy, SC f*v,i$ S3; rough&#13;
heavy, $6 20f?;6 40; light. %6 4*ii» 50; bulk of&#13;
eales. $6 4)@6 60. SheeD—Good to choice&#13;
wethers. 13 30&lt;??3 75; fair to choice mixed,&#13;
J3fi3 30; western sheep. $2 30Q3 H); native&#13;
lumbs. $2 504*4 73; western lambs, $3 409&#13;
4 40.&#13;
Buffalo.—Cattle— Offering light; steady;&#13;
veals, $7 75\f»S. Hogs—Mixed packers. $o "5&#13;
liO 95; choice heavy. SlfTil 10; grassera,&#13;
light to good. $6 25*7« 40; pigs, good to&#13;
choice. $6^6 10; rough, common to good,&#13;
$t&gt;ti6 25. Sheep and lambs—Choice to&#13;
fancy native lambs. $5 1055 20; do fair to&#13;
good. $4 S.VS5 05; culls, common to good,&#13;
$3 U5«4 25; native sheep, choice handy&#13;
wethers, $3 85&lt;g'4; culls and common, $1 "5&#13;
&lt;52 25.&#13;
Pittsburg. -.C^Jtle — Choice. $5 73^6:&#13;
prime. 15 30(BR 70: good. $5 1005 35: ttdy.&#13;
$4 70^5: fair. $3 ft&gt;a4 35; heifers. $2 60#4 26;&#13;
oxen, $2 50ft"4: fat cows, $1 50^4; bulls and&#13;
stags, $2.JM: common cows to fresh, |20*p&#13;
35; good fresh cows, 135^50. Hogs—Prime&#13;
heavy. $•» 90¾7; best mediums. 16 85&lt;R* S7%;&#13;
h e a w Yorkers. $6 75«"6 80; light Yorkers,&#13;
16 G0@G 70: piys. $,&gt; 7¾?6 25; skips. $4 50@&#13;
5 25; roughs, $.ViG 50; grassers, $6 25P6 M;&#13;
Sheei&gt;—3«?st wethers. $3 80«i3 90; good.&#13;
$3 40??S 70; mixed. $.W-4 25; culled and common&#13;
$1 25Ai2 2»; yearlings, $3 50®4; spring&#13;
lambs, $3^4 S3.&#13;
G r a i n . E t c .&#13;
Cincinnati.—Wheat—Demand light, little&#13;
arriving. Xo. 2 winter red sold at 73½ on&#13;
track. Corn—Two cars No. 2 mixed sold&#13;
at 5£Hic; on track. No. 2 white is held at&#13;
GO'.uC and Xo. 2 yellow at 60c. Oats—One&#13;
car No. 2 white sold at 40½^ one car Wo.&#13;
2 mixed at 39'3c and one car No. 3 mixed&#13;
at 3Se on track, and two cars No. 2 mixed&#13;
at £7¾^ • ^ _, ,&#13;
Detroit—There is barely enough doing&#13;
in the wheat market of lat&lt;» to be worth&#13;
telling about. The cash and export demand&#13;
are small. No. 1 white. TlUc; No.&#13;
2 red, 1 car a t 70^o. closing nominal at&#13;
'IOHC; No. 3 red. *&amp;\-&gt;c; mixed winter. 70*4c;&#13;
by sample. 1 car at 6S&gt;, &gt;c l car at ®H4c per&#13;
bu. Corn—Steady; mixed grades were&#13;
quotable at 57V4c; sales of 1 car No. 3&#13;
vellow. a ^ t s - N o . 2 white. 39c bid; No. S&#13;
do. 1 car nt SSVic. 2 cars at 33c; by sample,&#13;
1 car at 37*4e per bu.&#13;
Chicago.—Wheat—No. 3 spring. 67c; No.&#13;
2 r«d. 68:Vi'?f«0%c. Corn—No. 2. 5« 1 - 4 ^ ¾ .&#13;
Oa.ts—No 2. 35 l-2&lt;»: No; 2 white, W 1-W&#13;
38c; No. 3 white, 3?ff38e. , - ' . . . . '&#13;
New York —Wheat—No. 2 red. 74 T-8c f.&#13;
o b. afloat; No. 2 red, 73 7-Sc elevator: No.&#13;
1*northern Duluth. 74 7-Sc f. o. b&gt; afloat;&#13;
NO. l hard Duluth. 79 l-8c f. o. b, afloat.&#13;
C 6 r n - N o . 2» C l-4c elevator and R!l-4c f.&#13;
o. b. atteat. O a t s - N o . 2 white. 40 l-$c; options&#13;
dull and barely steady. ••-&#13;
^ W o o l - N e w York. Mlchinan and W l s c o s -&#13;
t sin, etc.. fine. SKittlc; medium. t4c; &lt;HfSrt*T&#13;
blood. 24«Sf23c; common, 20©Hc.&#13;
..-•-r-&#13;
-"'..^•':^-;.i-#il&#13;
*... '•)&#13;
.- _ - ,.,v&#13;
•'' '--,;vj"ft"!&#13;
• ' • • • ' • • ' - - . • * ,&#13;
••;';.««&#13;
i&#13;
I&#13;
:.&#13;
i&#13;
i&#13;
v-^r.-J&#13;
H-'&#13;
--^:1&#13;
:'• ' • • W - ' ' ; ;&#13;
•9*&#13;
SSsisssssl **ilxL iu&amp;mL .^.,»fc. *sii. isIsM siUii&#13;
f M&#13;
:t&lt;j&#13;
; ?. \; • • .v •;•. ::* " " • * • ,&#13;
ft&#13;
(¾&#13;
Vr I ; • • * '&#13;
'V-&#13;
.'•*?•-.'.''&#13;
if&#13;
- • - ' ! . &gt; , • ' , . • / ' •, • ' • • ' • ^ . - ^ • - . - v " \ • • • - • ' : - , • ' . - ; ~ ' • • • • . ' - , • ' • ; • • ' • • " ' - . • ' • " • ' • - ' . ' • • • ' "&#13;
:.,:,it:' .. M , . , , , ^ ^ . ^ - , ^ . ^ ^ - * , - ^ . ^ v , ^ , , ^ ^ ^ ; - ^ * ; ^ ^ •-r^^'^'^V^'T *f*v', :*"!&#13;
^ • * . • ^ . - - &gt;&#13;
-,, t&#13;
»•&#13;
•v r **&gt;- -, -i i •-; ,. v&#13;
7 , i . P .*, '' f«.&lt; k- -&gt;"*"' ' ""&#13;
w&#13;
J,W. l^Tif/w^i^Prtrqit last&#13;
W i Laey Wtte^att goee to&#13;
Detroit this week to visit friends.&#13;
M rev Melis* Kirk of St Johns&#13;
is visiting friends here this week.&#13;
Mrs. Minnie Cole of Durand is&#13;
visiting in this vicinity for a few&#13;
days*&#13;
Wm, Shook died Sunday morning,&#13;
funeral Wednesday at the&#13;
home.&#13;
Chester VanCamp has purchased&#13;
the cider mill and commenced&#13;
making cider. .&#13;
Mrs. Lottie Boyd of St. Johns&#13;
is here looking after the interest&#13;
of her farm in Oceola.&#13;
The frost caught the Dormire&#13;
vineyard with about 7,000 pounds&#13;
of grapee un-pickcd owing to the&#13;
fact that they could not get baskets.&#13;
Bessie Lane was in Chelsea Saturday.&#13;
//..: . ..'*-• .\ ••••&gt;&#13;
Wm. Pjfper and wife visited ia&#13;
Stockbridge Saturday,&#13;
Mia. Janet Webb is visiting at&#13;
North Lake and Chelsea.&#13;
Mrs. Wm, Laverock is entertaining&#13;
a sister from Leslie,&#13;
Jessse Abbott of White Oak.&#13;
spent Sunday with Ina Smith.&#13;
Mrs.J. D. Coulton of Chelsea&#13;
called on friends here Tuesday.&#13;
A. C. Watson, wife and family&#13;
are visiting her brother, Alex Pyper&#13;
of Grand Ledge and relatives&#13;
at Ionia.&#13;
EAST PUTNAM.&#13;
Mrs. Caroline O'Neal of Durand&#13;
is visiting relatives here.&#13;
J. W. Sweeney and wife of&#13;
Chilson were guests;here Sunday.&#13;
Arthur Scheoubals and wife of&#13;
Hamburg calle4 on friends here&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
x E d n a Bolison of Brighton is&#13;
spending a couple of weeks at S.&#13;
E. Swaithout's.&#13;
Guy Lewis of Harbor Springs&#13;
has been visiting his parents 'for&#13;
the past ten days.&#13;
__Theie_wasno school Tuesday;&#13;
the teacher, Miss Monks attending&#13;
the Tiplady-Dunlavey wedding.&#13;
Warren Lewis and family entertaiiied&#13;
a number of guests from&#13;
different points in the state, the&#13;
past week.&#13;
WEST MARION.&#13;
How many of the readers the&#13;
DISPATCH saw it snow, Thursday&#13;
Oct. 3.&#13;
•Eugene and Phenie Collins&#13;
*ere callers at A, B. Farrington's&#13;
Sunday last.&#13;
Ceo. Nichols, mailman on Howell&#13;
route No. 3 is very sick with&#13;
typhoid fever.&#13;
John Witty, wife and family&#13;
visited friends hi White Oak Saturday&#13;
and Sunday.&#13;
The infant daughter of Chas.&#13;
White and wife died Friday night&#13;
funeiill Sunday 2 pm.&#13;
Mrs. Sheperdand Bev. Hennigan&#13;
filled the appointment Sunday&#13;
morning as the minister was&#13;
not there.&#13;
ANDERSON.&#13;
The farmers of this vicinity unloaded&#13;
a car of coal at this place&#13;
last week.&#13;
No. School last Friday as the&#13;
teachor, Will Boche attended the&#13;
Stockbridge fair.&#13;
A. 6 , Wilson and wife attended&#13;
the funeral of Ben Westfall in&#13;
Stockbridge Sunday.&#13;
Mabel and Ethel Montague of&#13;
Chubbs Corners visited relatives&#13;
in this place Sunday.&#13;
A. Bo wen of Muskegon and Miss&#13;
Sarah Bowen of Bandy visited at&#13;
Jas. HofFs over Sunday.&#13;
Ed. White and family of Wis.&#13;
visited Edd's parents and other&#13;
relatives here the first of the week.&#13;
. Edith Wood spent part of last&#13;
week and the first of this with the&#13;
Misses Boyle &amp; HalsteadatPinckney.&#13;
Seth Perry and wife are visiting&#13;
her parents n^ar Fowlerville&#13;
and taking in the fair.&#13;
••j • n''i.»iinii|. m* ***** i l * 'i'ii|i*M&#13;
_JLKH£B80K JABMER^S CUJB^&#13;
Tbe following program is being prepared&#13;
for the club which will meet&#13;
next Saturday, Oct. 12 at the home of&#13;
Fred Heramingway:&#13;
Will Roche,&#13;
Mae Brogan,&#13;
Nellie Gardner,&#13;
Dillivan Durkee,&#13;
Ethel Durkee,&#13;
Mrs. Stowe,&#13;
Clara Ledgwidge,&#13;
Grace Barton,&#13;
Solo&#13;
Paper&#13;
Solo&#13;
Paper&#13;
Solo&#13;
Paper&#13;
Recitation&#13;
Solo&#13;
Addltioal Local.&#13;
F *&#13;
&amp;A&#13;
WEST PUTNAM. m&#13;
Anna Spears is visiting her sis&#13;
ter Mrs. Wm. Doyle.&#13;
Ella Murphy was home from&#13;
Ann Arbor a few days last week.&#13;
H. B. Gardner and wife attended&#13;
the Ann Arbor fair last Thursday.&#13;
A good many from here attended&#13;
the Stockbridge fair Friday&#13;
last&#13;
Mrs. B. Erwin and daughter&#13;
Parrie visited at D. M. Monks'&#13;
iast Thursday.&#13;
G.W.Bates is making an exended&#13;
visit in Battle Creek, Les-&#13;
1^¾ and other points.&#13;
Edward White and family have&#13;
- moved back from Wisconsin where&#13;
Ihey have been several years.&#13;
The Misses Nellie Gardner and&#13;
Fannie Monks attended the Tip- ^ ^ ^&#13;
WyDuulavey weeing Tuesday. QY.X.&#13;
E. R. Brown is treating bis house&#13;
to a coat of paint.&#13;
Several are attending tbe Fowlerville&#13;
fair this week from here.&#13;
Tbe Misses Boyle &amp; Hal stead are in&#13;
Hamburg today with a line of millinery.&#13;
School closed last Friday to give all&#13;
a chance to attend tbe Stockbridge&#13;
fair.&#13;
Rev. H. W. Hicks was called to&#13;
Fenton Tuesday to officiate at tbe&#13;
funeral of Wm. Shook.&#13;
1. S. P. Johnson raised a few bills&#13;
of sweet potatoes, this season. Tbey&#13;
were not started in time however to&#13;
folly ripen.&#13;
Wjllia Tnpper aad family visited&#13;
friends in Matron last week and took&#13;
in the street fair. They report the&#13;
fair a success.&#13;
Will Doyle and Fred Teepietook up&#13;
work in the High sctool again this&#13;
week. Tbey were unable to commence&#13;
in Sept.&#13;
H. G. BrigfF, wife and daughter&#13;
Mrs. F. L Andrews, attended the district&#13;
Epworth League meeting at&#13;
Chelsea Wednesday.&#13;
G. S. Burgess and Co. of Brighton,&#13;
a e bidding for a "fair" share of your&#13;
trade during tbe Brighton fair. Tbeir&#13;
adv. is on page one.&#13;
Some noe reads the local advs. in&#13;
tbe DISPATCH. At any rate 8igler's&#13;
wbee barrow was returned in les* than&#13;
24 hours after onr last issue.&#13;
Mesdames T. Read, Nettie-Vaughn,&#13;
pan. Richards and grandson, are in&#13;
Grand Rapids this week. The ladies&#13;
arn attending tbe state meeting of tbe&#13;
WEN Superintendent&#13;
Converse promised' a&#13;
better aeries of live&#13;
stock sbowa at tbe&#13;
Pan-American Exposition&#13;
than was ever before attempted,&#13;
tbe statement was accepted as an ordinary&#13;
pleasant and pardonable exaggeration.&#13;
Tbe complete success of tbe dog and&#13;
tbe swine shows, however, proved to&#13;
be the first steps toward redeeming bis&#13;
promise.&#13;
The cattle show was an agreeable&#13;
surprise to every stocfcma#n who saw&#13;
it and at once established a new standard&#13;
of excellence that will not be&#13;
equaled for years to come and possibly&#13;
never surpassed as regards quality.&#13;
The sheep show, now fully under&#13;
way and lasting to Oct. 26, is in every&#13;
way a worthy successor to the dog,&#13;
the swiue and the cattle shows. The&#13;
best flocks in the United States and&#13;
Canada are represented, together with&#13;
their recent additions of imported&#13;
stock, consisting of about twenty fine&#13;
animals now shown in this country for&#13;
the first time.&#13;
The sheep show, taken as a whole, is&#13;
one of the most complete ever brought&#13;
together. Every important breed has&#13;
a strong representation, while every&#13;
breed known has an exhibit of some&#13;
kind. The Island Black Face, of whicb&#13;
there are but three or four flocks in tbe&#13;
United Stutes, are well represented,&#13;
and tbey are creating a great deal of&#13;
interest among the exhibitors and visitors.&#13;
&gt;&#13;
All classes in tbe middle wools are&#13;
pnrticr.JsM-ly _strong.,_nuioiis whlcli :tre&#13;
tTon" visitors their" practical^worlfaf,&#13;
twenty sheep are brought from the&#13;
East Buffalo stockyards every morning.&#13;
One machine is set In motion each&#13;
half hour during tbe day, and one of&#13;
the men in charge removes a fleece&#13;
with it One of the operators claims a&#13;
speed of one and one-half minutes to a&#13;
neece.&#13;
Raa*« Sk**p.&#13;
In a pen outside of the regular sheep&#13;
exhibit is a carload of range sheep direct&#13;
from the Canadian northwest&#13;
These are sent as an advertisement of&#13;
the rich pasture lands and an illustration&#13;
of what may be produced there&#13;
without additional feed and without&#13;
artificial shelter.&#13;
The Pan-Amerlearn Horse Show.&#13;
Dame Fashion may have withdrawn&#13;
her smile of approval and tbe different&#13;
styles of autos turn their backs in derision,&#13;
but tbe borse still holds favor&#13;
with the great majority of mankind.&#13;
The borse show at the Exposition&#13;
which holds the boards for two weeks,&#13;
from Oct 7 to Oct. 19, will be no exception.&#13;
Five hundred horses are coming&#13;
which are carefully selected to faithfully&#13;
represent the best of every breed&#13;
found in the United States and Canada.&#13;
Vermont is again courting prominence&#13;
by sending a fine lot of Morgan&#13;
horses, a breed that should receive&#13;
more attention than it does.&#13;
Draft horses, especially the Clydesdale&#13;
and Percheron breeds; are well&#13;
represented. These are principally from&#13;
-Canada and the western states.&#13;
German coach horses attract a great&#13;
deal.of attention. Ont large Uqnorta-&#13;
Wjp. Kennedy of Detroit has MN&amp;&#13;
edioe home of W. tt BurU sjaji&#13;
moved bU family there. Bthutai&amp;&#13;
rented the Jaoobey hnuet of i&gt;. ,W«&#13;
Marts and will open a basket factory&#13;
there, There oertainly it a oha*ee to&#13;
make something at ths basket Vbosf^&#13;
new as tbe past season it baj bem&#13;
simply out of tbe question for fruit&#13;
growers to get baskets enough te&#13;
handle this fruit.&#13;
Jas. Dillon will work for Mr. Kennedyand&#13;
we wish them unbounded&#13;
success. There ia plenty of suitable&#13;
timber in this vicinity and we hope&#13;
the industry may grow and prosper.&#13;
Card of Thank*.&#13;
* • • ' • ' £ •'.-&#13;
*iy ' '•, •' ^ '" *^&#13;
,V'-V;'-V j".&#13;
We wish to thank tbe friends and&#13;
neighbors for their kindness during&#13;
the illness and death ot oar little&#13;
daughter. We also wish to thank tbe&#13;
choir. MB* AKD MBS. CHABXBS WHITE&#13;
Business- Pointers.&#13;
Fortfele&#13;
A good top buggy, new this summer.&#13;
Terms Cash. tf&#13;
C. L. SIGLIB.&#13;
For S a l e .&#13;
20 aores of land. About half good&#13;
mowing marsh, rest good secondgrowth&#13;
oak timber.&#13;
t-43 JOSEPH QUITO. *&#13;
LIVE STOCK BUILDINGS, PAN-AMBBI04N EXPOfiITK)N.^&#13;
"« arr.-c ^ t —&#13;
/ ' , - • •ih tf&#13;
&amp;••' i f . A UNADILLA^&#13;
race Palmer of Fair InneV band, one of the best ui the&#13;
?u T \ country, will give concerts free to all&#13;
•« tHe ttrst Pa^Ainerloan ExnosltlOft tlsltofs^rom&#13;
Oct 7 to 2a&#13;
north, south and Canada. Tbe strongest&#13;
representation of all is from the&#13;
Merinos. Vermont, tbe home of the&#13;
Merino, where tbe only distinctive&#13;
American breed of sheep originated, is&#13;
represented by many of her best breeders.&#13;
This fact deserves more than a&#13;
passing notice, as our domestic animals&#13;
of American origin are not numerous.&#13;
We have borrowed almost everything&#13;
of this nature from other&#13;
countries. The only otlier exception Is&#13;
possibly tbe American trotting borse&#13;
Ansorm Goat a.&#13;
In connection witb the sbeep sbow is&#13;
an exhibit of 240 Angora goats. These&#13;
interesting animals fill one of the iive&#13;
stock pavilions. Tbe growing of Angora&#13;
goats is a comparatively new&#13;
business in this country, and very little&#13;
Is known about it in the east Their&#13;
adaptability to rough, rocky pasture&#13;
lands, where they graze and grow contentedly,&#13;
has brought them prominently&#13;
into consideration where such lands&#13;
have proved useless or nearly so.&#13;
Wool Exhibit.&#13;
As another feature of the sheep shew&#13;
Superintendent Converse has arranged&#13;
an exhibition of wool. This is International&#13;
in scope, having fleeces from tbe&#13;
different states, Canada and several&#13;
South American countries. Argentina&#13;
alone contributes more than 200 sample&#13;
fleeces. Chile. Costa Rica, Bolivia,&#13;
Salvador and other Central and South&#13;
American countries are also represented.&#13;
Such an international wool exhibit&#13;
was never before attempted. It cannot&#13;
fall to produce lasting benefits that&#13;
will be shared by growers of sbeep,&#13;
mannfacturers of woolen goods and&#13;
through tbem tbe general public*&#13;
Shoarta* Naafclaory.&#13;
Still another accessory to tbe sbeep&#13;
lndnetry is elaborately illustrated. In&#13;
one of tbe stock buddings a platform&#13;
was erected about three feet above the&#13;
floor, upon which is installed tbe latest&#13;
and beet shearing nnd clipping machinery.&#13;
Some of tbe nincuiues are operated&#13;
by electricity, while others are&#13;
mn£|i&amp; bjLhnnjL Ta_fifcaaJtQ-Elotion&#13;
of these horses will bVbrought direct&#13;
to the Exposition.&#13;
French-Canadian horses from Quebec&#13;
are entered more as a special feature of&#13;
the horse show. Tbey are little known&#13;
in the United States, but their style&#13;
and endurance will commend them as&#13;
superior coach horses and those that&#13;
will command favor in any market&#13;
Instead of enumerating the different&#13;
breeds it is only necessary to select&#13;
any kind of horse wanted, with tbe assurance&#13;
that it will be on exhibition.&#13;
The finest stables on tbe continent are&#13;
contributing to tbe show witb sufficient&#13;
enthusiasm to Insure the finest representation&#13;
possible.&#13;
place In the Stadium on tbe 9th and&#13;
10th of October, when this immense&#13;
structure will be none too large to accommodate&#13;
those who will want to see&#13;
this crowning climax to sucb an elaborate&#13;
series of live stock shows.&#13;
Pomltrr aad Pet Stock.&#13;
From Oct. 21 to the close of tbe fair&#13;
tbe stock,pavilions will be once more&#13;
filled witb life, though In a very different&#13;
form. Poultry of high degree&#13;
from all parts of the United States and&#13;
many places in Canada will fraternise&#13;
without regard to politics or tariffs.&#13;
As near neighbors tbe poultry will have&#13;
mice, rabbits, cats, cavies, prairie dogs,&#13;
squirrels, ferrets, rats and Belgian&#13;
hares, besides a great assortment of&#13;
pigeons, owls, magpies and a great&#13;
many cage birds.&#13;
Eight thousand animals and birds&#13;
are being gathered together to form&#13;
this complete cosmopolitan assemblage&#13;
of birds and animals. &gt;&#13;
If you want your piano tuned&#13;
right, drop a card to F. N. Monroe,&#13;
Howell, Mich. t-43&#13;
Pettyaville cider mill is-now ready&#13;
and will make cider whenever there&#13;
are apples to grind.&#13;
W. Hoona,&#13;
i • • • ' . i « i i m » n&#13;
These cool day^rSmind ns that winter&#13;
is approaching and our wood supply&#13;
is low. Any of our many subscribers&#13;
wbo wish to help us out along&#13;
this lioe we would be pleased to have&#13;
them do so immediately.&#13;
Far Halo.&#13;
Anyone in need of a well pump will&#13;
do well to call on us. Desiring to&#13;
pat in a force pomp we have a good&#13;
second band pump in good running&#13;
order. It was working well in a 58&#13;
foot welt when changed for the force.&#13;
The pump may be seen at Teeple &amp;&#13;
Cad wells.&#13;
If a person has anything to sell, be&#13;
he merchant or tarmei, it does not&#13;
pay to. wait until your competitor has&#13;
the start of yon before you let the.&#13;
buyer know yon have it for sale. Tbe&#13;
DISPATCH is the best medium in this&#13;
vicinity through which to let your&#13;
wants be known.&#13;
CfTAttl OF MICHIGAN, County of Ltriagrtoa&#13;
At p SMsUm of th« Probate Court for said Cocatv,&#13;
hHdat the Probate OBotla tat VlUtf* of&#13;
Howell, on Monday tbe SOth Aaj of Septaaber, te&#13;
tbe year one thou and nine bnadred aad one.&#13;
Present, Eocene A, Stowe Judge of Probate, ia&#13;
tbe Matter of tbe Getate of .&#13;
OBLA B..JAGjcaoir, Deoeaeed.&#13;
On reading and filing tbe petition duly verified ot&#13;
Ella M. Jackson, praying that a certain inatnment&#13;
now on file in this coort, purporting to be&#13;
the last Will and Testament of said flaooaand, may&#13;
be admitted to probate.&#13;
Thereupon it is ordered that Tuesday tbe 89th&#13;
day of October next, at 10 o'clock in tbe foret&#13;
The Judging takeajjioon, at''said Probate Office, be assigned for tbe&#13;
bearing of said petition.&#13;
It is further ordered that a copy of this order be&#13;
published in the PINCKKBT DISPATCH, a newspaper&#13;
printed and circulating la sai&lt; oouaty, three&#13;
successive weeks previous to said day of bearing.&#13;
Euexsi A. STOWS,&#13;
" 3 Judge of Probate&#13;
JUm&#13;
Poultrymen from an over the United&#13;
States wltt be meeting at Buffalo and&#13;
the Pan-American Exposition tbe last&#13;
three weeks of October.&#13;
Tbo stock shows at the Pan-America&#13;
n Ex no* it ion have been, most popular.&#13;
The fibeep ohow began Sept 28 and&#13;
lasts until Oct 25.&#13;
STBWA RT'S ROOFING *&#13;
AND&#13;
ROOFING IATIEIALS&#13;
tif Mkin »EW ROOK u i nptalsx&#13;
PipJU£j if ill ttaa, em torn&#13;
mint. St* fff Clt*CM.&#13;
W. H. ST&amp;WART,&#13;
IOSJOHNST.. t N. V.&#13;
•&#13;
, V , ; , ,&#13;
• ' ' ' ' • .&#13;
.•'•':. 'I&#13;
. . / . - • . . ' . j '- .V''. .'•&#13;
* • *&#13;
s!&#13;
;::S £•,&#13;
)"&#13;
is&#13;
'i&#13;
% .¾.&#13;
•I&#13;
•rk&#13;
•il&#13;
K.&#13;
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              <text>Use the Windows Snipping Tool to capture the area of the document you want to save. If you want multiple pages printed please see staff to print the pages you want. &lt;a href="https://howelllibrary.org/technology/#print" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View the library's printing information.&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch October 10, 1901</text>
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                <text>October 10, 1901 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>1901-10-10</text>
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                <text>Frank L. Andrews</text>
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                  <text>Below is a list of all the newspaper information we know about for Livingston County, Michigan:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Brighton Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (1880-2000) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1880-1968 in the Local History Room. Brighton Library also has holdings of this newspaper in their &lt;a href="https://brightonlibrary.info/about-bdl/genealogy-local-history/the-brighton-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Brighton Room&lt;/a&gt;. &lt;a href="https://brighton.historyarchives.online/home" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Community Life&lt;/strong&gt; (Hartland) (1933-present) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1933-1991.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville News and Views&lt;/strong&gt; (1984-present)- a newspaper that has been covering the Fowlerville, Webberville, and Howell areas. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?fc=websiteGroup%3AFowlerville+News+and+Views" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; (contains 2018-present newspapers and 2015-present blog entries). &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville Review&lt;/strong&gt; (1875-1971) - we have microfilm of this newspaper in the Local History Room. &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Gregory Gazette&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1912–1913) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=gregory+gazette"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/strong&gt; (2003–2009)&lt;span&gt; - digital copes of newspaper. &lt;/span&gt;The&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;em&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/em&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;was a local community newspaper, housed in downtown Brighton, with a weekly circulation of 54,000. Encompassing a News, Features and Sports sections, the paper operated from 2003 to 2009 under the umbrella of The Ann Arbor News. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=livingston+community+news"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; &lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Argus-Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt; (1965-1969) - Brighton Argus and Pinckney Dispatch merged in 1965. Then became Brighton Argus again in 1969. See either Pinckney Dispatch or Brighton Argus for access to this newspaper.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1937-2000) - Livingston Republican Press changes name in 1937. In 1980 Brighton Argus buys and continues to publish both Brighton Argus and Livingston County Press. In 1997 both papers are published twice weekly. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Courier &lt;/strong&gt;(1843-1857) - we have 1843-1846 in digital format. We don't have the rest of the date range. Becomes Livingston Democrat in 1857. Have microfilm for 1843-1856 in Local History Room.&lt;span&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (2000-present) - In September 2000, two successful twice-weekly newspapers the Livingston County Press and the Brighton Argus – that had each been publishing in various forms for more than 100 years - became one. The first edition of the Livingston County Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus hit the streets Sept. 7, 2000. Gannett purchased the newspaper in 2005 as part of the acquisition of Hometown Communications Inc. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Democrat&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1857–1928) - index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Herald&lt;/strong&gt; (1886–1887) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/paper/the-livingston-herald/9306/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Livingston Post&lt;/strong&gt; (2009-present) - a all-digital information and opinion site in Livingston County, Michigan. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1855–1929) &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span&gt;- index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1929-1937) - Livingston Republican and Livingston Democrat merged in 1929. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Tidings&lt;/strong&gt; (1906-19??) - By 1910 it was published by A. Riley Crittenden.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Pinckney Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1883–1965) - digital copies of newspaper. We have all the years except 1890 and 1894-1896 are missing. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=pinckney+dispatch"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Brief Sun&lt;/strong&gt; (1883-1965) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Town Crier&lt;/strong&gt; (1966-1999) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
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              <text>InnAi**ytWt"S%lif) morn'ug Mr. Teepto ; Jtsnft tJM&#13;
p u i M last ^ * f l(Wr«e^ en the back stent but the fife&#13;
Xiir A»ma pwpyww«» nrday .,w ith. .M. Us B_ et,i futw-.a.^rt1b.o^n-^t. ,-1 The same nurbt tfe* &lt;&#13;
An interesting letter fro© $• W.&#13;
of. hei^r dra ugvhit.e_r , M*«i.s.. Ww . Ww . BUairmnarrdd &lt;rt...MMV«tA»*AftrM Mir medi-&#13;
A boot the heaviest rain of the sea*&#13;
•oh tMuted this iextion on Friday&#13;
» i g b | a ^ S ^&#13;
. Borate Mr. and Mpt, H. F. McKever&#13;
Oct. I a sen, Thais leaking four&#13;
son* and four daughters.—Irston&#13;
Clipper.&#13;
lUt". H;. W., Hicks witrpreach a&#13;
memorial sermon on the death of&#13;
Preaideot McKinlej Sunday evening&#13;
next at 7 o'clock. Everyone invited.&#13;
Mrs. Pinch's Sanday school class&#13;
will hold an experience social at her&#13;
home on Unadilla street on Friday&#13;
•vening Oet. 18, to which, all are welcome.&#13;
Admission 10 cents.&#13;
A.Bowman,&#13;
DEPARTMENT&#13;
STORE Howut mmm&#13;
BOWMAN'S&#13;
Special S a l e of:&#13;
Battenberg and Art Needle&#13;
^ Goods. ^&#13;
ALSO&#13;
The corner stone of the new medi&#13;
cal building at the U. of U. was laid&#13;
on Tuesday.&#13;
Do not forget the social at Mrs. R.&#13;
£. Finch's to-morrow, Friday night,&#13;
, Go and give the class a lift.&#13;
night the O'Connor girls I&#13;
were awakened by hearing someone,&#13;
ih their dinning room and seeing a&#13;
dim light. They rapped upon the&#13;
wall awaking Chas. Teeple who lives 1&#13;
in the other part of the house and the*&#13;
-^Of course you are coming to the fair and a^turaltjr yen*&#13;
wittlmng along a little spare change in case of emergency.&#13;
T o persuade you that it will be worth your white tor bring;&#13;
\n the other part of the bouse and the a little more with you and call on us while here, we quote a&#13;
noise startled the burglars who i»d few Df the best "fair" bargains ever offered to the people of&#13;
Ohas. got to the window in time to t b j s v j c j n ; t v 4&#13;
them jump from the porch and run.&#13;
to and give the class a lift. ^ - - . . - ^ - :&#13;
" , . , • _. Several residences in So. Lyon were&#13;
-Merk Swertboat harvested 154 hrQkm iM 8 o | l d a y ^ &amp;na ft .$&#13;
-.u„i . n* w.anft tr«m . acres. This _ _ ; _ , , t w fw A r e ^ 8 a m e o r&#13;
Big New Stock of China.&#13;
Lower Price* than e l s e w h e r e&#13;
Trade at B O W I t i a i l ' s »P«V»&#13;
T h e Buiay Store,&#13;
Howell, Mich.&#13;
bushel s of beans trom i acres.&#13;
is a vield of 22 bushels per acre.&#13;
Another piece of the Ann Arbor&#13;
railroad sank about ten feet Monday.&#13;
This time it was near John Sweeney's.&#13;
The Putnam and Hambnra farmers&#13;
club will meet at the home of Myer&#13;
Davis, Saturday of next week. Bring&#13;
lap boards and dishes.&#13;
Mrs. C. D. Coleman of Oreston Co.&#13;
and Mrs H. E. Brown of Stookhridge&#13;
visited with Chas. Love and family&#13;
Tuesday of this week.&#13;
M. Yake was in. Munith on business&#13;
Tuesday. On Saturday, Oct. 26, he&#13;
will hold an auction at his place of&#13;
business in this village. See small&#13;
bills.&#13;
J. W. Placeway brought us a dozen&#13;
fine ears of sweet corn the first of the&#13;
week. Be planted the same July 26&#13;
for the purpose of having some late&#13;
green corn. Thanks.&#13;
Mrs. Lena Smith and (laughters&#13;
and Mrs. A. J. WilbeLm were in Lansing&#13;
last Saturday and Sunday attending&#13;
the two-day meeting held at&#13;
that place by the L. D. 8. of the Reorganized&#13;
church of Jesus Christ.&#13;
surmised that these are the same or&#13;
belong to the same ffang, $L0Qapr=&#13;
H ABTEST HOME FESTIY a L.&#13;
Don't forget the Harvest Hpme&#13;
Festival at the Opera House Friday&#13;
and Saturday Oct. 25 26 to which&#13;
everybody is most cordially invited.&#13;
Bring {your pocketbook with you for&#13;
all kinds of Merchan dise and produce&#13;
will be offered for sale at extremly&#13;
low prices. All who can contribute&#13;
are repuested to bring their offerings&#13;
Wednesday or Thursday so they can&#13;
he arranged in the booths. Friday a&#13;
good supper for 10c. Chicken Pie on&#13;
Saturday 15c. Ice cream will be served&#13;
both days. Th« last fair of the&#13;
season. Hen? ember the dates Oct. 25-&#13;
26&#13;
One group of Boys' Oil Grain and Kangaroo Calf shoes,&#13;
sizes tyto 5¾ at&#13;
One group of Boys' and Youths' Oil Grain and Ca f&#13;
skin shoes, sizes 1 ¾ to 5 i at 75e a pc&#13;
One group of Youths' Calf skin shoes, sizes U to U at 50c a pr&#13;
One group of Boys' Calf, Congress shoes; sizes 13$ to 5¾ at 25c a pr&#13;
Several lots of Children's and Misses' shoes at 50c and 75c a pr&#13;
Jackets&#13;
One lot of Ladies' Jackets, sizes 32 to 40, at&#13;
One lot of Ladies' Jackets, sizes 32 to 42, at&#13;
One lot of Ladies' heavy, warm Jackets, sizes 32 to 40, at&#13;
One lot of Ladies' heavy, warm Jackets, sizes 32 to 34, at&#13;
W e a l s o h a v e q u i t e a n a s s o r t m e n t o f b a d l e s 9&#13;
N e w e r a n d B e t t e r s t y l e J a c k e t s a t 2 5 p e r c e n t d i s -&#13;
c o u n t f r o m t h e r e g u l a r p r i c e .&#13;
50c each&#13;
•1.00 each&#13;
2.00 each&#13;
3.00 each&#13;
-.«•«-»-&#13;
Barrier* at Plnekney.&#13;
Pinokney is bound not to be behind&#13;
her sister villages in anything, even&#13;
burglars. On Monday night someone&#13;
entered the residence of John J. Teeple&#13;
and vamoosed with his trousers.&#13;
Just Received&#13;
At JACKSON'S,&#13;
A fine hne of Black Dress Goods&#13;
at 50c, 75, 85c, $1.00 and $1.25 per yd.&#13;
A large line of Bed Blankets and Comfortables.&#13;
A fine line of Plain and Figured Tennis Flannel&#13;
at 5c, 8c, 10c and 12c per yd.&#13;
A complete line of Men's, Ladies', Misses'&#13;
and Children's Cotton and*-Wool Underwear&#13;
at prices in reach of all.&#13;
Men's Duck Coats ranging from $1.25 to $2.00 each&#13;
Men's Fine Shoes ranging from 1.50 to 4.00 pair&#13;
Ladies'Fine Shoes ranging from 1.50 to 3.00 pair&#13;
Boys' and Youths' Shoes ranging from 1.00 to 2.00 pair&#13;
Misses and Childrens shoes ranging from .50 to 2.00 pair&#13;
Men's Leather and Rubber Boots at Popular Prices&#13;
ANDERSON FARMER'S CLUB.&#13;
Owing to the bad weather the Anderson&#13;
farmers club was not very well&#13;
attended at Fred Hemmingway's last&#13;
Saturday. However they held an interesting&#13;
and profitable meeting. The&#13;
main subject discussed was the sugar&#13;
beet business and while many thought&#13;
it was the most profitable thing&#13;
to do where a factory was&#13;
near they thought it would require to&#13;
large an amount of the profits to&#13;
haul tbe beets as far a Howell. It a&#13;
factory was nearer they thought it&#13;
would be a ffood thing and would go&#13;
into it heartily. The next meeting&#13;
will be held at the home of J as. Livermore.&#13;
Suits and Overcoats&#13;
In Men's and Boys' Suite, Overcoats and Ulsters, we can still show&#13;
yon quite an assortment at the extremely large discount of 25 per&#13;
cent from the regular price.&#13;
^ ? : -&#13;
O u r l a t c h s t r i n g i s a l w a y s o u t a n d y o u a r e a s w e l -&#13;
c o m e a s e v e r t o m a k e o u r s t o r e s y o u r h e a d q u a r t e r s&#13;
w h i l e i n t o w n . L _ .,.&#13;
6.- S. *Bwro,ess l&gt; Co.,&#13;
\20th Century Stove Greeting.&#13;
The old reliable firm that have built up their trade with&#13;
your valuable assistance, are happy to inform you that&#13;
they are in better position to serve your wants than ever&#13;
they were in the 19th Century, and cordially invite yon&#13;
to our store and iaveetigate the truth of the statement&#13;
that we have the best line of&#13;
Coal and&#13;
in&#13;
and at&#13;
Always Yours,&#13;
*^&#13;
that defy competition.&#13;
TEEPLE &amp; CftDWELL&#13;
WHY NOT PENCKNETf&#13;
Best Location In County for Beet Sugar&#13;
Factory.&#13;
Howell and 4'owlerville are both after&#13;
a beet sugar factory and both&#13;
claim tbe best advantages. We rise&#13;
to say that right here in Fincknej&#13;
and vicinity we have every advantage&#13;
of either town and some better. ,&#13;
In the first place the land about the&#13;
village is especially adapted to raising&#13;
the sugar beet that has the sugar in it.&#13;
There are hundreds of acres within&#13;
a few miles of the village that are&#13;
easily cultivated and contains the&#13;
properties of sugar. Low black soil&#13;
may raise tbe beets but the sand loam&#13;
is what makes the sugar.&#13;
In the second place considerable&#13;
hrne stone is needed in the sugar&#13;
making process and that could be se&#13;
onred without going as far as some&#13;
may think.&#13;
In the third place w£ are situated&#13;
so far from the milk factory that the&#13;
best profiits are spent in getting the&#13;
milk to market ana with a beet factory&#13;
farmers could draw their beets in&#13;
and a load of pulp back for fuel and&#13;
manure.&#13;
We understand that.«U the acreage-I&#13;
required to start a factory conld be'&#13;
secured here and a site given etc.&#13;
We think it wocud pay to founders of&#13;
the factories to visit our village before&#13;
jumping at any conclusions. Let us&#13;
hear what you think about it.&#13;
Orla Hendee returned to his work&#13;
at Cadillac Tuesday.&#13;
Sugene tempbeUaed njf* m ^&#13;
iting in and near Buffalo, Tney wiU&#13;
visH the Pan-Am. again while :tee*i.&#13;
Mr. and airs. Malaoha Roche returned&#13;
Monday from a weeks, visit&#13;
with relatives aai friends in Bunker&#13;
Hill, Fowltrvilleand Howell.&#13;
Drugs,&#13;
Medicines,&#13;
Books:&#13;
Stationery, .&#13;
Fancy and&#13;
Toilet&#13;
Articles.&#13;
A Full Um of the Finest Candies&#13;
We sell you more Stick Candy&#13;
for the money than others dare&#13;
offer.&#13;
61VE US 4 CALL Yours for trade,&#13;
F. ». SIGLER.&#13;
BOOK BINDING.&#13;
.¾&#13;
all&#13;
Magazines,&#13;
Pamphlets,&#13;
Receipts,&#13;
Blank Books, Etc,&#13;
Having ftthd &lt;hwB fa butmmi in utr&#13;
ewBTTOrev MCWVV new IBMS* #WC*# *IC* W wt,&#13;
MnVr^^JpwVv uKm w99r IV flv M W 0 N W e j [ W&#13;
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• • f&#13;
Unwary YleHwp; from tfe*'&#13;
— m a r JsaUk X£I* It*&#13;
Wfcai of tba.M*hV-T*ha&#13;
&lt;* 4r««t Temptation.&#13;
"TV.&#13;
wj*^^*» s X 36 SpS&#13;
scutvte o r coal to that poor family to&#13;
that dark place. Kara It an undertaktr&#13;
tolftf up the steps of * building&#13;
trm**htd*-.tkurwrnm * hitter crt;&#13;
wM&amp;h -Jn4t&lt;*t*« tha* ft*&#13;
angel&#13;
is » minist**vot &lt;r%ig}an, whQ, be* beta&#13;
Chrlatlin. Here is a physlcta*&#13;
along In great feast* Keslftr i l l tb#&#13;
Ughts have gone out in the dwellings,&#13;
for It is the third watch of the Alghtt&#13;
That light la the win&lt;law&gt;ia tbAdigat&#13;
of .the watcher, lor the med clnes m.u#&#13;
be administered, and the fever nw#t&#13;
it^iiffiiy&#13;
/W-yrttat, ttW,. br fcqujs l^ontch, 2*. Y.J,&#13;
Washington, Oct 13.—In thU di*-&#13;
Df. Talmage describes some of&#13;
* ^ ^ ^ « « « 4 ****** nj^htdha watchjed».aa&lt;Ltha AS-USLS tossing off&#13;
e* the groat c|ties, and warns the un&#13;
* v y of many perils; text, Isaiah, xxl,&#13;
41, '"Watchman, what of the night?"&#13;
Wh^j^Jghtcsme dawn on Babylon,&#13;
JKUwreh and Jerusalem they needed&#13;
qnrofta watching; otherwise the lnoeh-&#13;
4tV?'f torch might have been thrust&#13;
***»• the very heart of th* metropolitan&#13;
^tendor, or enemies; marching from&#13;
&lt;tke hills, might have forced the gates.&#13;
All night long, on top of the wall'and&#13;
Mm front of the gates/ might be heard&#13;
measured step Of the Watchman on&#13;
solUary beat. Sijence hung in the&#13;
•Ir, save as some passerby raised the&#13;
•jpartton, "Watchman, what of tho&#13;
JSlghtr?&#13;
I t is to me a &gt; deeply suggestive and&#13;
thing to see a man standing&#13;
by night It thrilled through me&#13;
at the gate of an arsenal in Char-&#13;
^ ^ the question once smote me,&#13;
•"Who comes there?" followed by the&#13;
Command, "Advance and give&#13;
countersign." Every moral teacher&#13;
on picket or patrols the wall as&#13;
-watchman. His work is to sound the&#13;
and whether it be In the first&#13;
. in the second watch, in the&#13;
'third watch or In the fourth watch to&#13;
'-'•*• vigilant until the daybreak flings its&#13;
**Boniing glories" of blooming cloud&#13;
, across the trellis of the sky.&#13;
The ancients divided their night into&#13;
four parts—the first watch, from 6&#13;
t» 9; the second, from 9 to 12; the&#13;
third, from 12 to 3, and the fourth,&#13;
from 3 to 6. I speak now of the city&#13;
fa the third watch, or from 12 to 3&#13;
Vclock.&#13;
Th« Early Watch.&#13;
I never weary of looking upon the&#13;
life of the cjty in the first watch. That&#13;
•Is the hour when the stores are closing.&#13;
The laboring men, having quitted the&#13;
Holding and the shop, are on their&#13;
home. It rejoices me to give them&#13;
seat in the city car. They have&#13;
and hammered away all day.&#13;
feet are weary. They are exhausted&#13;
with the tug of work^ They&#13;
mostly cheerfulT With appetites&#13;
led oa the swift turner's wheel&#13;
the carpenter's whetstone they&#13;
the evening meal. The clerks,&#13;
»too, have broken away from the coun-&#13;
'ter and with brain weary of the long&#13;
'Use of figures and the whims of those&#13;
who go a-ahopping seek the face of&#13;
or wife or child. The streets&#13;
thronged with young men setting&#13;
*oat from the great centers of bargain&#13;
wtaking. Let idlers clear the street&#13;
aad give right of way to the besweated&#13;
artisans and merchants! They have&#13;
earned their bread and are now on&#13;
their way home to get i t The lights&#13;
i a fall jet hang over 10,000 evening repasts—&#13;
the parents at either end of the&#13;
table, the children between. Thank&#13;
God, "who setteth the solitary In fami-&#13;
A few hours later and all tha places&#13;
'Of amusement, good and bad, are in&#13;
fall tide. Lovers of art, catalogue in&#13;
hand, stroll through the -galleries and&#13;
discuss the pictures. The ballroom Is&#13;
resplendent with the rich apparel of&#13;
those who, on either side of the white,&#13;
glistening boards, await the signal&#13;
from the orchestra. Concert halls are&#13;
lifted into enchantment with the war-&#13;
Me of one songstress or swept out on&#13;
a sea of tumultuous feeling by the&#13;
Mast of brazen Instruments. Drawing&#13;
rooms are filled with all gracefulness&#13;
«f apparel, with all sweetness of sound,&#13;
with all splendor of manner; mirrors&#13;
catching up and multiplying the&#13;
until it seems as If in Infinite&#13;
corridors there were garlanded troops&#13;
advancing and retreating. The outdoor&#13;
air'rings with laughter and with&#13;
moving to and fro of thousands&#13;
the great promenades. The dashspan,&#13;
adrip with: the foam of tie&#13;
country ride, rushes past as you&#13;
at the curbstone. Mirth, revelry,&#13;
heanty, fashion, magnificence, mingle&#13;
-tm the great metropolitan picture until&#13;
•the thinking man goes home to think&#13;
snore seriously, and the praying man&#13;
-to pray more earnestly. A beautiful&#13;
and overwhelming thing Is the city in&#13;
the 'first and second watches of the&#13;
atght&#13;
Tturd Watch of the Night.&#13;
Bat the clock strikes 12 and the third&#13;
watch has begun. The thunder of the&#13;
city has rolled out of the air. The&#13;
ellgfatec^ sounds cut the night with&#13;
•aaea distinctness as to attract your&#13;
attention. The "tinkling of the boll of&#13;
the street car in the distance and the&#13;
haying or the dog. The stamp of a&#13;
in the next street The slamof&#13;
a saloon door. The hiccough&#13;
the drunkard. The shriek3 of the&#13;
thistle five miles away. Oh,&#13;
sufflpstive, my friends, the third&#13;
watch of the nightt '&#13;
There are h:n:st men passing up&#13;
4QWA the tt*e t Her* Ja a city&#13;
whs has be .a canying X&#13;
of the coverlid must 'he rtsisM&amp; WW&#13;
the ice mast ba k'pt on the hot temples&#13;
and the pery^tuajSprayer mus\|W&#13;
up from hearts »aoa-te be broken/&#13;
Oh, the third watch of the night!&#13;
What a stupendous thought—-a whole&#13;
city at rest! Weary arm preparing" for&#13;
tomorrow's toll. Hot brais*hcing nodicd&#13;
off. R'gld muscles relaxed. Excited&#13;
nerves soothed. The white htfr of&#13;
the octogenarian in thin drifts across&#13;
the pillow, fresh fall of flakes oa enow&#13;
already fallen. Childhood, wtth its&#13;
dimpled hands thrown cut on the pillow,&#13;
and with every breath taking in a&#13;
new store of fun and frolic. Third&#13;
watch of the night! God's slumberless&#13;
eye will look. Let one great wave of&#13;
refreshing slumber roll over the heart&#13;
of the great town, cubmeiglng cars and&#13;
anxiety and worriment and pain,- Let&#13;
the city sleej&gt;.&#13;
Those Who Sleep Not.&#13;
But my friends, be not deceived.&#13;
There will be toni&amp;ht thousands who&#13;
will not sleep si alL Go up that dark&#13;
alley, and be cautious where you tread&#13;
lest you fall over the prostrate form&#13;
of a drunkard lying on his own doorstep.&#13;
Look about you, lest you feel the&#13;
garroter's hug. Look through the broken&#13;
window pane and see what ycu can&#13;
see. You cay, "Nothing." Then listen.&#13;
What is it? "God help us!" No&#13;
footlights, but tragedy ghastlier and&#13;
mightier than Rlstori or Edwin Booth&#13;
ever enacted. No light, no fire, no&#13;
bread, no hope. Shivering in the cold,&#13;
they have had no fcod for twenty-four&#13;
hours. You say, "Why don't they&#13;
beg?" They do, but they gat nothing.&#13;
You say, "Why don't they deliver&#13;
themselves over to the almshouse?"&#13;
Ah, you would not ask that if you ever&#13;
heard the bitter cry of a man or child&#13;
when told he must go to the almshouse!&#13;
"Oh," you say, "they are vicious&#13;
poor, and there!ore they do not&#13;
deserve our sympathy." Are they vicio&#13;
u s ? S o much more need they your&#13;
pity. The ChrlElian pocr, God helps&#13;
them. Through their . night there&#13;
twinkles the round, merry star of&#13;
hope and through the broken window&#13;
they see the crystals of heaven, but&#13;
the vicious poor, they are more to be&#13;
pitied. Their last light hai gone out.&#13;
You excuse yourself from helping them&#13;
by saying that they are sd bad they&#13;
brought this trouble on themselves. I&#13;
reply, Where I give tea prayers for&#13;
the innocent who arc suffering I will&#13;
give twenty for the guiliy who are suffering.&#13;
T h e Open Door.&#13;
Pass on tlTOUih the aley. Open the&#13;
door. "Oh," you say, 'it is locked."&#13;
No, it Is net lecked. It has never been&#13;
locked. No burglar would be tempted&#13;
to go in there to steal anything. The&#13;
dcor is never locked. Only a broken&#13;
chair stands against the door. Shove&#13;
it back. Go in. Strike a matcM. Now,&#13;
look. Beastliness and r?g3. See those&#13;
glaring eyeballs. Be careful now what&#13;
ycu say. Do not utter any insult do&#13;
not utter ary suspicion, if ycu walue&#13;
your life. What is that red mark on&#13;
the wall? It is the mark of a murderer's&#13;
hand! Lock at those two eyes&#13;
rising up out of the dukne&amp;s and out&#13;
from the straw in the corner, coming&#13;
toward you, and as they come near you&#13;
your light go as out. Strike another&#13;
match. Ah, this is a babe, not like&#13;
thess beaut'ful childr:n pr3&amp;ented In&#13;
baptism. This little one never smiled;&#13;
it never will smile. A flower flung on&#13;
an awfully barren beach. 0 Heavenly&#13;
Shepherd, fold that little one in tby&#13;
arms! Wiap around you your shawl&#13;
or your coat tlghtsr, for the co!d wind&#13;
sweeps through. , , . ,&#13;
Strike another match. Ah, !s it possible&#13;
that the scarred and bruised face&#13;
cf that young woman wats ever looked&#13;
into by maternal tend?rn:s3? Utter&#13;
no scorn. Utter no harsh word. No&#13;
ray of hope has dawned on that brow&#13;
for many a year. No ray of hope ever&#13;
will dawn on that brow. But .the&#13;
light has gone out Do not strike another&#13;
light It would be a' mockery&#13;
to kindle another light in such'a place&#13;
as that. Pass out and pass djcosa.lhe&#13;
street. Our cities are full «f such&#13;
hemes, and the wotst time the third&#13;
watch of the night.&#13;
The Criminal'* Hoar.&#13;
Do you know that it is in this third&#13;
watqh of the night that criminals do&#13;
their worst work? It Is* tho criminal's&#13;
watch. At half pa.t 8 o'clock you&#13;
will find th:m In the drinking saloon,&#13;
but toward 12 o'clock they go to their&#13;
garret3, they get out their tools, then&#13;
they start en the s.rett. Watching on&#13;
either side for the police, they go to&#13;
their wo:k of darknesi. This is a&#13;
burglar, and the false key will soon&#13;
touch the store lock. This is an iacen-.&#13;
diary, aad before morning there will&#13;
be a light in the sky and a cry of&#13;
"Fire, a r e r This,is an assassin,, and&#13;
tosjiofrow morning thtrew^l ^e a dead&#13;
hofcr in one oj.the vacant ^ ^ | ^ 4 a j r&#13;
tha daytime these rutins } n ? w ogles&#13;
loimgs abowtV 7cm&gt; 3 ^ ¾ ¾ 1 toSe&#13;
awake, but, when the third,watch of&#13;
their foot test t9 $9 pjr pursue,&#13;
are ready. Many of thfse poo*&#13;
tares were brought up that&#13;
were horn l a ^ t U w i ? gayret&#13;
childish toy was a burglar's daj&#13;
tern. The first thing thsy rem®&#13;
was their mother bandaging the brow&#13;
* * M&#13;
At'lNVfttTOfti.&#13;
of their father, sttucfc by thfvJjQfte*, Jftf&amp;ftuufc/jgus:&#13;
g*el* Kerrooaoeer *»•«• SeeerttfM&#13;
. OsBiw aha Urea—» Mnmh axwiMe. -&#13;
Two women -fiiaTipWJ/ta'.'^sft,'&#13;
and afte*,tajking to** broker for two&#13;
f^d4 hours b^uih,tVfc*ernfl^is ho»4&#13;
because It was sate Next day they&#13;
•old tt hsaaase ttpeid-'very-mtte^fe&#13;
Aerest'^wi bought gas Stock. *&#13;
•tc^wouYdnV^ w ^&#13;
they. retwael to Hthe^ brofcer sad&#13;
swapped tor TaUWay stooaVwhievthey&#13;
'returned to tiim rtxtW oecausi t X&#13;
railway! J # t &gt; i ffc i&amp;bi the. true* aad&#13;
stock wouldn't pay any, ,diy4den4s, X^&#13;
' ~ — • - .hoafls&#13;
UtptK ef the Karth^a atn,o»ph»re.&#13;
The Belgian B^oytl MeteoralogiCal&#13;
Observatory has recently published the&#13;
^various eattmatw^r«athematlclans&#13;
Tegareitg^taw4epUiK&gt;i&lt;the^tmesphere&#13;
suTrotmdiagH^hs eartist »Thejicateu:a-&#13;
Crtrtvof these *t*aft«s are certainly&#13;
' -" J urlb'^i h a d ttitars t o re^&#13;
^^Aim**-***&#13;
ineVhtfVI«f|p4lfi;(!MhT^4|a^ttiaftr Calia&#13;
«&lt;!*awj/i» mllest ieWapareai, 111&#13;
miles; Marie X&gt;avy, OW; and iJUtter,&#13;
U« milts,' ^DttHngth^* early; part oX&#13;
club. They begap byr robbing, hoys'&#13;
p«ekets, and now they havV' coin^(^&#13;
dig the' under&amp;rouad passage to the&#13;
cellar of the bank and are preparing&#13;
to blast the gold vault Just so long&#13;
as th«re are neglected children of the&#13;
street, just so long we wifofasfe these&#13;
desperadoes^ Some one,' wlshlnh to&#13;
make a good Christian pclnt anf to&#13;
attote a passage of Scripture, expecting&#13;
to get a Scriptural passage in answer,&#13;
said to One of these poor lads, cast out&#13;
and wretched, "When your father, and&#13;
mother forsake you, who will take you&#13;
up?" and the boy said, "The perlice!**&#13;
In the third watch of the night also'&#13;
drunkenness does its worst. T*he&#13;
drinking will he rerpectable at 8&#13;
o'clock in thf evening, a little flushed&#13;
at 9, talkative and garrulous at 10, at&#13;
II blasphemous, at 12 the hat falls off,&#13;
at 1 the man falls to the floor asking&#13;
for more drink. Strewn through the&#13;
drinking saloons of the city, fathers,&#13;
husbands, sons as good as you are by&#13;
nature, perhaps better.&#13;
My friends, you see all around about&#13;
you the need that something radical be&#13;
done. You do not see the worst In&#13;
the midnight meetings in London a&#13;
great multlude have been saved. We&#13;
want a few hundred Christian men and&#13;
women to comedown from the highest&#13;
circles of society ,to toil amid these&#13;
wandering and destitute ones and kindle&#13;
up a light in the dark alley, even&#13;
the gladness of heaven. Do not go&#13;
wrapped in your fine furs and from&#13;
your well filled tables with the Idea&#13;
that pious talk is going to stop the&#13;
gnawing of an empty stomach or to&#13;
warm stockingless feet. Take bread,&#13;
take raiment, tako medicine, as well as&#13;
take prayer. There is a,great deal of&#13;
common sense in what the poor woman&#13;
said to the city missionary when he&#13;
was telling her how she ought to love&#13;
God and serve him. "Oh," she said, "if&#13;
you were as poor and cold as I am and&#13;
at J»:IQ JL&gt; m. aAcLware ,&#13;
Hadn't slept all night Had just&#13;
about the Brooklyn brWJ&amp; "Su&#13;
a tornado should blow our&#13;
W t S s o ^ t y ^ ^ w i ^ b e l&#13;
bridge bands th«y .*|cu*p&lt;&#13;
.county^hbnd, a^r.ati^uaHy.&#13;
worry for a wbele week, ^aea they&#13;
swooped down on t^tflpoor-hlpkei jand&#13;
had him sell themj' JHS. gave us'tis&#13;
clients. Then came afmo lookingh&#13;
Ueman named Atonis* Jrom .Da&#13;
Texan, who wanted to borrow '|1,000 &gt;at&#13;
10 per tent on h V big ranch,' gnd&#13;
would pay laterest in advance. 'The&#13;
women trusted him, aud now learn&#13;
that there are worse investments than&#13;
gas, bridge,- street and governments.&#13;
Adams boards at the expense of 'the&#13;
state of Texas, and won't answer any&#13;
communications from the fifty-odd.&#13;
first mortgage holders on the same&#13;
piece of land.&#13;
*\ "v,&#13;
i&#13;
incandescent a&gt; a m u c h gjwattr height&#13;
than-this seems to eftUrely.eontrovart&#13;
this idea; Sir lloheifB^1 makes the&#13;
^statement that meteors have been seen&#13;
at aw altitude ctf:dve?-*a*4«l|jih-aa^&#13;
s.ioco tjaey oiily' becoiij^ ase^tile^ett&#13;
tjhey , ¾ ^ ia,..coatact ,with -,thf- a &gt; ,&#13;
mospbere, it would seem that^ if fllf&#13;
Bohert is correct, SUtter'a cs^mste is&#13;
the nearest to the mark.—Philadelphia J,&#13;
T i m e s . " '••' •• '„••' - '•&#13;
?c&#13;
,»e e t Ohttmeuta l#: Catarrh That&#13;
Cowtale'tleraaar*'••, '&#13;
sAmte Uta,e »rne&lt;nlr oyo wajiplll eBteu^rs dtyw itaenitgteebjrb »wtbSeo-ei«en sayest eomf Swubceho eanrtteicrliensg aIht bthurlaqi unreav ethre b em uap«eo&lt;ula e §xabrefputo oea#&#13;
as hungry you could thlnkTof nothing&#13;
else."&#13;
A great deal of what is called Christian&#13;
work goes for nothing for the&#13;
simple reason that it was no*; practical,&#13;
as after the battle of Antietam a man&#13;
got out of an ambulance with a bag of&#13;
tracts, and he went distributing the&#13;
tracts, and George Stuart, one of the&#13;
best Christian men in this country,&#13;
said to him: "What ace you distributing&#13;
tracts for now? There are three&#13;
thousand men bleeding to death. Bind&#13;
up their wounds and then distribute&#13;
the tracts." We want more common&#13;
sense in Christian work, taking the&#13;
bread of this life in one hand and the&#13;
bread of the next life In the other&#13;
hand. No such inapt wor': as that&#13;
done by the Christian man who during&#13;
our civil war went to a hospital with&#13;
tracts and, coming to the bed of a man&#13;
whose legs had been amputated, gave&#13;
him a tract on the sin of dancing! 1&#13;
rejoice before God that never are sympathetic&#13;
words uttered, never a prayei&#13;
offered, never a Christian almsgiving&#13;
indulged in, but it is blessed. There is&#13;
a place in Switzerland, I am told,&#13;
where the utterance of one word will&#13;
bring back a score of echoes, and 1&#13;
have to tell you that a sympathetic&#13;
word, a kind word, a generous word, a&#13;
helpful word, uttered In the dark&#13;
places of the town will bring back ten&#13;
thousand echoes from heaven. Are&#13;
Jo ere in this assemblage those whe&#13;
know by experience the tragedies in&#13;
the third watch of the night? I am&#13;
not here to thrust you back with one&#13;
hard word. Take the bandage .from&#13;
your bruised soul and put on it the&#13;
soothing salve of Christ's gospel and ol&#13;
God's compassion. I tell you there is&#13;
more delight in heaven over one man&#13;
that gets reformed by the grace of God&#13;
than over ninety and nine that nevez&#13;
got off the track.&#13;
Bin. MadUon** Case.&#13;
Polk City, Ia„ Oct Hth.—For over&#13;
ten years Mrs. E isabeth P. M:dison,&#13;
a respected lady of this place has suffered&#13;
most severely with Kidney&#13;
trouble complicated wtth derangements&#13;
of the bowels and liver. Rhejs'*&#13;
matism another painful result, of deranged&#13;
Kidneys add £ d Hs. tortures, do&#13;
her burden of pain. I&#13;
Treatments and medicines without&#13;
number were tried; physicians aijso&#13;
.exhausted their skill, but all to ho&#13;
purpose. {&#13;
At this- stage of the c^oe a treatment&#13;
of Dcdd's Kidney Pills was feeorted&#13;
to and the results, were simply&#13;
miraculous, from the very first box an&#13;
Improvement was noticed and $ie&#13;
continued treatment resulted in.: a&#13;
complete cure. -* t&#13;
This remarkable cure created a decided&#13;
sensation in the neighborhood&#13;
because of the complications of the&#13;
case as well as its severity and appar-&#13;
Sreacriptioo* ttom reputable payalcfawt; aathe&#13;
stnatfb tney will do in teotoldto the good yoa.&#13;
c»o posHibly derive from them. Hall a Catarrh&#13;
Care. artaufaotured~Dy F. ?. Cfceeey~a~rJaEr&#13;
Toledo. 0., contains- no mercury, and Is .taken&#13;
Internally, acting- directly upon, the Wood and&#13;
mucous surface* or •the system. In buying1&#13;
Hall's Catarrh Cure beHureyouaetthewmilno.&#13;
JM* teke'jlntoroAlly, ami made in Toledo, Ohlei&#13;
by*1. J. Cheney a Oa Testimonial* free. Sola&#13;
byDruffgists. price TRc per bottle.&#13;
Hair* Family Pills are the beet&#13;
Ilia Bfoney*s Worth.&#13;
"Mary Ann," said the economical&#13;
husband at the summer resort hotel,&#13;
"let the mashed turnips alone and take&#13;
some more of those cream potatoes.&#13;
Think.what they're charging us here&#13;
for board !"—Chicaso Tribune.&#13;
PUTNAM FADELESS BYES are&#13;
easier to use and color more goods brighter&#13;
and faster c\&gt;lor»,thanany other dye*&#13;
Sold by druggists, 10c. per pacaage.&#13;
ent hopelessness. ~ ~ —&#13;
Upon investigation Dodd's Kidney&#13;
Pills are found to be the only remedy&#13;
that has. ever cured Bright's Disease,&#13;
Diabetes' or Dropsy and these hitherto&#13;
incurable diseases are readily conquered&#13;
by this remarkable remedy.&#13;
NtGRO SUPERSTITION. •&#13;
People Who Est Coal.&#13;
Earth-eating savages are known tc&#13;
anthropologists, but the statement that&#13;
therfvare people in civilized England&#13;
Who habitually swallow lumps of ordlnaryhousehold&#13;
coal appears somewhat&#13;
surprising. To this practice Alary Ann&#13;
Poy^jt housemaid lately employed at&#13;
46 Gloucester gardens, Hyde Park&#13;
owed her death. Som* of the pieces,&#13;
stated Dr. Harper at the Inquest, had&#13;
stuck in the windpipe and caused suffocation.&#13;
It was a fact, added the witness,&#13;
that some persons did eat small&#13;
portions of coal. The coroner asked&#13;
with what object A juror said that&#13;
persons suffering from severe attack!&#13;
of heartburn did so. The coroner said&#13;
that be.had heard, of persons eating&#13;
charcoal, but not coal. There was 14&#13;
the present case; however, no doubt&#13;
about the' fact "Death from misadventure"&#13;
was the verdict.-*London Eg*&#13;
jress.&#13;
S o m e o f T h e m A r e J o a t L i k e t h e Q*ea&#13;
H e t d by T h e i r W h i t e B r e t h r e n .&#13;
Many of the negro superstitions in&#13;
Kentucky are quite interesting. An&#13;
bid philosopher told me With great&#13;
gravity:. "If you want poppers to&#13;
grow, you must git mad. My old&#13;
'oman an' me had a spat, an* I went&#13;
right, dut an' planted my peppers, an'&#13;
they :came right up." Still another&#13;
saying is that peppers, to prosper, must&#13;
be planted by a red-headed or by a&#13;
high-tempered person. The negro also&#13;
says that one never sees a jailbird on&#13;
Friday, for the bird visits his satanlc&#13;
majesty to "pack kindling" on that&#13;
day. The three signs in which the negroes&#13;
place implicit trust are tho well--&#13;
known ones of the ground hog appearing&#13;
above ground on the 2d of February;&#13;
that a hoe must not, be carried&#13;
through a house or a death will follow,&#13;
and that potatoes must be planted&#13;
in the dark of the moon, as well as&#13;
-all vegetables that ripen in the ground&#13;
ana-that com most be planted *1n tie&#13;
light of the moon. Feed gunpowder&#13;
to dogs and It will make them fierce.&#13;
A negro will not burn the wood of a&#13;
tree that has been struck by lightning,&#13;
for fear that his house will burn or&#13;
be struck by lightning. If a bird files&#13;
into a house it brings luck. If a crawfish&#13;
or a turtle catches your toes It&#13;
will hold on till it thunders. When a&#13;
child I was told by a black nurse that&#13;
If a bat alights on one's head rl wER&#13;
stay there till it thunders. This was&#13;
so terrifying that even now I have an&#13;
unnecessary fear of being clutehed by&#13;
a bat. To make soap, stir it with a&#13;
sassafras stick in the dark cf the&#13;
moon. J&#13;
It Is better to be able* to suffer* Ion?&#13;
and be kind, than to be able to talk&#13;
like an angel.&#13;
Too many christians pay the Lord in&#13;
promises, and the devil in spot .cash.&#13;
_ •&#13;
Rheumatism, neural sria, soreness&#13;
pain, sore throat and all bodily suffering-&#13;
relieved at once by Wizard OiL In*&#13;
ternally and externally.&#13;
A warm-hearted preacher will generally&#13;
find a way to warm up a cold&#13;
ebutch^&#13;
HO'JSKKEEPERS. ATTENTION t&#13;
Try a package of Rins Bleaching blue and&#13;
you will tue no other, loc at grocers.&#13;
Do as much good as you can, and&#13;
God will see to it that you can soon do&#13;
more.&#13;
Mr*. Wlnnlow'H R o o t h t n * Ryrtan.&#13;
For chtlilren tMthln?. (tofton* (hi gum*, r*tii&lt;**« In.&#13;
flamuiutioo, allay* pain, cure* wln*j oolla Me a battle.&#13;
We would all have loss cause to blame other*,&#13;
U we hud fewer faults of our own.&#13;
BE MEN. Zoolctzoo, ine great lnvigorator, act*&#13;
at once. Sent for SI) postage paid. JLadrata&#13;
Zookl Co., 1101 Suawll s&gt;t., Detroit, illeb.&#13;
If there were no politics the devil's, tfrtp on&#13;
some men would be more feeble.&#13;
Plso's Cure for Consumption is an infallible&#13;
medicine for coughs and oolds—N. W. SAOTKL,&#13;
Ocean Grove. N. J., Feb. 17, 1WXX&#13;
Philosophy may keep a man from doing wrong&#13;
but it cannot make him better.&#13;
9&#13;
a&#13;
o&#13;
EVERYMAN&#13;
WOMAN AND CHILD&#13;
who suffers from&#13;
Rheumatism&#13;
should use&#13;
St. Jacobs Oil I&#13;
It Conquers Pain, acts !!ke&#13;
marie, ard has ro equal on&#13;
earth as*painkiller.&#13;
Price, 25c and 5 0 c&#13;
part of Asia. On one occasion, wham,&#13;
Hi caravan was in danger of periah., Mora's Mct**ttRr«rt»&#13;
teg through bich of water, a mass ot DH.0. PHELPS MOWN?&#13;
mow was luckily found in a-gulch.. PREOEOU8&#13;
anothtr time the party was saved by* HERBAL '&#13;
bo-lfottcOkT,r f-ofcf •wjtt-.k» flottinj os tal^ OINTMENT &lt; BfigW^J?&#13;
• SOLDDTALLIrtULElSlliaKWCnrt Z&#13;
• • • ••at»&gt;eaa*a&lt;»a&gt;t^a»aa&gt;a»»«»&#13;
! ":• • • ' ' ' • " . .1' ' U 'IF" '&#13;
Otte Mail In Nine Mouths.&#13;
In a private letter to a Gotebor*&#13;
sditor dated TJarkhlih, April 27, tha&#13;
3wedjsh explorer, Sven Hedin, relate!&#13;
that'he had just *ot his first mall ahaf&#13;
received his Urit lew*: of tha world |jfcj — , ^&#13;
line ttooths. His Ohlnaio companions} H o t W 6 a t u 6 r S e j t l t h ,&#13;
ind tenranU; were gehtla and amiably During th© heated term of Jnly and&#13;
at TJarhhTlK he fitted oat'a caravan August one should be careful to keep all&#13;
if the thirty-eight camels, twenty-four, the organs of the system in free work*&#13;
horses and a*veaty mules. HisjJour* ing condition.&#13;
8«y ft&gt;r lW^Swe^h miles had l e * J ? * * * Maodrak^ Blttera Uken be-&#13;
U» through an S f i » i a i M w « l ^ &amp; **&#13;
IHeunaUsM, NeitfSt*'&#13;
Kraawft* SM aHPaln! ^i^SS year&#13;
^*^f '*v$ »M&#13;
&amp;ftl JXir^ *• V ^ ' ; ' ? ? ;:&gt;••• A &lt;» v /&#13;
N o&#13;
&amp;'." •ttLteatfillMsiiMBh&#13;
r.ym*&#13;
•far&#13;
&gt; : • *&#13;
&lt; • ' . 4-&#13;
• ' « , '&#13;
• ^ ' V •w. » ^ - ; V *&#13;
:.;«J&#13;
Col* Robert )f^$i&gt;oitffifott&lt;?«frXeift&#13;
York, pgesfettjit** $to* tteitedj Slates&#13;
Naval ftcatltpijr^lQWnU. »afc*t jM*&#13;
A abatement ,bi cotiuactjta. with the "* Schle? ^ 1 ^ 4 ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ^ ^ ¾ state the trie tsjts, and1 rift inW nV&#13;
soTiitelr' &gt;rely T0pdn tliiMu ft» the irutl*.&#13;
The proofs tV««» sent M Mr. ^iaoiay lo&#13;
Adrntakuitempson -with the request&#13;
V'.UTW.&#13;
that they akouM b^JWMi tonft wpr«cted.&#13;
The a t o k a U M * * f(!iM,|U{|f,wM&#13;
not to goc^JieaKh and 4W not wish&#13;
to undertake tfte labor. l ^ M * •*&lt;*«»&#13;
tar* polhtetl out that the Uocloj lite*&#13;
tory wa* a shiitdrirn4 on* n»A u*»d *t&#13;
fti* academy, as tf textbook; TUh *oK&#13;
ttu* brought tnteirtstory down through&#13;
the p«rlo&lt;Li^tl^ Spanish;:«ritt\ and i t&#13;
wa* deidjrabje that tnm,a\pnl.d..!fe "ft&#13;
innocuraclea, ju it The admiral ,there: fore eottseuledto; Md'them, ,n»d 1*.&#13;
did correct a cerfshlrtertof ttien&gt;, imt&#13;
as soon «*• be* arrived nt that part&#13;
which - containsJ' 41» ' statement • ttiatf&#13;
Sebiey Was* coward and a* caitiff I*&#13;
wa* very inuch angered and said the&#13;
statement was one the author bad no&#13;
right to make: that it was unjust and*&#13;
unfair to speak of an? naval officer in&#13;
such terms, and declined to have anything&#13;
further to do with the proofs.&#13;
His secretory, impressed with the;&#13;
jsreat desirability of having the statements&#13;
of facts accurate and not believing&#13;
tixat he was in. auy way rea&#13;
m a w * •*+&lt;* pr. **»•'*. 0#a**jur* Irnmw.&#13;
V,.,*' , i . i m i l i u m . yi.iilM iipn nj 'ii , ' . ' • " ' ' ' ' - &gt; • '&#13;
fmwf»f«^»s4ewhaoia*m%»tliw» reUffea,&#13;
* * » set Sak^af p a * WsjSjssTir saajsliAWfc&#13;
fe?1ut*«a&gt; i o t a * feet,&#13;
t T X ^ U H f OtOTHCS A E V lftfStOHTfct&#13;
™ *PPPI «y PH^Tj S^SSSL 3S~^^^^* # P ^ *&#13;
... MatiynM«a. *•&#13;
• +*+* *»• HUP*'*&#13;
"."'•». " ' i&#13;
1 fcsiiftea * * • he*** tostarWwtottaver tt ©*-&#13;
f i M tewelk wits i u haoda la l u jrtotota..' "'&#13;
T, alUSt&#13;
an&gt;i&lt;n sss »&#13;
JV' ' *v.^_; • L;&#13;
» « * W » * i * p i p * f " " w W » P - » i rr&#13;
KlCAT ADPmOHAt.&#13;
•mrWm MSfOlH fuel BMWMBBI t»&#13;
r. urn' p*pr.' ltv»'-w»4Hiii a«h&lt; Ptfc*&#13;
«aoeWA,a Jc». TSMUfrf«ft OHot m4 onrw.M iea&#13;
&lt;WWW»«PPWWW»PI|"&#13;
fillllPLETC BOOK OFTMOFneui UFEW M'UILET-SS&amp;»&#13;
KtfKiBtof; «tto cmaisllvM of oorpibwr i PJMUW^,&#13;
M«t«M4*itnam&#13;
S&gt;f4M»^iM*%««ra«KM(tM«BU«NAl»ffiht4BWT«MM«hUt«7 of • treat N 4 m ) i&#13;
irmwnov.whnsUwlrwaUiMi. 0« so« *«Jar. for trwr 4»y it wortn &lt;ron 1» to iSft «&#13;
i7W« atilNWr own book* Md « M «««t»y «uiH««u tb« offelrof tay ot&gt;«r IUWM. «sd win&#13;
DmUviMiUwsisirn tuoin*u^M vtMnW nr«tgkt gnafMMM Mian to thoM in th« tdTtaaod. BOM? MlekiyHkirnnr tana yon luwn toasr&#13;
WP*, fink* now, wnttatlMlrvaUaot. Oonoi Antor-tor «r«7 4AT i* worth ffon • » to&#13;
«b«frfa mind ttet If fM ditBoa«mto to oa ttat yon oaa Mil book*. Ibat Utor to «•• fnltw^win o» art&#13;
win»ryMS»d«ra*r»i4M*«t*am^ TMttn^taw&#13;
'«•&gt;u arl«n«*m »«!7*^• r•« -«vamtelom«Mro*w in»b«*nmo)tuaaMBH Sloe M«*M^vyt)J7M dN"I§IIr "&#13;
» • &lt; (WttTaaoSvtibMi t b a r a U f l&#13;
tSt%iftkrobornktaef rforo*imia'o&gt;iW. WejirafivvlUMty oy«wtjotooorrdd«trrffnrwomi««i•,a, a*addt^U io*aM4tr«el)rvtUittM&#13;
S t ,&#13;
W . l l . a ^ O E T R O l T - ^ N O . 4 2 — | 9 Q t •^pw^ap ^a#*SjS^a^^ ^pa^B9' ^BH . aj# ^^ai&#13;
I O A S * - A » l f . inaalMtf-&#13;
W M * toad booort bar&#13;
1U.&#13;
_. - wai . - - - -&#13;
toneHf MvertHeikHit&#13;
lltaitei Tais rater.&#13;
sponsibTMfor' the statements of opinions,&#13;
did, 0¾ his own authority con*&#13;
pare the book with the records and&#13;
make on the margins a number of&#13;
questions, As these were in. the same&#13;
handwriting «s those made when&#13;
Sampson was giving his personal attention&#13;
to the corrections Mr. Mnelay&#13;
was perfectly justified in his statement."&#13;
Porelicn Kotea.&#13;
All Cape Colony is now under British&#13;
martial law.&#13;
French miners may declare general&#13;
strike October 15.&#13;
Ohineao want all foreign business&#13;
firms to get out of Tekin.&#13;
Venezuela \s salrt to bo planning an-&#13;
* other iuvasion of Colombia.&#13;
Half a doaen i-evolts against Castro&#13;
are reported from Venezuela.&#13;
It is regarded as certain that there&#13;
Will be an"'outbreak of civil war In&#13;
Afghanistan.&#13;
The Berliner Tagcblatt says there&#13;
are renewed rumors of the early resignation&#13;
,of United States Ambassador&#13;
White. *&#13;
Jesuits are to he deprived of thMr&#13;
estates by the French government for&#13;
failure to comply with the "associations*'&#13;
law.&#13;
Hablb lUlo,h Khnn.lms been offlclally&#13;
Afghanistan, and&#13;
the accession has been accepted by his&#13;
brothers and .the Sirdars.&#13;
Mr. Choate. the United States ambassador.&#13;
Intend* saillns for the United&#13;
States with his family ou the American&#13;
line steamer Philadelphia.&#13;
/ Fifteen Mexican artillery officers&#13;
have sailed for Antwerp, en route to&#13;
•France, where they will study the&#13;
manufacture and manipulation of the&#13;
French ordnance.&#13;
The Kngllsh torpedo boat destroyer&#13;
Crane almost met the fate of its sister&#13;
Iwat Cobra, while on her way from&#13;
Portsmouth to Portland by the deck&#13;
beams buckling amidships.&#13;
»&#13;
Alarming rumors about. King Edward's&#13;
health are discredited in Ixmdon&#13;
by favorable news from court,&#13;
which the king has permitted to leak&#13;
out, following the example of hl-j&#13;
mother in putting the public next to&#13;
the facts.&#13;
The German minister of education&#13;
has issued new regulations in regard&#13;
to the'admission of foreign students at&#13;
the Berlin Technical College. The (Jermans&#13;
complalu tlyit the foreigners&#13;
crowd them out of laboratories and lecture&#13;
rooms.&#13;
Kexra in Brief.&#13;
Senator' Chauncey M. f Depew is to&#13;
marry Miss May Pal met in the nertr&#13;
future.&#13;
President Roosevelt will probe&#13;
charges against W. Street, chief justice&#13;
of Arizona.&#13;
President Roosevelt declares that no&#13;
removals will be made except for&#13;
, - cause to better the service.&#13;
Samoan^t^lsjslouurles are. said to&#13;
have made most of the drunkenness&#13;
charges against Gov. Tilley, of Samoa.&#13;
* The fighting strength of the United&#13;
states nary Is estimated l-y experts at&#13;
fully three times what it was at the&#13;
outbreak bf the Spanish war.&#13;
President IiC.renzo Snow, of the Mormon&#13;
church, died Thursday. He leave**&#13;
. nine widows. Snow was a native of&#13;
Ohio, where he was born in 1814.&#13;
Rear Admiral Schley Wednesday&#13;
will have reached the age limit of 02&#13;
years, and thereafter will be on the&#13;
retired list. His salary will be reduced&#13;
from $7,500, to &amp;MK23 a year,&#13;
"Bert" -Martin/ the Nebraska convict&#13;
discovered to.be a woman, is a&#13;
former Wisconsin convict, having served&#13;
time for the robbery of a store at&#13;
" Wairpun. She aenred her time with-&#13;
' out her sex being discovered.&#13;
Ernest Seton-Thpmpaon, the noted&#13;
writer on wild animals, and J ohn OofT,&#13;
Colorado's famous guide, who aceoru-&#13;
- jkanled President Roosevelt on his&#13;
* mountain Tlofi hnfTf, have been arrested&#13;
for vlolttrmg the game laws of Col-&#13;
'orado. »••-'&#13;
Wm. Hv Gibson, 10 years bid, said&#13;
t« be the heir wpou the death of his&#13;
mother to several hundvai tbdusatW&#13;
dollars, la confined in a ©hicargo police&#13;
station on a charge of burglary. Gibson&#13;
adaslts hi* guilt, end ns a result of&#13;
'hf* confwfpion nwaeh of the Jaweiry&#13;
stolen hnfl bwa rtcorered at a pawn&#13;
mm* *W&gt;-&#13;
* . - • '&#13;
mm&#13;
m* NOV. 30™&#13;
'*M0T*1,&#13;
M M .&#13;
1 ^&#13;
tOTMS.&#13;
AAjre* sr*o/&gt;.&#13;
^ ^&#13;
HUT sir aiLve* PLtrco,&#13;
*9»*y.&#13;
tO**rAHttt».&#13;
MATCH mox.&#13;
j * * * * .&#13;
MJUfM. £19C*&#13;
•Mttot *rr&#13;
PROM S T A R&#13;
HORSE SHOE&#13;
SPEARHEAD"&#13;
STANDARD NAVY&#13;
ff WW&#13;
PIPER HHDSIECK&#13;
B O O T J A C K&#13;
w&#13;
U ff&#13;
ii&#13;
DRUMMONDNA&#13;
OLD PEACHY HONEY&#13;
NOBBY SPUN ROLL"&#13;
J O L L Y T A R&#13;
E.RICE.GREENVILLF it •»&#13;
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TOOL&#13;
§&#13;
. • *H n : ' • • • • [ •&#13;
'..&#13;
"'•if&#13;
' l ' • ' ' "&#13;
• *r * • -&#13;
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.* ^-V'.in^a^H&#13;
•'•''UhaTATaw&#13;
• SiHfl&#13;
'*-••• -1#H •••it .•' .•"i'll&#13;
•'••^:*AH&gt;Jm&#13;
•• ^f/.(fmwM&#13;
•'it-hu.yJm&#13;
;..-. ''^'vfc%$&amp;&#13;
- .• . ; &gt; . ' # • • ' • • . { l&#13;
. . • - ; - . v ;•' \ » v |&#13;
"-"'..•• '.-.•»' A . . * !&#13;
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.••••-'. - J , ' f ; . ' $ $ |&#13;
...•: .^:-: ,Hil&#13;
"'•'"• •'" 'vjl :'^'*^3&#13;
.' '.^;-f^| '• : ; ; : M&#13;
- • • ^ j - " ' . * * ? !&#13;
• .f»\&#13;
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7WMU0U&#13;
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^*&gt;.&#13;
8uire*KMin %N«M: c#Ma»&#13;
SUM* SMtU **K»*' €$ U*S.&#13;
a If GRANGERTWIST 2 GWCHTWIST T.m being equal to one of others mentioned.&#13;
••Good Luck," "Cross Bow," "Old Honesty,"&#13;
••Master Workman," ••Sickle," »Brandy wine,"&#13;
••Planet," ••Neptune," "Razor," " Tennessee&#13;
Cross Tie," •• Ole Varginy." 3&#13;
so&#13;
TAOO.&#13;
SALT MHO M**r» *tr.&#13;
•H*mf 'jrtcjrn tmrcH,&#13;
k&#13;
TAPt MtAStlfi*. J04OT&#13;
. ^ • A Y ^ &gt; 7 5 ,&#13;
ASOO nes.&#13;
TAGS MAY BE ASSORTED IN S8CURINO PRESENTS.&#13;
Our new illustrated&#13;
CATALOGUE OF PRESENTS&#13;
FOR 1902&#13;
will include many articlaa not shown hero, It will contain the&#13;
moat attractive List of Presents ever onered for Tags, and will&#13;
bo sent by mail on receipt of postafw—two cents.&#13;
(Catalogue will bo ready for matting about January xet, tooa.)&#13;
Our offer of Presents for Tags wHI expire Nov. 40th, too*.&#13;
CONTmUfTAS. TOBACCO COMrANY.&#13;
, Wri^te your name and address//«»»&gt; on outside of packages&#13;
containing Tags, and send thorn and requests for Presents to&#13;
C. My. BROWN,&#13;
4241 Poiwoes Ave*,&#13;
St* Lonis, Mo*&#13;
SO CA*r.&#13;
sane*.&#13;
AMO/OMt.&#13;
ts ns*.&#13;
7STA4t&#13;
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':.• - " . * ^ " "&#13;
' S '&#13;
i. -hi&#13;
• • . . - ,&#13;
f ? * j I:&#13;
&gt;•'&gt;&#13;
v'S&#13;
!&gt;*''-&#13;
,-o*':r?.'-&#13;
i'1&#13;
*'\&#13;
'"?,;%v. ..;*',* !*,:W ^&#13;
i'lfi'&#13;
I ' M J i 1&#13;
.^r*'':a&#13;
x&#13;
*•» •jaw&#13;
'.rt*»&#13;
K$;&#13;
S-S\.&#13;
£?&gt;&#13;
m-.&#13;
; • &amp; " • , '&#13;
i/*&amp;.&#13;
&gt;*?.&#13;
• ' • ' , * - '&#13;
**•*"•&#13;
•WW***'&#13;
" • • p i *&#13;
• T V ; # CO."F*c*«irro*ft.&#13;
T&#13;
^ OPT. 17» 1901-&#13;
Until after the sixth &amp;£tury of&#13;
our era all ailk imported from the&#13;
eaat to U&gt;e «rest wa« valued at its&#13;
W0ight in gold, r h e aHken goods&#13;
were put into on,© scale and enough&#13;
gold to balance them was&#13;
placed in the other.&#13;
WM^TYonrFaee Worth?&#13;
Sometimes a fortune, bat never, if&#13;
yon have a sallow compleotion a jauudiced&#13;
look, moth patches and blotches&#13;
on the skin, all signs of Liver Trouble.&#13;
But Dr. King's New Life Pills give&#13;
Clear Skin, Rosy Cheeks, Rich Compinion.&#13;
Only 26c at P. A. Skier's&#13;
drug store.&#13;
The buildings decided upon for&#13;
the St. Louis World's Fair cover&#13;
a great deal more ground than the&#13;
similiar structures at the Chicago&#13;
exposition. There was no special&#13;
building devoted to education&#13;
in Chicago. I n S t Louis the two&#13;
halls for the educational exhibit&#13;
will occupy 735,000 square feet&#13;
The space under roof in St. Louis&#13;
will be at least one-third greater&#13;
than that at the famous Columbian&#13;
exposition at Chicago.&#13;
* • * •&#13;
lit, »•..•*&gt;•• T i t * Doft't Know. ;*^&#13;
»i» , « n •&#13;
A Fiendish Attack.&#13;
An attack was lately made on C. P.&#13;
Collier of Cherokee, Iowa, that nearly&#13;
.prov-d fatal. It came through his&#13;
kidneys. His back got so lame he&#13;
conld not sloop without great pain&#13;
por-84i4t*^faair-e*oept proped by-cusnions.&#13;
No remedy helped hiin until he&#13;
tried Electric Bitters which effected&#13;
such a wonderful change that he&#13;
writes he feels like a new man. This&#13;
mrvaelous medicine cures backache&#13;
and l^n^^roujje^j^fie^the^bljiod | o w n ^ ^ ^ ^ -&#13;
anXhuilds up your health. Only 50c&#13;
at P. A Sigler's drug store.&#13;
A c r j fc g o ^ « p a t T o w tfc*&#13;
country tha% ifa« big jaail order&#13;
houses with tfc#4r ponderous catalogues&#13;
are cbriving the country re.&#13;
tailer out of exiatauce. '&#13;
And the plaint is usualy ftjs:&#13;
"We can sell just as cheaply **"*&#13;
in some oases cheaper than • #*&gt;&#13;
mail-order houses, and yet bur&#13;
customers persist in sending their&#13;
money away from homeV in paying&#13;
freight charges, and so on, in&#13;
selecting from a catalogue, instead&#13;
of the goods themselves. The&#13;
trouble is that: they don't know&#13;
that we can do just as well or better&#13;
for them at home."&#13;
The last sentence tells the whole&#13;
story—the people don't know.&#13;
The mail-order house sends its&#13;
catalogues with its alluring low&#13;
prices—r"why Jones never advertised&#13;
any prices like that"—and&#13;
the order is sent out of town.&#13;
The retailer would feel aggrieved&#13;
if anybody were to imitate to&#13;
him that the mail order houses&#13;
away off in the big cities had more&#13;
classified knowledge about the&#13;
people in his territory than he&#13;
possessed himself.&#13;
Yet he sees the results of that&#13;
knowledge every day—catalogues&#13;
sent into his town and persistently&#13;
followed up with good literature&#13;
until orders result.&#13;
How many retailers have a care&#13;
fully kept mailing list?&#13;
How many see to it that they&#13;
not only have such a list, but that&#13;
the people on thai__list_ftre__kept&#13;
constantly in lniud of the fact that&#13;
they sell certain things at such&#13;
ami such prices?&#13;
The retailer has the remedy for&#13;
this mail order nightmare in his&#13;
" Be ap and doing, blow your&#13;
hora, infuse some new enthusiasm&#13;
into your advertising. Show&#13;
the people of your own town that&#13;
yon are very much alive, that your&#13;
goods.are juat aa up-to-date, and&#13;
fresh and-good, and cost j ust aa&#13;
""* aa any they can buy oat of&#13;
yon instead of the mail-order e%ht ojtffea the lake shore end on&#13;
And BO yon will live content in&#13;
the enjoyment of the trade that is&#13;
yours by righi—{The Advertising&#13;
World.]&#13;
Sta» « * • (tons** aael w o r k * e)ff «a*&#13;
C a l l .&#13;
Laxative BromoQuinineTablets cure&#13;
a cold in one day. No cure, no pay.&#13;
Price 25 cents.&#13;
I t f - V&#13;
$15,000&#13;
To Bo Given Away in 1,000 Prizes,&#13;
T* the persons making the nearest&#13;
correct guesses of the combined vote&#13;
For Govenor in 'the state of Ohio,&#13;
Iowa and Massachusetts, at the election&#13;
to beheld on November 5th n*xt,&#13;
will bo awarded the prizes. The contest&#13;
clo6csNov. 1,1901, and all guesse3&#13;
must be in not later than above&#13;
date.&#13;
Ity sutscrioing for The Daily and&#13;
Sunday Free Press, for one month,&#13;
and paying in advance at the regular&#13;
pric« of 60c pe.r month, you can have&#13;
one puess, or you can have as many&#13;
tfnes&gt;e8 as you psy monthly, pub-* rip&#13;
tions in advance. Why not send in&#13;
vour older lor the best paner and&#13;
make a guess in this great contest.&#13;
A dd re***'&#13;
The Free Press, Detroit, Mich.&#13;
Tot causes night Alarm.&#13;
"One nitfht my brother's bahy wasf&#13;
taken with Croup." writes Mrs. .J. C&#13;
Snider, of Cltenden, Ky., 4,it, seemed&#13;
it would strangle before we could tfet&#13;
a doctor, so we grave quick relief and&#13;
permantly cured it. We always keep&#13;
it in the bouse to protect our children&#13;
from Croup and Whooping Couph. It&#13;
cured me of a chronic ! ronchial trouble&#13;
that no other remedy would relieve&#13;
Infallible ior Coughs, Colds, Throat&#13;
and Lung troubles. 50&lt;; and $1.00&#13;
Trial bottles free at.F. A. SiglerV&#13;
drug store.&#13;
The Candid Sabnrbsmlte.&#13;
"I suppose people around here raise&#13;
their own vegetables?"&#13;
"Some do; others merely plant them."&#13;
—Puck.&#13;
It may be that yon haven't more&#13;
trouble than others, but that you bare&#13;
more time to think about It—Atculst»&#13;
Globe.&#13;
51* *' t*&#13;
stepped fnto Lire Coals.&#13;
••.When, a child I burned in? loot&#13;
frightfully." writes W. H. Eads, ot&#13;
JnnesviUe, W„ &gt;• which CHIKH horrible&#13;
iatr sores f*r* 30 ye*rs. t.ut Buck&#13;
lee's Ainira Salve «holly cured me,&#13;
alter ev«ry«JjgrJg elM laiKd. Infallible&#13;
/»&gt;r Burns, Scald*, Cuts, rime*;,.lii-uif •&#13;
^•d.Til*»* W4! by F. A..Filler 25..&#13;
Study the methods of the mail&#13;
order houses—it's a queer game&#13;
that two can't play at, you gnow.&#13;
If you have any inducements to&#13;
offer that will keep trade at home&#13;
don't k*»ep a good thing to yourself,&#13;
tell your customers about i t&#13;
If you can well goods as cheaply&#13;
or cheaper than the mail order&#13;
houses, your money drawer won't&#13;
show it, if nobody outside of your&#13;
self knows it.&#13;
Now here's a straightforward&#13;
question; what are you doing to&#13;
keep trade at home?&#13;
Are you talking interestingly in&#13;
your newspapers about the new&#13;
goods that just came in, how good&#13;
they are, how little they cost,&#13;
what a good store you have, about&#13;
your bright, clean stock, and how&#13;
well you can serve your trade?&#13;
How often do you go down into&#13;
your pocket and pay the printer&#13;
for producing a handsome little&#13;
booklet?&#13;
Does your trade know as much&#13;
about your store a s it does about&#13;
the inside of- the big mail-order&#13;
house catalogues?&#13;
Answer these questions satisfactorily,&#13;
and there won't be so much&#13;
talk about the "ruinoqs competition"&#13;
of the mail order houses.&#13;
Fight them with their own weapons—&#13;
good advertising,&#13;
Bave a well kept mailing list,&#13;
just as they do.&#13;
Buy as much newspaper space&#13;
as you can a$ord, and fill it with&#13;
good business talk—store news.&#13;
Take hnlf a dozen articles frcm&#13;
the catalogues, quote the catalogue&#13;
prices and put your own prices&#13;
beside them.&#13;
Show your trade the folly of ordering&#13;
goods by mail, paying&#13;
freight charges, etc., wnen they&#13;
cau buy them just as cheaply of&#13;
you, have the actual goods to&#13;
select from, and keep their money&#13;
at home.&#13;
Don't oall on thidr town pride—&#13;
that's w h i n i n g - g i v e t i«in g«&gt;od&#13;
and sound reasons, hard-dollar&#13;
reasons, why they should buy of&#13;
Aft Interesting Utter.&#13;
Winslow, O n t , O c t 8,1901.&#13;
Editor Andrews.&#13;
Denr Sir:&#13;
While others&#13;
are giving such glowing accounts&#13;
of their visits to the Pan-&#13;
Am. and other interesting visits I&#13;
thought that a sketch of my visit&#13;
in Canada*would not be out of&#13;
place.&#13;
After leaving home Sept. 30 we&#13;
wen* to Detroit and spent the afternoon&#13;
about the city and visited&#13;
the beautiful Belle Isle, where we&#13;
spent about 3 hours very pleasantly.&#13;
Taking the train at 8:40 we&#13;
went by the way of F t Huron&#13;
through the S t Claire Tunnel and&#13;
arrived in Hamilton, Ont. at 3:10&#13;
in the morning. Of course it was&#13;
dark when we left Detroit so we&#13;
did not see any of the sosnery&#13;
along the way.&#13;
After arriving in Hamilton we&#13;
took a hack to a hotel where we&#13;
MS CALLS&#13;
YEAR&#13;
mfciJiMwhtiUTiSi vletion, «te. T&amp;&#13;
•orib* tosUy, or, Mod jjo. for litest CMf.&#13;
' U l r «*«aaw*«^d. Stopfer ttra*, ^&#13;
Stylifth, Reliable, Staple, ttp-t+&#13;
Economical and Absolutely&#13;
rFlttlag Pipe* Pattern*, [5 CALL&#13;
M BAZAR* |&#13;
PATTERN^&#13;
2?£&#13;
aadtewft,!&#13;
Sf» * .&#13;
•wwy *ehrj&#13;
THE MoCALL CO&#13;
tD-ns-itrwettsittst, sew&#13;
spent the rest of the night and&#13;
after enjoying a good breakfast&#13;
and getting our baggage past customs&#13;
and transferred to the T. H&#13;
&amp; B. depot we took the train for&#13;
Smithville. This road runs east&#13;
of the city and for about 15 miles&#13;
is a steady up-grade and gives a&#13;
good view of the country. Below&#13;
the mountain, away to the north&#13;
could be seen the beautifull Hamilton&#13;
bay; beyond that is another&#13;
range of mountains which was&#13;
plainly seen in the morning sun&#13;
and lake Ontario, stretched its&#13;
broad expanse of green waters to&#13;
the northeast.&#13;
Arriviug at our destination we&#13;
found a sister there waiting forus.&#13;
From there we enjoyed a drive of&#13;
ttbout six miles to our mothers&#13;
where it is needless to say, we&#13;
were' made welcome. Here we&#13;
spent • a few days visiting old&#13;
friends and neighbors and enjoying&#13;
the fat of the land, then we&#13;
took up ov.r journey and drove&#13;
about 25 miles through a nice&#13;
country, well wooded with a mixed&#13;
timber which presented to the&#13;
eye an ever changing scene. VVe&#13;
passed through the old .town of&#13;
Mount Albion with its decaying&#13;
walls and crumbly chimneys and&#13;
on down the Albion mountian&#13;
drive. This is a very beautiful&#13;
drive, the road for about half a&#13;
mile is down grade and some&#13;
places quite steep, skirted on both&#13;
sides with trees of different kinds,&#13;
the maples showing the effects of&#13;
jack frost with the varying hues&#13;
contrasting with the deep green&#13;
of the pine folage which makes a&#13;
picture .fit for the brush of any artist&#13;
Emerging from this we came&#13;
upon more level country which is&#13;
given up entirely to the culture&#13;
of fruit which is raised in great&#13;
abundance, the most of which is&#13;
harvested except grapes. There&#13;
are hundred of tons yet to be gathered&#13;
of different vaiieties but&#13;
mrmtly a small blue grape used for&#13;
wine parpo&amp;«5.&#13;
Arriving et the hoflse of a jfriend| I A I W t f A T l X H N&#13;
for the BigMK Bfor*. m epea* f&#13;
half of th*me*i d*y vieitin^.oH ]&gt;&#13;
sand en joy iag^ a ramble in/&#13;
the gravel along the ehore an*&#13;
witnessed the jwxdiug ol a fisher* u&#13;
nans boat laddenrwith nice shin: ^4&#13;
ing herring.' After doiugr fustic&#13;
to a good mwr%t. i^iimk^m&#13;
went by electric car to Hamilton*** • -&#13;
beautiful summer' r % t i | t t t | a t e |&#13;
on a narrow atrjp e | lan&lt;J between&#13;
the bay aud lake. This ai&#13;
one time was nothing bttt a piece&#13;
of bare ground, not considered&#13;
worth anything and was only inhabited&#13;
by a few fishermen; now&#13;
it is like a city with its beautiful&#13;
summer cottages, electric lights,&#13;
with both steam and electric railways&#13;
also steamboat connection&#13;
with the city. After viewing the&#13;
scenes here we return by electric&#13;
oar to the city where we spent the&#13;
night with a friend.&#13;
Taking up our journey again&#13;
we take an east bound car which&#13;
brings us to the Hamilton Jockey&#13;
Club track where we make a few&#13;
calls and pass on to the city water&#13;
works where we are made welcome&#13;
by Mr. McFarland its genial superintendent&#13;
who was once my&#13;
Sunday School, teacher and he informs&#13;
me I was a hard head and&#13;
not having any proof wherewith&#13;
to refute it we have to except it&#13;
and pass on again to where our&#13;
horse was left and after a hearty&#13;
dinner we reluctantly bid farwell&#13;
to friend8 and turn our backs to&#13;
place which knew us when we&#13;
were children.&#13;
We return by another way to&#13;
our mothers where we shall spend&#13;
a few more days after which we&#13;
shall return home where after&#13;
-f*.&#13;
absence of two week we shall take&#13;
up the r^spnsibilities of life where&#13;
they were laid down, and shall be&#13;
glad to see our friends again from&#13;
a business stand-point.&#13;
Yours Bespectf ully,&#13;
G. W. BLACK.&#13;
W o n by Hie Wit.&#13;
A story is told of an English clergyman&#13;
who owed bis appointment to a&#13;
rich living to a lucky pun. He was&#13;
tutor to the son of a nobleman and&#13;
had not long taken orders when he&#13;
attended the funeral of the rector of&#13;
the parish in which the nobleman's&#13;
seat was situated.&#13;
The father of his pupil was patron ot&#13;
the living and was also present at the&#13;
funeral of the deceased rector. There&#13;
was a young clergyman present also&#13;
whose grief was so demonstrative that&#13;
the noble patron was much affected by&#13;
the sight and asked If the young man&#13;
was,a son of the deceased gentleman.&#13;
"Oh, dear, no, my ldrd—no relation at&#13;
all," said the tutor.&#13;
"No relation!" exclaimed the nobleman&#13;
in a surprised tone.&#13;
"None, my lord; he Is the curate, and&#13;
I think he is not weeping for the dead,&#13;
but for the living."&#13;
His lordship, who was something of&#13;
a wit and a cynic himself, was so delighted&#13;
with the bonmot that he conferred&#13;
the living upon the ready punster.&#13;
&lt;S&amp;£ This eiffnatttre is on every box . lihe genniae&#13;
Laxative BroaKHQuimae Tibi*&#13;
the remedy thai career » coM to MM *aw&#13;
Subscribe for Dispatch.&#13;
*%****+****t^*^***%J*u****i*»**k&amp;*0l&#13;
POeTAL 4 MOMV,&#13;
FROPftirrone.&#13;
•fcfetiy&#13;
SrtV&#13;
claee. House "jSl&#13;
DETROIT. thaCi*&#13;
Rates, $2, $2.50, $3 per Day.&#13;
con. 4**N» Mivan a aeieweia BT.&#13;
^&#13;
STATE OF MICHIGAN, County ot Llvlngetoa&#13;
At a eeesion of the Probate Court for said County,&#13;
held at the FTobate Office in the Village of&#13;
HoweU, on Monday the 80th day of September, la&#13;
the year one thousand nice hundred and one.&#13;
Present, Eupene A. Stowe Judge of Probate, in&#13;
the Matter of the Estate of&#13;
ORLA B.JACKSOW, Ueoeaeed. *&#13;
On reading and filing the petition duly verified ot&#13;
Ella M. Jackson, praying that a certain instrument&#13;
now on file in this court, purporting to be&#13;
the last Will and Testament of said deceased, may&#13;
be admitted to probate.&#13;
Thereupon it is ordered that Tuesday the 29th&#13;
day of October nest, at lb o'clock in the forenoon,&#13;
at said Probate Office, be assigned for the&#13;
hearing of said petition.&#13;
It is further ordered that a copy ot this order be&#13;
published in the PIKCKMBY DISPATCH, a newspaper&#13;
printed and circulating in said oounty, three&#13;
successive weeks previous to said day of hearing,&#13;
ECGKKB A. Brow*,&#13;
t-48 Judge of Probata&#13;
llroad Guide.&#13;
Leaving all this we pass on&#13;
still northward iwtfl we come | t^lncaiidaa^J^t?&#13;
tlovr They Do In C1»tnsu&#13;
In China liquids are aold by weight&#13;
and grain ..by measure. John buys&#13;
soup by the pound and cloth by the&#13;
foot. A Chinaman never puts his name&#13;
outside of his shop, but &lt;paints instead&#13;
a motto or a list of bis goods on his&#13;
vertical signboard. Some reassuring&#13;
remark is frequently added, such' as&#13;
"One word hall,"f "A child two feet&#13;
high would not be cheated." Every&#13;
single article has to bo bargained for.&#13;
and it is usual for the customer to&#13;
take his own measure and scales with&#13;
him.&#13;
When yon engage a servant or make&#13;
a bargain, it is net.considered binding&#13;
until "the fastening penny" has been&#13;
paid. Although his bad faith is notorious&#13;
in some matters, yet, to do him&#13;
justice, when- once this coin .has been&#13;
paid by you he Chinaman, cooly or&#13;
shopman will generally stick to his&#13;
bargain even if the result to him be&#13;
loss. . "&#13;
TO Cava a Coli ta One:Dar .&#13;
Take Laxative Bromo Qutnin* Tablets.&#13;
All dmwmt* refund the money&#13;
if it Tails to cure, E. W, Grove's siifnator*&#13;
i* on each h»u. 25c.&#13;
%s9am&#13;
&gt; &gt;».Y» STEAMSHIP UKK9* v&#13;
Popular route lor Ann Arbor, Toledo&#13;
and points East, South, and for&#13;
Howell, CKvo?so, Alma, Alt Pleasant&#13;
Cadillac, Manistee, Traverse City and&#13;
points in Northwestern Michigan.&#13;
W. H.BlflKNlTT,&#13;
G. P . A. Toledo&#13;
Thomas A. Edison said of the Pan-&#13;
American HJkposltlon after viewing the&#13;
illumination. "This is the apotbaoalt of&#13;
SBAlXssaa, Xava. 1, l o o t .&#13;
Trains leave South Lyon aa followa:&#13;
For Detroit and Best,&#13;
10:36 a. m., 3:04 p. m ., 8:58 p. xtu&#13;
For Grand Rapids, North and Went,&#13;
9:45 a. m., 2:08 p. oft. 6:30 p. M.&#13;
For Saginaw and Bay City,&#13;
10:3« a. m., 8:04 p. m„ 8:58 p. a .&#13;
For Toledo and South, 1018&amp; a. JB.&#13;
FaaxKBAY, H. F. MOILUBH,&#13;
Ageet, south Lyoo. G, p. A„ ^9tniit&#13;
I 2&#13;
JlMksdo. uetroiiaalel&#13;
•*»»* Trwat Railway Hjatew.&#13;
d-Ma. n.&#13;
•:4a p, a.&#13;
'«*:«*». a&#13;
iatermmeeUdtitautdee xB. Jtaarctkesroane.o Llaeieimetse,t iaonads&#13;
wucasv&#13;
jnnri:&#13;
5:j*p. a.&#13;
m . 1&#13;
?•• Rift a. a. and ft* p. a. * « * ta?t iVongh&#13;
•oachbatwe^Ji^a^oaiaaaDetroa. *&#13;
. W.4,aiatk, A.; - flastaaj&#13;
r&#13;
?|'*('rt'-;iJ»&#13;
••^M&#13;
'.,- x&#13;
i f&#13;
•»••¥ .11&#13;
nrrer without Interest.&#13;
,^Ut. .'WJiHiWywi'^y&#13;
*•*•! »»»•«*•* MM • /&#13;
TEfci Li, ** CAD WELL.&#13;
*&#13;
One W a r of Telllatr.&#13;
Curley—You see that fellow loafing&#13;
t«er {here? He used to go to the same&#13;
college that I did. I wonder If be remembers&#13;
me? 0&#13;
Burleigh—Ask b!m for the loon of $5.&#13;
Curley—What for?&#13;
Burleigh—If he remembers you. you&#13;
won't get It—Judge.&#13;
Politeness fs like an air cushion—&#13;
there may be nothing in It. but tt eases&#13;
many a hard jolt.—Chicago News.&#13;
Mind Is that which preceives, feels,&#13;
remembers, acts and is conscious of&#13;
continued existence.&#13;
President Roosevelt said, of the Pan-&#13;
American Exposition. "It is well worth&#13;
the while of every man, woman aud&#13;
child in the country to visit the Pan-&#13;
American Exposition."&#13;
The FlublnK Ottet.&#13;
The otter used by Scottish poachers&#13;
is one of the most deadly fishing instruments&#13;
known. Iu some waters is is far&#13;
more effective than a net. It may be&#13;
described as a water kite, which serves&#13;
to take out over the water a line bearing&#13;
50 or more flies. The otter itself Is&#13;
a floating piece of board leaded along&#13;
one edge to keep it upright. The poacher&#13;
walks along the side of loch or river,&#13;
letting out the fly decorated line as he&#13;
goes, the otter board gradually working&#13;
out toward the center. An enormous&#13;
area of water is fished at one time and&#13;
numbers of fish are killed.&#13;
• • « • » .&#13;
With the magnificent exhibit of the The ^rqgramme fur OetnPr'm*****&#13;
United tat^wnui-pt * * ? t&amp;V-«t&amp; «p*t tbJa*to* J* w*oHowa;&#13;
ISouth and Central Amejctcan . . S t a t e * * i itoJei*on* **^-W--mi*.*ffy-,&#13;
tbnttdings every rUrftbf ean spend *&amp;&amp;** i i f f 2 I * ? i ^ ^ *&#13;
More tha,n 5,000,000 people have visited&#13;
the Pan-American Exposition. As&#13;
Secretary of Agriculture Wilson said&#13;
on Sept 11. after a visit, "No one can&#13;
afford to keep away."&#13;
A Card.&#13;
'I, the undersigned, do hereby ajjren&#13;
to refund the money on a 50 cent, not&#13;
tie of Green's Warranted Syrup of&#13;
Tar if it failes to enre your cou^h or&#13;
cold, i also guarantee a 25-cent bottle&#13;
to prove satisfactory or money refunded.&#13;
t23&#13;
Will E. Darrow.&#13;
Does it pay to buy cheap.&#13;
A chpap remedy tor coughs and&#13;
colds is all riyht, but, yon want something&#13;
that will telieve and cure the&#13;
moiH severe and da^gerou*reVuits^oT&#13;
throat and lunj? troubles. What&#13;
shall we do? Go to a warmer and more&#13;
regular climate? "ies, it possible; if&#13;
not possible for you, then in either&#13;
case take the ONLY remedy that has&#13;
been introduced in all civilized counties&#13;
with success in severe throat and&#13;
iuntf troubles, "Boscbee's German&#13;
Syrup." Itnxjt only heals and stimulates&#13;
the tissues to destroy the serin&#13;
diseases, but allayp ioflamation, causes&#13;
easy expectoration, gives affood nighis&#13;
rrst, and cures the patient. Try one&#13;
bottle. Itecommended many years by&#13;
alt druggists in the world. Get&#13;
Green's Prize Almanac. For sale by&#13;
K. A. -SitflHr.&#13;
GREAT DAYS&#13;
...AT THE...&#13;
•AMERICAN&#13;
T CnTcagd October was th«&#13;
great month in point of attendance&#13;
at the World'!&#13;
fair. There is every reason&#13;
to believe the same re&#13;
•Hit will come to the Pan-American Exposition&#13;
at Buffalo, where October is&#13;
always a month of delightful weathers]&#13;
The Exposition in point of beauty and&#13;
interest is at its climax, and the programme&#13;
of special events .is such as tt&#13;
attract and please. September started&#13;
with great crowds, and only the t&#13;
dy in the Temple of Music, which&#13;
ned and shocked a world, halted an&#13;
overwhelming success in that nwth.&#13;
The Exposition management as * tt&amp;&gt;&#13;
ate of respect closed the gates for aw&#13;
day, Thursday, when the state funeral&#13;
of the third martyred president too*&#13;
place. The crowds since then a*v»&#13;
poured to Buffalo. The Temple of&#13;
Sialic, now hallowed and lijaiflr,&#13;
ground, has been the Mecca or fhOtt*&#13;
courts; *:". • ..;;.*&lt; r.:* T v.*-os. ::a r.rantains&#13;
nnd stuuir.ry. Its exhibits and its&#13;
amusements, lias been a ('.plight to the&#13;
i5XXK),QC0 visitors who have already&#13;
been to the Tau-American.&#13;
Toe Exposition Company oponed up&#13;
the tibttth of October, beginning Monday*&#13;
Sfpt. 30. with a Oirulvnl week of&#13;
splendid events, including a baby&#13;
eatje|jr parade, with 3,000 school cl-.lldYtn&#13;
singing in the procession, a monster&#13;
pageant with the floats used in the&#13;
New Orleans Mardi Gras aud alle-&#13;
| fojrieal parade and the feature of the&#13;
In so compact a space, with s n c h f ^ f ^ &amp; S r W . towoticW.&#13;
beauty of architecture and wita so *. Fennsyiveni*«•/• ' „&#13;
1 4, fc r &gt; * orgjm redtaL Harry B. Jepson, ITtw&#13;
BataavCona. .., » ' '*&#13;
} 6. Peru day/, Awards ^sy. ftreworKs, ,C, ol B,-&#13;
lAhigfa football.&#13;
7, a Mist Ion* B. RUdcO, OndajwrV ¢ . , fret&#13;
etgan rectal, Old Folk** day. IMinei* day.&#13;
740. Junes* b w d . New. York, slaty awn.&#13;
7*10. Uorae show. Judging'*. 10.&#13;
a' Brooklyn .day. Knight* of toe Golden Eagk,&#13;
9. Hew York State day, Federation of WOMB**&#13;
Clnbe, fireworka. -&#13;
9. Free organ recital&#13;
10. NattoW Grange day, Dataware day. Dunkirk&#13;
day, Nat P. a and V. A. aesodatiea, fireworks.&#13;
'&#13;
10-12. Free organ recital. William 0. Carl, New&#13;
York city.&#13;
XL Atlantic City day.&#13;
XL International Sunshine day.&#13;
12. U. of B.-Brown football, fireworks.&#13;
1S-16. Fret organ recital, Clarence Eddy, Sew&#13;
York.&#13;
14-31. Victor Herbert'* orchestra, Pittsburg, sixty&#13;
men.&#13;
tt. Merchants* Aaaociation off Hew York, Pain's&#13;
fireworka.&#13;
17, 18. Free organ recital, Harry Bowe Shelley,&#13;
New,York city.&#13;
17. University of Buffalo day, fireworks.&#13;
19. Buffalo day, Cornell-Car I isle football, fireworks.&#13;
80. Free organ recitaL&#13;
20, 21. Free organ recital, N. J. Corey, Detroit,&#13;
Mich.&#13;
21-31. Exhibition of poultry and pet stock.&#13;
Judging 23. 24.&#13;
22. Pain's fireworks.&#13;
23. Wesleyan-U. of B. footbalL&#13;
24. Pain's fireworks. American Buff Plymouth&#13;
Hock club, American Polish club.&#13;
24. American Langshan club. Eastern White&#13;
Wyandotte club.&#13;
24-20. Pigeon club, American Magpie club.&#13;
25. National White Wyandotte club.&#13;
20. Pain's fireworks.&#13;
27-20. Free organ recital, William B. Conlaon,&#13;
Cleveland, 0.&#13;
28. Alaska day.&#13;
29. Pain's fireworks.&#13;
81. Pain's fireworks.&#13;
YBKPXiX OF MUSIC, MAIN ENTRANCE—FAtf-&#13;
AJfSBlCAN EXPOSITION.&#13;
much care for the comfort of the visitor,&#13;
so much. All exhibit buildings are&#13;
free, Including the Stadium, the great'&#13;
amphitheater, the art gallery, state&#13;
buildings, and never was so much&#13;
given for so little.&#13;
The gorgeous pyrotechnics—and no&#13;
exposition has ever been so lavish in&#13;
the display of fireworks—are free to&#13;
all Exposition visitors. The programme&#13;
provided by,Pain in Oetober Includes&#13;
the magnificent water carnival with&#13;
gorgeous ballet, wonderful figures in&#13;
liquid fire, and aerial bombs and rockets&#13;
of startling beauty and mystifying&#13;
construction.&#13;
i To the millions Interested in agriculture,&#13;
stock and poultry rearing, the&#13;
Pan-American Exposition especially&#13;
appeals. The cattle show was a tremendous&#13;
success and the sheep show,&#13;
beginning Sept 23 and' continuing to&#13;
Oct. 25, has proved an attraction foi&#13;
those interested, from every section&#13;
from Maine to California and Canada.&#13;
Among the states represented are Michigan,&#13;
Indiana, Wisconsin, New York,&#13;
Pennsylvania, Illinois, Vermont, Ohio,&#13;
the total number of flocks on exhibition&#13;
twenty-seven have been sent here&#13;
from the Dominion of Canada, most of&#13;
the exhibitors being located in the&#13;
province of Ontario. The province of.&#13;
Quebec is also represented. During&#13;
We the ttrit)*r4(tfn*J •irnai.'^tff, offn&#13;
»*&gt; a.ewa.d of 90 ceo** to any p*r*4«&#13;
*bn paicbs3e»of u*t two 2 ^ boms&#13;
of UaxUrVMa^irak*£ u«r* Tablets,&#13;
if it fails toeore con^H*Htmn, bilions-&#13;
Bess, «tr^i.h«»dirhe, imorio*, Jos* of&#13;
^ppMttn.. sonV stolonU*. df specif&#13;
liver eampUiot; or any ol «h* &lt;Ji$*ii»«s&#13;
for wtwh it i* recomiuended. Price&#13;
25 ettar* tor either tablet» m* lUjaid.&#13;
We will also ref nod tfc» m^noT on one&#13;
paeksire oi either if H fills to gWtwtiftfaction,&#13;
.•• "•'&gt;-&lt;«&#13;
f V: 8i«fcjr;&#13;
W. B,t)arrow»&#13;
w^mmmf^f Iht • ginffcilfjl f.l^lttM&#13;
rUBUSJISP KY**T WMDA* **&gt;*»V-* SVV&#13;
' sottons MO MoemaToaa.&#13;
SnbecripUon Plies SI la A4v«net&#13;
Cotereo at tb« Poetofflce at Plttc*ao/t Mle*)*** ( M«ocond-ola«« mUUtr. .&#13;
Adrertiaing rata* wad« known on apnlfeaiiob.&#13;
Bcnlneaa C«r&lt;ta, $4.00 t»er /«#r.&#13;
INNUb and tuvtLi** uotieea «JUbUao«e} tr««.&#13;
AnnouneasMnb* &lt;&gt;t •utnrutntuenia auy o« uki4&#13;
for, U desired, by ,&gt;r •aentiogiua uuk* witit Ucke&#13;
u of adntiaaioB. tnc«a«acke&lt;»ar«» iw*uruu,&lt;pr&#13;
to toe oUlce^ogalaxratea will )&gt;«ca«ex«4.&#13;
Ail lanttor in loadn«tfc«cotanuwUltoenailed&#13;
at 5 cant* per Una or fraction thereof. for a*c*&#13;
inaertion. wnerenotitoaiaapocited^inoUcot&#13;
will bo inserted anttl orders liscunOnuad, ««4&#13;
same week. the&#13;
Can Care F o r 2 3 0 , 0 0 0 .&#13;
Director General Buchanan says the&#13;
only problem now confronting the Exposition&#13;
is how to find days enough&#13;
within the closing weeks to adequately&#13;
take care of the many attractions and&#13;
features now being planned. He predicts&#13;
a great attendance during the&#13;
month of October and one far inwexcess&#13;
of the highest estimates that have&#13;
been made by the most sanguine. In&#13;
answer to the inquiry as to whether or&#13;
not Buffalo could take care of the&#13;
crowds, he said there was no difficulty&#13;
whatever in this regard; that Buffalo&#13;
could easily care for 250,000 strangers&#13;
every day comfortably and at reasonable&#13;
prices.&#13;
In t h e Music Temple.&#13;
The organ recitals in the Temple of&#13;
Music are daily features of the Pan-&#13;
American Exposition. Many celebrated&#13;
organists are on the programme for&#13;
OctSber. Victor Herbert's famous orchestra&#13;
will be at the Temple of Music&#13;
from Oct. 14 to the close of the Exposition.&#13;
JOB ttlXIZMGr&#13;
lo eirite branches, * specialty. We n»*esll a m i s&#13;
and the latent styles of Type, etc., which enable*&#13;
as to execute all kinds of irork,aneh as Books,&#13;
Pantideia. foatera, frogramwea, Bill Heeds, Nets&#13;
Heads, Statements, Carda, Auction BUls, etc.. In&#13;
auperier styles, upon the shortest notice. PrleeaM&#13;
o t aa good work can b*~ done. v&#13;
«LL BILLS fATABU* JTIBST Of S 7 « S Y tt»*rtl.&#13;
THE VILLAGE DIRECTORY.&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICERS.&#13;
PRSBIDBMT . . ^ . . . . . - . - . . C U S i g l e *&#13;
TttUBTans It. Bator, B. H. Brwln,&#13;
tf. G. Jacluoo, Geo. beasonJr.&#13;
Chas. Ldve, JJaUchy Bacne.&#13;
CUSKTJH 1...^^....- , • i..,..JS. tt.—Bfws—&#13;
TKBASOU^O. _ MW. .....—..J. A. Cadw&gt;U&#13;
Attasaaon , . . — -^..Jaa. A.Oreone&#13;
STBBSTCOMH(ssiowna -J. Parker&#13;
UKALTBOrnoBR Dr. H. K. 5l«4et&#13;
ATTOBKST....«»... ..MM, ...MM ..MMM W. A. Car?&#13;
MAUMUAIX, MW.......M^~ •..—«» - —.S. Brotjah&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
The Pan-American Exposition is proving&#13;
a great success. While the enterprise&#13;
suffered for a few days from the&#13;
national tragedy, the crowds that have&#13;
put off going until the fall are rushing&#13;
to Buffalo in great_numbers now.&#13;
Ciffnrn Are R l e n t e and Lefts*&#13;
"It is not always because a cigar is&#13;
badly made that the wrapper curls up&#13;
and works off," said a tobacco dealer.&#13;
"It is often because a right handed&#13;
man is smoking a left handed cigar.&#13;
Sounds strange, hey? Well, a left&#13;
handed cigar is one rolled by the maker's&#13;
left hand, for all cigar makers&#13;
TEMPLE OP Mtrsic, MAIN ENTBANCE FROM ] must be ambidexterous. A piece of&#13;
!R£:f:li&#13;
ATTDITOBIUM—PAN-AMEBICAK EXPOSITION,&#13;
the course of the sheep show there will&#13;
be held in the New York State building*] the filler. The other piece, for reasons&#13;
beautiful floral parade at Saratoga.&#13;
These will take place on Thursday and&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 3 and 5, but every day&#13;
from Sept. 30 to Oct. 5 will be replete&#13;
WKh Interest. Special fireworka on the&#13;
|t tafce, with decorated and Illuminated&#13;
Hunches in a procession of fiery grand-&#13;
#jnr, will afford new and wonderful&#13;
fenaatlons to the visitors.&#13;
' Thus October will be ushered In with&#13;
programme so arranged as to give&#13;
Buffalo baa demonstrated her *bUttj[ the American publie&amp; delightful week.&#13;
The life saving drill, daily, has become&#13;
one of the great attractions of&#13;
the Exposition. Jt tells the story of the&#13;
work of the heroic men who guard the&#13;
shores of ocean and great lakes, always&#13;
on the alert to drag from death'!&#13;
{brink the shipwrecked sailor or pas-&#13;
•eager*. The model camp of United&#13;
8tates marines, the aeacoaat guns, the&#13;
ordnance and all the exhibits showing&#13;
war's panoply and our defensive meaanres&#13;
have been a great educator to&#13;
thonsandi of visitors. Some military&#13;
Mara?? Hi always fflcjm^ ft the&#13;
TO care for great crowds satis&#13;
lot only tn hauling them to the. .&#13;
ion by street car and steam railway 0&#13;
X fare of but B cents from a*rf*rt «&#13;
^ iactt^bot^o-hooee and fejt-**as* ai&#13;
-'does in the reach of alk A t atssle*&#13;
- £ exorbitant prices weT«, lajss *ro&#13;
Hown to be fables, and eINst vtfftor&#13;
bo makes the slightest «tn«t %• get&#13;
&gt; ooommoflatton can do soailjaaV Wltb-&#13;
.. vi ate means., v: • - &amp;J- I' •&#13;
- Tbe Bxposlflrjn itsett, Wttb its beautt&#13;
,*^wtd bTiilaiTig8,ltts coloring by dsr, its&#13;
a series of meetings of prominent North&#13;
and South American sheep breeders.&#13;
The Buffalo Review of Sept. 24 said&#13;
that "this ought to be a great time for&#13;
the farmers to visit the Pan-American.&#13;
Every farmer in New York State, not&#13;
to mention those in other parts of the&#13;
country, ought to see the attractions of&#13;
the Rainbow*City during the next three&#13;
or four weeks.&#13;
"The cattle show last week was a&#13;
big feature of the Exposition, and this&#13;
week there is a great sheep show in&#13;
progress.&#13;
"The New York State farmers and&#13;
the sheep raisers from other states will&#13;
find it most interesting to compare the&#13;
South American breeds with those of&#13;
North America.&#13;
"It will surprise many to learn that&#13;
the pavilions for animals at the Pan&#13;
American cover ten acres and are ca-&#13;
Pfiblcof housing,35,000,animal&#13;
60 YEARS'&#13;
EXPEDIENCE&#13;
tobacco for a wrapper is cut on the&#13;
bias and is rolled from left to right on&#13;
of economy, is then used and must be&#13;
rolled the opposite way by the operator's&#13;
other hand. Hence a smoker who&#13;
holds his cigar in his right hand sometimes&#13;
in twisting it about rubs the&#13;
wrapper the wrong way and unloosens&#13;
ltM—Philadelphia Times.&#13;
\JErHOUJ8T BPliiCOPAL Olil/UCll. —&#13;
iVl Kev. H. W . Hick*, pastor. Services evert&#13;
Sunday morning at 10:&amp;, and ererj Sunday&#13;
evening at 7:0» o'clock. Prayer meetingThursday&#13;
evenings,&#13;
ing service,&#13;
bonday school at cloae of morn-&#13;
CHAS. UBMBX Supt.&#13;
CONUrtKGATIONAL CHUUCM.&#13;
Kev. &lt;J. W. J&amp;iee ppaais tor. Service ever;&#13;
Sunday morning at 101::3800 and every Sanday&#13;
evening at 7:0C o'clock. Prayer meeting Thar*&#13;
day evenings. Sunday school at close of morn&#13;
Inirservice, an. Tnos. Read, iuyt,, Moccu&#13;
Teeple Sec&#13;
CT. M \KY\S CA L'Hf»UC CtlC ttOIi.&#13;
O Kev. M. J. Ooinamrford, i'istor. Services&#13;
every Sunday. Low mass at?:8Uo'clock&#13;
high mass with aermon at 9:10 a. m.. Catechism&#13;
at S :0o \&gt;. ia„ vespers ana benediction at 7:8U p.na&#13;
SOCIETIES:&#13;
The A. O. d . Socl^tv »(tui* ^l.i^e, &gt;neet* every&#13;
third 4 iiiUy mens PV. vl i t u ^ v I»U&#13;
John Tuoraey snd M. r. K&gt;«ily,0&gt;i it* Ud-ig&gt;te*&#13;
Li^PWORTH LEAGUE. Meets every Sunday&#13;
tJjevening at 6:00 ucloch in tbe A. \L. Cnurch. i&#13;
cordial invitation is extended to everyoae, e*p^-&#13;
dally youog people. F. L. Aodrewe, Pre*&#13;
CiiBisn VN E^aavv »tt&#13;
ihgd every Sundi*/ evenin; HC «:J».&#13;
SJJiai't — CM&#13;
PtaA. te:i&#13;
Mias L. M. Ooi; Sacritary, \l\a Llittle C»r|n-i5*&#13;
, „ - i • . ii i i n • • • • r ^&#13;
ri tUK W. C. T. U. meets the first Friday of eaoi&#13;
1 month at 2:3t p. m. atttte home of f&gt;r. H. b.&#13;
Sigler. Everyone interested in temperance&#13;
coadlally invited. Mrs. V*eal Sigler, t'res; Mn .&#13;
j£tta Durfee, Secretary.&#13;
The C. T. A. and H. Society of thla place, o&gt;*«&#13;
eve&lt;y third Satoraay evening in the Ft. Matthew&#13;
Hall. John Donohae, President.&#13;
TRADC rV?MW«&#13;
OtetoNt&#13;
Cofnrm4MT« A c&#13;
Anyone sending n sketch and deeertption may&#13;
ajnlekly aseerinin our optnton n e e whether an&#13;
invention la probably patentable. Coanmnnlen*&#13;
tknu strictly oraSdentiaJ. RandboceteenMats&#13;
sent free. OMeat streney foraecnrtngpntasits.&#13;
•• PaU&amp;U Uken tbroosh Mnnn eVCTTmsist&#13;
sjisBtafnotke, withoat obarre, la tbe Scientific fliwrkm A tHUKhwmely HhwtvtAed&#13;
ennUlon of any " fowr&#13;
7 Mm$ TiSrseat eb&gt;&#13;
Terma,!&#13;
B r o t h e r l i n e s a l a B r o c k t o m .&#13;
Here is a story told by Professor Barrett&#13;
Wendell about Dr. William Everett:&#13;
The latter was going out to&#13;
Brockton one night to deliver an address&#13;
and ran across Mr. Wendell in&#13;
the Old Park square station. "Come&#13;
along. Wendell," he said. "I am going&#13;
out to Brockton to speak, and I want&#13;
some one respectable to sit on the platform&#13;
with me." So the professor went&#13;
along.&#13;
When Everett arose to speak, the&#13;
hall, which was a large one, was only&#13;
passably well filled, and even the comparatively&#13;
small number present began&#13;
to grow smaller as one by one people&#13;
slipped away. Mr. Wendell began to&#13;
think that Brockton must be a singularly&#13;
cold hearted place when* suddenly&#13;
he noticed people coming in by twos&#13;
and threes and silently taking seats&#13;
wherever they could find them. Soon&#13;
the hall was full, with standing room&#13;
only, but still they came till the aisles&#13;
and walla were lined with interested&#13;
listeners.&#13;
The supposed deserters had simply&#13;
gone eat and told the* people of Brock*&#13;
ton that fcere was the greatest mail&#13;
they'd e w heard and gathered them&#13;
IB by the ecore.-^Bostoo Herald,&#13;
I f NIGHTS OF MACCABEES.&#13;
XVKeet every Friday evening on or before fall&#13;
of the moon at their hall In the Swartbout bldg.&#13;
Viaiting brothers are cordially Invited.&#13;
CHAS. VAMPACLL, Sir Knight Commands*&#13;
Livingston Lodge, No,&#13;
the full ot the moon&#13;
w . 7% 9 &amp; A.&#13;
Communication&#13;
Tuesday evenini&#13;
Kirk Van&#13;
H. Ktzn'er&#13;
on or before&#13;
inkle, W.M&#13;
OROEB OF EASTERN STAB meets each month&#13;
the Friday evening following the regular F.&#13;
AA M. meeting, MRS. MART B I A D , W. H.&#13;
RDER OF MODERN WOODMEN Meet the&#13;
evening of each Xc&#13;
C. L.Grimes V. C.&#13;
'first Thursday evenln&#13;
Aiaccabee ball. ~ Month In the&#13;
LADIES OF THE MACOAfiSJCS. Meet every la&#13;
and 3rd Saturday of eachmonth at a:80 p in. a&#13;
K. •&gt;. T. M. hall. Viaiting sisters cordially in&#13;
vited, JcrtASiei^a, Lady Com.&#13;
KNIGHTS o» ran LOYAL GUARD&#13;
meet every second Wednesday&#13;
evening of every moatn in tbe K. O.&#13;
T. M. Ball at 7:80 o'clock. AU visiting&#13;
.Guards welcome.&#13;
« ., F. L. Andrews P. M, * J&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
J. W. MONKS.&#13;
DOCTOR OF DENTAL SURGERY&#13;
RNCKNEY, MICH,&#13;
omet ovta sratss's oaoo STOM.&#13;
K.F.8IQtCRM.f&gt; C,L,«OACR|«VO&#13;
PK DRS. SIGLER &amp;.SIGLliRr&#13;
Physicians and Surgeoaa. , A U oaUa prempU&#13;
attended to day or night, OOee e * Mataats&#13;
Pinekney, Mleh. . \&#13;
J. F. JflUTM*&#13;
VETERINARV 8 U R Q E O N .&#13;
Gradoate et OnUclo Veterinary Coilege, also&#13;
tb^Vetsriaaryl^BAlatryOiuS&#13;
Tocoste Oaaeaa, ''&#13;
Will promptly attead to ail diseases « O b t da&#13;
•ssilselsd snlmsl at s rsaanaaMs mimTT^&#13;
k eMatfaed^Fre*.&#13;
OTTrCCat MILL. PlftsCKHCN&#13;
! • . '&#13;
t'.-'M.&#13;
7&amp; vS?«; •&gt; :/.-,jr;*&#13;
' r''.*-:;.«&#13;
• &gt; • • •&#13;
5 ' . •&#13;
v-i- I&#13;
^&#13;
•*$*&#13;
•••V m.&#13;
-5¾¾ '&#13;
',.V; '"(*?!!&#13;
.?' V •• «*V-';&#13;
EBve»'?' ' ••&lt;••" "'&gt;, - 'y" '.»"• "'• '&#13;
Kfj".^V?..V '&#13;
ES^hV ",.•;.&#13;
forM- •.'.&#13;
\'''r);:&#13;
;.V J-W.&#13;
'. i.&#13;
^: .i.: v&#13;
':"; &lt;-!-&#13;
' &gt; • • ! A - '&#13;
: ' • , . ' . - ;&#13;
'&#13;
dJf',&#13;
1&#13;
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•?VA;-'.&#13;
i j ' ^ v S t * " ' •&#13;
«f&#13;
V&#13;
is: 3.&#13;
^1'"&#13;
fc*v •&#13;
fS*.&#13;
• • $ :&#13;
-.V.&#13;
V! '&#13;
&amp;iL&#13;
. I f •*•!•'&#13;
» &gt; • •&#13;
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ntWRKBY,&#13;
ANBBXWS, Publisher.&#13;
~ 7 T ~ MICHIGAN.&#13;
umut «5RS Wasn wt are yielding tb« peaceable&#13;
traits of righteousness, It will not be&#13;
dl«cnit f or- IM to reteaU unyielding&#13;
, ^ . ' " in i M | | l « « i i l i n l . i , n i ! • • .&#13;
I * * * * o f t h e P u l l m a n e a r s o w n e d b y&#13;
t h a c o m p a n y i s n o w Idle, a n d orders&#13;
«or m o r e , whJtesw&lt;snaot be* met;**r* b e - J.&#13;
i n * c o a s t a n j t j y r e c e i v e d .&#13;
G r e a t B r i t a i n i m p o r t e d l a s t year&#13;
a b o u t 260,000,000 p o u n d s of tea, of&#13;
w h i c h 55 per c e n t c a m e f r o m India, 37&#13;
p e r c e n t from Ceylon, 7 per c e n t from&#13;
C h i n a .&#13;
* W(W W W ^ W W » " » • • II I I !•• I — p — — — —&#13;
• T h e c h a m p i o n s n e a k thief l a t e l y did&#13;
a n e a t t r i c k In Greenwood, Iowa. A b o u t&#13;
t w o hours after hte release from jail&#13;
h e s n e a k e d Into t h e p r i s o n a n d stole&#13;
h i s photograph from t h e rogues' gall&#13;
e r y .&#13;
A curious And is reported from o n e&#13;
o f t h e C h i n c h a Islands, off t h e coast&#13;
of Peru. In a bad of g u a n o a n o l d&#13;
s h i p ' s ^ c o m p a s s w a s l a t e l y d u g up,&#13;
w h i c h , w h e n cleaned, w a s found t o be&#13;
i n w o r k i n g ord?r. T h e c a s e of t h e&#13;
I n s t r u m e n t Is brass, and it bears t h e&#13;
e n g r a v e d i n s c r i p t i o n " J a o . W a r r e n ,&#13;
C h e p e s i d ? , C i t y o f L o n d o n . Maker.&#13;
1C99." T h e c o m p a s s h a s b e e n s s n t to&#13;
au m u s e u m i n L i m a .&#13;
T h e t e s t - p o i n t of a s e r m o n i s n o t&#13;
i t s c l i m a x , but t h e m t n u t e after it is&#13;
finished—as t h e p r e a c h e r a n n o u n c e s&#13;
t h e c l o s i n g h y m n . If t h e hearer s a y s&#13;
t o himself, " T h e s e r m o n is done," t h e n&#13;
i s t h a t s e r m o n a faHure. B u t if t h e&#13;
h e a r e r s a y s , " I t is t i m e n o w for t h e&#13;
s e r m o n t o begin in m y dally life," t h e n&#13;
Is t h a t s e r m o n a success. A discourse&#13;
i s but a s t r i n g of idle w o r d s until It&#13;
b e c o m e s incarnated in s o m e l i v i n g&#13;
s o u l .&#13;
A l b e r t F o s s , o f T a s w e l V Ind., rec&#13;
e n t l y filed Affidavits againBt s i x s o -&#13;
c i e t y girls w h o g a v e h i m a public k i s s -&#13;
i n g . F o s s i s a m u s i c t e a c h e r and&#13;
b o a s t e d a t several parties t h a t he had&#13;
n e v e r been k i s s e d by a girl. T h e s i x&#13;
g i r l s laid for h i m o n t h e s t r e e t and&#13;
k i s s e d h i m u n t i l h e cried "enough."&#13;
H e w a s greatly mortified and w e n t be~&#13;
t h e arrest of t h e girls.&#13;
l e a s e d o n ball.&#13;
T h e y were re-&#13;
Mi'* ^£^^¢^¢53355&#13;
MiHions Invested in Beet Sufar&#13;
Plants.&#13;
VERY INTERESTING FIGURES.&#13;
* •' • ' i • ' *&#13;
Th« stftta Witt Soon L«Mt J» the aUaofaetare&#13;
With Nln*t««a P U n t e - S l r t y * » •&#13;
ThfNUfta* AOTM ot B&lt;mt« mad Klcntyfour&#13;
ThoaMnd T«M pt O M I Bvaalivd,&#13;
T h e beet s u g a r Industry h a s and Is&#13;
?rovvin» to vu^t proportions In Michigan&#13;
a s s h o w n by the State'l^blwr Commlssioner'a&#13;
report jfiven out F r i d a y .&#13;
Then-' are three factories a t B a y City,&#13;
ono at Caro, one at KocJiester, one iit&#13;
Alma, o n e a t K a l a m a z o o , one at B e n -&#13;
ton Harbor, o n e at Holland a n d o n e&#13;
•it Marltu* OMy. T h e p l a n t s w h i c h w i l l&#13;
be in operation for t h e Hrst t i m e t h i s&#13;
season are located at Laa«lujj, Saprinaw&#13;
nnd Salzlnn^'. T h e p l a n t s t h a t will g o&#13;
into operation next; s e a s o n are at Harl&gt;&#13;
oi' BeaHi, Sebewalnjr, M t Clcnnens,&#13;
I'arroUton, L a i v c r and Croswell. Companies&#13;
h a v e also been organized to&#13;
build f«&gt;uv n e w plants, t w o of wbUdi&#13;
will bo in W a y n e county, oiie a t Casevilk-&#13;
and t h e other at Mt. C l e m e n s .&#13;
Tho thirteen plants w h i c h will operate&#13;
in Mi eh lean the present seasou&#13;
h a v e a capitalized stock of $4.-1^).01¾).&#13;
an a v e r a p - of $33S.4t!2 each. T h e co«t&#13;
of construction and equipping those&#13;
factories will asrinvKate $r&gt;,52.T000. au&#13;
averaire of $425.(MX' each. T h e six&#13;
plants wlrie.li will \K&gt; completed for&#13;
next season's work will h a v e an agg&#13;
r e g a t e capital stock of $2,1.^0,0(^, a n&#13;
a v e r a g e of $35S.3SS'eacli. T h e co»t of&#13;
th^lr c o n s t r i v t l o n is e s t i m a t e d at an&#13;
a v e r a g e of ^."SO.OOO each, an a g g r e g a t e&#13;
of $3.H00.()0(\ it is a c o n s e r v a t i v e eKtlm&#13;
a t e that over $9.000.(KK) will h a v e&#13;
been Invested in sugar plants in Michigan&#13;
the c o m i n g scaso^i.&#13;
Tlio thirteen factories whicli will l&gt;e&#13;
operated during the c o m i n g s e a s o n will&#13;
wave an a v e r a g e d a i l y capacity of n.r»5o&#13;
tons of beets. T h e nix sf tctories which&#13;
will start next yean* will h a v e ai capacity&#13;
of JUiOO tons daily, w h i c h w i l l bring&#13;
the a g g r e g a t e capacity of Michigan&#13;
factories to 10.S5*' tons of lx&gt;cts dally.&#13;
It_ls e s t i m a t e ! tlmt the thirteen factories&#13;
to l»o oi^rated this season will&#13;
a v e r a g e ninety d a y s each and together&#13;
will require "&gt;i)8.:r*M) tuns of l&gt;eets. Th«&gt;&#13;
Filgav obtained from Michigan beets&#13;
hist season averaged a b o v e 1-4 p e r c e n t .&#13;
and on tlais IKI.-JIS the output of sugar&#13;
for t h e s e a s o n will be 107.380.000&#13;
por.uds. or 81.7:^- tons. K x p e r l e n c * l&#13;
tnantiractrrcrs estimate that there will i&#13;
traor*r e aa jluusatulccee oofi tinhee--TpeieagcceB-a-annad-c-caaunsseeod-f+-^^&gt;ji.&gt;j j^«V, «,rn JMt h (vvf )i^«,^J ^Oii_h nonna» ^4&gt;f—SU^HJ&#13;
O n e h u n d r e d feet from a m a n h o l e ,&#13;
w i t h all, e s c a p e cut oH, t h r e e workm&#13;
e n , w h o w e r e d i g g i n g in a s e w e r in&#13;
N i n e t e e n t h street, N e w York, m a d e a&#13;
r u s h t o s a f e t y w h e n a n e x p l o s i o n of&#13;
n a p h t h a g a s occurred, but t h e flames&#13;
s w e p t o v e r t h e m , and t h e y were c o m -&#13;
p e l l e d t o lie o n their faces in thick&#13;
m a d t o escape being burned t o death.&#13;
T h e y w e r e unconscious w h e n found by&#13;
P o l i c e m a n F i l e , w h o bravely entered&#13;
t h e s e w e r w h i c h but a m o m e n t before&#13;
h a d been spouting fire.&#13;
R e a p p o r t i o n m e n t cf representation&#13;
i n C a n a d a after a n e w c e n s u s is a&#13;
s i m p l e r m a t t e r t h a n i n t h e United&#13;
S t a t e s . W h e n t h e D o m i n t o n w a s&#13;
f o r m e d t h e r u l e w a s adopted t h a t t h e&#13;
P r o v i n c e of Quebec s h o u l d a l w a y s&#13;
h a v e sixty-five m e m b e r s of t h e L o w e r&#13;
H o u s e of P a r l i a m e n t T h e population&#13;
o f Quebec, divided b y sixty-five, furn&#13;
i s h e s , therefore, t h e b a s i s of repres&#13;
e n t a t i o n for the o t h e r provinces.&#13;
U n d e r t h e n e w apportionment, w h i l e&#13;
Q u e b e c r e m a i n s s t a t i o n a r y , Ontario&#13;
a n d the Maritime P r o v i n c e s will lose&#13;
r e p r e s e n t a t i v e s , and British Columbia&#13;
a n d Manitoba will gain.&#13;
" I m a d e n o m o n e y by m y h y m n s , "&#13;
s a i d a feeble old m a n of s e v e n t y - s e v e n ,&#13;
a r e s i d e n t of the Isle of W i g h t , w h o&#13;
w a e recently e x a m i n e d in bankruptcy&#13;
p r o c e e d i n g s . This w a s t h e author of&#13;
" T h e r e ' s a Friend for Little Children."'&#13;
M i s f o r t u n e had o v e r t a k e n him, and he&#13;
s e e m e d t o be u t t e r l y w i t h o u t resource&#13;
— u n t i l Christian E n g l a n d heard of h i s&#13;
p l i g h t T h e n subscriptions were eve&#13;
r y w h e r e started and funds contributed&#13;
for h i s relief, and n o w h e m a y look&#13;
f o r w a r d t o peaceful years. A hymn&#13;
t h a t s i n g s its way t o hearts and cons&#13;
c i e n c e s is n o t n e c e s s a r i l y profitable&#13;
t o I t s author; but if w e could m e a s u r e ,&#13;
i n m o n e y , its w o r t h to h u m a n i t y , h o w&#13;
r i c h be would g r o w !&#13;
Attention is called to the facf that&#13;
a large portion of the machinery used&#13;
in t h e factories is n o w o f American&#13;
manufacture, and that the indu-try&#13;
ojwms up other a v e n u e s for tho employment&#13;
of American capital and labor. A&#13;
large a m o u n t of limestone is used In&#13;
tiie purifying process, t h e a v e r a g e 1M;-&#13;
iug alR)in 2.100 tons for each factory&#13;
during the season. A large portion of&#13;
Mils stone is p r o c u b \ l from t h e quarries&#13;
near Alpena. About 8.WX) tons of&#13;
b i t u m i n o u s co:il from Michigan mines&#13;
will a Wo be used.&#13;
A total oi' (tf.ofK) acres of l&gt;eets wi'l&#13;
be USIHI this year, and farmers will&#13;
receive an a v e r a g e of .So per ton for&#13;
the product oi' their farms. T h e operating&#13;
force in the factories this season&#13;
wili a g g r e g a t e about 2.400 i&gt;ersons.&#13;
w h o art. paid high w a g e s . Tho a m o u n t&#13;
of labor employed in weeding, thining&#13;
and pulling the beets is very large.&#13;
The future outlook for the industry is&#13;
considered 'very bright. F a r m e r s anrl&#13;
beet g r o w e r s are realizing h a n d s o m e l y&#13;
on their crops.&#13;
E n c k e ' s little comet, n a m e d after the&#13;
F r e n c h a s t r o n o m e r w h o first discove&#13;
r e d Its periodicity, is n o w o n o n e of&#13;
i t s e v e r y three-and-a-half-year visits&#13;
t o t h e earth's gaze. N o other k n o w n&#13;
c o m e t h a s a period s o short, and proba&#13;
b l y , in consequence, n o n e other h a s a&#13;
recorded h i s t o r y s o large. Many o t h -&#13;
e r c o m e t s are domesticated, s o t o&#13;
s p e a k , celebrating o c c a s i o n a l old h o m e&#13;
w e e k s of their o w n . T w i c e had a wellk&#13;
n o w n astronomer h u n t e d d o w n a&#13;
c o m e t , o n l y to find that a rival c o m e t -&#13;
h u n t e r w a s a few hours a h e a d of Mm.&#13;
T h e ' t h i r d t i m e h e w a s confident t h e&#13;
p r i s e w a s really his, a n d t h e n e w s of&#13;
t h o n e w d i s c o v e r y , w a s circulated. "I&#13;
t a i n t / w r o t e h i s friend, " y o n will&#13;
t a d it Is m y c o m e t of f i x y e a r s a g o&#13;
s o m e back." S o it w a s , a n d t h e disg&#13;
u s t e d reply earns b r i r t r e , " W h y don't&#13;
/ o n fceepjnw c o m e t * ohAined u p ? "&#13;
ni't inastlfltthiViii&#13;
She Lost H e r I-Ife.&#13;
T h e body of Mrs. L. A. Seel or, the&#13;
aeronaut known as Lillian Lrfay. w a s&#13;
found in the Illinois river, fom- miles&#13;
w e s t of La Salle. 111., and will be sent&#13;
to Kced City. Mich., for burial. Seven&#13;
d a y s .ago Mrs. Seeley ascended from&#13;
one of the principal streets in LaSallo.&#13;
The ascension w a s m a d e at dusk in a&#13;
brisk wind. T h e balloon rose rapidly&#13;
and pursued a s o u t h w a r d course toward&#13;
the river. The parachute I^ap&#13;
w a s made and tho spectators considered&#13;
that the aeronaut would land safely&#13;
beyond the river. Several men. Including&#13;
her husband, were detailed to&#13;
meet t h e aeronaut and return with her&#13;
and the parachute. A t midnight an&#13;
alarm to the effect thait the aeronaut&#13;
w a s lost w a s spread, in response to&#13;
w h i c h 500 m e n and b o y s turned out&#13;
and, a general hunt w a s instituted.&#13;
For three d a y s and nights tho river&#13;
v a l l e y and the hills south of it w e r e&#13;
searched in vain. B e l i e v i n g his w i f e&#13;
had landed in safety. Seeley g a v e it as&#13;
ids opinion t h a t she w a s abducted.&#13;
T h i s w a s generally believed until the&#13;
finding of t h e body.&#13;
4P- ^^^^^ 5SS I I I I » ,l'n i&#13;
'T '••* ' f:Y, , . 4 , ^ , &gt;k • &gt; »• &gt; 'Mi l ' -M&#13;
F e a r XArmm L « r t . : *&#13;
E x c e p t t h a t t h e f a t h e r w i l l not snr.&#13;
v i f * hhf'terrible b u r n s , t h e details ^ f ,&#13;
T u e s d a y night's Ore; a t B a n t u * * , ftH&#13;
w h i c h t h r e e children o f J o s e p h P e t e r s ,&#13;
w e r e cremated, w e r e correctly given.&#13;
T h e P e t e r s fomUy c o n s i s t e d of Joseph&#13;
Fetei-a. A n n a , b i s wile,' Christopher..&#13;
&amp;gea 1?; Mabel, «god 7, end,Gertrude,&#13;
a g e d 4. T h e y retired u » usual T u e s -&#13;
d a y night, nil o c c u p y i n g A room up*&#13;
stairs, a n d s o m e t i m e a f t e r w a r d M r s .&#13;
P e t e r s w a s aroused by t h o crackling&#13;
of flames. She r u s h e d d p w n stairs t o&#13;
find t h e kitchen n e a r l y c o n s u m e d , a n d&#13;
s h o u t e d f o r help, t h e n a t t e m p t e d to return&#13;
t o a w a k e n her h u s b a n d and children,&#13;
but t h e srnlrwayjhvas n m a s s o f&#13;
flames* a n d «h« e^uld n o t reaeh her&#13;
loved ones, although badly burned In&#13;
tho e f f o r t In despair s h e called t o her&#13;
bus k i n d , w h o a w a k e n e d a n d spent&#13;
s o m e t i m e In an effort to lind and s a v e&#13;
the little ones. In t h i s he failed, and&#13;
finally, crazed w i t h pain from bis&#13;
burns, he sprang headlong through t h e&#13;
rear w i n d o w , his f a c e an unrecognizable&#13;
blister, his a r m s a n d chest literally&#13;
cooked, and one leg burned so badly&#13;
that it w a s d r a w n up to his body. In&#13;
ids a g o n y ho begged t h e bystanders t o&#13;
kill him.&#13;
K i l l e d l»y F o o t b n l l .&#13;
Robert. I. McKee. t h e A l m a College&#13;
student wlio re-openelriTn old internal&#13;
injury In t h e football jyune b e t w e e n&#13;
Alma and t h e D. A. C. t e a m last Saturday&#13;
afternoon, died yesterday afternoon&#13;
at Alma. A n operation w a s performed&#13;
on him In Bralnawl hospital&#13;
and it w a s found that his intestines&#13;
were i n j w e d . T h e r e s e e m s to h a v e&#13;
been n o secret m a d e of t h e fact that&#13;
he haul an old hernia that bothered&#13;
him at times, and w h y the A l m a&#13;
c o a c h e s allowed him t o play is not explained.&#13;
Mr. M c K e e w a s very popular&#13;
in Alma and his d e a t h h a s saddened&#13;
the w h o l e college. H e w a s 27 y e a r s&#13;
old and m a d e his h o m e w i t h sisters In&#13;
Detroit. H e w a s a senior and would&#13;
h a v e graduated n e x t .Inr.e. H e w a s&#13;
president of the college Y. M. C. A.,&#13;
a m e m b e r of several of t h e literary societies&#13;
and wiis preparing for missionary&#13;
work.&#13;
T h e I l o y n l OnU yty*t*ry.&#13;
T h a t IAZ'/AO Jeffries w a s not murdered&#13;
atnd that she is still alive is an&#13;
established fact w h i c h l e a v e s tho identity&#13;
of tho w o m a n found buried in a&#13;
"hallow g r a v e in the w o o d s near Hoval&#13;
Oak a:; much a m y s t e r y as ever. Llza'e&#13;
Jeffries a:ul her week-old child will&#13;
bo able in a f e w d a y s to leave the&#13;
private hospital in Detroit where s h e&#13;
•vas found Fr'day morning. A meeting&#13;
b e w e o n I -izzie and her father took&#13;
place- Friday morninc. Mr. Jeffries&#13;
had conic t«' entertain so strongly the&#13;
-bHrtef tltnt^rt7^in—WITS nilTrdered. that&#13;
Hie joy of lind lag her alive completely&#13;
o v e r s h a d o w s i all feeling of regret. H e&#13;
lo\ir'-od ami 'k'vsed. his daughter an 1&#13;
'•v'tiO. and wept like :i child. H e thank-&#13;
^1 ''oil that his child was alive and&#13;
not a word of reproach from his lips.&#13;
Ho E l e c t i o n in D e t r o i t .&#13;
The Supreme Court lias handed&#13;
down a decision s u s t a i n i n g the constitutionality&#13;
of the so-called "term extension"&#13;
bill passed by the Inst legislature&#13;
as an a m e n d m e n t to the election&#13;
c h a p t e r uf the Detroit city charter.&#13;
Tito opinion holding the act valid nnd&#13;
sustaining the action of t h e . W a y n e&#13;
Circuit Court w a s written by Justice&#13;
Long aind signed by himself. Justices&#13;
Montgomery and Hooker. A dissenting&#13;
opinion w a s tiled by Justices&#13;
Grant and Moore. The purport of the&#13;
act w a s to defer by a year the date of&#13;
the n e x t Detroit municipal election and&#13;
to extend by a similar period the terms&#13;
of office of the m a y o r and other city&#13;
officers and one-half of the members&#13;
of t h e c o m m o n council.&#13;
5f i ijinr »ii#w ^r^Z^T essaraf&#13;
A new UaakiWili he e j * ^ $ t * « #&#13;
Dipbtbfcife ^ f epidemic hv IARIA&#13;
• Alfred Hightoa, T8 yehrf jMLJKgtoir&#13;
fed-fluids of t h e A g u e s D^Ar&#13;
T M » u Tonartt.&#13;
T w o resident hunters reported meeting&#13;
a w i l d m a n in the w o o d s near the&#13;
h e a d w a t e r s of the Dopr river, about&#13;
fourteen miles from Crystal Falla.&#13;
T h e y got within thirty feet of the&#13;
place w h e r e he w a s eating t h e carenss&#13;
of a dead skunk. H e snarled at them,&#13;
theu bounded off Into t h e w o o d s . H e&#13;
carried a piece of a g u n Itarrel and&#13;
tent pole, and. from utterances of&#13;
"Public," ••Public." it is thought he is&#13;
from Republic. A posge left to search&#13;
for him.&#13;
B r u t a l l y M n r d r r # d .&#13;
U n i t e d S t a t e s District A t t o r n e y&#13;
G e o r g e O. Covell h a s received official&#13;
information about the murder of Con&#13;
and F l o r e n c e Sullivan o f Grand Rap-&#13;
Ids, at Cape Xome, A l a s k a , T h e c r i m e&#13;
w a s particularly brutal, and Fred&#13;
H a r d y , of Chicago, h a s b e e n c o n v i c t e d&#13;
a n d s e n t e n c e d t o b a n g o n D e c e m b e r U&#13;
for the deed,^ . . '•"&#13;
JokKson'jt H o p e .&#13;
Charles A. Johnson, the Niles bank&#13;
wrecker, it is said, hoped that he would&#13;
get r.ff with Jive or s i x years. H o w -&#13;
ever, it docs not m a t t e r materially, for&#13;
the plains of friends w e r e the s a m e in&#13;
any i-ase. and these plans contemplate&#13;
a m o v e m e n t for a pardon after a reasonable&#13;
time has elapsed. Physically,&#13;
Johnson is not able to stand confinement,&#13;
and he will soon be broken in&#13;
health and in such s h a p e that ids&#13;
fi lends wili feel warranted in making&#13;
an appeal for his release from confinement.&#13;
It w a s t h e hope that this appeal,&#13;
w h e n made, will be grainted. that&#13;
nerved both tho innocent and the&#13;
ruiity to meet tho Judgment of the&#13;
court with dry e y e s and firm expression.&#13;
M«rrl-»Bre» nflil Dlvorce-n.&#13;
A coinpilat'on of marriages and divorces&#13;
returned by county clerks for&#13;
i h o year 1000 has been m a d e by t h e&#13;
secretary of staite. T h e r e were 2Ji.20."&#13;
marriages in tho s t a t e J a s t year, as&#13;
compared .with 21.877 In 1800, and 20,-&#13;
IBS In 18PS. The returns for the year&#13;
l o o o thus s h o w a considerable increase&#13;
over the preceding years, although the&#13;
large number of m a r r i a g e s of non-residents&#13;
returned from St. Joseph somew&#13;
h a t interferes w i t h e x a c t eoinpari&#13;
sons. Berrien c o u n t y reported 1,448&#13;
marriages for 1900, 1.077 for 1899. and&#13;
only 444 for 1808. T h e number of divorces&#13;
returned a l s o s h o w * a considerable&#13;
increase for 1000. there being&#13;
2.418 a* compared w i t h 2,218 for 18W,&#13;
and 1.808 for 1808.&#13;
T h e y A r e I n d l e i e S .&#13;
I n d i c t m e n t s h a v e l&gt;een returned by&#13;
tho federal grand Jury, in Grand Rap-&#13;
Ids, against Citv A t t o r n e y L a m K.&#13;
S s l s b u r y and Stllson V. MacLeod,&#13;
former p a y i n g teller of tho Old Nationn&#13;
l b a n k a n * manager o f the local clearing&#13;
house. MacLeod w a s indicted on&#13;
several count* c h a r g i n g violation o f&#13;
tho United S t a t e s b a n k i n g law. and In&#13;
connection w i t h the i s s u i n g of a worthless&#13;
certificate of deposit, and Salspnry&#13;
Is c h a r g e d w i t h b e j n c an accomplice,&#13;
Bail In t h e cases of Snlsbury and Mae*&#13;
Lcod w a s fixed at $7,500 each.&#13;
LTArceui&#13;
wttw&#13;
and now ^gase, to JacJMon far o torn;&#13;
ternu "l. v&lt; • w&#13;
T h o American Ladles' Corset G o ^ o f&#13;
DAtroit, hsii l e a s e d a bu^Jiogvio Jack-:)&#13;
son, a t t d J i y ^ © y e w h e r 1 $m h a v e *&#13;
b r a n c h factory, e m p l o y i n g 100 b a n d s ,&#13;
in, operatkui there. V VK '&#13;
Mrs. Thompson, of t h r e e . Rivera,&#13;
a g e d 40, w i d o w of R o b e r t ' ^ o m n s a n *&#13;
died W e d n e s d a y e v e n i n g a s a » f s u j t of&#13;
a r u n a w a y accident oh M^nday^ ° n e&#13;
l e a v e s t w o children. k ' ''.&#13;
Word from W a s h i n g t o n h a s ft t h a t&#13;
Stanley W. Turner Is s l a t e d to s u c -&#13;
ceed Charles W r i g h t a s collector of&#13;
internal revenue in Detroit, t h e c h a n g e&#13;
to be j n a d e early n e x t year.&#13;
Porter J. '."White, a n actor, says„ h e&#13;
wlU c o m m e n c e t h e erection o f n ' h e w&#13;
opera house in O w o s s o w i t h i n t h e n e x t&#13;
six w e e k s . W h i t e t e l l s t h e s t o r y honestly,&#13;
b u t O w o s s o people a r c skeptical.&#13;
Forest J. Smith, aged K9 y e a r s , living&#13;
t w o miles smith of Durand, Is dead.&#13;
While opo^tinsMv-eoru--slmulder last&#13;
Friday, Smith c a u g h t one of his h a n d s&#13;
in t h e machinery. Blood poisoning s e t&#13;
In.&#13;
Several c a s e s of diphtheria h a v e developed&#13;
in the public schools of Carrollton&#13;
and at n . m e e t i n g of t h e board&#13;
of health, the schools w e r e closed. T h e&#13;
trouble originated in a Polish settlem&#13;
e n t '&#13;
W. D. Webster, cf Ilrookfleld, and&#13;
Kdnn H o l m e s , of Duck Lake, wore&#13;
married at tho Calhoun county fall-&#13;
T h u r s d a y In the presence of 7.000 witn&#13;
e s s e s . They were, the recipients of&#13;
m a n y presents.&#13;
F. W. Gilchrist of Alpenn. w h o w a s&#13;
called to London. Eng.. by a fake cablegram&#13;
announcing t h e serious illness of&#13;
his sister, has returned. H e s a y s he&#13;
k n o w s who sent t h e telegram, but refuses&#13;
to talk about It.&#13;
A horse and b u g g y Iwlonglng to Wra.&#13;
Lewis, a farmer living near Camden&#13;
vIMage. w a s stolen Monday evening.&#13;
T h e horse w a s standing; upon the main&#13;
street of the village. T h e thief h a s&#13;
been traced to Indiana.&#13;
II. O. Stlllwcll and L. E, Bruce,&#13;
eastern experts, w e r e in E d w a r d s and&#13;
H o i t o n townships t e s t i n g fho m a r l p i t s&#13;
at ihe lakes. T h e y we're favorably Impressed&#13;
with the quality and quantity&#13;
found in both t o w n s h i p s .&#13;
New man Clark, of Inland. Is possr-&#13;
sped-w-ith the rnnnht-tmr&#13;
all tho cattle in tho country. W h e n he&#13;
stole thiX'«* head belonging to a neighbor&#13;
ho w a s arrested, and an e x a m i n a -&#13;
tion s h o w e d t h a t - h e is Insane.&#13;
The trial of Charles R. Pratt. Indicted&#13;
with ex-Speaker A d a m s and ex-&#13;
I/and Commissioner French for participation&#13;
in the alleged law book deal,&#13;
will begin Oct. 21). This ca,»e will bo&#13;
followed by that against A d a m s .&#13;
T h e coroner's jury at W a y n e in the&#13;
case of Charles DcLong. Joseph W.&#13;
S w e e n e y and (Jeorge Leopold, killed in&#13;
a wreck Sept. 20, returned a verdict&#13;
t h a t they came to their death through*&#13;
their *.wn negligence while stealing a&#13;
ride.&#13;
.Catherine Tucker, of &lt;Jrand Rapids,&#13;
a n d J a y M. Lawrence, of L e n a w e e&#13;
county, were paroled by Gov. Bliss.&#13;
T h e sentence of C. J. T h o m p s o n , w h o&#13;
w a s paroled early in September, w a s&#13;
c o m m u t e d so that he m a y go o u t of&#13;
the stale.&#13;
A dispatch from W a s h i n g t o n s a y s&#13;
t h a i the life s a v i n g service has received&#13;
a-telegram from Bailey's Hnrlior,&#13;
Wis., that tho whalebnck s t e a m e r&#13;
T h o m a s Wilson Is a total loss, but t h a t&#13;
her c r e w of 20 men w a s s a v e d by the&#13;
life s a v i n g service.&#13;
A m o s Bobbins, of Muskegon, a g e d&#13;
nn. w a s killed at a crossing by a Pore&#13;
Marquette train, w h i c h struck his rig,&#13;
c u t t i n g it in two. T h o horses, and the&#13;
other t w o occupants of the, w a g o n ,&#13;
wore thrown down an e m b a n k m e n t GO&#13;
feet, but escaped injury.&#13;
All of the principal business streets&#13;
of Muskegon are in the hands of paving&#13;
contractors, and merchants and&#13;
factory owners are kickiug hard bec&#13;
a u s e of d a m a g e done to their business.&#13;
T h e streets have been torn up&#13;
for w e e k s , and the contractors will not&#13;
hustle.&#13;
Fireman Corwln, of the Michigan&#13;
Central, w a s thrown from t h e c a b of&#13;
lils engine near Lapeer by the breaking&#13;
of a side rod. H e struck on his&#13;
head and w a s fatally injured. T h e accident&#13;
occurred at a curve w h e r e&#13;
young Bcecher, of Detroit, lost his life&#13;
in ISO.*).&#13;
Stephen Hart man, a well-to-do y o u n g&#13;
farmer of Osslneka, Alpena Co,* w a s&#13;
found guilty of criminal a s s a u l t upon&#13;
a young girl under 10 years of age. On&#13;
a c c o u n t of the f a m i l y c o n n e c t i o n s of&#13;
both parties, tho c a s e ):as created o&#13;
sensation. The crime w a s committed&#13;
J u l y 21.&#13;
Interuol R e v e n u e Commissioner&#13;
Yerkes has remitted the $300 fine imposed&#13;
on P. C. Servatius, a merchant&#13;
of Menominee, w h o sold oleomargarine&#13;
w i t h o u t paying t h e federal tax. 8erv&#13;
a t l u s contended t h a t he w a s only an&#13;
a g e n t for t h e manufacturer, so w s s&#13;
n o t lioble for t h e tax. H e will n o w&#13;
pay $450 tax.&#13;
L y m a n Morris, aged BO, a prospero&#13;
u s Alpine t o w n s h i p farmer in illhealth,&#13;
is supposed t o h a v e c o m m i t t e d&#13;
suicide In Mud lake, near his farm.&#13;
Earl Corey and R. B. A n t h o n y / a g e d&#13;
a b o u t IS 5ears, are charged w i t h att&#13;
e m p t i n g to wreck a train on the (J.&#13;
R. &amp; I. b e t w e e n Muskegon a n d Grand&#13;
Rapids, by piling s o m e rocks o n t h e&#13;
track. A n t h o n y is said t o h a v e con*&#13;
t eased.&#13;
Crowe, the&#13;
ctted.&#13;
X&#13;
STRANGE BUT TBUEPKO?«ESY&#13;
juiA. f-f&#13;
Bakeoflk Tax RMlaaSte^ StniMHlSlaBt"*'&#13;
- lt»r« W w MUpT t e 8 * » » l t t - ¥ » S * o «&#13;
Matter* of Inter***. • * &gt; • *&#13;
:,.;.&lt;'•'&gt;•!. :i fr M»&#13;
, ,^. ' T h e I«tb«»lan 0 p a a l . ;&#13;
*.'4L Wasljfpgton ^ I ^ a t c t i s a j w ^ b e&#13;
UjUted s t a t e s a n d Qreat 5&amp;rfta» howir&gt;&#13;
reached a n a g r e e m e n t e o n o y n i u t f t h e n&#13;
jst^miau canal q u e s t i o n ; and t h e new,,&#13;
treaty w i n be pifeseuted'to t h e s e n a t e&#13;
for its ratification eaHy in the c o m i u c ' "&#13;
session. T h e s u b s t a n c e of t h i s t r e a t y&#13;
p r o v i d e ' • i&#13;
"1. F o r abrogation of t h e «©W C l a y -&#13;
ton-Billwer treaty in toto.&#13;
"2. For a neutral i s t h m i a n tcano).&#13;
in case one be constructed .by t h e&#13;
United States, o p e n in t i w e ' w t p e a c e&#13;
to t h e ships of all nations upon e q u a l&#13;
tennis.&#13;
"3. This neutrality is g u a r a n t e e d b y&#13;
the United S t a t e s alone, and e t h e r&#13;
maritime p o w e r s are not,hwlfcod t o&#13;
participate in s u c h guarantee. . G « a t&#13;
Britain is inferentially one o f t h e&#13;
guarantors, b e c a u s e s h e is a piwty t e&#13;
this treaty. ;&#13;
"4. In c a s e o : w a r t h e U n i t e d S t a t e s&#13;
reserves t h e right t o t a k e s u c h s t e p s&#13;
for its o w n protection a s it m a y &lt;deeia&#13;
proper.&#13;
"While the principle, of- nodtrftltty&#13;
Is assorted, the United S t a t e s a l o n e&#13;
g u a r a n t e e s that neutrality, nnd no Eb&gt;&#13;
ropoan p o w e r s ore Invited to g i v e t h e i r&#13;
a s s e n t to i t&#13;
*'By the t e r m s of tha n e w treaty t h e&#13;
United States m a y . i n 'time- of w a r ,&#13;
deal w i t h the c a n a l a s it d e e m s b e s t&#13;
for its o w n interests, lit m a y c l o s e&#13;
t h e canal to the ships of its e n e m i e s ,&#13;
and could, if it w e r e t h o u g h t advisable&#13;
(whicli no o n e believes it eVer w i l l&#13;
be), fortify the channel or its termini.&#13;
"In the broad s e n s e the i s t h m i a n&#13;
w a t e r w a y is to be 'all-Anierlcau.' T h e&#13;
United S t a t e s is to build it and t o&#13;
h a v e complete control of it, unharaper*&#13;
ed by onerous restrictions.&#13;
"The government of Great B / i t a l n&#13;
h a s met this question in a liberal&#13;
spirit. It has a s s u m e d that it w a s Us&#13;
duty to place no unnecessary o b s t a c l e s&#13;
in t h e w a y of a work promising PO&#13;
much of importance aud value to t h e&#13;
commercial world.&#13;
V ,&lt;•&#13;
More Witr S h i p s .&#13;
J,t is probable that a liberal building&#13;
policy with respect to naval ships will&#13;
be urged upon congress at the tip*&#13;
preaching session. No authorization for&#13;
n e w construction w a s given b y con*&#13;
gross at t h e hist session, o w i n g . In&#13;
l&gt;art, to a d i s a g r e e m e n t a s to the pros*&#13;
•pective merits of single and snperi&gt;ose,'l&#13;
turrets. Congress contented itself w i t h&#13;
a direction to t h e . n a v y department to&#13;
submit full plans for t w o battleships&#13;
and t w o armored cruisers to It at the&#13;
approaching session, so that the b o d y&#13;
could itself c h o o s e b e t w e e n the d'3*&#13;
signs.&#13;
T r a m p s In Stock*.&#13;
Tho police of W a u k e s h a . Wis., h a v e&#13;
revived the s t o c k s of colonial daj's for&#13;
the benefit of t r a m p s w h o refuse t o&#13;
work out their sentences. T h e l e g s and&#13;
a r m s of recalcitrants arc t h r u s t&#13;
through the bars of t h e cell and shackeled.&#13;
'Tin- i&gt;Ian is n o w being tried o n&#13;
Arthur Skrene nnd A n t h o n y Ha-ber,&#13;
w h o w e r e airrested a n d fined for stealing&#13;
a ride on a freight train. T h e y refused&#13;
to work and will remain in t h e&#13;
stocka until t h e y c h a n g e their m i n d s .&#13;
T o R e d u c e T a x e s .&#13;
It is not expected that so radical n&#13;
proposition as is proposed by Representative&#13;
Babcock, to i&gt;lace every article&#13;
.'liannfacturod and controlled bv&#13;
tracts or a trust, on t h e free list, w i l l&#13;
be o&lt;iopt&lt;\1 during t h e c o m i n g ' S e s s i o n&#13;
of congress, if e v e r ; y e t it is e v i d e n t&#13;
that s o m e legislation will be enacted&#13;
n e x t winter t h a t will m a k e quits* a c u t&#13;
into the- present t a x e s , and prove to be&#13;
a considerable relief to t h e pepple w h o&#13;
pay the taxes.&#13;
A T r u e P r o p h e c y .&#13;
"Within nine d a y s that fine mare will&#13;
die, tho colt t h a t you v a l u e w i i l cUe.&#13;
your last bun-ting dog will disappear&#13;
nnd then yov will dde.". T h i s w a s t h e&#13;
prophecy marte b y a mysterious w o -&#13;
man to Dr. Alfred C. Lemberger, of&#13;
Louisville, Ky.. a n d it c a m e true to t h o&#13;
letter, for Dr. I/emberger fell o v e r&#13;
dead from heart failure on tire e v e n i n g&#13;
of the ninth day. T h e other conditions&#13;
of tho prophecy h a d already been fulfilled.&#13;
rt&gt; , T h e C u d a l i r K M n n p r * .&#13;
Chief of Police Donalute. of O m a h a ,&#13;
h a s received from Patrick Crowe.&#13;
through a friend o f t h e latter, ah-offe*&#13;
to surrender himself and stand trial&#13;
In the courts if t h e reward of g.TO.000&#13;
h a n g i n g over his head for t h e a l l e g e d&#13;
kidnaping of Fdwrirrt A. Cndahy. Jr.,&#13;
is w i t h d r a w n . T h e chief s a y s C r o w e 1«&#13;
l e s s than 500 m i l e s from O m a h a a n d&#13;
is not w i t h hie relatives.&#13;
R e a r AfesUral. S a a t f p a a ,&#13;
Rear-Admiral Sampson* w h o la n o w&#13;
sojourning in W a s h i n g t o n , is profiting&#13;
by t h e dally core and attention o f o n e&#13;
of t h e best local physreiftns. It U&#13;
stated that h e suffers a t present from&#13;
aphasia (loss of p o w e r o t speech, b u t&#13;
not a mental affection*, nu a i l m e n t&#13;
w h i c h h a s troubled him in greater or&#13;
l e s s d e g r e e s i n c e he w a s chief of t h e&#13;
naval bureau of ordnance. H i s condition&#13;
is not serious to a d e g r e e w h e r e i n&#13;
his life would h e considered a s in&#13;
danger. Admiral S a m p s o n will retire&#13;
F o t n u r v . a t « 2 y e a n of .age.&#13;
11&#13;
w$W*WW!&amp;ffiW^.&#13;
1X6&amp; ^ ^&#13;
\\l *'iV&lt;:\&gt;\\ ^ w t o % * t ^&#13;
A Story # *'•&#13;
•.«»\*&#13;
T*&#13;
YkVANUS Kt,&#13;
**sfr«l (&#13;
J!&#13;
» # &gt; • • .^^0^185^^^^9^ A ^ ^ ^ ¾ ^ ^ **in l0*Swtth *#??,&#13;
ttonrfna; vM teat tot Omtr, w&#13;
"•,; *t *«•* ane^word to&#13;
* • * • , •&#13;
IfWrt to mafce," »»M*i*?W*^J$?&#13;
•-"•; montfai'fc greetlxtgt %** P**1**7&#13;
re.&#13;
* * * ?&#13;
wUi yoo once more to tel]^ me the&#13;
•lory of' i$f i e n a '* ift'W^08* a n d&#13;
tl-enet&amp;rjfll to rttiiaitt • l ^ n t w b n toe&#13;
/ wbject; I may 'have dreamed some&#13;
; « f tte' t b i ^ j t ^ now fctartle my&#13;
' tieuguts; ior J'wp not clear at what&#13;
pet** ywtv le&amp; me last nighiM', ,&#13;
Thw caltei upon, the.klnjl of AlftPPO&#13;
wJstetf ail that he had told on tin?&#13;
prevloue evening, and then made sotoe&#13;
•farther explanation ot Incidents which&#13;
he fca«t not before revealed1; It was a&#13;
plain, simple statements bearing the&#13;
stamp of truth upon every word.&#13;
"Or* groaned Horam, clasping hie&#13;
thin fcandjrr together,—'what would I&#13;
give to call Helena'back to life! But&#13;
It cannot be. She is gone—and she&#13;
Was innocent!"&#13;
He started .up from his seat, and&#13;
walked several times across the floor;&#13;
and when he next approached hl9&#13;
royal guest, he had grown calmer,&#13;
and his Up had ceased its quivering.&#13;
"Omar, I have no blame for you.&#13;
. Henceforth let the book be sealed."&#13;
He had taken, one or two more&#13;
turns up and down the apartment,&#13;
when a messenger entered with intelligence&#13;
that Bononl had arrived, and&#13;
desired 'audience.&#13;
"Send him in at once. Good brother,&#13;
you will remain with me," This last&#13;
was spoken to Omar, who had turned&#13;
to leave.&#13;
In a little walla Benoni made his&#13;
appearance, and Horam was sure he&#13;
could see the flush of victory upon his&#13;
brow.&#13;
"Now, my captain, what word do&#13;
you bring?"&#13;
"Good word, sire. We have captured&#13;
those whom you desired to see,&#13;
and have also brought an old man&#13;
and old woman who resided in the&#13;
eavc."&#13;
"Have you brought the Lady Ulin—&#13;
and the robber chieftain—and Osrnlr&#13;
and Selim?"&#13;
"Yes, Eire."&#13;
"And tbese others are the old hermit,&#13;
Ben Hadad, and the woman who&#13;
lives with him?"&#13;
"Yes, sire."&#13;
"By the crown I wear!", cried the&#13;
monarch, leaping up, and clapping his&#13;
hands, "thlB Is enough to make me&#13;
forget the wrongs I have suffered. Let&#13;
the robber •« chieftain and the two&#13;
treacherous guards be brought before&#13;
me. But—hold. There was one other&#13;
epoken of by the Arab—the lieutenant&#13;
— Hobaddan his name was."&#13;
"He was'not in the bave, sire; nor&#13;
was he about tne place."&#13;
"Very well. Let the chieftain bs&#13;
brought in."&#13;
The captain retired, and presently&#13;
returned, followed by Julian and the&#13;
two guards. They were heavily ironed,&#13;
and six stout soldiers walked behind&#13;
them. The youthful chieftain&#13;
had schooled himself for the ordeal,&#13;
and no sign of fear was manifest. Osmir&#13;
and Selim stood like two deaf&#13;
mutes, seeming to care nothing for the&#13;
fate that surely awaited them.&#13;
"That is all," said Horam, after he&#13;
had looked at the prisoners. "Take&#13;
them out, and.guard'them well. Place&#13;
twenty of your most trusty men over&#13;
them, and remember that tnose twenty&#13;
heads shall answer for the safety c'&#13;
the charge."&#13;
"Shall I conduct them to a dungeon,&#13;
Bire?"&#13;
"No,—there is no need of it. Thsy&#13;
will not live to behold the setting of&#13;
this day's sun!"&#13;
Ben Hadad did not tremble when he&#13;
stood before the kins; nor did Ezabel&#13;
seem much frightened.&#13;
"Old man." said Horam, "I understand&#13;
that you have harbored and protected&#13;
the notorious Scourge, Julian."&#13;
"He hath found shelter with me, as&#13;
have all' who ever sought it," replied&#13;
the hermit;&#13;
v "And you also harbored the lady&#13;
Ulin. You knew who* she was, and&#13;
that she had fled from her home."&#13;
" Y e s . " -.'• &lt;- . • • • •&#13;
"And perhaps you knew why she&#13;
.fled?"&#13;
She told me Tier story, sire."&#13;
"It is enough,*.' cried the king, impatiently.&#13;
"I wish to- hear no more.&#13;
You both,-stand condemned, and the&#13;
degree of your punishment shall be&#13;
made known to you soon enough.&#13;
Omar was Trpoii the point of lhakinj&#13;
some remark, when Benoni entered.&#13;
"Now. BettpaV aaW Horajn, with&#13;
more nervousness 'In. his manner than&#13;
he had before exhibited-, "I have a so- j&#13;
rioua question to ask you; aad I de*&#13;
•ire that you should answer me&#13;
promptly and truly.' You'have* noticed th.o,cci:-it or ai'tgjfcafc' via?" '&#13;
\ :• ' . v • 11 . i v i &gt;. J. .M&#13;
j s.&lt; Beaafel again- -#e*t otxfc Wi *» «Md&#13;
j4fQt ^ * # % f t fa&gt;r a* *• W&lt;* ****1&#13;
coming towards the rdyai apartment&#13;
t h e king greeted him a* he entered,&#13;
and asked him if he had seen hia&#13;
daughter.'"-'' "' '• ' '••' " J "YeaVi&amp;e;" "replied the minlstar. "I&#13;
j ^ J u ^ l ^ h e r ^ .&#13;
"Have you talked with Jier ?"&#13;
"Yes."&#13;
'Then you must have' discovered the&#13;
secret\yhj*c|i ^h.,,beeji' imparted £o&#13;
pie. Did you speak with her of this&#13;
Jobber chieftain?"&#13;
to the old hermit and myself. Even&#13;
Julian himself know* not the secrsi l&#13;
tmrtp imjMKrt, ahd-were h r now&#13;
the v e r g e d .deaths no pecs&#13;
Should draw Mjvm&gt;:m%. 1% may; be,&#13;
#*# tfy disfttoaure ,*tfkwmyi, ^s&gt;,tt&gt;.&#13;
S w S ^ S s ^ w ^ I " w n ^ essantlia tt tl»&#13;
«th^iai ^cwi^^« s»j »m4, w wa*ers»e*a,r riie d" A£«t-*a£iie*a£r]i y W2&amp; °J^4^^::J^'^ '"V ?^!HJL&#13;
agev One,6o» vas/l^rft W'&amp;k aid&#13;
then ay. husban* died, flhfrtly after&#13;
W* ba*ea¥eme»^t'iras catted tf «urse&#13;
a siek 45hild—a girl, some three years&#13;
old—'Who was suffering; from sM acci*&#13;
"I did, a^re.'&#13;
., "Weil-^wbat dicj you observe?"&#13;
"0, mercy, sire-rspare my child!"&#13;
f"That is not the answer to my question,&#13;
Aboal. I asked you what you&#13;
discovered." » *&#13;
"I discovered," returned the minister,&#13;
in tones of deepest dread, "that&#13;
her love had been turned from you."&#13;
"Aye—and upon whom?"&#13;
"Upon Julian, sire."&#13;
"That is it, Aboul." cried the king,&#13;
again starting* up. "That is the thing&#13;
that enters most deeply into my soul.&#13;
And now I will tell you what the girl's&#13;
punishment shall be. She shall witness&#13;
the death of her robber lover; she&#13;
shall see his head severed from his&#13;
body—and then the shall be shut up,&#13;
to lead a solitary life, through the rest&#13;
of her days! None of her own sex&#13;
shall attend upon her; but black&#13;
guards shall be her sole companions.&#13;
What say you to that?"&#13;
Tho executioners were not long In&#13;
obeying the order. A large mat was&#13;
brought in and spread upon the floor,&#13;
and three stout'baskets of palm-leaf&#13;
were placed Upon it. The mat and the&#13;
baskets were darkly stained, and even&#13;
Omar, used as he was to such scenes,&#13;
shuddered wnen he beheld the preparations.&#13;
When all wa3 ready, Horam&#13;
turned to his captain and ordered that&#13;
all the prisoners should be brought in.&#13;
At length they came. Julian and&#13;
Osmir and Selim came first. Then followed&#13;
Ben Hadad and Ezabel, with&#13;
Shubal and Ortok. And lastly came&#13;
Ulin and Albia.&#13;
The robber chieftain was led up to&#13;
the block. His arms were folded upon&#13;
his broad bosom, with the heavy&#13;
chains hanging almost to his feet,&#13;
and hi3 head was; borne erect. There&#13;
was a deep pain-mark in hi3 face, but&#13;
it was not of fear for himself.&#13;
"Outlaw!" spoko Horam, through&#13;
his shut teeth, and with his thin hands&#13;
clenched, "the hour has come in which&#13;
you are to clo3e your career of rapine.&#13;
and robbery; and these people who&#13;
have been friends to you, and who&#13;
have civen you protection in your&#13;
crime, are to see your head fall. Perhaps&#13;
you would ask for mercy."&#13;
"No!" said the chieftain. "I ask no&#13;
mercy at the hand of Horam of Damascus:.&#13;
Let the work be finished as&#13;
quickly as possible, and thus shall one&#13;
more be added to the list of thy bloody&#13;
deeds. I could wish to live that I&#13;
might taka more vengeance on thee."&#13;
"And is there not one thing for&#13;
which you would live?" asked the king,&#13;
bending a searching, burning glance&#13;
upon him. . . .&#13;
Julian started, and struggled; but&#13;
made no reply. And "in a moment more&#13;
Horam turned to his chief executioner.&#13;
"Bel Dara, go now to your work.&#13;
Lot this man's head fall first. Your&#13;
arm is strong, and your hand is sure.&#13;
Bend him upon his knees, and watch&#13;
, for my signal."&#13;
There was a low, wild cry breaking&#13;
upon the air; and as Julian turned his&#13;
head, he saw Ulin, white and faint, in&#13;
the arms of her attendant.&#13;
Eeforo the grim executioners could&#13;
bend the robber chieftain to his knee3&#13;
there was an Interruption in the proceedings.&#13;
The .voice of Ben Hadad,&#13;
stern and authoritative, sounded above&#13;
all else:&#13;
"Kitfg. of Damascus, ere you stain&#13;
your hands with that man's blood, 1&#13;
must reveal to you a secret which it&#13;
is fitting you should know."&#13;
"Old man," ha said, "you speak a&#13;
secret. Do you think to trifle with&#13;
me?"&#13;
"I have to causa a simple story to&#13;
be unfolded to your majesty," replied&#13;
Ben Hadad; "and if you will grant&#13;
this woman speech, she will give you&#13;
light."&#13;
The king looked hard into the face&#13;
of F.zabel, and for the first time he&#13;
seemed to be struck by something familiar&#13;
in her features. A moment ho&#13;
sat as if irresolute, and then he said,&#13;
starting up 03 though his mind were&#13;
fixed:&#13;
"Let the woman approach."&#13;
Ezabel came nsar to the throne, Ben&#13;
Kadad walking close behind her..&#13;
"Woman, what is it that you have&#13;
.to tall? Speak, and let not the words&#13;
lag upon your lips."&#13;
"I speak by the request of Ben Hadad;&#13;
r replied. Ezubel; "and the story&#13;
T,l.*h 2 aitll Ivll rj-a is JLVLZ«i oa^r&#13;
The' strength, of character of the&#13;
aaoe«r o* Afghanistan and tbv tfstittjr&#13;
of bis service in pressing Afgnsnisun&#13;
B/iresyij&amp;re sjepevajs/ refHtpafaw- t9rr&#13;
rfuxletf \i» expressed lest his ^pMKeessoT;&#13;
4?he deat$ of the ameer to reported&#13;
i&gt;y a news ajcetfey, which publishes&#13;
the folk)wing dispatch from 81m!a:&#13;
"Hablb 0»Uah Khan, eldest son.of&#13;
thd amecfr of Afkhantsjtaa, has reported&#13;
to tfc» British agency at Cabn!&#13;
de*. The child x « p s l s ^ , j t o ^ \ ^ | . j 5 a t the ameer died last Thursday af-&#13;
-...i?.*...-, .—«•./rrr»*r T ' tera brief illnesa.&#13;
., -. &gt;Xa «eu3rmation, has been received&#13;
at the foreign office of the report, but&#13;
It Is not doubted.&#13;
M Simla it is believed that Habib&#13;
Oullah Kuan, who was regarded by&#13;
his father as his successor and bad&#13;
Ions had a share in the government&#13;
of the country, will assume the succession&#13;
peaceably.&#13;
, and as I had formed a strong&#13;
attachment for her, and as she had&#13;
ajsp conceived the same for me, 1 was&#13;
retained to attend upon her. Her parent^&#13;
were ot the wealthiest of Damascus,&#13;
and while they made it very&#13;
pleasant for me to remain with their&#13;
daughter, they also provided a good&#13;
place for my son, Hobaddan. My&#13;
charge grew up to be a beautiful maiden,&#13;
and became my mistress; and I&#13;
terved her with joy, for she was good&#13;
and kind and generous; and I knew&#13;
that she loved me. In time my mistress&#13;
became a wife, and I went with&#13;
her to her new home. For a few&#13;
months all went pleasantly under this&#13;
new relation; but finally a dark eloud&#13;
arose to obscure the heaven, of my&#13;
lady'3 joy. Her husband became jealous&#13;
of her—became so jealous that his&#13;
soul was fraught with deadly vengeance.&#13;
He fancied that his wife's&#13;
guilt had been prove 1, and he resolved&#13;
to put her away from him forever.&#13;
Her protestations availed nothing. He&#13;
would not listen to her—he would not&#13;
even allow her to approach him; but&#13;
he gave her into the hands of his executioners,&#13;
and bade them drown her&#13;
in the waters of the Pharphar. I discovered&#13;
what was to be done, and&#13;
slipped away from the home of the&#13;
cruel husband, and sought my son,&#13;
who had then become a stout youth.&#13;
Hobaddan and I hid ourselves near&#13;
the gates of the city, and when the&#13;
executioners came out, we followed&#13;
them. They had with them a large&#13;
sack, and I knew that my mlstrera&#13;
was in i t We saw them sink that&#13;
sack in the river—they sank it where&#13;
the water was dark and deep—sank&#13;
it in the middle of the night—and then&#13;
went away. As soon as they were gone&#13;
we hurried to the 3hore, and my son&#13;
plunged into the stream, and succeeded&#13;
in bringing the sack to the land.&#13;
We opened it, and my sweet mistress&#13;
was taken forth, cold and senseless;&#13;
but she was not dead. Her heart still&#13;
had motion, and after much labor we,&#13;
succeeded in bringing her back to consciousness.&#13;
The next need waa to find&#13;
a safe shelter for her. We dared not&#13;
take her back to the city. I thought&#13;
of the hermit, Ben Hadad. I had&#13;
heard that ho was a benevolent man,&#13;
and I reiolvcd to seek him. We found&#13;
his cave; and when he had heard my&#13;
story, he promised to give us shelter,&#13;
and to protect the unfortunate lady.&#13;
"My mistres3 so far recovered as to&#13;
be able to sit up; but 3hc could not&#13;
get well. Her system had received too&#13;
great a shock, and her poor heart was&#13;
broken. In two weeks from the time&#13;
when she entered the cave^. she gave&#13;
birth to a son, and shortly afterwards&#13;
she died. She died as pure and true&#13;
as heaven itself, and her child was the&#13;
offspring of an honor which no temptation&#13;
could have tarnished. She died;&#13;
but the child lived and thrived—lived,&#13;
and grew strong, and noble, and bold.&#13;
We told him how his mother had been&#13;
wronged; but we did not tell him all.&#13;
We did not tell him who I1L3 father&#13;
was; only we told him that he owed&#13;
his orphanage to the king of Damascus.&#13;
When he grew up he resolved&#13;
that tho king should suffer for the deed&#13;
he had done, and subsequent events&#13;
have proved that his resolution wa3&#13;
not vain.&#13;
"This, sire, is the son of the woman&#13;
who was my mlstreas. Julian, tho&#13;
Scourge of Damascus is the child 1&#13;
have reared. Would you know more?"&#13;
Horam sat in his great chair, with&#13;
his hands clutched tightly upon the&#13;
golden armi-, and his whole frame quivering.&#13;
"O," he gasped, "the secret is nigh&#13;
to the surface! What shall I ask?"&#13;
The king of Aleppo moved to Horam's&#13;
side, and whispered in his ear.&#13;
"Aye," exclaimed the quaking monarch,&#13;
when he had listened to the&#13;
words of his brother, "?t shall be so.&#13;
What ho! Benoni—clear this chamber&#13;
of all save this old man and woman,&#13;
and this—this—Julian! Lead them out&#13;
quickly, and remain w'th them to&#13;
watch them."&#13;
In a few moments tho two king*&#13;
were alone with the three prisoners&#13;
who had been designated.&#13;
"Now—now—speak!" .&#13;
"King of Damascusp^sald the aged&#13;
hermit, taking a sjep forward, "allow&#13;
me to tell you Vis rest The suns of&#13;
almost a hundred years have rolled&#13;
over my head, and not yet have I willingly&#13;
deceived a fellow creature to&#13;
his Injury. What this woman has told&#13;
you is truo. The lady who was&#13;
brought to my cave three-and-twenty&#13;
years ago-^who gave birth to a child&#13;
there—and who died in Ezabel*s arms-,&#13;
was Helena, Queen of Damascus! And&#13;
i the son which she bore was the son&#13;
of the kins—I swear it; and in support&#13;
thereof, I pledge my soul's salvation!"&#13;
\&#13;
Cecil Rhodes Verr HI.&#13;
Cecil Ruc4es, wliosc part In politics&#13;
and empire-making is vividly recalled&#13;
by tho Soknndhorst letters, is Hvlna aiinost&#13;
absolutely alone- at a quiet London&#13;
hotel, on a diet and with the attentions&#13;
of n man who, Is seriously ill.&#13;
There is no doubt that he is suffering&#13;
from heart f.iwnse and i« po longer the&#13;
io).u:Ht luan of former times; yet he&#13;
never missed a dav Inst week at tho&#13;
ojP.ee of tho British Chartered South&#13;
African Company, burying himself in&#13;
drtaite and conducting long, tediona&#13;
meetings without complaint or mention&#13;
of his ill-health. After these duties,&#13;
however, in the quiet of the hotel, he&#13;
seems to become almost a wreck, "like&#13;
a man liable to so oft at any moment,"&#13;
as one of his few visitors said on coming&#13;
out from his room.&#13;
IRS. IDALROSER&#13;
,'/ * D i i i W w . Pnrgsan:—tn*ve 1&#13;
married for near ly two years, and stv&#13;
far have *ot been blessed witb.%eidld*&#13;
1 have, however, •ufTercdwUb aoom*&#13;
plication of female troubles and psi»»&#13;
"fill mlifist 1 ist Win ttatil verv xeosmtlT.&#13;
MUa Stone's Perllona PUtfnt.&#13;
"If the ransom of Miss Stone is not&#13;
paid, I firmly believe her bead will be&#13;
set upon a pike pole In the nearest village,"&#13;
was the statement of Hon. Z. T.&#13;
Sweeney, of Columbus, Ind.. ex-cor^&#13;
sul-general to Turkey: "I think&#13;
the kidnaping of Miss Stone was&#13;
done for political purposes. Ber&#13;
captors wish the United States&#13;
to seek revenge upon Turkey.&#13;
True to their promise, they will release&#13;
Miss Stone if the ransom Is paid.&#13;
If it is uot, they will cut a nnscr off&#13;
and send It to her friends. Then an&#13;
ear and finally her head AVIU be put&#13;
upon a pike pole in some little village&#13;
of Turkey."&#13;
Mrs. Carrie Nation, who was arrested&#13;
in Wheeling. W. Vn., Monday night&#13;
for lending a crowd of 400 women iuta&#13;
n saloon and fined $20, which she refused&#13;
to pay. has jriven l&gt;ond to kee^&#13;
the pence, aii-d appealed the case.&#13;
IDA L. BOSEB.&#13;
"The vaJue of Lydia, E . P i n k *&#13;
ham's Vegetable Compound was&#13;
called to my attention by an intimate&#13;
friend, whose life had sizrply been a&#13;
torture with inflammation and ulceration,&#13;
and a few bottles of your Compound&#13;
cured her; she can hardly&#13;
believe it herself to-day, she enjoys&#13;
such blessed health. I took four&#13;
bottles of your Compound and consider&#13;
myself cured. 1 am once more in fine&#13;
health and spirits; my domestic and&#13;
official duties all seem easy now, for I&#13;
feel so strong I can do three times&#13;
what I used to do. You bave a boat of&#13;
friends in Denver, and among the best&#13;
count, Yours very gratefully,— Mas,&#13;
IDA L. BOSEB, 326 18th Ave., Denver,&#13;
Col."—J5000 forfeit If ab*tt Uftlmcnful Is mV&#13;
gtnuln*. - -....- —&#13;
If yon are ill, clout hesitate t o&#13;
r e t a bottle of Lydia F.. Pinkham'a&#13;
Vegetable Compound a t once,&#13;
and write t o Mrs. Pinkham*&#13;
Lynn, Mass* for special adviee—&#13;
i t &amp; f i $ a *&#13;
% ! •&#13;
Tooth&#13;
Powder 25&#13;
AMUSEWKNTS IV DETROIT.&#13;
WEEK ENDING OCT. 19.&#13;
AYENTTE THEATRE—Vaudeville— Prlcesr fiftefuoon,&#13;
:0, 15, &amp; -J&gt;; evcninx.'lO, -i), 2 c: res?rv. .M)c.&#13;
DBTHOIT OPERA—"Maude Adams"—Evenings&#13;
at K Saturday Matinee at -'.&#13;
LYCEUM THEATER—The Telephone Girl.—Wed.&#13;
and Sat. Mat. i i j ; evenings. 15, £&gt;, 'J) and 75c.&#13;
WHITNEYGRANU— "A Gambler's lmushter.- —&#13;
Mac. 10c. 15 and-Joe; evenings. 10c, -Uoani&amp;Jc.&#13;
T H E M A R K E T S .&#13;
Good for Bad Teetb&#13;
Not Bad for Good ToetH&#13;
Suzodont Liquid ajc Large Liquid and Powder 75c AS&#13;
•tore* or by mail tor the price, bampte tor pottage sb&#13;
HALL &amp; RUCKJtL, Ne^Toflu&#13;
Detrofc—Cattle light; goo:! butcher&#13;
steers. $.1.75(^4.40: steers and htlfers, $3.25:3)&#13;
4.2-j; mixed butchers and fat cows. $2.7.y^r&#13;
3.75; canners and common v in butchers.&#13;
$1.50^?2.«5. Bulls—Light to good butchers&#13;
and sausage. $2.41X53.40; stockers and light&#13;
feeders, 52.75^3.75; veal calves, steady;&#13;
sales range from $5 25&lt;:t».25 per 103 pounds,&#13;
Sir ep and lamb?—Best lambs, $4 2W24.40;&#13;
light to sood and good mixed lots, $3.5)@&#13;
4.15: fair to good mi * d and butcher sheev&gt;.&#13;
$2.30^3.73: culls anc common. $l.."uy2.©&gt;.&#13;
lioss—Mixed and butchers, $6.00^^.10: bulk&#13;
sales at $6.^^^6.10: pigs and light yorkers,&#13;
$5.5055.90: stags, 1-3 off; roughs, $5.25®&#13;
5.35.&#13;
Cincinnati—Cattle— Heavy steers, choice&#13;
to extra. 53.15115.61): nominal, fair to good. I&#13;
?4.50&lt;:ri5.lL); oxen. $1.75^4.25: butchers choice |&#13;
to extra. $4 505¾4 r0; fair to g:ood. $3.40f?4.40; \&#13;
heifers, fair to good. $3.40414; comrr.on to 1&#13;
fair. J2.25fi3.25; cows, fair to good. $.J."ya j&#13;
4; common to fair. $2.15(^3.25: canners. $1.50 1&#13;
^2.25: scalawags, $1**1.50; stockers, $2.25¾¾ j&#13;
3 75; tops, $3.S5fr4. Hogs—Light shippers,!&#13;
$6.10fi6.15. and mixed packing lots from&#13;
$5.50&lt;fi«;. mostly $5.75(rf5.S5: stags and heavy&#13;
fat sows. $3.75^5.90; extra good. $6; light&#13;
shippers. $5.50@6; pigs. 110 lbs and less, $4®&#13;
5.35. Sheep—Extra. $3: good to choice, $2,23 |&#13;
(Tf2.30; common to fair. Jl.25Tr2.15; lambs&#13;
extra. $4.4O?i4.50; good to&#13;
$1.25; common to fair. $2.25^3.3).&#13;
Chicaro— Cattle—Gool to prime steers.&#13;
$S.20f?jt&gt;.t5; poor to medium. $3.50rrf5.9o;&#13;
stockers and feeders, $2'a4.25; cows. $1.25^ '&#13;
4.60; heifers. $2*15; canners. $1.25®2.25;&#13;
bulls. $1.7.Vrf&gt;4.75; calves. $2.50&lt;f?6.25; Texas'&#13;
Fte» rs. $2 90fi3.75; Western steers, $3.65®&#13;
$5 50. Hogs—Mixed and butchers. $tf*6.40;&#13;
pcod to choice heavy. $6.2tKJT6,C0: roug-h and&#13;
heavy. $5.1^56.10; light. $8.15$i6.30; bulk of&#13;
sales. $6*?6 2\ Sheep—Good to choice wethpif*.&#13;
$3.5#?i3.90: fair to choice mixed. $3®&#13;
3.50; Western sheep, ?2.73&lt;??3.60; native&#13;
lambs, poor to choice. $2.5#f?5.70; Western I&#13;
lambs. $3.r5??4.85.&#13;
Buffalo—Cattle—Steady for good, dull&#13;
for others: no good her^: veals, $5^7.50.&#13;
Hogs-—Best heavy. $6 55*?6.ti5; mixed, $8.45&#13;
«?ti.V. urasser* and common weighty hogs,&#13;
&amp;UCK(6.3.): roughs. S5.75«i6: stags. $4.7V?f.*.&#13;
Sheep and lambs—Top native lambs, $4.90&#13;
&lt;i5: others, $3.25*?4.S'): mixed sheep, tops.&#13;
$3.2)^3.40: culls t o good, $l.«xg3; wethers&#13;
and yeanlings. $3 50^3.73.&#13;
Pitttshurg — Cattle — Choice. $5.7Sfift;&#13;
rrlm». $5.S(K?5.70: good. $5.10(^5.35: tidy. $4.70&#13;
^5: fair, $1.90«?4 35; heifers, $2.«0&lt;ft4.»; oxeR,&#13;
$2.5(*74: fat cows, $1.50#*; bull? and stags.&#13;
$2tt4; common rows to fresh. $rofW3: good&#13;
fre^h eow*. tfSfKSO. Hogs—Prime heavy.&#13;
$8.5*56 70: mediums. $6.45(56.50; best yorkers.&#13;
$6,30&lt;?*.4O: light yorkers. $6^6.15;&#13;
grassers. $5 90^6 25; ptgs. $5.20#5.«&gt;: skips.&#13;
$J#?5. Shren-^Bewt wethers. ri60©3.70;&#13;
good. $3.25*73.50: mixed. $2.80^3.10: culled&#13;
and common. $1*12; yearling*. $2.50^3.^0:&#13;
spring; lambs, $3@5: veal lambs, $6®6.50.&#13;
G r a i n , E t c .&#13;
Detroit—Wheat—No. 1 white. 72%c: N o .&#13;
? red. 7 1 V : No. 3 red. 70c; mixed winter,&#13;
72«». Corn—S&amp;TTSSUc. Oats—No. 2 white,&#13;
S9Ho bid; No. 3 do. 2 cars at 38c; by sample,&#13;
t car at STV-e per bn.&#13;
Chlcapo— Wrei\*—No. 3 spring. 67—6S*ic;&#13;
No. 2 red. 69«4&lt;?70}ic. Oats—No. 2. ?**»«x3*&gt;;&#13;
No 2 white. 37*c3tS$*iC; No. 3 wLT.e, 37½&#13;
(f?3S*4&lt;\ Corn—srvic&#13;
Cincinnati—Wheat—Demand light; offerings&#13;
smnU: No. 2 winter red. 74c. C o r n -&#13;
No. 2 white is quotable at 61c; No. 2 yellow&#13;
at 60V.C. and No 2 mixed a t 60c, on&#13;
track. Oats—No 2 white, 40*?4'H*c.&#13;
New Ycrk—Wreat—No, 2 red, 75%c f. 0.&#13;
. K a"cat; No. 2 red. 74»«c; elevator; No. l&#13;
Northern Duluth. ?5%c f. 0. b. afloat: No.&#13;
1 hard Dvluth. 79^c f. 0. b. afloat. C o r n -&#13;
No. 2. 611¾c elevator and 61%c f. 0. b.&#13;
afloat. O a t s - N o . 2. 33*C: No. 3. SSHc;&#13;
No, f whjfce. 41\»c; No. 3 white. 41c track;&#13;
AT ONCE&#13;
With rig to sell Poultry Mixture; straight&#13;
salary, SJ15.O0 weekly and expenses; year's&#13;
rontrnet; weekly pay. Address with stamp,&#13;
ECBXKA MJTG. Co., Dept 4, Ham Sc Louis, VL&#13;
SHOES&#13;
_ SlOAMADK.&#13;
ITur More Than a U uarter of a Century&#13;
The reputation of W . L . Doualas S3.0T&gt;&#13;
and 83.50 shoes for style, cemfort a n d&#13;
wear has excelled all other makes sold at&#13;
these prices. This excellent reputation has&#13;
been w o n by merit alone. W . I*. DcuaJas&#13;
shoes have to give better satisfaction than&#13;
other S3.00 and S3.60 shoes because bis&#13;
reputation for the best S3.00 and S3^K&gt;&#13;
shoes must be maintained. The standard&#13;
has always been placed s o high that the&#13;
wearer receives more value for h i s m o n e r&#13;
in the W . L. Douglas 33.00 and S3.50&#13;
shoes than he can get elsewhere. _&#13;
W . It. Douglas selb more » 3 . 0 0 and S3 JBO&#13;
shoes than any other t w o manufacturers.&#13;
W. L Douglas ¢4.00 GM Edgt Lit*&#13;
cannot 6t equalled at amy trie*.&#13;
choice. $3.35@ j sy^csr ^ ¾ ¾ ^ 1 ^ 4 ^ ' ^ ^ --^^ —&#13;
' sf^B) ttnt S M .&#13;
Sold b y the best shoe dealers everywhere.&#13;
Insist upon bavins; WV 1« D o v g l a s shoes&#13;
w a s nasae and pries stamped em bottom.&#13;
H a w t e O r i t o r » y Mail.—It W. 1« nssatss&#13;
re BOS 1010 is TOW towBaSena oraer anew ••&#13;
. SJioei»-t»tanrwhwe oa receiptorpcVesssi&#13;
sXo *wjMtUM tqMata. Iln S fft taynfd. Sfift e»ss4. we«r.. l-i-k^e meiuorwneot* of&#13;
CvOstTjor tloaessdsnMbaoiltwryen dwMi iot rMn:a astoswlnk ae&gt;n&#13;
TryTsaS&#13;
xnfnc«lttcst:ra,&#13;
«470. $zK Ua;i: wli:o, O&#13;
• &amp;&#13;
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: .:•-,• •'.;:-•.'(." ••• ""'ffifil&#13;
H*% &amp;•*'•$&amp;&#13;
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••'&gt;'•' • $&#13;
v%&#13;
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• • : ; $&#13;
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• . $ * • •&#13;
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t • ^ unwy wi,1 &lt;P««W|lM|i&#13;
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££i'&#13;
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1¾&#13;
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RSH&#13;
fo:'f&#13;
&amp; / '&#13;
PAR8HALLVILUE.&#13;
Mrs, Browning of California U&#13;
visiting fctenda in thit vicinity.&#13;
Walter VaaCauip of Feotoa ia the ^ ^ ,&#13;
moving back onto nit farm An&#13;
Oueola.^&#13;
Bev. Davis and family are Visit&#13;
ing bis parents in Grand Rapids&#13;
this week.&#13;
Mary Snow who has been working&#13;
at tbaebaptist minister's home&#13;
in Fentoa has returned home.&#13;
Mrs. Melissa Kirk who has been&#13;
visiting -friends Here the past&#13;
week has returned to her home in&#13;
St. Johns. .&#13;
John Wolverton took in the&#13;
JEtakAnL last week. John hasj^eturned&#13;
home but his wife has gone&#13;
on further east to visit relatives.&#13;
Emmet Hadley waa in Fowlervine&#13;
last Saturday and Bundajr.&#13;
ZL A, Harteoff and son Ohas, a&#13;
tended the Fowlerville fair last&#13;
Friday.&#13;
3ev. Hioks of Pinokney visited&#13;
friends at this place the first of&#13;
W 4&#13;
"V &gt;'" •yUmy^ii&#13;
I:&#13;
EAST PUTNAM.&#13;
Albertr-Mills spent Sunday in&#13;
Cbilson.&#13;
Guy Lewis returned to Harbor&#13;
Springs last Friday.&#13;
B&amp;&#13;
tif.-':&#13;
ft;*.-1&#13;
.if"&#13;
Supervisor, E. W. Kennedy is&#13;
in Howell this week.&#13;
X^on Lewis made a flying trip&#13;
to Fowlerville last Friday.&#13;
Mesdames Brown visited at Arthur&#13;
Schoenhals last week.&#13;
HerbestSchoenbaU and family&#13;
Sundayed in East Putnam.&#13;
Nellie Fish visited Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
J. W. Sweeney of Chilson the&#13;
first of the week.&#13;
John Chambers and wife visited&#13;
atDwight Butlers in Hamburg&#13;
one day last week.&#13;
Grace Lake is spending the&#13;
week with Mr. and Mrs. Fred&#13;
Lake at the county farm.&#13;
Mrs. Ohas. Chifele and daughter&#13;
Gertrude visited Mrs. James&#13;
Pearson the last of last week.&#13;
fcv&#13;
•Or-' -&#13;
m&#13;
V*:-.&#13;
la-&#13;
NORTH LAKE.&#13;
E. Brown is still very low with&#13;
but little hope of recovery.&#13;
WntrG. Ivory tl&gt;e hypnotist is&#13;
visiting relatives in Lyndon.&#13;
Elsie Hinkley is expected home&#13;
from Ann Arbor Wednesday.&#13;
Perry Noah is building a stoop&#13;
• on the south side of his house.&#13;
Henry Shultz delivered duite a&#13;
quantity of hay in Chelsea last&#13;
week.&#13;
Martin Clinton visited his son&#13;
Richard near Pinckney the first&#13;
j£ of the week.&#13;
Henry Carragbar of Jackson,&#13;
was looking after bin interests in&#13;
this vicinity the first of the week.&#13;
R. S. Whalian and * ife visited&#13;
his son Emmett at Howell recently&#13;
and frund him sick with typhoid&#13;
fever.&#13;
Jas. Cooke has sold a piece of&#13;
timber to Wm. Butler and there&#13;
is some talk of a saw mill being&#13;
put in this winter.&#13;
ANDERSON&#13;
HArry Singleton visited at C.&#13;
A. Frost's Sunday.&#13;
No school Friday, Will Roche&#13;
attended the Fowlerville fair.&#13;
\ Communion services were held&#13;
at the Lakin school house Sunday.&#13;
ft? rs. Wood and daughter Mrs.&#13;
i* Isaac Ppugbom, returned Thurs-&#13;
X^.4ay from their visit in Caro.&#13;
Baxter L. Brown and wife (nee&#13;
Miss Emma Clark) of Ohio, visit-&#13;
^ v Mrs. B's sister, Mrs. D. B.&#13;
Smith BundRV.&#13;
Geo. Black, son Kenneth and&#13;
Miss Anna Black returned Mon-&#13;
- day from their visit in Canada.&#13;
They also took in the Pan Am.&#13;
• • • * • *••• ™ - , w • • • ' , • / : . - - - - . _ • . _ . .&#13;
, UNAOIU.A. . &gt; - • -&#13;
:Jf O. St«dmau of Mutkeegdn is&#13;
..jpetiding a tew weeks af \Vm. P&gt;-&#13;
:&gt;&#13;
k&lt;:'&#13;
BJesdames Frank Ives of Stookbridge&#13;
and*D. E . Watts of Mason&#13;
visited Mrs. A. Q. Watson Friday.&#13;
A C. Watson is having cement&#13;
walks put down in his yard. Mr.&#13;
Giitner and son of Leoni are doing&#13;
the work.&#13;
Mrs. McCollum of Detroit spent&#13;
the latter part of last week and&#13;
the first of this visiting her aunt&#13;
Mrs, S. G. Nobles.&#13;
Mesdames Will Smith and Lyman&#13;
Hadley visited their brother,&#13;
Geo. Buhl of Ionia-anoL relatives&#13;
and friends in Lansing and Fowlerville&#13;
last week.&#13;
D. M. Joslin an old and respected&#13;
citizen, died at his home in&#13;
Lyndon O c t 9, aged 86 years.&#13;
The funeral services were held in&#13;
the Presbyterian church on Friday&#13;
conducted by M. C. Powers.&#13;
one son to&#13;
affectionate&#13;
He leaves a wife and&#13;
mourn the loss of an&#13;
husband and father. '&#13;
The man, Wm. Chidster of Detroit,&#13;
who contracted to put in the&#13;
steel arch bridge north of this village,&#13;
has left town owing all with&#13;
whom he had any dealing. He&#13;
also borrowed considerable money&#13;
from differen t citizens. Mr. Giitner&#13;
and son of Leoni who done&#13;
the mason work are also left without&#13;
their pay. They will complete&#13;
the bridge. The road commissioner.&#13;
Jas. Livermore, put in&#13;
a temporary bridge Monday.&#13;
The Fu ad ilia farmers club will&#13;
meet at the home of Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
Frank Ives Saturday, Oct, 19; the&#13;
following is the program:&#13;
Singing Club&#13;
Prayer&#13;
Minutes of last meeting&#13;
Inst. Duet Mesdames Minn Watson&#13;
and Lulo Marshall&#13;
Paper, Pure Seeds Wirt Baroum&#13;
Disscussiou led by Them. Howlett&#13;
Duet Mr. and Mrs. D. E. Watts&#13;
Question Box&#13;
KNOWS A GOOD THING.&#13;
Hello! Pinckney.&#13;
Hello!&#13;
Is this the Dispatch office?&#13;
It is.&#13;
Is Mr. Andrews there?&#13;
I'm it.&#13;
This is Mi, Smith of The Smith&#13;
Surprise Spring Bed Co., Ham burp.&#13;
Ob! How are yon, Hove is business?&#13;
Flourishing. We are several hundred&#13;
behind our orders and every&#13;
mail bring!- more. Say!&#13;
Yes.&#13;
1 want 1,000 more envelopes and 2,-&#13;
000 more blotters like you got out for&#13;
me last month—they were fine; and&#13;
Sa v!&#13;
Yes.&#13;
I' want some more, say 5,000 of&#13;
those circulars. When can you get&#13;
'em out?&#13;
Which do you want first?&#13;
The envelope and blotters.&#13;
We can get you the envelopes and&#13;
blotters on the 5:30 train tonight and&#13;
the circulars in the morning. Will&#13;
that do?&#13;
Can you get them as soon as that?&#13;
01 course—we make a specialty of&#13;
rush jobs.&#13;
All right, send 'em and say!&#13;
Hello!&#13;
Well 1 was going to ask about some&#13;
more work but will wait and write&#13;
oat the copy and send it by mail and&#13;
frost you that everything w 11 be O.K.&#13;
All right, is that all?&#13;
Y»'8, good bye.&#13;
Good* bye.&#13;
« • —&#13;
Addlttoal Local.&#13;
Horr -Fitch wa* in town tbe first ol&#13;
the w*&gt;ek. He Is going into the north*&#13;
eift-jMutof-tbn nt'ile u$ sell the Ann&#13;
Art»i&gt;r £»*&lt;4itt4t fctijft iiwi • pressure&#13;
!«yst*ttj t»f l^gu't.&#13;
Another r*4* W*in«a&lt;U7.&#13;
Bev. H, W.^ H*k» w«j ia DttwH&#13;
M.T.Killy it to* a* for * fcw&#13;
days with* brokin,hand. Sorry Mikft,&#13;
this a busy tim« to be Uid up.&#13;
Brightoa farmer* b*ve formed ft&#13;
gam* and fiah protective tsaocUtioa&#13;
and will proaecuU anyone violating&#13;
the lew on the property of ftny of its&#13;
member*.&#13;
Wm. Moras, ot Pinckney, rooeived&#13;
a slight injury one day last week&#13;
while at work laying brick at the new&#13;
electric lighting. plant in Howell.—&#13;
Democrat,&#13;
J. J. Rattrey of Chelsea, the genial&#13;
mercbant tailor has been investing in&#13;
some resort property, having reoently&#13;
purchased 26 lots on the banks of&#13;
Uavanaugh lake.&#13;
Engene Ackwr and wife -of Iosco&#13;
were guests of M. 0. Wilson and family&#13;
over Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Wilson&#13;
returned to Iosco with them and Mr.&#13;
W. will work a week on the farm.&#13;
A. M. Huntington, who has been&#13;
here running a photo gallery for several&#13;
months, has gone to Stockbridge&#13;
where he will cacry on the same business.&#13;
His daughter Grace went with&#13;
him.&#13;
We endorse the action of General&#13;
Chas. fl. Grovsvenqr^fn^rebjulnng^a&#13;
certain share of the proceeds from the&#13;
of his book to be set aside for a Mc&#13;
Kinley MoumentFund. Our readers&#13;
will see an sdvertisem jnt of this book&#13;
in another column of this paper.&#13;
The Fifth General Conference of the&#13;
health officers and other health officials&#13;
in Michigan will be held in Ann&#13;
Arbor on Tbursdav and Friday, November&#13;
21 and 22, 1901. The state&#13;
board of health earnestly urge that&#13;
every village send a delegate wbo&#13;
should be if possible the health officer.&#13;
St. Joseph's church. Dexter, which&#13;
has been in the bands of the decorators&#13;
for several weeks, was reopened&#13;
Tuesday, evening Oct. 8. A saored&#13;
concert bv St. Thomas' church choir,&#13;
of Ann Arbor, was given, also a brief&#13;
lecture by Rev. E. D. Kelley, of Ann&#13;
Arbor, on his recent trip through Europe.&#13;
A. M. Hunting took good pictures&#13;
of the pupil* of each school room before&#13;
going to Stockbridge. Samples&#13;
were left at this office and can be seen&#13;
at any time. Every Scholar ought&#13;
to have one of these pictures. Tbey&#13;
may not seem worth much now but&#13;
twenty years f»om now you will prize&#13;
them highly.&#13;
Seymour K el log was found yesterday&#13;
in Genoa township with a dead&#13;
quail seven days ahead of schedule&#13;
time. Deputy Game and Fish Warden&#13;
James King had him, appear be*&#13;
fore Judge Power this morriing and&#13;
he was charge 118.50 for shooting one&#13;
bird out of season. The Livingston&#13;
County Fish and Game Protective association&#13;
has a standing offer of $5&#13;
reward for the conviction of anyone&#13;
shoot in? game out of season, and their&#13;
first reward went to King.—Free&#13;
Press.&#13;
A PINK AND WHITE WEDDING&#13;
The people of Dexter and vicinity&#13;
in the presence of many friends and&#13;
relatives from home and abroad, witnessed&#13;
a very pretty pink and wi ite&#13;
wedding which occurred Tuesday Oct.&#13;
8 at 9 O'CIOCK at St. Joseph's church,&#13;
Rev. Fr. Ryan officiating assisted by&#13;
Rev. Fr. Comerford and Rev. Fr. Connors.&#13;
The wedding parties, well known&#13;
and highly respected in this vicinity,&#13;
were William J. Tiplady son of Jfemes&#13;
Tiplady, and Mary Dunla/ey, daughter&#13;
of Mrs. Felix Dnnlavey. Bliss&#13;
Anna Dunlavey, sirter of the bride,&#13;
acted as bridesmaid and Dr. Monks,&#13;
cousin of the groom, acted as groomsma&#13;
n. After the services tbey returned&#13;
to the home of the bride where after&#13;
receiving congratulations from about&#13;
200 friends and relatives, all partook&#13;
of a bountiful feast, known as the&#13;
wedding dinner, served by Mr. Hank-&#13;
•tiver and waiters of Ann Arbor, assisted&#13;
by eight young ladies dressed&#13;
in white acting as table waiters.&#13;
After the feast the company was&#13;
well entertained by Mist Mae Carrol&#13;
of Ypsilsnti, wbo rendered some very&#13;
tine jiinrio seleH ion*&#13;
Alter receiving a large amount of&#13;
beantifnl and costly presents the brid*&#13;
al party, wit{i many w 0J wishes aad&#13;
throngh showers of rise, entered the&#13;
carriage which drove them to the oV&#13;
pot where they boarded a. train tor a&#13;
trip eastward vititla* Cleveland* &amp;aff»&#13;
alo and Niagara Palis, l&#13;
The out of town guests, relatives of&#13;
the bride were; Mr. and Mra. Palmer&#13;
and Margaret Gallagher of Frankfort,&#13;
Mich.; Mrs. Shepard of S t lionia. Mo.;&#13;
jdrs, Patrick Gallagher and son of&#13;
Corunna; Mr. and Mrs. Eddingtoa,&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Flyn, Mr, and Mrs,&#13;
Wales and families from Maurice.&#13;
Relatives of the groom; Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. Briody of Jackson; Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
McKernan and family of Chelsea;&#13;
Mrs.'John Maroney and Miss Lizzie&#13;
Lavey of Ann Arbor.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Tiplady will be at&#13;
home to their many friends after Nov.&#13;
15 in Webster, where a new bouse is&#13;
being erected on their farm. *&#13;
;-&#13;
* *&#13;
A NABBOW ESCAPE.&#13;
On Thursday last as the section men&#13;
were on their way to work a wild en*&#13;
gine came over the line running at&#13;
a high rate of speed. The boys applied&#13;
their brake, stopped the handcar&#13;
and jumped for their lives. Tbey&#13;
were none too soon as the engine&#13;
made kindling of the wood work of&#13;
the car the next instant. We understand&#13;
that the Hamburg crew had&#13;
about the same experience only tbey&#13;
had time to save their car. The boys&#13;
on this section say they do not want&#13;
to go through many such scrapes.&#13;
« -&#13;
•&#13;
Almost Fatal Acident at Lakeland.&#13;
On Frinay last as a young man by&#13;
the name of Ernest Quinton. of near&#13;
Jackson, was driving two horses, one&#13;
hitched to a cart and another beside,&#13;
was near the crossing west pt the ice&#13;
bouses, his horses became frightened&#13;
at an Ann Arbor traiu and ran,&#13;
throwing Mr. Quinton out striking&#13;
his head against some obsticle rendering&#13;
him unconscious for about three&#13;
hours. One of the horses bad a leg&#13;
broken and we underetand had to be&#13;
killed. Dr. C. L. Sigler was called to&#13;
attend him. Before the train for the&#13;
west came he bad revived enough to&#13;
tell them bis name and that bisaddress&#13;
was Jackson, PRD 8.&#13;
A GROWING CONCERN.&#13;
The Smith Surprise Spring Bed Co. of&#13;
Hambarg.&#13;
On Saturday last we made a hurried&#13;
visit to the above factoiy and&#13;
found everyone at work trying to&#13;
catch up with orders. Chas. G. Smith&#13;
the genial manager showed us through&#13;
the institution and although at present&#13;
only four men are employed be informed&#13;
me that they turned out over&#13;
twenty complete bed springs per day.&#13;
If orders continue to come in as fast&#13;
as tbey have witbin the past two&#13;
weeks tbey will have to put in more&#13;
bands.&#13;
The factory is a two story building&#13;
20x64 thus giving about 2,600 square&#13;
feet o'f floor. The machinery is driven&#13;
by a 6-horse power gasoline engine&#13;
which furnishes power enough to keep&#13;
20 or SO^men at work if needed.&#13;
All sizes of springs are made from a&#13;
sofa spring to the largest made and&#13;
tention to the spring given from a&#13;
loose easy one for a light person to a&#13;
very stiff one for a heavy person,&#13;
They even make them heavy on one&#13;
side and light on the other just as ordered.&#13;
In fact one can order a spring&#13;
to suit himself.&#13;
The Surprise Spring is sold upon a&#13;
positive guarantee to give perfect satisfaction&#13;
or money refunded whitbin&#13;
ten days. We snrely think that every&#13;
opto-date furniture dealers must&#13;
carry them in stock to supply the demand&#13;
tor wben people once find out&#13;
their good qualities tbey will have no&#13;
other. Send to the company for circulars&#13;
of description of the spring.&#13;
Business Pointers.&#13;
II II ' I !!• • ! I . « I&#13;
i! or Sale.&#13;
Second-band coal stove as good as new&#13;
WILL Duifwrso.&#13;
Between the Oong'I cboroh and&#13;
Cbss. Loves residence a fine bemthtched&#13;
lace trimmed handkercheif.&#13;
Finder please return to Mary V. Love.&#13;
imfWui mi w&#13;
A&#13;
oa*et»&#13;
J*' mre 4t toll&#13;
:#r&#13;
mmm&#13;
A married man^o work oa fftrm by&#13;
the year. Enquire of |';"" '^Vu'••-"•.&#13;
C.Y. VJJTWOTU,&#13;
House belonging to rf -&#13;
STXLLA GaasAic*&#13;
AJ1 who have accounts with A. U.&#13;
Fliqtoft, Pettyiville please call ana*&#13;
settle by Oct. 26. U 8&#13;
•V**&#13;
A good top buggy, new this tnm«&#13;
mer. Terms Cash. tf&#13;
0. L. SioLia.&#13;
F«rft«l««&#13;
20 acres of land. About half good&#13;
mowing marsh, rest good secondgrowth&#13;
oak timber.&#13;
t-48 JOSEPH Quxmr.&#13;
If you want your piano tuned&#13;
right, drop a card to F. N. Monroe,&#13;
Howell, Mioh. t-48&#13;
Pettysville cider mill is now ready&#13;
and will make cider whenever there&#13;
are apples to grind.&#13;
W. HOOKXB.&#13;
These cool days remind us that winter&#13;
is approaching and our wood supply&#13;
is low. Any of onr many subscribers&#13;
wbo wish to help us out along&#13;
this line we would be pleased to have&#13;
them do so immediately.&#13;
For ««t«.&#13;
Anyone in need of a well pump will&#13;
do well to call on us. Desiring to&#13;
put in a force pump we have a good&#13;
second hand pump in good running&#13;
order. It was working well in a 68&#13;
foot well when changed for the force.&#13;
The pump may be seen at Teeple &amp;&#13;
Cadwelle.&#13;
If a person has anything to sell, be&#13;
he merchant or tarmei, it does not&#13;
pay to wait until your competitor has&#13;
the start of you before you let the&#13;
buyer know you have it for sale. The&#13;
DISPATCH is the best medium in this&#13;
vicinity through which to let your&#13;
wants bo known.&#13;
WILLIAM M'KINLEY&#13;
HIS LIFE AND WORK,&#13;
BY&#13;
GEN. CHARLES B. GBOSVENOB.&#13;
President's lite long Friend, Comrade&#13;
in war Colleague in Congress.&#13;
Was near his side with other great&#13;
men when bis eyes were oloeed in&#13;
death. Followed the bier to the National&#13;
Capitol and to Canton. The&#13;
General requires a share of the proceeds&#13;
of his book to be devoted to a&#13;
McKinley Monument Fund. Thus&#13;
every subscriber becomes a contributto&#13;
this fond. Millions of copies will&#13;
besold, Everybody will buy it. Orders&#13;
for the asking. Nobody will refuse.&#13;
Elegant Photogravure Portrait&#13;
of President McKinley's last picture&#13;
taken at the White House. Yon&#13;
can easily and quickly clear $1,000&#13;
taking orders. Order outfit quick.&#13;
Chance to prove success, secure yearly&#13;
contract and become manager. Send&#13;
12 2 cent stamps for elegant prospect-'&#13;
us. Taking 10 to 50 orders daily. 50-&#13;
000 copies will be sold in this vicinity.&#13;
Address,&#13;
lfHE CONTINENTAL ASSEMBLY,&#13;
Corcoran Bldg , Opp. U. S. Treasury,&#13;
Washington, D. C.&#13;
STEWART'S&#13;
ROOFING&#13;
AND&#13;
ROOFING MATERIALS&#13;
(ir Mkhc KW ROOFS n i UMlri*&#13;
fiLpJpjfj if ill kUlt. M i l flu&#13;
•MM. Snf tor burnt.&#13;
W. H. S T E W ART,&#13;
10» JOHN ST., N. V.&#13;
f&#13;
. &gt; • .&#13;
M&lt;&#13;
S.</text>
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              <text>Use the Windows Snipping Tool to capture the area of the document you want to save. If you want multiple pages printed please see staff to print the pages you want. &lt;a href="https://howelllibrary.org/technology/#print" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View the library's printing information.&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch October 17, 1901</text>
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                <text>October 17, 1901 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>1901-10-17</text>
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                <text>Frank L. Andrews</text>
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                  <text>Below is a list of all the newspaper information we know about for Livingston County, Michigan:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Brighton Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (1880-2000) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1880-1968 in the Local History Room. Brighton Library also has holdings of this newspaper in their &lt;a href="https://brightonlibrary.info/about-bdl/genealogy-local-history/the-brighton-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Brighton Room&lt;/a&gt;. &lt;a href="https://brighton.historyarchives.online/home" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Community Life&lt;/strong&gt; (Hartland) (1933-present) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1933-1991.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville News and Views&lt;/strong&gt; (1984-present)- a newspaper that has been covering the Fowlerville, Webberville, and Howell areas. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?fc=websiteGroup%3AFowlerville+News+and+Views" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; (contains 2018-present newspapers and 2015-present blog entries). &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville Review&lt;/strong&gt; (1875-1971) - we have microfilm of this newspaper in the Local History Room. &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Gregory Gazette&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1912–1913) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=gregory+gazette"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/strong&gt; (2003–2009)&lt;span&gt; - digital copes of newspaper. &lt;/span&gt;The&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;em&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/em&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;was a local community newspaper, housed in downtown Brighton, with a weekly circulation of 54,000. Encompassing a News, Features and Sports sections, the paper operated from 2003 to 2009 under the umbrella of The Ann Arbor News. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=livingston+community+news"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; &lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Argus-Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt; (1965-1969) - Brighton Argus and Pinckney Dispatch merged in 1965. Then became Brighton Argus again in 1969. See either Pinckney Dispatch or Brighton Argus for access to this newspaper.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1937-2000) - Livingston Republican Press changes name in 1937. In 1980 Brighton Argus buys and continues to publish both Brighton Argus and Livingston County Press. In 1997 both papers are published twice weekly. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Courier &lt;/strong&gt;(1843-1857) - we have 1843-1846 in digital format. We don't have the rest of the date range. Becomes Livingston Democrat in 1857. Have microfilm for 1843-1856 in Local History Room.&lt;span&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (2000-present) - In September 2000, two successful twice-weekly newspapers the Livingston County Press and the Brighton Argus – that had each been publishing in various forms for more than 100 years - became one. The first edition of the Livingston County Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus hit the streets Sept. 7, 2000. Gannett purchased the newspaper in 2005 as part of the acquisition of Hometown Communications Inc. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Democrat&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1857–1928) - index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Herald&lt;/strong&gt; (1886–1887) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/paper/the-livingston-herald/9306/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Livingston Post&lt;/strong&gt; (2009-present) - a all-digital information and opinion site in Livingston County, Michigan. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1855–1929) &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span&gt;- index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1929-1937) - Livingston Republican and Livingston Democrat merged in 1929. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Tidings&lt;/strong&gt; (1906-19??) - By 1910 it was published by A. Riley Crittenden.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Pinckney Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1883–1965) - digital copies of newspaper. We have all the years except 1890 and 1894-1896 are missing. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=pinckney+dispatch"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Brief Sun&lt;/strong&gt; (1883-1965) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Town Crier&lt;/strong&gt; (1966-1999) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
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              <text>LOCAL-N8JWS.&#13;
;MrS; AUie .«etntyre was borne tie&#13;
put wseV&#13;
Mr. snd Mr*. B. B. Brown wore in&#13;
SoweM Tussday.&#13;
Teetfle A Cftdwell have a large display&#13;
of * an* in their show window.&#13;
Tim Mi sees Lillian Boyle and Iva&#13;
Haistead spent Sunday in 80. Lyon.&#13;
Chai. O'Connor and wife of Howell&#13;
were guests of their daughters at this&#13;
place 8unday.&#13;
-There is a little more wood that has&#13;
been promised us that would come acceptable&#13;
these days.&#13;
Mrs. 8idney Lyon and daughters of&#13;
Hartland were guests of her sisterMrs.&#13;
K. H. Crane over Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. Clarissa Kirk and sun John of&#13;
Howell and Mrs. Horace Bains of&#13;
Penton were quests of H. G. Briggs&#13;
and wife Sunday. —&#13;
Edward A. Bowman,&#13;
DEPARTMENT&#13;
STORE&#13;
HOWELL MtCHIGAN&#13;
B O W M A N ' S&#13;
Special Sale of:&#13;
B^fetenberg and Art Needle&#13;
Goods.&#13;
ALSO *&#13;
Big New Stock of China.&#13;
Lower Prtce* than elsewhere&#13;
Trade at BOWIliail's "Pay*&#13;
The Busy Store,&#13;
Howell, Mich.&#13;
Read ti» article fJAore a boat the)&#13;
Sugar BeetS on nageiaur.&#13;
Lawyer Greene pat m a verf ffine&#13;
law liuijsVv jh» |ii*t week containing&#13;
a4»ut 200 volumes.&#13;
Mrs. A. B. Eastman, of Jackson,&#13;
waB the truest of Misses Boyle &amp; Halstead&#13;
the past week.&#13;
Ernest Frost and John Oommiskey&#13;
are down to serve as jurors at tbe November&#13;
term of court.&#13;
Nearly 150 residences and business&#13;
places are connected by the new telephone&#13;
company at Howell.&#13;
—IttrBv L . B r o k a w ^ e t a m e d h o r n *&#13;
Monday from several week's visit&#13;
with relatives in western N. Y.&#13;
A Cohoctah farmer raised 1,000 bu.&#13;
of beans from 28 acres. This is the&#13;
best report yet on a biff acerage.&#13;
F. VV. Mac kinder recently received&#13;
an order for some of his tine Leghorn&#13;
fowls from parties in South Carolina.&#13;
Only one week more of the Pan-&#13;
Am. and then every effort will be&#13;
centered on the St. Louis expo, in&#13;
1908.&#13;
Mrs. Winegar and daughter EiJa,&#13;
and Miss Gertrude Suedicor, of Howell*&#13;
visited at the home of Geo. Green,&#13;
Snnday.&#13;
Mrs. Leal Sigler is spending a conpie&#13;
of weeks at the academy of art in&#13;
Detroit taking lessons and attending&#13;
sketching class.&#13;
The many sportsmen are bringing&#13;
down the squirrels, by the bate fall.&#13;
There are bat few gray squirrels to&#13;
be found most being of the fox variey.&#13;
Blood bounds w e being trahred i n&#13;
Ann Arbor to hunt criminals and&#13;
anyone leaving tracks aroundwhere he&#13;
bad not ought to be shonld wear reinforced&#13;
tronsers.&#13;
We-have at this office several copies&#13;
of the new song ''McKinley's Dying&#13;
Words'* which we will sell at 15c per&#13;
cop&gt;. Sent by mail on receipt of&#13;
price. See adv. elsewhere.&#13;
HtLLDAHeONEAQAM.&#13;
Tho Pinckn*/ Kilt Own&#13;
Rat*.&#13;
Ruined Again by&#13;
About 9:90 Tuesday it was noticed&#13;
that rats had caused a break in the&#13;
dam. Immediate steps were taken by&#13;
Mr. Peters to arrest the progress of&#13;
the water, butow-ing to the looseness&#13;
of the soil this was impossible and in&#13;
a very few momenrs^tbe water was&#13;
rushing through in torrents and the&#13;
east end of the dam was in ruins.&#13;
The break occured at the same placeas&#13;
it did about a year and a half ago.&#13;
A goouHsEare of tlFcTtuehT of the&#13;
village got to the scene in time to see&#13;
the torrents of water and some were&#13;
lucky enough to secure some of the&#13;
tine fish, and the pond was well stocked&#13;
and was just begining to furnish&#13;
sport to the nimrods. Thousands of&#13;
small bass, pickerel, sunfish etc. were&#13;
left on the weeds to die and unless&#13;
something 1¾ dune the smell of decay*&#13;
ing weeds and fish will be terrible in&#13;
a week.&#13;
The loss falls heavily on Mr. Peters&#13;
who has purchased the will and was&#13;
getting a trade that caused him to run&#13;
the mill almost continually to keep Up&#13;
and fill foreign orders. He has however&#13;
quite a little flour on hand and&#13;
can supply most of his home customers,&#13;
A bee will be made by the* citizens&#13;
aud farmei patrons on Monday and&#13;
Tuesday of next week, to help in the&#13;
work of reparing the break and getting&#13;
the mill running again before&#13;
cold weather. This will benefit all&#13;
and ovoryone should turn out. Bring&#13;
your team, wagon and scraper it you&#13;
have one, if not come prepared to&#13;
shovel. Dinner will be served both&#13;
days by Mr. Peters for all who come.&#13;
Just Received&#13;
At JACKSON'S,&#13;
New line of Black Dress Goods&#13;
New Bed Blankets and Comfortables.&#13;
New Patterns Tennis Flannels&#13;
New line of Ladies' Kid Gloves&#13;
A complete line of Men's, Ladies', Misses' and Children's&#13;
Cotton and Wool Underwear at prices in reach of all.&#13;
Ladies' Flannel Wrappers at $1 and $1.25&#13;
- » • # • • -&#13;
Card of Thanks.&#13;
I wish to extend thanks to the&#13;
Knights of the Maccabees of Livingston&#13;
tent tor the expression of sympathy&#13;
tendered in my bereavement. I&#13;
wish especially to thank the oflbers of&#13;
the tent for acts of kindness extended;&#13;
and the officers of the Great Camp for&#13;
their promptness in forwarding draft&#13;
for settlement of claim. May your&#13;
order continue in growth, prosperity&#13;
and usefulness, is my sincere wish.&#13;
MES. ORLA B. JACKSON.&#13;
* * * * *&#13;
To C l o s e Saturday 9 O c t . 2 6&#13;
One lot Ladies' Wrappers 89c&#13;
Gents* 50c Neckwear 39c&#13;
Windy these days. i Mr*, Cbri* Redinger of Iosco it we*.&#13;
Mrs. Jas. Welsh is slowly recover- , covering from an operation fa* apn*»- *&#13;
ing from an attack of typhoid fever.f d'eitis. She is able to sit up roost of '&#13;
I). D. Burnett &amp; Son of Fowlervili*!&#13;
King Edward, of Engine*, b i s&#13;
placed the ban of hi* disapproval on&#13;
all Sunday entertaiiynenrs of every&#13;
sort, and he wishes to restore a rigid&#13;
presbyteriun regime. The butchers,&#13;
the bakers and candlestick makers are&#13;
a little uneasy. Perhaps the time has&#13;
come when the Sabbath laws mast be&#13;
obeyed in order to sav &gt; the country.&#13;
Christian America will do well to follow.&#13;
She should have set the ex*&#13;
are painting H; W. Pluuimer's boose.&#13;
Miss Rose Dunn is coming to attend&#13;
Briggs Clark who is sick with typhoid&#13;
lever.&#13;
Geo. Loram and family will soon&#13;
move to Frank Reasons farm near&#13;
Anderson.&#13;
We took a couple of pictures while&#13;
the dam was going out Tuesday and&#13;
they can be seen at this office.&#13;
W&amp; understand tht.t an a that of ibe I arc pie.&#13;
Gleaners is to be organized at this&#13;
place. M. Y».ke is doing the soliciting.&#13;
R. W. Caskey of Plainfleld was&#13;
down to Pinckney one day last week.&#13;
The extra quality of the work done&#13;
by the flouring mill brought him.&#13;
Do not forget bee to repair the da to&#13;
at this place, Monday and Tuesday ot&#13;
next week. Come one&#13;
A Word to Pathmasters.&#13;
or both—days&#13;
and bring your wagon or semper.&#13;
Dinner will be served.&#13;
The next night after the burglarv&#13;
at this place the residence of Dr. Brogau,&#13;
at Stock bridge, was broken into&#13;
and about $12 secured. They were&#13;
evidently following up the railroad.&#13;
Mrs. Kate Salisbury of Jackson is in&#13;
town for surgical treatment. On&#13;
Wednesday Drs. Sigler and Wylie removed&#13;
a large caneroua tumor from&#13;
her side. She is rapidly improving.&#13;
Aiphens Smith, of Genoa, will handle&#13;
the grocery trade of Cbilson hereafter.&#13;
He has purchased the two&#13;
atore buildings ofMr; Lusk and the&#13;
grocery stock of A. L. Urippen, which&#13;
he will move into b&gt;s own bujldmus.&#13;
Mr. Lusk has packed his goods and is&#13;
moving back to Owosso—Brighton&#13;
Argn&gt;.&#13;
It seems proper to call I he attention&#13;
ot path masters to the fact that by law&#13;
all road work must be done by Aug. 1&#13;
of each year except a small reserve to&#13;
be be used in ne?saary repiirs of&#13;
places that might require it after this&#13;
time. There is a rapidly growingsentiment&#13;
tor better roads and those&#13;
path mas ten» who are in the habit of&#13;
wholesale plowing of the roads in tb*&#13;
fall may have complaint lodged against&#13;
them and have a Heavy fine to&#13;
pay.&#13;
An Interesting Case.&#13;
A case posseting more than ordinary&#13;
is that of Mrs. Frank Spiegelberg&#13;
of Whitmore Lake. About two years&#13;
ago this lady bad an operation for an&#13;
abscess of the Kidney which never&#13;
properly beaied. Several weeks ago&#13;
it was decided that it would be ne,ccessarv&#13;
to remove the—right Knine?.&#13;
When her infant child was but two&#13;
weeks old Drs. Sigler and Lemon performed&#13;
the operation and she is&#13;
about the house now and enjoying&#13;
better health than in years.&#13;
GI¥E US A CALL&#13;
\20ih Century Steve Greeting.&#13;
. / ,&#13;
, The old reliable firm that have bnilt up their trade with&#13;
your valuable assistance, are happy to inform you that&#13;
they+ere in bettor position to serve your wants than ever&#13;
th^y were in the 19th Century, and cordially invite yon&#13;
to ©nr tore and investigate the troth of the statement&#13;
that we have the best line of&#13;
~V C o a l a.nd H e a t i n g &amp; t o v e »&#13;
^TftT#e«« i n P i n o k n e y ,&#13;
. ^ and at prioes that defy competition.&#13;
Always Yours,&#13;
TEEPLE t CADWELL&#13;
Mr8. Fitzsimroons remains abont&#13;
the same.&#13;
Mrs. Wm. Black started Wednesday&#13;
for Petoskev where she expects to stay&#13;
during tbe winter, with her father.&#13;
C. L. Grimes and family have moved&#13;
into the rooms over Campbell's store&#13;
for the winter to be near her dressmaking&#13;
parlors.&#13;
Miss Katie Gibnsy of Gregory closes&#13;
ber second very successful term of&#13;
school in Dist No. 9 on Friday of this&#13;
week. Miss Gibney has shown herself&#13;
to be a very thorough and competent&#13;
instructor and we are sorry she cannot&#13;
be with us the coming year. \*&#13;
If a person has anything to sell, be&#13;
be merchant or iarmei, it does net&#13;
pay to wait nntil your competitor has&#13;
the start of you before you let tbe&#13;
buyer know you have it for sale. The&#13;
DISPATCH is the best medium in this&#13;
vicinity through which to let your&#13;
wants be known.&#13;
Don't forget the festival at the opera&#13;
house this week Friday and Saturday,&#13;
Oct 25 and 26. There will be&#13;
bargains in merchandise, produoe&#13;
bake goods, fancy articles, Etc. A&#13;
good supper will be served on Friday,&#13;
chicken pie on Saturday. Everybody&#13;
Gome and have a good time.&#13;
Dr. R. F. Erwin aad Miss Ada Allioott&#13;
of this place were married at&#13;
Ithaca Saturday, Oct. 13 by the Rev.&#13;
Mr. Baldwin* of the first Baptist&#13;
church. Dr. and his wife am two of&#13;
Alma's moat highly esteemed young&#13;
people. The Record extends c o a s ^ r s ^ ^ * * 1 &lt;&#13;
oUtioas .—Alma Resort. iHrHoe. \&#13;
Drugs,&#13;
Medicines,&#13;
Books:&#13;
Stationery,&#13;
Pancy and&#13;
Toilet&#13;
Articles*'&#13;
A Full Line of the Finest Candies&#13;
We sell you more Stick Candy&#13;
for the money than others dare&#13;
offer*&#13;
Yours for trade,&#13;
F. A. SIGLER.&#13;
BOOK BINDING.&#13;
Having stttl«i domn «9 buv'n—' in &lt;wr mm&#13;
quarHrt. etciMW m» nwfr, a/oc*. etc., wt ore&#13;
6*n*r pr*par*d than trtr to do book binding of&#13;
all kind*.&#13;
Magazines,&#13;
Pamphlets,&#13;
Receipts,&#13;
Blank'Books, Etc.,&#13;
.. ;w&#13;
*.•: V:'&#13;
I ^ M f l M k S ^ M W i r M i N S W ^&#13;
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K i l t 171 •'CoeaV^jTbe&#13;
to Christian Faith—Two&#13;
Oetv 80^-In this dis-&#13;
Dr. TsJmage calls all people to&#13;
soeV opens all the doors-of&#13;
eqr; ^txta, Genesis vi, 18,&#13;
BevA&amp;Uons xxii, 17, "Com**'&#13;
tender and all persuasive&#13;
&lt;ss) the wot* ^Coaae." Six hundred and&#13;
times it is found in the&#13;
It stands at the front gate&#13;
est tit* Bible. a» in my first text, invitdug&#13;
•RtedOavUns Into Noah's ark, and&#13;
at aejusds at tike other gate of the Bible&#13;
a s tan my second text, inviting the post-&#13;
4fl*rv1ans of all later ages into the ark&#13;
-of a Savior's mercy. ''Come' is only&#13;
* word of b a r letters, but it is the&#13;
of words, and nearly the entire&#13;
of English vocabulary bows to&#13;
Its scepter. It is an ocaan into which&#13;
. i n i i • i )ii;ii.iiiii.i,- !« i • • • ! » ! ,••! I H I ; .1111111111,i'in ' ^ n ' l i . i ^ i j i j S i&#13;
are not ce&gt;tiinly among the proiper.u*&#13;
gle all tne way ap m $ k reaehed tae&#13;
prosperity, and slne^qier fc#ta reaehed&#13;
these heights there have hsen* perplexities,&#13;
anxieties and cri«s^which&#13;
were .almost enough to abetter the&#13;
nerves and turn the brAln* It would&#13;
be hard to tell-which have the biggest&#13;
fight in this world, the prosperities or&#13;
the adversities, the conspiotfitks or the&#13;
obscurities. Just as soon as yon have&#13;
enough? success to attract the attention&#13;
of others the envies an^ laalouilee are&#13;
mm ' M U , ' » ' I "***&#13;
Other wor. s drive, but this beck-&#13;
All moods of fe sling hath that&#13;
Sometimes it weeps&#13;
it laughs. Sometimes&#13;
(.sometimes it tempts, and&#13;
it destioys. It sounds from&#13;
ot. the church and from the&#13;
•aragdlca of sin, from the gate3 of heaven&#13;
and the gates of hell. It is con-&#13;
••mil and w c eaccnt of a 1 power, it&#13;
ts Ceo heiressof moat of the peat&#13;
let loose from their kennel, t h e gfeaU&#13;
est crime that yen oah' eammit in the&#13;
estimation of others is to get on better&#13;
than they do. They think your&#13;
addition is their subtraction. Jfive&#13;
hundred persons stait for a goal of&#13;
success; one reaches it, and the other&#13;
four hundred and ninety-nine are mad.&#13;
It would take volumes to hold the&#13;
story of the Wrongs, outrages and defamations&#13;
tna* have com* upon you&#13;
as a result of ycur success. The warm&#13;
sun of prosperity brlng3 into life a&#13;
swamp full of annoying insects.. On&#13;
the other hand, the unfortunate classes&#13;
have their struggles for maintenance.&#13;
To achieve a livelihood, by one who&#13;
had nothing to start wth, and after&#13;
tea thousand rivers o l mean- awhile for a family as well, and carry&#13;
the ahnoacr of xno3t of the future.&#13;
*!*• Ton may pronounce it so&#13;
all the heaven3 wi 1 be heard in&#13;
or pronoucce it so that all&#13;
of. time aad eternity shall&#13;
ha lt» one syllable. It is&#13;
the lip of saint and profligate.' It&#13;
is the^soigbxle^t of all -soli.i.anta either&#13;
lor goad** had.&#13;
«U1» ¥y U M Word "Come.**&#13;
Too most remember that in many&#13;
~" *t3ome" has a mightier&#13;
to conquer before it has any&#13;
at nil. Just g va me the accuthe&#13;
statistics of how many&#13;
Svro down in fraud, in drunkenness, in&#13;
In impurity or in vice of&#13;
sort, and I will give you the acox&#13;
stat stic3 of how many&#13;
have hcen slain by the word "Come."&#13;
*¥3DJBO and click wineglasses with me |&#13;
mt this lvoiy bar." "Come and see&#13;
we can win at thla gaming table."&#13;
enter with me this doubtful&#13;
'SKKxalatlon!" "Come with me and&#13;
lead those infidel tracts on Christianity.**&#13;
"Come, with me to a pace of&#13;
bad amusement" "Come with me in a&#13;
;«sy boot through the underground life&#13;
tot the city." If in this city thero are&#13;
twenty thoaaand who are down in&#13;
moral character, then twenty thousand&#13;
fell uader the power of the word&#13;
I was reading of a wife&#13;
husband had been overthrown&#13;
few strong drink, and she went to the&#13;
sjaloom where he was ruined, and she&#13;
amid, "Give me back my husband." And&#13;
the bartender, pointing to a maudlin&#13;
battered man drowsing in the corof&#13;
the barroom, said: "Th:re he&#13;
Jim, wake up; here's your wife&#13;
for yon." And the woman said:&#13;
-**B0 you call that my hu3band? What&#13;
imve you been doing with him? I?&#13;
tint the manly brow, is that the clear&#13;
eye. Is that the noble heart, that I&#13;
married? What vile drug have you&#13;
given him that his turned h m into a&#13;
Bend? Take your tiger claws off of&#13;
3dm. Uncoil tho^e se p u t fo ds of&#13;
evil habit that are crushing him. Give&#13;
aae back my husband, the one with&#13;
whom r stood at the a'tar t3n years&#13;
Give him back to me." Victim&#13;
he, as many millions 6f others&#13;
.have been, of the word "Come!"&#13;
Had* Btrht with God.&#13;
With that word which has done so&#13;
much for others I approach ycu today.&#13;
Are yon right with God? 'No," you&#13;
say, "I think not; I am sometimes&#13;
alarmed when I think of him; I fear I&#13;
will net be ready to meet him in the&#13;
last day; nay heart is hot right with&#13;
&lt;2od." .Come then and have it made&#13;
right. Through the Christ who died to&#13;
emve yon, come! What is the use of&#13;
waiting? The longer you wait the further&#13;
off you are and the deeper you&#13;
ore down. Strike out for heaven!&#13;
Tea remember that a few years ago a&#13;
steamer called the Princess Alice, with&#13;
e&gt; crowd of exaroionisia ab:ard, sank&#13;
in the Thames, and there was an awful&#13;
ameriSce of life. A boatman from the&#13;
shore pat out for the rescue, and he&#13;
had evbiff boat, and he got It so full&#13;
It would not hold another parson, and&#13;
as he b&gt;id hold of the oars to pull for&#13;
ithe shore, leaving hundreds helpless&#13;
mem drowning; he cried out, "Oh, that&#13;
I had a bigger bout!" Thank God&#13;
that I am not thus limited and that I&#13;
earn promise room for all in this gospel&#13;
beat. Get la; get in! And yet there&#13;
ts resm. Boom in the heart of a par-&#13;
Jsalag God. Room in heaven*&#13;
wsera u JCo KM»P«.&#13;
t sJsp apply the word of my text to&#13;
Who would like practical comr.&#13;
if s a y orec escape the struggle&#13;
«** ICVI have net found thorn. They&#13;
think that God will not welcome yout&#13;
ooa)inf? Will a father at vast outlajL&#13;
construct a^ inanaion^for-fctt son and&#13;
lay out parka white with statues an*&#13;
green with foliage and all a-aparkU&#13;
With fountajtna, and then not allow Mi&#13;
son to. live in the house or walk in th«&#13;
parks? Has God built this: house e l&#13;
gospel mercy and'will he then refusi&#13;
entrance bVhU children? Will a&#13;
emment at great expense build lifeboats&#13;
that can hover unhurt like a&#13;
petrel over the wj(l4esv,snrjf, and ftsnl: ^&#13;
wreck of a ship in* the c#ng. n $ sjlov&#13;
the drowning to seise the life line ot&#13;
take the boat for the wore in safety!&#13;
Shall God prpTlde at the cost of hJ|&#13;
only Son's'assassination escape for an&#13;
sinking world and then turn a deaf ear&#13;
to the cry, that comes up} from the&#13;
breakers?&#13;
i . i &gt;&#13;
this on until children are reared and&#13;
educated and fairly startod in the&#13;
world, and to do this am*d all' the&#13;
rivalries of business and the uncertainty&#13;
of c;ops and theJlckleness o l&#13;
tariff legislation, with an occasional&#13;
labor strike and here and there a&#13;
financial panic thrown in, is a mighty&#13;
thing to do, and there are hundreds&#13;
and thousands of such heroes and&#13;
heroines who live unsung and die unhonored^&#13;
'. '• ~r " :~ •&#13;
Solaoa of Christian Faith.&#13;
What w e a l l need, whether u p o r&#13;
down in life or half w a y between, i s&#13;
the indefinite solace of t h e Christian&#13;
religion. And so w e employ t h e word&#13;
"Come!" It will take all eternity to&#13;
find out t h e number of business-men&#13;
who have been strengthened b y t h e&#13;
promises of God, and the people w h o&#13;
have been fed by the ravens when other&#13;
resources gave out, and t h e m e n&#13;
and women who, going into this battle&#13;
armed only with needle or saw or a x&#13;
or yardstick or pen or type or shovel&#13;
or shoe last, have gained a victory that&#13;
made the heavens resound. With all&#13;
the resources of God promises for every&#13;
exigency, no one need be left i n the&#13;
lurch.? - - -&#13;
I like the faith displayed years a g o&#13;
iu Drury Lane, London, in a humble&#13;
home when every particle of food had&#13;
given cut, and a kindly soul entered&#13;
with tea and other table supplies and&#13;
found a kettle on the fire ready for tea.&#13;
The benevolent lady said, "How i s it&#13;
that you have the kettle ready for the&#13;
tea when you had no tea in the house?"&#13;
And the daughter of t h e home said:&#13;
''Mother would have me put t h e kettle&#13;
on the fire, and when I said, 'What is&#13;
the use of doing so when we have nothing&#13;
in the house?' she said, 'My child,&#13;
God will provide; thirty years h e has&#13;
already provided l o r me through "all&#13;
my pain and helplessness, and h e will&#13;
not leave me t o starve a t last. H e will&#13;
send us help though w e do not y e t see&#13;
how.' We have been waiting all day&#13;
for something to come, but until w e&#13;
saw you w e knew not how It w a s to&#13;
come." Such things the world m a y&#13;
call coincidences, but I call them Almighty&#13;
deliverances, and though y o u&#13;
do not hear of them they are occurring&#13;
every hour of every day and i n&#13;
all parts of Christendom.&#13;
The "»Vorlrt'» Dismal Consolation^&#13;
Wnat dismal work of condolence the&#13;
world makes when it attempts to condole!&#13;
The plaster they spread does not&#13;
stick. The broken bones under theii&#13;
bandage do not knit. A farmer was&#13;
lost in a snowstorm on a prairie of the&#13;
far west. Night coming on, and after&#13;
he was almost frantic from not knowing&#13;
which way to go his sleigh struck&#13;
the run of another sleigh, and he&#13;
said, "I will follow this rut, and it will&#13;
take me out to safety." He hastened&#13;
on until he heard the bells of the preceding&#13;
horses; but, coming up, he&#13;
found that that man was also lost, and*&#13;
as the tendency of those who are confused&#13;
in the forest or on the moors,&#13;
they were both moving ir. a circle, and&#13;
the runner of the one lost sleigh was&#13;
following the runner of the other lOBt&#13;
sleigh round and round. At last it&#13;
occurred to them to look at the north&#13;
star, which was peering through the&#13;
night, and by the direction of that star&#13;
they got home again. Those who follow&#13;
the advice of this world in time of&#13;
perplexity are in a fearful round, for&#13;
ii is one bewildered soul following another&#13;
bewildered soul, and. only those&#13;
who have In such time got their eye on&#13;
the morning star of our Christian faith&#13;
can find their way out or be strong&#13;
enough to lead others with an all persuasive&#13;
invitation.&#13;
"But," says some one, "you Christian&#13;
people, keep telling us to 'come/&#13;
yet you do not tell us how to come."&#13;
That charge shall not be true on this&#13;
occasion. Come believing! Come repenting!&#13;
Come praying! After all that&#13;
God has been doing for six thousand&#13;
years, sometimes through patriarchs&#13;
and sometimes through prophets and&#13;
at last through the culmination of all&#13;
the tragedies OS CT^oth^ can an^ pae&#13;
: Two Things to BeU&#13;
- *ftdt," you say, "there are so many'&#13;
things I have to believe and so many&#13;
things in the shape of a creed that I&#13;
have to adopt that I am kept back;**&#13;
No, no! You need believe but two&#13;
things—-namely, that Jesus Christ&#13;
came into the world to save sinners,&#13;
and thai you,are one of them. "But,"&#13;
you say, "I do believe both of these&#13;
thihglT""Do"you" really believe them&#13;
with all your heart? "Yes." Why,&#13;
then, you 1mve passed from death into&#13;
life. Why, then, you are a son or a&#13;
daughter of the Lord Almighty. Why,&#13;
then, you are an heir or an heiress oi&#13;
an inheritance that will declare dividends&#13;
from now until long after the&#13;
stars are dead. Hallelujah! Prince ol&#13;
God, why do you not come and take&#13;
your coronet? Princess of the Lord&#13;
Ainrtghtyrwhy do you-not^BountTOui&#13;
throne? Pass up into the light Youi&#13;
boat IS anchored, why do you not go&#13;
ashore? Just plant your feet down&#13;
hard, and you will feel under them the&#13;
Rock of Ages. I challenge the universe&#13;
for one instance in which a man&#13;
in the. right spirit appealed for the&#13;
salvation of the gospel and did not get&#13;
it. Man alive, you are going to let all&#13;
the years of your life go iw*y with you&#13;
without your having this great peace,&#13;
this glorious hope, this bright expectancy?&#13;
Are you going to let the pearl&#13;
of great price lie in the dust at your&#13;
feet because you are too indolent or&#13;
too proud to stoop down and pick it&#13;
up? Will you wear the chain of evil&#13;
habit when near by you is the hammer&#13;
j:hat could with one stroke snap the&#13;
shackle? Will you stay in the prison&#13;
of sin when here Is a gospel key that&#13;
could unlock your incarceration? No,&#13;
no!&#13;
Maglo of a Word.&#13;
As tho one word "Come" h a s some*&#13;
times brought many souls t o Christ, 1&#13;
will try the experiment of piling up&#13;
into a mountain and then send down in&#13;
an avalanche of power many of these&#13;
gospel "Comes." "Come thou and all&#13;
thy house into t h e ark." "Come untc&#13;
me all y e w h o labor and are heavy&#13;
laden, and I will give you rest." "Come,&#13;
for all things are now ready." "Come&#13;
with us, and w e will do y o u good."&#13;
"Come and see." "The Spirit and the&#13;
bride say 'Come,' and let h i m that is&#13;
a thirst come." T h e stroke of o n e bell&#13;
in' a tower may be sweet, but a score&#13;
of bells well tuned and rightly lifted&#13;
and skillfully swung i n o n e great&#13;
chime fill the heavens with music almost&#13;
celestial. A n d n o o n e w h o has&#13;
heard the mighty chimes in t h e towers&#13;
of Amsterdam or Ghent or Copenhagen&#13;
can forget them. N o w , i t seems t o me&#13;
that i n this Sabbath hour a l l heaven&#13;
is chirring, and t h e voices of departed&#13;
friends and kindred ring down the sky'&#13;
saying, "Come!" The angels w h o never&#13;
fell, bending from sapphire thrones,&#13;
are chanting "Come!" Yea, all the&#13;
towers of heaven, tower of martyrs;&#13;
tower of prophets, tower of apostles,&#13;
tower of evangelists, tower o f the temple&#13;
of tho Lord God and the Lamb, are&#13;
chiming, "Come! Come!" Pardon foi&#13;
all and peace for all and heaven for all&#13;
who will come.&#13;
Mrs.&#13;
I H I ^ c t f e i g i s S Pythias, No. W&amp;m&#13;
p ^ a i j ^ JVlfnneapoIif, Minn., Alter&#13;
^ 1 ¾ ¾ ^ ¾ Su#erihg \V^s ttirecl b)?;Lydia&#13;
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Some of my friends who have used your Compound for uterine&#13;
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.tornis money In tUe W. L, DOURIM #3.00 awfl&#13;
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fer&#13;
- One of Welling ton's Officer*.&#13;
On good authority soldiers like best&#13;
to be officered by gentlemen, but they&#13;
have their choice of the type. Of the&#13;
right kind was Gen.' Crawford, of the&#13;
Light Division. An incident in his&#13;
career during one of the Wellington&#13;
wars shows him to have been rich in&#13;
that justice which commands respect&#13;
from equals and loyalty from Inferiors;&#13;
in a word, he kept discipline&#13;
without regard to rank. His division&#13;
was crossing a ford on one of the Spanish&#13;
marches and an officer, to keep hit&#13;
breeches dry. rode through on a soldier's&#13;
back. Crawford observed the&#13;
thing with disgust, and in a minute&#13;
was splashing through the water after&#13;
them.both. "Put him down, sir!" he&#13;
shouted. "Put him down! I desire&#13;
you to put that officer down instantly!"&#13;
Tho soldier dropped him and&#13;
went on. "Return back, sir!" Crawford&#13;
said to the officer, "and go&#13;
through the water like the otfetxiv I&#13;
will not allow my officers to ride upon&#13;
the men's backs through the rivers;&#13;
all must take their share alike hereof-?-.&#13;
Youth's Companion.&#13;
• &gt; ; • *&#13;
GATAioe Fnm,&#13;
Sold by CS Douqlat $*orn in AmericT.i eitiet seflingntiract from/a&#13;
fe wearer at one profit; ami the 6ett shot dealer* ttermther*,&#13;
~~ l.tUt apo« JtaTl.f W. L. De*(1aasfc«wwUli»aa&#13;
aad arm «s«i*« oa »*ti«*. Shoes sen* anywhere&#13;
on receipt ot price and 250. additional&#13;
- for carriage. Take measurement&#13;
of foot as shown: state style&#13;
dertredj shte and wldlh&#13;
-r— . ,,, usnally worn iplaiaoj pap&#13;
To«; no»Ty, median, or light soles, '^&#13;
W. X* Bougfes, Srocktoa, U m .&#13;
lAdlee Can Wear Shoe**&#13;
One size smaller after using Allen's Foot*&#13;
Ease, a powder. It makes tight or new&#13;
shoes easy. Cures swollen, hot, sweating,&#13;
aching feet, ingrowing nails, corns&#13;
and bunions. All drugcHBts and Shoe&#13;
stores d6o. Trial package FREE by mail.&#13;
Address Allen S. Olmsted, LeRoy, N^Y.&#13;
Brooklyn, N. Y„ Oct. 14,—The value of&#13;
Garfield Tea. the herb_ medicine, la an*-&#13;
If a nan thinks a girl is a vision, some other&#13;
girl pronounces her a perfect sight.&#13;
THE BEST LAUNDRY. WORK&#13;
is done by the use of Ross Bleaching Blue,&#13;
grocers. 10c. Get the genuine&#13;
if afflicted with&#13;
•ore evea.ua*&#13;
AH&#13;
DD O D Q V " * DiscoviRYi gives I V W 1 ^ 0 » ¥ QU lek relief and cum wots*&#13;
geated;by these facte: It, to a specific, for&#13;
all diseases of the liver, fcldneya. stomach&#13;
and bowels; it purifies the blood end&#13;
l a y a t t e foundation fer health. •&#13;
PtjtfMAU FAMJt^SSS D•YmE- Sare'flwt&#13;
tasunlifbt* waahing*»4 rubbing, i Isold&#13;
by druggists, 10c per package. •&#13;
Mn. Wtaalow's Soothing Srra&gt; '' •&#13;
Sfoarm mehafUldorne,w a l&lt;U—yat hblHoaS c soeaftrosiw* wtihned goaonliua. rteodou aee b*a Itntl-e.&#13;
: ^ -»".l: • ' o&#13;
BS MKK. Zooklioo. .&#13;
at once. Sent SH&#13;
tne great lnTlgorator&#13;
ice. sent for ell postage paid. Ai&#13;
goekt- Co., UOiBusseU St., petrolt, Mlcb.&#13;
acts&#13;
ddfesa&#13;
*Mt-&#13;
; The Egyptians ueexl pencils of colored&#13;
chalk, s*d several ot these ancient&#13;
crayons have bsen found in their&#13;
inmha ^ - : ^ . ^ - f^1 •m&amp; «•'&#13;
Hot Weather Htealtiti.&#13;
/ ''During 4he heated term of July and&#13;
August one should be careful to keep all&#13;
the organs of the system in free work*&#13;
in? condition.&#13;
Baxter's Mandrake Bitters taken before&#13;
meals will ward off mieeoeee tod*&#13;
deirt to this 4r«4i ng-seeeon, -*•&#13;
_ _ _ _ QUI&#13;
cases. Book of testlrroniats and te sure* tmnttnenl raSa, s i . s . a emsn«sose.sesSkAtiaa«a, a.&#13;
VRs.apltepa&lt; ^ ^&#13;
O. fitBKM KSOwa.&#13;
SAVE FUEL&#13;
HEAT sOOmOffsl R00U8&#13;
B&#13;
BIOOKOMlSUfiB 1&#13;
by attaching BCRTOWS FO&#13;
to your stove pi&#13;
Saver one-third fuel Price, S4.&#13;
Your dealer will supply you.&#13;
not, order direct from us.&#13;
W . J . B U R T O N A O O .&#13;
*»C*«STWITV. MTTtOIT. MlCeV&#13;
Catalogue and testtaoniala ©a, request,&#13;
1 O ' S C U R E Fvitx f * *&gt;ivj *., o M P i i o ^&#13;
• w &gt;i i •{&#13;
.»&#13;
' ^ &gt; ' * i ' * " * ' r i t ^ - 5 ! , ^ , i '&#13;
V*^w • -* *W ^V J ^ ^ ^ ^ J R&#13;
' Fnaeie* MWri wo*«W&#13;
t&#13;
-%a-^li,-;t&gt;-&#13;
. .. •• A t t e e i ^ o n &gt;tn* &gt; r # l « e * t i&#13;
It is a i o n g time sjnesrany pves/dent&#13;
ban U e n t M target o&lt;-«wil.f«rioc4oQa&#13;
attack* *K t h e parens of the south&#13;
are u W roaWJiX-&lt;Sik i^eeJOeiit Boo«&amp;-&#13;
v*lt ft&gt;r iavlnjj/hfld a colored flaaiy&#13;
Booker 1 * Wpfrhigtw,, a t dinger, at&#13;
/ t h e White House. An extensive budget&#13;
of these attacks v a s l s a o e d »8atuff-&#13;
&lt;tay nlffbt. Mr. Washington says: "I&#13;
think the, n«^wH&gt;anei's ore getting up a&#13;
tpnsatkm in regard to it. and dp not&#13;
voiw* t h e opinion 'of 'the southern people.&#13;
However* fb^y are vurtjna: the&#13;
entire south more than they are President&#13;
Roosevelt. Tftey represent a&#13;
transient emotional sentiment on the&#13;
part of a {-IIIKH at i l i e j g b l t e people of&#13;
the south, but such feelings do not&#13;
last and do not indicate t h e general&#13;
feelings and opinion of the southern&#13;
people*: As far as I can learn of him&#13;
he makes no distinction a s to the color&#13;
of a man's cuticle when he wants to&#13;
get at facts, and is as ready to consult&#13;
with a uegro, Indian or Chinaman a s&#13;
he is with the Anglo-Saxon when he&#13;
wants tto get nt the whole situation io&#13;
a n y line of his work."&#13;
O e r i TOUT&#13;
We offer One Hundred Dollars&#13;
e»t*rrH ce*»«n«fiot t%&#13;
VWe, fee&#13;
Bheaey foi&#13;
fleneaMde&#13;
ootople&#13;
^ s e 5 &gt; 5 e T » &gt; n&#13;
ninem tranmatMW&#13;
] AnJm„w*9. 4 « * » * . * « « M B » ^ »,.,,,&#13;
. Jt i f t i p only w e for SwoHe**&#13;
fcnartlnaV Burning,; Sweating&#13;
re Is Ukeu utafBallrtOSV&#13;
.. _ , * ~~ Testimonials sent its*&#13;
fsrsi&#13;
— THe ©*to C a n i w l g n .&#13;
The Ohio campaign w a s opened nt&#13;
Delaware- on Saturday and w a s the&#13;
most largely attended opening meeting&#13;
for yenrs. * Tom L. Johnson. Cleveland's&#13;
Democrat mayor, w n s present.1&#13;
The greatest demonstratron of the day&#13;
was when Senator Hnmm&gt; declared&#13;
that he did not intend to quit politico&#13;
o r realgii as senator * or cha frma n of&#13;
the Repr.Wican national committee.&#13;
H e referred feelingly to the death of&#13;
President 'Mcivlnley and continued:&#13;
"Let notwvellow journals oi**'-blatant&#13;
d e m a g o g i e s elmta* yopr iait|i m - the&#13;
condition! of this country to-day. as&#13;
affecting rho,se who hay^ the responsibility.&#13;
I am not going to retire" from&#13;
' politics or from public duty. I have&#13;
no intention, of rcKlguing my chalrmanahlp&#13;
of tlte national committee." After&#13;
long continued applause, he continued:&#13;
"I am going to_sta_y there nnd see XPSII&#13;
and ForaUer and others through ifTF&#13;
takes ten years."&#13;
A Giswntlc Combination.&#13;
A new and gigautlc Industrial combination.&#13;
New York papers say, which&#13;
Is to consolidate the armor plate manufacture&#13;
of this country, enter into&#13;
the building of merchant and warships&#13;
for the world's trade and take&#13;
over the large and growing export&#13;
trade of the United States Steel Corporation,&#13;
is about to be organized by&#13;
J. P. Morgan and his allies. The story&#13;
is that while no ottlclal details are obtainable,&#13;
the project will not only consolidate&#13;
many details of steel and fuel&#13;
business of the country now separated,&#13;
but also serve to bring Into&#13;
closer ^ relationship these Interests&#13;
and"the great railroad interests&#13;
controlled by the Vanderbllts and the&#13;
Pennsylvania railroad. These interests&#13;
are also to be closely allied with&#13;
large Interests . of like character&#13;
abroad, and that the new company 1*&#13;
to be called the Anglo-American Steel&#13;
Company.&#13;
Good Annettes.&#13;
Surprising progress towards the&#13;
goal of self-support by the Apache&#13;
prisoners of war is recorded In a report&#13;
by Capt. Sayre, in charge of those&#13;
prisoners. H e shows that they now&#13;
have on hand-2,784 bead o f cattle of&#13;
their own raising, that they have built&#13;
many miles of n e w fences and repaired&#13;
as much more of the old and&#13;
that no clothing w a s issued to them&#13;
during the year. On t h e other hand,&#13;
these Indians are suffering severely&#13;
from tuberculosis, contracted by them&#13;
while in captivity in Florid* and there&#13;
were thirteen- more deaths than births&#13;
among them, *!hey -are declared to be&#13;
generally a moral, industrious, truthful,&#13;
honest and docile people.&#13;
A Serlona Blase.&#13;
The prosperous and thriving town of&#13;
Sydney, C. B.. w a s almost swept out&#13;
of existence Saturday by a fire which&#13;
started 'at 2 ©Yftx*.1 T h e flames,&#13;
which were / a n u e d by a 45-niUe gale,&#13;
•wept through the principal bnslness&#13;
portions of the town. Four blocks of&#13;
the finest•'. business buildings are in&#13;
ashes. Th*»puiy tbtng tlnfT sfited ffie&#13;
city from, total destruction! w a s a&#13;
heavy ram storm wbiqh set lu after&#13;
dark and, as the wind decreased hi&#13;
fury, the firemen nnd hundreds ejf&#13;
miners* succeeded In getting the fire&#13;
v under control, f^oss, about $400,000.&#13;
Cinder Tons of H o o k . . ,&#13;
Fifty tons of rock caved in t h e&#13;
rapid transit tunnel a t O n e Hundred&#13;
and Sixty-seventh street and Broadway;&#13;
N e w York, Friday, carrying&#13;
death to an undetermined number of&#13;
.the 40 mwi who.were at work ftar&#13;
down IHJIOW the surface in the burrow.&#13;
Foreman Madden w a s found&#13;
pinned down by torn* e f broken rock,&#13;
. only the feet being clear of the mass&#13;
of debris. Many of the other work*&#13;
meo~were imprisoned^&lt;«^«£ftatyotamper&#13;
of tfte- «xo*va4*oaV a«d£fe#lr fate&#13;
will not be known until the rescuers&#13;
reach them.&#13;
.•(&#13;
TooVBaae, a powder to nt shaken; into women.&#13;
and S a o * w ^ ^ *&#13;
nnwnr^»' ••^^wm^F^F — ^&#13;
t h e tnots. At all Druggist* and aWo*&#13;
0^*lrlPia»flWfc • » " * * • ••TO'O^eij^aaw ^Pvaajpw' • or eus*assenn*e ^nj^p^*&#13;
4m* Allan ft OUnatad, Lilto*; N. T. \f&#13;
All Godt w s n U j# williug hea^t# and&#13;
e will do a l i t h e r e s t&#13;
^ .&#13;
itfeeap. but betati^iajrerist Ire.&#13;
AB* votrm otx&gt;TH«a FADMOr r t7M Bam' Htenehinff Blue And BAJC* tkeni&#13;
whrteef»tm, »e. AtsUgao^jrroeare. .,&#13;
, BrooWyn., M. JC« Oat. M.-Peoi** wtw&#13;
have hemaechje know wn»t t h e / ore. k*t&#13;
those «*ou t*ke OArtUtd lUsAsVho Hew.&#13;
• t j m o ^ « h - *"3S938fte-&#13;
V a torn &gt;e a good Me^ener a&#13;
wNmw ^(B'PJ'Wl^WaaaeleTp™/'^P^rnn•'•yHan^^aMpjaWJnyWW . -.&#13;
Mililona of • * « « • » use Wiaard Oil&#13;
fog paUi every year and eaU i t Uletaad.&#13;
Aaet t h e drngyist, h e knows.&#13;
Pise's Owe le the beet medkiae m ever qeed&#13;
for «11 aleotlessof the tbroee tad langs.—^TM.&#13;
O. BsoauoT, Vsaboxea. lad., Feb. U, i*)&gt;.&#13;
IMvE mYOBiu mnaumEam nr sss:s A' 0#f&gt;eaaeaf assO) |awaweveagaae&gt;&#13;
^iaaartete Mors leaal l a i i i i i e i&#13;
No&#13;
in«ay put of the Unite*&#13;
X c e . . Benotst BidMlaav&#13;
W.N.U.—rjfcVrBOlT—1&#13;
-m&gt;&#13;
NOV. 30™&#13;
tsto nu&#13;
*&gt;&#13;
rAta. •efi-Wh-&#13;
#AZO* ST*OK&#13;
$*t*6S,&#13;
^ ^a&#13;
FT&#13;
. . ( .&#13;
»0 TdtS.&#13;
tfSSS spmr*A*t*o0 mm** too *+o nes,&#13;
jfor scr an vt* PIATCD&#13;
* * » * J .&#13;
nu*WMfic*.&#13;
MATtK BOX.&#13;
JMUti.&#13;
0CM&#13;
« n a&#13;
•tuo* str&#13;
« * * « £ .&#13;
«09 M M .&#13;
PROM S T A R&#13;
HORSESHOE&#13;
"SPEARHEAD"&#13;
STANDARD NAVY&#13;
ff &lt;J.T, » »&#13;
PIPER HEIDSIECK&#13;
B O O T J A C K&#13;
u tf&#13;
ii ff&#13;
ii&#13;
u&#13;
DRUMHOND NATURAL LEAF&#13;
OLD PEACHY HONEY&#13;
HOBBY SPUN ROLL"&#13;
J O L L Y T A R&#13;
E.RICL6REENVILLE ff&#13;
1902.&#13;
TOOL set.&#13;
/SO TA6S&#13;
•••: * &gt; * ' $ »&#13;
• • • , • " : &lt; &lt; &amp; ,&#13;
' . . • ' • •'•••ytn'.4'.1&#13;
' ''A:rt&#13;
.)¾&#13;
ts " « .&#13;
tsittr,&#13;
ntijourou&#13;
AMtruu.&#13;
t*0 TAG*, »(f$U»t&#13;
^"V.&#13;
m&#13;
6WTZA KtHK -*6*»s: *§ 7AOX&#13;
SI/CA* s#ru '*o*£*:m to r*€t&#13;
SAiT AMO ***•*€» SIT.&#13;
ii If GRANGERTWIST 26*AM6ExTmsrjA6$bein&lt;i equal to one of others mentioned.&#13;
«*Qood L u c k , " «• C r o s s B o w , " " O l d H o n e s t y , " *&#13;
• • M a s t e r W o r k m a n , " " S i c k l e , " •• B r a n d y w i n e , "&#13;
• • P l a n e t , " " N e p t u n e , " " R a z o r , " " T e n n e s s e e&#13;
C r o s s T i e , " •• Ole V a r g i n y . " a&#13;
T A 0 5 M A Y * B E ASSORTED IN SBCURINQ P R E S E N T S .&#13;
Our new illustrated&#13;
CATALOGUE OF PRESENTS&#13;
FOR 1902&#13;
will include many articles not shown hero. It will contain the&#13;
most attractive List of Presents ever ottered lor Tafs, and will&#13;
, be sent by mail on receipt of postafe—two cents.&#13;
(Catalogue will be ready for mailing about January xst, toos.)&#13;
Our offer of Prostata for Tags will expire Nov. soth* ioe*.&#13;
COKTUOWTAX. TOBACCO COM?ANY.&#13;
Write your name and address piminfy on outside of packages&#13;
containing Tags, and send them and requests for Presents t o&#13;
C. Hy. BROWN,&#13;
424! Potaoai Ave.,&#13;
3 C LoujaSt Mo«&#13;
too&#13;
tAPt&#13;
W/c/rti tmreK&#13;
srem WIHO 'ostr&#13;
00 CA*r.&#13;
&amp;&#13;
7S KfS.&#13;
J&#13;
• • • • ' " * S f t&#13;
•M&#13;
l r •&gt; 1 , ^ i v ™ r ••' •••••'&#13;
' ^ M l . ' ' • . _ . * L»„- * • • ' ' . : • ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ¾ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ '-v •^^^vTW^fip^P^^^? w*ffl$y&#13;
L fc-t*!":&#13;
, 1 •''•&#13;
..,^.,.&#13;
' • * : •&#13;
.¾&#13;
mm *&#13;
Hp;^';' H H L T ^ ,&#13;
Bl'^'r&#13;
KP "•-&#13;
•}','•'•*&#13;
^ ¾ *,&gt;*'-.&#13;
w ' • • • * ' • "&#13;
DT^:I*.'',-'*.!V .&#13;
m&amp; •&#13;
IP" (&amp;£;• ^&#13;
$ ' * $ ' • /&#13;
• ; &gt; • •&#13;
• ' • * . , ' .&#13;
V&#13;
' • ' ' . " . ' • • .&#13;
'&amp;'&#13;
•";~v&#13;
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W&amp;'&#13;
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lH+i.mti&amp;Hmti'i'-i-m. • •*&lt;• , » * "W*u*&gt;.'rt.i#»-*"^*^^ \ r # f^d*** »***.#+&lt; •'4*^*-&lt;»*-'•*» ' ^ " W • ^ ^ ^ y v ' - ^ ^ f c y ^ - - . i •»••'!'" • iafoi»**r»;y^*s» "HW»i'&lt;vv.^* - - - , ^ ,s-, .;•&lt;;••'• VN V*VN rf-wl f »*«*.v.*'»*' • * * t t •****,«. »r•^* i « ,.»4j|.^M»*f*yW&#13;
V&#13;
anr** ^&gt;»&lt;.*iiiyt»m^&gt;w &lt; H ^ l k W V *&#13;
XyT"^ -S-3* WwW ? 7 i^f'^T''^1'-''!';1'*'&#13;
* •&#13;
• y - i y i n 1 H i W ii^ii|(iln wfl'in m y ,&#13;
F. U ANORCWW&amp;Ca FHOMtttTOMk&#13;
TI^S»ATvO(Jr.t^19W,&#13;
• r * •P MP&#13;
1 mi mn&gt;in^i»^f»»» m»'nm mmmmm&#13;
JKtifc * • &amp;&#13;
• * « *Nsp" « .&#13;
.^ • » • • 11 • • • • » » « — — — » — ^ l | | • • ' i a &gt; w i a ^ — y p " « « H | » " i ni*^,—J*j«iii ' (neap——»&#13;
I t i k « a i d that i t w o m e u were&#13;
aiveft the bajlot, it would be t h e&#13;
death o f chivalry. Justice would&#13;
be worlfe;1hj^pe^ women tfca»&#13;
ohivalryi i f they could not have&#13;
both* X working girl p a t the&#13;
matter i f ja aatshell when she said&#13;
that she would gladly stand for'&#13;
twenty-minute* iu the street car&#13;
going home at night, if that would&#13;
enable her to g e t tne same pay&#13;
that a man would have had for&#13;
doing her day's work.&#13;
What's four Face Worth!&#13;
Sometimes a fortune, but never, if&#13;
yo« havea sallow complain^a jauu- f d&#13;
diced lootrmoth'patebea apd blotches. Jlli11" " - ^ " t - Z T ^ZT^ « .&#13;
TinJMAmitrj CM m a t Shealt he StM*&#13;
W Cawftilljr by th* Far»er.&#13;
• in . mi' ' 1 i..&#13;
As the sugar beet business i s a&#13;
growing one in this state everything&#13;
about it that can be learned&#13;
by the farmer should be studied&#13;
careiully. Prof. Kedaie of che&#13;
Agriooltural College is perhaps as&#13;
good authority on all subjects a s&#13;
there are in the state aud we publish&#13;
at length an article by him.&#13;
Whether there i s a factory ever&#13;
started in Pinokney or not it will&#13;
pay our farmer readers to keep&#13;
posted on the subject:&#13;
Oertaia industries in Michigan&#13;
have produced large wealth, of&#13;
which the farmers have received&#13;
only a small part Lumbering has&#13;
made a large class of millionaires,&#13;
on tbe skin, all signs of hirer Trouble.&#13;
But Dr..£ing'8 New Mfe Pills give&#13;
Clear Si;n, Rosy Cheeks, tticb Complexion.&#13;
Only 25c at F, A. Sigler's&#13;
drug store.&#13;
The /post office department&#13;
states that rural mail boxes are&#13;
^ntitled^&amp;o the same degreejofpro^&#13;
tection ;as the regular delivery&#13;
toxes situated in the city. The&#13;
statute that applies to the one is&#13;
also applicable to the other, and&#13;
the punishment for the one offense&#13;
of meddling with the boxes is&#13;
the same as for tbe other, a heavy&#13;
fine or a long term of imprisonmeut.&#13;
A rieitdisli Attack.&#13;
An attack was lately made on C. P.&#13;
Coliier of Cherokee, Iowa, that nearly&#13;
proved fatal. It came through his&#13;
kidneys. His back got so lam« h«&#13;
conld not stoop without great pain&#13;
nor si»&gt; in chair except proped by cushions.&#13;
No remedy helped him until he&#13;
tried Electric Bitters which effected&#13;
su^b a - wonderful ehansre that he&#13;
ceived only ordinary wagesT T h e&#13;
salt industry has made fortunes&#13;
for many, but the only decided&#13;
benefit to the farmers was the reduction&#13;
of the price of his salt&#13;
The discovery of large deposits of&#13;
coal will mainly benefit speculators&#13;
who buy options on farms&#13;
ere coal is likely to be developwrites&#13;
he feels like a new man. This&#13;
tnt'vaeloua medicine cures backache&#13;
and kidney trouble, purifies the blood&#13;
end build&amp;upyour health. Onlv 50c&#13;
at P. A Bigler's drug store.&#13;
The postoffice department has&#13;
decided to place the late President&#13;
MeKinley's bead on the new&#13;
issue of postal card&amp; which will&#13;
appear shortly after December" 1st&#13;
next. The design, as explained by&#13;
Acting Postmaster-General Madden,&#13;
includes the year of birth and&#13;
year of death immediately at the&#13;
left and right respectively of t b e&#13;
name "McKiuley," which will be&#13;
directly under the head. Above&#13;
the head will he the words "Series&#13;
of 1901," aud above that "One&#13;
Cent." The inscription "United&#13;
States of America," now appearing&#13;
on the postal cards, will be&#13;
abandoned aud replaced.at a point&#13;
lower down so as to leave the&#13;
space at the upper part of the&#13;
card, about one-third of the width&#13;
of tbe card, clear for postmarks.&#13;
Tot causes night Alarm.&#13;
"One nitfht my brother's bai y was&#13;
taken with Croup," writes Mrs. J. C&#13;
Snider, ol Cittenden, Ivy , 'it seemed&#13;
it would strangle before wo could vet&#13;
a doct&lt;n\ so we gave quick relief* and&#13;
permantly cured it. W« always keep&#13;
it in the bOu.«e to protect our children&#13;
from Croup and Whoping Cough. It&#13;
cured me of a chronic'.-ronchial trouble&#13;
that no other remedy would relieve.&#13;
Infallible- tor L'ougue, Colds. Throat&#13;
and Lua#r troubles. 50c and $1.00.&#13;
Trial botfcfeb free at P. A. Sigler's&#13;
drugstore.&#13;
ed and the land owner will get the&#13;
smallest share. Speculators&#13;
bought up the pine lands and capitalists&#13;
developed the'salt industry;&#13;
the salt trusts took possession&#13;
of the market and the coal&#13;
trust bids fair to take the larger&#13;
share of the profit into its hands&#13;
and dictate prices for the public.&#13;
Thus the owner of these sources&#13;
of wealth are pushed aside and&#13;
others reap the profits. I t is natural&#13;
that capital, energy and business&#13;
capacity should receive a&#13;
large part of the profits, and co mplaiut&#13;
ra-pot^Bade-on Ihis account.&#13;
eration of thje farmers i n raising&#13;
the beet*,; and i t i s s e e n ' that&#13;
monopoly and trwsfcs iu the sugar&#13;
state. Farming is free t o all, and&#13;
any man can build a factory who&#13;
has the necessary cash.&#13;
Muoh of the sugar that comes&#13;
from abroadlneeds refining.before&#13;
it is fit to be placed on the tawket*&#13;
The sugar refinersin eastern cities&#13;
for a time had a monopoly of this&#13;
business, selling the refined sugar&#13;
at their own price, and thus fixing&#13;
the price for refining to shit ^hemselves.&#13;
The fact that the price of&#13;
"common stock in American Sugar&#13;
Befinig Co.,*1 Septembei 3 0&#13;
was mare than 121 is evidence&#13;
that it is a paying concern. Having&#13;
a monopoly of refined sugar&#13;
they fixed the price for any locality&#13;
and season. The practice of putting&#13;
up the price of SJ2gar„_acerrt&#13;
a pound during t h e canning&#13;
Season, and then allowing i t to&#13;
sink to its normal level when the&#13;
canning flurry passed by was an&#13;
illustration of the tactics of the&#13;
sugar trust.&#13;
The monopoly of the sugar trust&#13;
is threatened by the increasing&#13;
proa^uctionofgranulated beet s u -&#13;
rrvrspr •ntccr-tjxoeanEs-£ . ^ ^ . . , - ^ . , 1 - . .&#13;
&lt; * • • • A r RfE FATTERJ&#13;
^rorn^sr?s^&#13;
Lord Bc^eberry's warning h»»j&#13;
become true sJrejidj^ ^If yjju;^&#13;
no$ ooui^qj Jhe'\.|S|M* ,.:Jr«ife the&#13;
liquor ti^wiitoeartroHhe co n ^&#13;
- - **•**- , , . • * • g ^ . . ; « ( W k ' ! ^ ; . ^V. &amp; * $ •&#13;
-«Ki^-,*.*ir. , = - ^ '&#13;
..'/.#"* Dr. Joseph Parker s ^ thuigsi&#13;
in ,a stirring way: ,4I ojwjd avike&#13;
agardenof Eden in tne east end&#13;
of London in three ^nonths, if I&#13;
had my own wayr I should do&#13;
nothing but bum down all the&#13;
breweries and shut up all the public&#13;
bouses.*1&#13;
«v&#13;
MAGAZINE&#13;
At-&#13;
A UWES'MACAZWL&#13;
IMJUOUho auhold MBtfi.ftetlon.ate.&#13;
^SitVb -- - -&#13;
•ertb*todny.or, MB4'«'. lor litert ooaf.&#13;
•tfdr •«•»«• wwtod. S«n4 for tons*.&#13;
Stylith, Reliable, Simple, Up-t*.&#13;
date* Economical and Absolately&#13;
Feciect-ritdng Paper Patterae.&#13;
•'•1&#13;
WCAULdm&#13;
' 1 am not muoh of a mathematition,"&#13;
said the cigarette, "but I&#13;
can add to a man's nervous troubles,&#13;
I can subtract from his physical&#13;
energy, I can multiply hts~4-&#13;
aches and pains, I can divide h i s&#13;
mental powers, I can take interest&#13;
from his work and discount his&#13;
chances of success.&#13;
»•&#13;
R«qvtc»eat In Paee.&#13;
"He thought the gun wasn't loaded&#13;
"But it really was tended V&#13;
"After b* found It out It wasn't."—&#13;
PblladeJpbfrPress^&#13;
Stepped into Live Coals.&#13;
"When a .child I burned rny loo!&#13;
frightfully.*: writes W. H. Eads. 0'&#13;
JonwviUe,V'V*H.. " which UMII«I» I ho» r&gt;&#13;
bis leg norss f r 30 years, hut Hm-k&#13;
Ian'8,Arni(f| !^alve Hhn'iy IMII-»«IJ I»&gt;&#13;
aittr svsrjibing else failed, intniiible&#13;
tor Bbi'Bv, Scalds Curs, Sore^, Uruise^&#13;
and Pile*. Sold' by T. A. Sigler 25c.&#13;
But there is one field in which&#13;
the farmer is in evidence, and&#13;
from the nature of the case must&#13;
remain there, viz: sugar beets for&#13;
manufacturiug beet sugar. Here&#13;
the farmer is the first party to&#13;
consult and conciliate. I f for any&#13;
reason he refuses to raise the sugar&#13;
beets, the beet sugar industry&#13;
comes to a full stop. The farmer&#13;
c a rum and 8 the situation. The result&#13;
is that a fair division of the&#13;
profits of this industry is made&#13;
and.the farmer receives a proportion&#13;
that is satisfactory. Not only&#13;
is this so, but this is the only i n -&#13;
dustry where his equitable proportion&#13;
of the profits comes directly&#13;
into the pocket of the farmer in&#13;
cash. The price does not depend&#13;
upon quotations in Chicago, New&#13;
York or Liverpool, but is determined&#13;
by conditions at home. The&#13;
sugar produced in our state is of&#13;
such high quality that it dees not&#13;
require refining but it is ready for&#13;
use just as it comes from the factory.&#13;
I n this respect the beet&#13;
sugar m*de in .Michigan differs&#13;
from most commercial sugars.&#13;
AmericRu machinery and skill&#13;
have brought the process to such&#13;
perfection that no refiniug is here&#13;
required, the sugar as it comes&#13;
from our factories is fit for immediate&#13;
use granulated sugar of&#13;
high quality. Baw sugar requiring&#13;
refining is not made in our&#13;
state. I'he process is thus removed&#13;
from any posibility of a&#13;
monopoly. Any farmer can raise&#13;
the beets, and capitalists can put&#13;
up a iactory for making the sugar.&#13;
Competition is absolutely free on&#13;
both sides* No trust i s possible&#13;
under such conditions; t h e only&#13;
trust required *s that the farmer&#13;
;and manufacturer should trust&#13;
each other. T o class the beet&#13;
sugar industry with the sugar&#13;
trust is absurd. Take these two&#13;
facts ( 1 ) that the American method&#13;
enables the manufacturer to&#13;
turn out refined RU«ar, the only&#13;
kind sent tint famrour sugar factories,&#13;
and ( 2 ) beet sugar factories&#13;
are possible ouly by Vie co-op.&#13;
gar by the American method, fit&#13;
tor immediate use as it leaves the&#13;
factory and needs no refining.&#13;
This production of sugar for consumption&#13;
is a fatal blow to the&#13;
monopoly of the sugar trust. I f&#13;
we can produce in the factory refined&#13;
sugar i n sufficient quanity&#13;
to supply our people, the refiners'&#13;
occupation is gone. That a natural&#13;
manufacturing process should&#13;
thus supplant a grinding monopoly&#13;
should be a matter of congratulation&#13;
for our people.&#13;
The sugar trust recognizes the&#13;
dangerrand within the- week h a s&#13;
When Frances Willard was conducting&#13;
a great campaign in one&#13;
of the states on the issue of licens&#13;
e or no-license, a' liquor dealex&#13;
•Aa*d? t ofowrn !,* o«r •b.y' 8aa«tUl b&gt;o mM orfr&#13;
T H S MoCAlI. CO..&#13;
rU-ltS-m Wilt 31ft ft, WWVMHL&#13;
Thts eignetare is on every box , 1 the geaulM&#13;
Laxative BronxKfrrinlae M M *&#13;
the remedy that core* •&#13;
'&#13;
announced a cut in price of refined&#13;
sugars, to 3 1-2 cents a pound in&#13;
all the region where beet sugar&#13;
competes with the trust sugar.&#13;
This reduction of more than 31&#13;
per cent in the price of granulated&#13;
sugar is surprising, but it is&#13;
a blow at an innocent rival, and&#13;
not a concession to the general&#13;
consumer. If the rival i s crushed&#13;
the old prices will be again imposed.&#13;
This industry should prosper&#13;
because:&#13;
1. I t is the means by which&#13;
the people can subve rt a huge&#13;
monopoly.&#13;
2. I t is a legitimate industry,&#13;
brought to marvelous degree of&#13;
perfection by American skill and&#13;
ingenuity, and the people have a&#13;
right to its full benefits.&#13;
3. The large.amount of capital&#13;
invested which deserves protection&#13;
Thirteen sugar factories have been&#13;
erected in our state at a cost of&#13;
$7,000,000. Next year the number&#13;
of factories will be increased to&#13;
twenty. There are now growing&#13;
60,000 acres of beets in our state.&#13;
4. I t is the money getting crop&#13;
for our farmers. Last year there&#13;
were paid to Michigan farmers $1&#13;
600,000 for sugai beets. I n Bay&#13;
county in 1900 the mortgages on&#13;
fifty-one farms were paid off by&#13;
money received for sugar beets.&#13;
The price of farm lauds,, near sugar&#13;
factories has increased by 15&#13;
to $10 an acre.&#13;
5. I t is a borne industry, and&#13;
tne benefits abide with our people.&#13;
6. I t is the natural antagonist&#13;
of monopoly, and by i t s very&#13;
nature is incapable of formiug a&#13;
trust of any kind.&#13;
• 7. • I t is the only great manufacturing&#13;
industry in which the&#13;
farmer must secure his share of&#13;
profits.&#13;
B . (X K E D Z I E .&#13;
Agricultural College, O c t 7, 1901.&#13;
said to his supporters: "We are&#13;
bound to win; we have the drinking&#13;
men on our side; we have the&#13;
foreigners on osr side; we have&#13;
tbe money on our side; and money&#13;
is power and don't you forget it."&#13;
Two nights latter, Frances Willard&#13;
said in the same hall, "We are&#13;
bound to win; we have the women&#13;
on our Bide; we have the Christian&#13;
church on our side; we have God&#13;
on our side; and God i s power,&#13;
and don't you forget i t "&#13;
«te&gt;f&gt; t b e Ceufffc.and w o r k s o f f t h e&#13;
Cold.&#13;
Lcxative Bromo-Quinine Tablets cure&#13;
a cold in one day. No rure, no pay.&#13;
Price 25 cents.&#13;
The SUlleet Birds.&#13;
Dodo is tbe Portuguese name for&#13;
simpleton, and It is given to the silliest&#13;
bird that ever lived; Three hundred&#13;
years ago, when the Portuguese first&#13;
visited the island of Mauritius, they&#13;
found a large number of these birds.&#13;
They were about the size of a large&#13;
swan, blackish gray in color and having&#13;
only a bunch of feathers in place&#13;
of a tall and little, useless wings.&#13;
More stupid and foolish birds could&#13;
not be imagined. They ran about making&#13;
a silly, hissing noise like a goose,&#13;
rnd the sailors easily knocked them&#13;
over with their paddles. They couldn't&#13;
fly, they couldn't swim, they couldn't&#13;
run at any great speed, and, as for&#13;
fighting, they were the greatest cowards&#13;
In the world. They were much&#13;
too stupid to build a nest and so they&#13;
dropped an egg and went off to let it&#13;
hatch as best it could.&#13;
A Pattl Satire.&#13;
During one of Adelina Pattl's last&#13;
tours in tbe United States, the following&#13;
preliminary notice was published&#13;
by a western editor:&#13;
Mme. Patti Nlcolinl, the eminent&#13;
vocalist and farewelllst, will come to&#13;
us for positively tbe last time next&#13;
year. All those who expect to die before&#13;
the year after next will do well&#13;
to hear the human nightingale on this&#13;
trip, for Patti never says goodby&#13;
twice In the same year, and to die&#13;
without hearing her strike her high&#13;
two thousand dollar note is to seek the&#13;
hereafter in woeful ignorance of tbe&#13;
heights to which a woman with good&#13;
lungs, a castle in Wales and who only&#13;
uses one kind of soap can* soar when&#13;
she tries."&#13;
Subscribe for Dispatch.&#13;
iVM»«vvs«,»*^^^»ygMs^«Mv&gt;^&lt;v^n&#13;
POSTAL a MOSSY,&#13;
wiowtit+owi. The&#13;
Griswold&#13;
House el&#13;
npm3ooLddeam«e,&#13;
Hotel, locate*&#13;
in the keort tf&#13;
DETROIT. *•«*•&#13;
Rites, $2, $2.50, $3 per Day.&#13;
Con. OMAN* HIVBN 4 em«wOL» Br.&#13;
STATE OF MICHIGAN, County of LiyiDgstos&#13;
At a eeasion of the Probate Court for said County,&#13;
held at the Probate Offloe in the Village of&#13;
Howell, on Monday the 80th day of September, In&#13;
the year one thousand nine hundred and one.&#13;
Present, Eupene A. Stowe Judge of Probate, In&#13;
the Matter of the Estate of&#13;
ORLA B. JACKSON, Deoeaeed.&#13;
On reading andfllinR thepeUtlon duly verifiedot&#13;
Ella M. Jackson, praying that a certain instrument&#13;
now on file in this court, purporting to be&#13;
thelaet Will and Testament of said deceased, may&#13;
be admitted to probate^&#13;
Thereupon it is ordered that Tuesday the 89th&#13;
day of October next, at ltf o'clock in the forenoon,&#13;
at said Probate Office, be assigned for the&#13;
hearing of said petition.&#13;
It is further ordered that a copy of this order be&#13;
published in the PINCKNXY DISPATCH, a newspaper&#13;
printed and circulating in sal£ county, three&#13;
saccebBive weeks previous to said day of hearing.&#13;
EUGBHS A. STOWB,&#13;
W 3 J ad ge of Probate&#13;
Railroad Guide.&#13;
The Hint book printed in Minnesota&#13;
about 18 years before to* A N * issue of&#13;
a Mfrspaps* J» S t Stod.&#13;
Most Sfttlsfjrtnafr&#13;
They were speaking of the billionaire's&#13;
insufferable pretensions.&#13;
"Upon what meat does this our&#13;
Csesar feed that he has grown so&#13;
great?" exclaimed Mordaunt bitterly.&#13;
"Mint's meat, possibly!" observed&#13;
Meltravera, trying to be cheaply witty&#13;
while yet preserving tbe easy grace of&#13;
a map of tbe world.—Detroit Free&#13;
Press.&#13;
Mrs, Notepoke—John, don't yen think&#13;
lfs about time for us to call on our&#13;
new neighbors?&#13;
Husband—Why, they only moved in&#13;
this morning.&#13;
Mrs, Noftpoke-Oh, I know, bat all&#13;
tnelr stuff will be downstairs and I can&#13;
see It better.—Ohio State Journal.&#13;
TO d u e t t COHI m o n o ©wf&#13;
T*If»» l.iixMMre fV'Wio Quinine / f s h&#13;
irta.,. Ail dj UKtfUk- r«iund ih»rnoos7&#13;
&gt; *ND 8TEAHSHIP t//Vf?8* %P&#13;
Popular route for Ann Arboi, Toledo&#13;
and point? Kast, South, and for&#13;
Howell, Owo?3o, Alma, Mt Pleasant&#13;
Cadillac, Manistee, traverse City and&#13;
points in Northwestern Michigan.&#13;
W. H. B s i n w r ,&#13;
G. P . A. Toledo&#13;
PEBE MARQUETTE&#13;
Aollxos,*., Tewa.. 1 , l O O l .&#13;
Trains leave South Lyon as follows:&#13;
For Detroit aud Eest,&#13;
10:36 a. m., 3:04 p. m., 8:68 p. mS&#13;
For Grand Rapids, North and West,&#13;
9:45 a. m., 2:08 p. m. 6:20 p. M.&#13;
For Saginaw and Bay City,&#13;
10:36 a. m., 3:04 p. m., 8:68 p. au&#13;
For Toledo and South, 10:86 a. m.&#13;
FSAIIK BAT, H. F* MOSLL&amp;lt,&#13;
Afttt, Sooth Lyon. G. P. ^ nelroit.&#13;
ttrandTrnsk Railway Sjstann&#13;
¥.44 a. m.&#13;
was a BiWe. i t was printed in ISM. M it fails to cars. B. W. flrorVf t i * v ^ - ^ 1 5 .&#13;
aatsre it on each tax. 25*.&#13;
| , *45p.m.&#13;
£ 4:46 p.m.&#13;
ij &gt;lt,and&#13;
»ns&#13;
frxp.&#13;
&gt;"»*, and&#13;
feUOone&#13;
A:i«a.ai. «&#13;
*0«.*. f&#13;
tratastovs tarettjfc&#13;
asd Detroit.&#13;
A&#13;
^M^m^^^w^^ immm-igm , v&#13;
&lt;,..,.&#13;
\r ;&#13;
r;';4ft&#13;
^ r ^ » » i y » . i I.IIWI.*M&#13;
. . . . , , . ' , , . » . ' . . . . » . . - . • . . ' . . • ' • ' , ' .&#13;
. . • W t . * . i t M * * ' * * ' - * - ' * * . * » » . . # • « * * * * .^ ,* '-.-»• * W H ~ I,.T&#13;
«*••« *&gt;jmm&#13;
.•r-i*....&#13;
,.«"'&#13;
:¾.&#13;
# •&#13;
"-'•'i.&#13;
JEWEL&#13;
STOVES&#13;
LARGEST ^gflMINfflEWRlil&#13;
.*.* ,**&#13;
v-^fflikuiayji^-JiL^ - +.\&#13;
Ihiting a&gt; local etectioBL iii a German&#13;
tows only &lt;*e BMM&gt; appeared it tbe'f ii •»*»!» v«a**rWi«*« "auWrt*."&#13;
The leading stoves a&amp;d ranges in the world. Unequalled&#13;
lor perfect construction, economy of fuel, handsome appearance.&#13;
Qyer 3,000,000 in use. Famous for 35 years,&#13;
f o r sale by leading dealers everywhere. Look for the&#13;
trade-mark, and insist on seeing the genuine JEWELS.&#13;
Jswal M«TM • * • aali tw&#13;
TEEPEE -&amp;CiBWELL.&#13;
D e w e y s m d t h e C h i l d r e n .&#13;
"If Admiral Dewey's hosts of admirers&#13;
could have seen him as I saw him&#13;
one lovely evening recently," said a&#13;
Portsmouth woman, "they would love&#13;
the man as sincerely as they commend&#13;
tiie brave and farsighted sea fighter.&#13;
An A w a k e o e r .&#13;
A preacher, raising his eyes from his&#13;
desk in the midst of'his sermon, was&#13;
paralyzed with amazement to see his&#13;
rude son in the gallery pelting the&#13;
hearers in the pews below with horse&#13;
chestnuts. But while the good man&#13;
* H e - a t e e J - © B ^ l M ^ ^ ^ ^^^^^ &amp; bystander^&#13;
hotel at Little Harbor, where the memeries&#13;
of gallant colonial days yet linger.&#13;
He was talking with friends&#13;
when -A girl, still only a child, said, 'I&#13;
wish I could speak to Admiral Dewey.'&#13;
A woman heard her and answered,&#13;
'You shall, and so shall all the chilyoung&#13;
hopeful cried out:&#13;
"You "tend to your preaching, daddy.&#13;
I'll keep 'em awake."&#13;
THEY GAMB, FIFTY OB MORE.&#13;
dren.' They came, boys and girls, fifty&#13;
or more. Their pleasure, their pride,&#13;
as the admiral, greeted them you can&#13;
well Imagine, but only the French&#13;
artist of the middle period of the nineteenth&#13;
century could depict on canvas&#13;
the grace, the winning courtesy, of the&#13;
admiral's attitude as he greeted them.&#13;
"'But I am not surprised that the&#13;
little ones love him,' said another woman&#13;
who was prcseDt. ^'Portsmouth&#13;
knows the man; the world only knows&#13;
the hero.' " A&#13;
A Llffht R e p a s t .&#13;
Hungry Horace—Kind lady, can't ye&#13;
gimme somepin ter eat? I ain't ate&#13;
nothin seuce day before yesterday.&#13;
Kind Lady—And what did you eat&#13;
then?&#13;
Hungry Horace—Nothin but de marbet&#13;
report iu an old papery -Baltimore&#13;
American.&#13;
nonttnatton dest&#13;
"Whom do 70s nominate?' inquired&#13;
the ©»ciai'&#13;
"MyaetfP' wag the answer. '- v&#13;
"Do you accept the nomination V&#13;
"Well, no."&#13;
The officer laughed and said:&#13;
"Then we mast try again. Whom do&#13;
you nominate?"&#13;
"Myself!" uYou accept the nomination?"&#13;
"No."&#13;
A subdued "donnerwetterT' escaped&#13;
the lipa of the perplexed official, but be&#13;
went on:&#13;
"For the third time—whom do you&#13;
nominate?*'&#13;
"Myself!" same the invariable reply.&#13;
"Do you accept the nomination?'&#13;
The man rose up, and a smile of&#13;
satisfaction spread over hfs face as he&#13;
answered proudly:&#13;
"Having been three times solicited&#13;
by my fellow citizens to accept the&#13;
nomination, I can no longer decline to&#13;
accede to their wishes." He then retired.—&#13;
Tit-Bits.&#13;
3 M P&#13;
SH OKIES&#13;
*&#13;
T "&#13;
m^&gt;y*nd^yhilte^r., the other day&#13;
got out of his $15,000 German automobile,&#13;
which is tjie prkie of Newport&#13;
with a queer expression on his face. *&#13;
"Run into anybody?" queried a friend&#13;
casually.&#13;
Mr. Vanderbilt's expression expanded&#13;
into a slow, full smile.&#13;
"Well, ye-es—In a way," be said.&#13;
"The other day at a dinner I ran across&#13;
.an old bore of a fellow, who expressed&#13;
the most ardent ambition to have a&#13;
spin In my 'bubble.' As I didn't take&#13;
any notice of his hints my gentleman&#13;
deliberately asked to be allowed te&#13;
have a ride, to which I had to cooseat,&#13;
as be was a friend of the family, you&#13;
know, though I made an Inward vow&#13;
to shake him up a bit You see, be&#13;
had never before been on an automobile.&#13;
Well, I took him along today.&#13;
I started at a quiet little skim very&#13;
prettily, taking care not to increase the&#13;
speed gradually, as of course he would&#13;
not then have felt it. But just when&#13;
he was in the midst of an ecstatic eulo-&#13;
Orlarin of "a Horn." gy on the 'calm, even, floating motion&#13;
A western man at a fastrtonable-bar -of automobiling' I turned, on Cull speed&#13;
In New York called for a horn and&#13;
then had to tell the drink mixer that&#13;
It was whisky he wanted before he got&#13;
his order filled.&#13;
"Curious," commented the westerner,&#13;
"how people In the east can't understand&#13;
plain English. Anybody down&#13;
in Kentucky knows what 'a horn' is&#13;
and now it got its name."&#13;
"How did it get its name?" inquired&#13;
Question Answered.&#13;
Yes, August Flower still has the&#13;
largest sale of any medicine in the&#13;
civilized world. Your mothers' and&#13;
grandmothers' never thought of usinj?&#13;
a^ytbtng^fee^for4fHl4geetion—or Bil f-silk-garter-a^her werlrting Her garter&#13;
nusness. Doctors were scarce, and&#13;
they seldom heard of Appendicitis,&#13;
Nervous Prostration or heart failure,&#13;
etc. They used -August Flower to&#13;
clean out the system and stop fermentation&#13;
of and'.Reestd food, regulate the&#13;
action of the liver, stimulate the nervous&#13;
and organic action of the system,&#13;
and that is all they took when feeling&#13;
dull and bad with headaches and other&#13;
aches. You only need a few doses&#13;
of Greens August Flower, in form, to&#13;
make you satisfied there is nothin?&#13;
se.ious the matter with you. Get&#13;
Green's Prixe Almanac. Sold by F.&#13;
A. Sigler, Pinckney.&#13;
- C h a m b e r l a i n ' s Little* O r c h a r d .&#13;
Mr. Jcscph. Chamberlain's love for&#13;
the ovchid Is wt»ll known and is responsible&#13;
tor the following:&#13;
During the progress of a political&#13;
meeting lately, according to Pearson's&#13;
Weekly, in the provinces, at which Mr.&#13;
Chamberlain spoke, an old man of the&#13;
laboring class pushed his way to the&#13;
front and asked of an old acquaintance:&#13;
'•Which la he?"&#13;
"Who?*&#13;
"Why, Chamberlain. Which of tha*&#13;
lot's 'im?"&#13;
"That clean shaven chap theer—him&#13;
with the eyeglass," responded the man&#13;
Addressed.&#13;
, "la that Chamberlain?' lowly ejaculated&#13;
the querist in a disappointed&#13;
tane. *7'&#13;
"Of course it la/ What 'do'e think of&#13;
im?* &gt;-^&#13;
"Why. I think he's a regular fraud.&#13;
That's wot I thinks,"&#13;
His companion at once entered into a&#13;
spirited defense of, the politician.&#13;
"I knows nothin' about politics," remarked&#13;
the laborer, pushing his way&#13;
to the door. "They said as 'e wore a&#13;
little orchard In his buttonhole, and,&#13;
theer, it ain't nawt but a tater blossom!"&#13;
— , — , — .&#13;
A. Card.&#13;
" I, the undersigned, do hereby agree&#13;
to refund the money on a 50 cant bottle&#13;
of Graan'a Warranted Syrup of&#13;
Tar if it failes ro core your coagb or&#13;
cold. I also guarantee a 25-eant bottieto&#13;
provasatitfaoiory-or money refended.&#13;
« v f 128"&#13;
A D i s c o v e r e r .&#13;
Bobby burst into the house in a state&#13;
of high excitement. His hands and&#13;
clothing were smeared with a liberal&#13;
amount of some sticky substance, and&#13;
his face wore a glow of triumphant&#13;
satisfaction.&#13;
"I say, mamma, those new people&#13;
across the way don't know much!" he&#13;
exclaimed. "They've got a sign on&#13;
their front door that says 'Wet&#13;
P a t a t ! ' "&#13;
"And y o u a r e covered w i t h it! You&#13;
o u g h t t o b e a s h a m e d of yourself!" said&#13;
h i s m o t h e r severely. " T h a t s i g n w a s&#13;
p u t u p t o w a r n people t o k e e p a w a y&#13;
f r o m i t "&#13;
"Well, a l o n g about 1 0 0 y e a r s a g o t h e&#13;
first distillery e v e r e s t a b l i s h e d in Tenn&#13;
e s s e e w a s s e t up in D a v i d s o n c o u n t y .&#13;
It w a s called t h e Red Heifer, a n d t h e&#13;
c u s t o m e r s w h o a s s e m b l e d a t t h e still.&#13;
e s p e c i a l l y on S a t u r d a y afternoon, t o&#13;
drink a n d gamble, g o t in t h e habit o f&#13;
s p e a k i n g o f a dram a s 'a horn o f t h e&#13;
heifer.' A s T e n n e s s e e w a s t h e first&#13;
s t a t e t o b e settled w e s t of t h e Alleg&#13;
h a n l e s t h e p h r a s e spread all o v e r t h e&#13;
w e s t a n d s o u t h w e s t finally b e i n g contracted&#13;
into t h e single w o r d 'horn.'"—&#13;
N e w York T i m e s .&#13;
. ;Wf» tW i*ni«*r&lt;ftf»*K do hereby&#13;
*itrm te rtrtund the money oa a 60&#13;
w i t Krtl«e&gt;f Down\$frjr if it doe*&#13;
not cure ant c ^ « ^ W t whoopina&#13;
eou gh, or t br«ak ^oaMfV I Wa atat&#13;
guarantee D&lt;iw**a RHair to cure con&#13;
sumption, when used aeeo/dintr tp di» *&#13;
rectiona, or money back. • AJu»ldosa ,&#13;
on rein? to '&gt;ed and small, doses dur&gt;&#13;
Ug the d*y will e.ire the rajut severe&#13;
co'd, and stop the most diatraanog&#13;
cough.&#13;
P. A. 31*1*1%"."*&#13;
W, fc. Darrow*&#13;
and let the thing fly. He clung to the&#13;
seat with his two hands, his eyes fairly&#13;
shining and bulging with fear and excitement&#13;
" 'How do you like It? I asked as&#13;
the wind whirled his hat off.&#13;
" 'Wh-why,' he stammered between&#13;
his puffings for breath, *my lad, I've&#13;
just solved the problem of how to be&#13;
happy though miserable!' "—New York&#13;
Times.&#13;
P i p e S m o k i n g .&#13;
T h e r e a r e many pipe s m o k e r s w h o d o&#13;
not k n o w h o w t o g e t t h e b e s t there i s&#13;
out o f their indulgence.. T h e great&#13;
point in pipe s m o k i n g is to s m o k e slowly.&#13;
N e r v o u s s m o k e r s s m o k e t o o rapidly&#13;
a n d burn their t o n g u e s w i t h hot smoke,&#13;
b e s i d e s failing entirely to g e t t h e fulle&#13;
s t a n d b e s t flavor o u t o f t h e tobacco.&#13;
It is, all a matter o f habit, b u t s l o w&#13;
s m o k i n g is a habit w h i c h "it is bard&#13;
for s o m e people to acquire. In s o m e&#13;
G a r t e r S u p e r s t i t i o n s .&#13;
A w o r n garter is regarded b y s o m e&#13;
people a s quite a v a l u a b l e present, f o r&#13;
it b r i n g s t o its n e w w e a r e r luck, or, a t&#13;
a n y rate, i s supposed t o do so.&#13;
A bride should a l w a y s w e a r a blue&#13;
is o f t e n g i v e n her b y a friend w h o&#13;
h a s t a k e n a w a y Its n e w n e s s by weari&#13;
n g it a f e w times, s a y s H o m e Notes.&#13;
T h e w e a r i n g of t h e g a r t e r does not e n d&#13;
t h e ritual c o n c e r n i n g it. A f t e r the&#13;
w e d d i n g c e r e m o n y it i s cither c u t into&#13;
pieces or hidden. W h e n it i s hidden,&#13;
t h e b r i d e s m a i d s h u n t for It. a n d t h e&#13;
finder is assured of b e i n g happily married&#13;
before the year Is out. W h e n it Is&#13;
cut, it is divided a m o n g t h e bridesc&#13;
a s e s pipe s m o k e r s h a v e tried for y e a r s&#13;
to check their s m o k i n g speed w i t h o u t&#13;
s u c c e s s . They began t o o late, a n d t h e&#13;
h a b i t of rapid s m o k i n g is s h a k e n off&#13;
w i t h difficulty w h e n it is once acquired.&#13;
Rapid s m o k i n g is a s bad a s rapid&#13;
eating—or worst*. It is a l s o "bad form."&#13;
W h e t h e r it Is cigar, pipe or cigarette,&#13;
-the^ s m o k i n g should bo deliberate-ln-or^&#13;
der to g e t the fullest e n j o y m e n t . I t is&#13;
especially so w i t h a pipe.—New York&#13;
P r e s s .&#13;
H y p n o t i c I n f l u e n c e .&#13;
Buyer—Look here, y o u ! You said this&#13;
horse w a s sound a n d kind a n d free&#13;
from tricks. T h e first d a y 1 drove him&#13;
he fell d o w n a dozen t i m e s , a n d he's&#13;
a s bad today.&#13;
Dealer—I'm—you've been w o n d e r i n g&#13;
m a i d s to g i v e to each good luck a n d a I i{ J cheated y o u , m n y b e ?&#13;
d e v o t e d husband. S o m e t i m e s t h e bride ' "Yes, 1 have."&#13;
b e s t o w s her garters o n t h e first bridesmaid,&#13;
a n d in G e r m a n y e a c h bridesmaid&#13;
receives a pair of b l u e w h i t e silk garters&#13;
from t h e bride.&#13;
A r u n d e l C a s t l e .&#13;
T h e m o s t singlar c i r c u m s t a n c e about&#13;
Arundel, c a s t l e is t h a t its o w n e r , b y&#13;
m e r e right of o w n e r s h i p , is Earl of&#13;
Arundel in t h e p e e r a g e of E n g l a n d . I t&#13;
Is believed that there i s n o similar e x -&#13;
a m p l e of a peerage h e l d on s u c h conditions.&#13;
A p p a r e n t l y t h e r e w o u l d be no&#13;
l e g a l obstacle, w e r e t h e h o u s e of H o w -&#13;
ard t o fall upon evil d a y s a n d t h e castle&#13;
b e sold to s o m e millionaire, t o prev&#13;
e n t t h e millionaire t a k i n g h i s s e a t in&#13;
t h e h o u s e o f lords a s E a r l of Arundel.&#13;
"And t h e first t i m e y o u drove t h e&#13;
h o s s y o u wondered if h e hadn't s o m e&#13;
tricks, didn't you?"&#13;
"Of course."&#13;
"And y o u kept s a y i n g t o yourself,&#13;
*I w o n d e r if that there h o s s will tumble&#13;
down.* e h ? "&#13;
"Probably."&#13;
"And y o u had y o u r mind on i t a&#13;
good deal, most like?"&#13;
"That's true."&#13;
"That's wot's. t h e matter. Y o u ' v e&#13;
hypnotized him. S e e ? '&#13;
"Yes, m a m m a , " persisted&#13;
I n d u s t r i o u s L o c u s t s .&#13;
He was an old sailor and full of&#13;
yarns about the good old times of sailing&#13;
ships. "I remember once," he&#13;
I said, "while we were cruising round&#13;
Bobby, j the Pacific we were -surrounded by a&#13;
with the enthusiasm of a- richly rewarded&#13;
scientific investigator, "but It&#13;
wasn't paint and I knew i t It was&#13;
varnish!"—London King.&#13;
" G r o w i n g ; D o w n . ' *&#13;
Everybody has noticed that in extreme&#13;
old age people grow rapidly&#13;
shorter, so that'a person formerly of ( happened to marry.&#13;
average height "grows down" into&#13;
Quite a diminutive man or woman. A&#13;
swarm of locusts, which ate evelry&#13;
inch of our sails. When we got into&#13;
the next port, I'm blowed if we didn't&#13;
see the same locusts and every one&#13;
with a pair of canvas trousers."&#13;
D i f f e r e n t F r o m t h e R e s t .&#13;
They are talking about tiow they&#13;
"1 married my wife," said one after&#13;
the others bad all had their say. "De-&#13;
German contemporary points out that j cause she was so different from any&#13;
this decrease of height begins as early I woman I had ever met"&#13;
as the age of 85 years. At 30. we are | "How was that?' chorused the&#13;
told, the human body has reached its others&#13;
ever&#13;
- » • • Will a Barrow.&#13;
full height, which Is retained for a few&#13;
years, after which the "growing down"&#13;
process begins. At first and for many&#13;
years the process is so slow as to be&#13;
almost imperceptible, but at the age of&#13;
about 00 it begins to be noticeable, and&#13;
after 70. even though a veteran does&#13;
not stcop nt all, the fact that he is&#13;
"growing dovn" becomes apparent to&#13;
one and all.&#13;
A Mood j- R e t o r t .&#13;
A religious enthusiast whose hobby&#13;
wasnntl-Catliolicism, wont io the groat&#13;
evangelist one day and put the direct&#13;
question: "Mr. Moody, do you ever In*&#13;
tend to do any preaching against the&#13;
CathoUca?'&#13;
~ "Yea, I may some time,"&#13;
"When will that be?»&#13;
"Aftar tha Prottatanta&#13;
"She was the only woman I&#13;
met who would have me."&#13;
BO YEARS'&#13;
EXPERIENCE&#13;
TRADC M A R K *&#13;
DcstONe&#13;
COPYMOMTS &amp; C&#13;
ksther an&#13;
Anyone sending n iketeh and dssortnUon may&#13;
Tree whet" H .... agn wunn A&#13;
sjsrtatasMo, withoutOD»T«*, into*&#13;
On a R u s s i a n R a i l w a y T r a i n .&#13;
Toilet a r r a n g e m e n t s such a s satisfy&#13;
t h e Russian are a t h i s disposal in first&#13;
a n d second c l a s s trains, b u t t h e third&#13;
c l a s s p a s s e n g e r s h a v e n o such luxuries.&#13;
W h e n t h e train halts for t h e breakfast&#13;
interval, those w h o travel third c l a s s&#13;
m a y be seen performing their ablutions&#13;
a t the platform tap. T h e y fill a&#13;
c a n like a gardener's w a t e r i n g p o t&#13;
suck through t h e spout a mouthful of&#13;
t h e water, spit It into t h e h o l l o w e d&#13;
p a l m s a n d then rub their faces. It i s&#13;
a d i s g u s t i n g process, performed w i t h -&#13;
out s o a p or towel, a n d . t h o u g h it m a y&#13;
b e a m u s i n g to t h e onlcoker, it i s n o t&#13;
very c l e a n s i n g to t h e operator. Y e t&#13;
t h i s is t h e method o f a b l u t i o n a d o p t e d&#13;
b y t h e poorer R u s s i a n o n h i s travels.—&#13;
C h a m b e r s ' Journal.&#13;
T h e E d i t o r W o n .&#13;
A London paper described a children's&#13;
excursion as a "long, white&#13;
scream of joy." and was called to account&#13;
by a correspondent who said&#13;
that a scream could be long, but not&#13;
white, whereupon the editor justified&#13;
himself by urging that "a hue is often&#13;
associated with a cry."&#13;
qntokly aieertaln oar opinion free&#13;
isTsntlon tTprobsbly nstsnUbta&#13;
UonsstrtoUjPconfldAntUL Hands&#13;
sent frea. Oldest Rtrency for •eoartosnatsni&#13;
Patents takon tbrough Mann JfcTo. rtoelvt&#13;
trprobably patentable. Communloa.&#13;
jy confidential. HandMok on Patents&#13;
te.&#13;
Scientific American.&#13;
A handsomely Uleetrated weekly. U r n s t rtr.&#13;
oalatton of any »raaL Term*, $a a&#13;
^XejHaK. "at. ^XSSSfSf^tS •&gt;' (-&#13;
byati newsdealers.&#13;
N e e d Not F e e l L o n e s o m e .&#13;
Rubberton—May I Inquire what your&#13;
business Is, stranger?&#13;
Stranger (haughtily)—Sir, I'm a gentleman.&#13;
Rubberton-Well. I reckon that's a&#13;
good business, stranger; bat you're not&#13;
the only man that's failed at it—Chicago&#13;
News,&#13;
A F o l l o w e r .&#13;
Caller—The minister's son Is following&#13;
In the footsteps of that spendthrift&#13;
young Jink*.&#13;
Mlsa Prim—Isn't that scandalous?&#13;
. Cau&gt;r—Hardly as bad as that You&#13;
see, he's a- tailor and is Just trying to&#13;
collect his bUL-Chelsea Oaietttv vrMSls*&#13;
V'KS&#13;
.^...,¾&#13;
•-L-IgJL1.1.1&#13;
'"•ViU!&#13;
» - » • $tu giarittugi gup! ttit.&#13;
rOBLUHID K V U T TWOJMDAY HOAKJX« A *&#13;
F R A M K L. ANOrREWd &amp; CO.&#13;
EDITORS MID momuEToam.&#13;
subecrtpUoa Price | 1 in Advance&#13;
Watered at tUe Poetoffice at Pioclu«y, Michigan&#13;
as •ecoita-daMS matter.&#13;
Advertising rate* matte luioett on application.&#13;
easiness Cards, $4.00 per /*»r.&#13;
iNjaih and marriage uoticee i&gt;uoUsh««f tree&#13;
AnniMm«nmeutaa7aBt^i.t»iinn^,,&lt; t ^ - 0 f l p^jn&#13;
tor, u desired, uj jr -Mntltt«ti»e ogee with ties&gt;&#13;
eta of admission. In usee tickets are uot brooeh'&#13;
to tneonlce, regular rates will be char***!.&#13;
All matter Io local notice column wi J J be cnart.&#13;
ed at 6 cent* per line or fraction tnereof, (or each&#13;
iDJwrtion. tVhere no time is «pecined, all notices&#13;
will be inserted until ordered olecontinaed.inj&#13;
willbe ctLatced foracnordlnsljr. t r A l l ebamns&#13;
of adTertlsements HUST reEa tbUoace M e a r S&#13;
atasTmDe MwBeAekT. morning to insure an insertion the&#13;
JOB ?2tIJVti#G t&#13;
endjhe l**««trtgesrqfTjfpel etc^_jrM«h_jtaabiJML&#13;
as *© execotenareraSof work, each as Books&#13;
Pamplets. Poiters, I'rogrswmes, Bill tfeadi\NoU&#13;
Heao», Statements, CarW Aurtlon BiJls7etc\,iuT&#13;
superior styles, upon tbe^nortest notice. P r i e e s i&#13;
o-v as good work can bf uone. *«*•»•&#13;
«LL BfCLS PATABL7 r i f t i t 09 B V g « * MoV Ctf.&#13;
THE VILLAGH DIRECTORY.&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICERS.&#13;
THUUTSM R. Baker, R. H. JSrwio, ^&#13;
F. G. Jackson, Geo. Reason Jr.&#13;
Cbas. Love, ijalasby ttjette. _,&#13;
ULioi.... .„.«^7.M M ;'„ ....^, , . . B , R; Brows&#13;
TKBASCBHR ~ ~ , J. A. Cad weir&#13;
AHSKSWOU „ „..Jas. A.tireene&#13;
aTUBKTCoiimasioHsa j . i»srker&#13;
UKALTBOrjioan Dt.U. K. cs«ler&#13;
ATTORNBY ~ . . . . . . . « . . . . _ ^ VV. A. Carr&#13;
31ARSUALL, M— ^, ......^.,....... s&gt; Brogan&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
YffiTuoDisT BPISOOPAL cairsoff;&#13;
L»I R«v. H. W . Htclca, pastor. Servioeeevery&#13;
Sunday moraiOK at 10:&amp;J, and every Sunday&#13;
dev*yen eivnegn aintg 7s,: 00o'clock. Prayer meetingThurs&#13;
ing service. Sunday scaooi at close of mom-&#13;
CUAH.liBMHY S u p t .&#13;
CONURKGATIONAL CtiUHCU.&#13;
Rev. C. W. Rice pastor. Service every&#13;
Sunday morning at 10*30 and uvory Monday&#13;
evening at 7:0C o'clock. Prayer mertUnjjTtitir*&#13;
day evenings. Sunday school at cloeeof &lt;aorn&#13;
ini? service. JJre. Tnos. Read, Suot,, Mocco&#13;
Teeple Sec&#13;
C'r. MAur»'jATiiouccauRcu.&#13;
O Rev. A£, J. Commerford, Pastor. Services&#13;
every Sunday. Low mass st 7:3Uo'clock&#13;
bigkoiaBs wilbsermoaat 9:30 a. ra. Catechism&#13;
at a :0u p. in., vespereand benediction at 7 :tt&lt;&gt; p. in&#13;
SOCIETIES;&#13;
The A. o. K. Society of tfii* i&gt;l*o, &lt;n*9t3 »very&#13;
rhird Sri latr i^icm fit. &gt;l .Ua-*.v dtll.&#13;
John Tuoiudyaud t(. T. Kelly. i;-» i itr r&gt;^-&gt;guea&#13;
if?WORTH LEAGUE. MoeU every Sunday&#13;
r^eveninj&lt; at &amp;00ociock in tu* M. K. Crinrcb. A&#13;
cordial invitation is extended to'everyone, eaneciadiy&#13;
young people. F. L. Andrewa, I're*.&#13;
pHRISTlAX E&gt;H)BVV')a SO "J 1141'if • • !•«"&#13;
1^/iass overv .Suaduv eveuiu&lt; nt «:•!&gt;. 'Prei. .; t&#13;
Mi»d L. M. O03; ieofHary, Mis* HutU Oarj&gt;» i&gt;»&#13;
1'H E w. c. T. U. meets the first KriJay of eaol&#13;
month at 2:30 p.m. at the home of Dr. H. it&#13;
Sigler. Everyone interested iu temperance&#13;
coadially invited. Mrs. '^eal Hi«ler, Pree; Mrs,&#13;
Ktta Durtee, Secretary.&#13;
The C.T. A. and b. Society of this place, tr***&#13;
eveo third Saturaay evening iu the Pr. Matthew&#13;
Hall. J-oh-n D- onobue, *P.r esident,&#13;
KNIQllTSO? MACCABBE8.&#13;
Meet every Friday evening on or before full&#13;
of the moon at their hall in the Swartbout bldg.&#13;
Visiting brothers are cordially Invited.&#13;
CHA». UAMPBMX, Sir Knight Commands!&#13;
Livingston Lodge, No. 79,? 4 A, M. Kerala&#13;
Communication Tuesday evening, on or befon&#13;
the full ot the moon. Kirk Van before&#13;
inkle, VI'. M&#13;
ORDER OF EASTERJf STAB meets each month&#13;
the Friday evening following the regular F.&#13;
AA.M. meeting, Has, MABT RBAO, VV. M.&#13;
ORDER OF MODKRN WOODMEN Ueet the&#13;
first Thursday evening of each Month in the&#13;
ilaccabee hall. C. L. Grimes V. C.&#13;
LADIES OF THE MACCABEUS, lioet every Is&#13;
and 3rd Saturday of eachineatb at a:30 p m. a&#13;
K. O. T. M. halL Visiting sisters cordially lu&#13;
viied. JCIIA 8IGLBB, Lady Com. 1 KNKJHTS.oTTHB LorAL GUARD&#13;
meet every second Wednesday&#13;
evuning of every month in the £ . O.&#13;
T, M. Hall at 7:30o'olock. All vlslUas&#13;
Quarde welcome.&#13;
F. L. Andrews P. M.&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS,&#13;
J. W. MONKS.&#13;
DOCTOR OF DENTAL SURGERY&#13;
- P'NCKNtY, MICH.&#13;
OFFICE OVER IMiCft'S M U O STOSS.&#13;
H. F. siatER M. r&gt; c. L, SIOLCR M, O&#13;
ph DRS. SIGLER &amp; SIGLER,&#13;
Physicians and Surgeon*. All cmlls prempsl&#13;
aUendedtoUay or night. Omoe on Main sir&#13;
Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
J. F. MtiJtm*&#13;
VETERINARY S U R Q I O h , -&#13;
Oradnata ot Ontario Veterinary OpIta«iv aks&gt;&#13;
the Veterinary DsnilstrrfottSp&#13;
Toronto 0aaa4al&#13;
Bones tastk enunlpert J&gt;ss\,&#13;
OPPKBat MILL. 0NCKNCY&#13;
'c /?&#13;
m&#13;
m&#13;
#:l&#13;
rl&#13;
r-.&#13;
m&#13;
m&#13;
:-&lt;"'4&#13;
• - • • • &amp; * : • .&#13;
-t.y:-&#13;
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FBAJTK L. AHUH'KWIJ' Publisher.&#13;
PINCKXtfY, . • " . • " MICHIGAN.&#13;
The Servinn, Roumanian and BnlgarUn&#13;
railroads are owned exclusively&#13;
by their respective governments.&#13;
Boston baa added this year 40 portable&#13;
school houses to its educational&#13;
equipment, making a tctal or 56.&#13;
Belgium, in 1898, through the purchase&#13;
of tha Grand Cant al Bilge and&#13;
tome minor private read 3, became the&#13;
possessor of the vrhole Belgian railroad&#13;
system, K&#13;
With voluntary subscriptions of&#13;
$4,000 in hand, a cammltt.e in Atlanta,&#13;
Ga., is msk eg a housi-to-housa canvass&#13;
to raise 825,000 to erect a monument&#13;
ready by the first anniversary&#13;
of Mr. McK!nley'&amp;' d e f i , and to have&#13;
President Roosevelt for orator of the&#13;
day.&#13;
The Ghost Dance .at Hillsdale was&#13;
a Great Thing.&#13;
DISASTER IN DETROIT RIVER.&#13;
The Quail ahooten Oat ta Thousands—&#13;
SmaUpox Patients Lived Htgk—Various&#13;
Thine* HappSnsd and Hone During tho&#13;
Fast wMk Briefly lo.d.&#13;
w*- !• &gt;' I'll mil i 3 = ¾&#13;
^ ,Mi^r.&lt;ss^U|;a&gt;swteta&gt; ... ...&#13;
Suiwlaj' u»rked&gt; the «pa»b»g .of. ti*e&#13;
open hunting season, and the hMPlera&#13;
were going ont In drove* Saturday&#13;
*tf tt*en.i&#13;
w... „... ,.. »^~. ».,..«„ ••nine time ho ha%&#13;
fltafi'.STthe huittnjr gwruiidB.niil the ( ' ^ ? *W»«J*' treble,&#13;
attburlmu ltnee wer* loaded to tbe ltm- - . ..&#13;
it, and on the Northwestern, Pontine&#13;
and Aim Arbor Imt* extra cars were&#13;
necessary to carry the crowds. It la&#13;
estimated that over 3.000 people left&#13;
Detroit Saturday night for the surrounding&#13;
AVOOCU for the first chance at&#13;
uuall UJUI partridge. :&#13;
X &lt;ii|Tiii&gt;n;iiijii&#13;
Feveica »rUt«k "v :&#13;
person who "rocked the boat," and&#13;
thereby caused the death by drowning&#13;
of some of those who were with him*&#13;
The class of those who think it is&#13;
funny to frighten timid people by this&#13;
dangerous trick is large and perennial,&#13;
and anything which will -warn or educate&#13;
them is a public service.&#13;
The widest possible publicity ought&#13;
to be given to the action of the magistrate&#13;
who has held for manslaughter a | «nd n nmssnere narrojrry averted, The&#13;
ColleMre Boy** Fan.&#13;
The first annual ghost dunce of&#13;
HlllwJale college took place Friday&#13;
night, when 150 students, representing&#13;
the spirits of the departed Bavy Boese&#13;
tribe. assembled1 lu front of the big&#13;
wigwam ou the college campus, Juil&#13;
Wiley as Mnn-Afruid-of-Hiniself, and&#13;
J. It. Imnan, as Fiery Water, assisted&#13;
W. J. Boone, known as White Wolf, to&#13;
lead the braves. After u war dance,&#13;
the redskins in single file wound their&#13;
way to President Guruey's house, who&#13;
was absent. Scouts captured Prof.&#13;
EUlmnnris and compelled him to sing a&#13;
solo. At Prof. Martin's house the request&#13;
for "tire water was refused."&#13;
Sandow, the athlete, while in Lyons,&#13;
France, wan attacked in a cafe by some&#13;
desperadoes With knives. He seized&#13;
one of them by the back of the neck,&#13;
lifted him in the air, and with the&#13;
other hand clutched his feet Swinging&#13;
him upward, he brought him down&#13;
with great force on the center of a&#13;
tablet. This blow with a human mallet&#13;
split the table in two, and the man&#13;
went through it. The other scoundrels&#13;
fled.&#13;
A duel between women^ tock placs&#13;
the^ other day at an hotel in Paris^&#13;
Mmo. Louse Ncquct. a woman of 35,&#13;
who had been d(seit~:d by her lovjf,&#13;
Leon Povison, instead of revenging&#13;
herself on tho latte\ sought out hsr&#13;
younger rival, Ergenie Cordelle, and&#13;
challenged her in due form, the result&#13;
being that Mile. Cordelle was repeatedly&#13;
stabbed. The sav3ge encounter&#13;
_^would have continued if Pnvlsnn, who&#13;
suddenly came* upon the scons, had&#13;
not sent for the pollcs.&#13;
wigwams of Prof. Reed and Prof. Hovney&#13;
were each visited, and at Sain&#13;
Kelley'8 place an Invitation to help&#13;
themselves to hydrant water, almost&#13;
caused another riot. The houses of&#13;
other professors wore serenaded, after&#13;
which the braves had a war dance and&#13;
disappeared. Frcm n student's standpoint,&#13;
this effort was a huge success.&#13;
The only Incident that marred the&#13;
evening's fun was the Tact that Brave&#13;
•Hnte»the-Water fell into the fountain.&#13;
It Makes Salt Product*,&#13;
Thomas Kh'kham. superintendent of&#13;
th© Pennsylvania Salt company, told&#13;
the business men of Wyandotte that&#13;
the works his company is constructing&#13;
will manufacture eleven different products&#13;
from salt, and w^ould, when complete,&#13;
employ 8.000 inon. The work*&#13;
will be constructed a section at n time,&#13;
so that part may be in operation ni..\t&#13;
spring.&#13;
MINOR MICHIGAN MATTERS.&#13;
hut was quickly rescued.&#13;
All T h r e e D r o w n e d .&#13;
Without a moment's notice and without&#13;
the slightest opportunity to save&#13;
themselves three members of the crew&#13;
of the tug Samuel J. Chrlstinn. of Toledo,&#13;
were sent to the bottom of Detroit&#13;
river Saturday evening. The big&#13;
Gilchrist freighter. John J. Albright,&#13;
bound up, and making about&#13;
fourteen miles an hour, struck&#13;
the tug squarely amld.ship and&#13;
cut )wy completely in twor. sinking&#13;
Jicr in loss TIIMII n tnlrmtn a n d b e f o r e&#13;
The Michigan grand lodge of Odd&#13;
Fellows will meet in Tort Huron next&#13;
year.&#13;
The Pere Marquette elevator in&#13;
Ionia was partly destroyed by fire&#13;
Tuesday.&#13;
The Phiinwell fair was n financial&#13;
success. All the premiums will be&#13;
paRliiTfuK&#13;
Burglars broke into W. E. Crawford's&#13;
h o w •&gt;* Vernon Tuesday night&#13;
and secured $G0.&#13;
•A desperate attempt was made to&#13;
rob the safe of G. A. Blakeslee &amp; Co.&#13;
at Gallon Tuesday.&#13;
Joseph Howard, an Owosso desperado&#13;
winged by Sheriff GcroV for resisting&#13;
arrest, got sixty days.&#13;
A new cheese factory is being built&#13;
-at-La- Salle, JLlonroe-Co^ and will_Lc_&#13;
Capt. William It. Harlow, the cook and&#13;
a ftreman had time to leave the tabic&#13;
at which ihey were eating supper. The&#13;
crew of the tug from all accounts are&#13;
entirely responsible for the disaster.&#13;
They attempted to cross the'"bow of&#13;
tho Albright, which crashed through&#13;
the tna: as though,she had been a cardboard&#13;
box.&#13;
The efforts of the state of Alabama&#13;
to punish persons found guilty of&#13;
lynching deserve the heartiest praise.&#13;
Already one man La.; been sentenced&#13;
to Imprisonment for. life for lynching&#13;
a negro* accused of stealing chickens,&#13;
and two others have been found guilty&#13;
of murder in the second degree and&#13;
sentenced to ten years' imprisonment&#13;
for their part in the same outrage. The&#13;
courage of the judge and the fidelity&#13;
of the jury before whom these cases&#13;
were tried, have been applauded no&#13;
les3 warmly by tbc influential papers&#13;
of the South than by their Northern&#13;
contemporaries..&#13;
The Costa Rican government has&#13;
granted to an American*German company&#13;
a cone3f3 on to 50 000 acres of&#13;
coal and agricultural lands lying on&#13;
bcth coasts of the country. The term&#13;
cf concession is fifty years, and the&#13;
company is parmitted to u e for port&#13;
purposes, 400 metres of land in evary&#13;
nautical mile of coast line. The company&#13;
is exempt from Import duties and&#13;
taxation, and is granted railroad and&#13;
telegraph pr.viicgas frae. The only&#13;
stipulation in the agreement is that.the&#13;
company mutt dispose of one-fifth of&#13;
its capital stock of five million shares&#13;
in Costa Rica.&#13;
\. H e n v j V e r d i c t .&#13;
A jury in the Wayne Circuit Court&#13;
found a verdict in favor of Caroline&#13;
Uiley and against' tho Rapid rallwav&#13;
for KOCH). The plaintiff was injured&#13;
three years ago because a switch leading&#13;
to ti .sand pit had been left open.&#13;
She testified that when she first regained&#13;
consciousness she was lying&#13;
upon the furrows of a plowed Held.&#13;
Tlie next time she became sensible of&#13;
her sunoundiugs she was at the Sanitarium,&#13;
and remained there U months.&#13;
Tlie company offered to settle her&#13;
in operation about December 1.&#13;
Potatoes are yielding from 1"»0 to&#13;
o(K&gt; bushels to the acre In the Thoiupsonville&#13;
and Grand Traverse regions.&#13;
Roy Htcks, James Barrett and John&#13;
Wilson, 14-year-old Toronto boys, confessed&#13;
robbing a house In Tort Hu^&#13;
ron.&#13;
The foreign berth destined by Senator&#13;
Burrows for William L1vi"trstone,&#13;
of Detroit, may be filled by someone&#13;
else.&#13;
There were 471&gt; births in Oakland&#13;
enmity last yeai\_all of the townships&#13;
with one exception contributing to the&#13;
total.&#13;
John GoMsworthy, of Menominee,&#13;
who last June murdered his landlady,&#13;
Mrs. Sarah Daniels, has been adjudged&#13;
insane.&#13;
Joseph Howard, shot Tuesday at&#13;
j Owosso by Sheriff Ge.row for reslsr-&#13;
} tug arrest, is resting easily, and will&#13;
J-r-ewmir-^-&#13;
The Davison; flouring -raltt%&#13;
vttlo; cauj»» tu a" awdttem atop aaft an*&#13;
l*r**tlRatton snrfwed'thit the big wn*&#13;
t&lt;* Khjrcl had jKjewne *U*tfy dogged&#13;
vAth eels that it refused tp move.&#13;
iThe WlndUte murder trial Wa&gt; wm:'&#13;
picB|cSctf"^S' WpJ&gt;*c^^pg^|gp.c^^jc^|pj^|icj c^pBJBtflT&#13;
'diet of g u % J 3 . m a M ^ K e r , W&#13;
wxfciftmenaW 'the ' prisoner to tftt&#13;
inwcy of t h e c o n r t t \ '1--:'&lt;'^&gt;&lt; •-"?•'': '•'';&#13;
Olivet Student* *heve&lt;&amp; i g b i i V ^ V&#13;
tin cans tied to its bind legs into Shipherd&#13;
hall, where the od^ed* stay, and&#13;
it awoke the entire colony. Tho matron&#13;
nnd a' few Urave girls eor*ercd&#13;
Uic* beast and ejected 'him. v&#13;
The receiver..of the defunct^ •Nllea&#13;
Citlzeus' bank is about to •conunejwe&#13;
suit ngiilnst.the trustees of the bank^&#13;
who, on the 2&amp;1 day of May, 1892&#13;
made n loan of $10,000 on behalf of tbu&#13;
bank to the Xlles Gas Co,&#13;
Sportsmen in the eastern and southem&#13;
parts of the state will be interested&#13;
in the announcement, which is general&#13;
all over that part of Michigan, that&#13;
there are more birds this fall tUhn&#13;
were ever known beforei &lt; .&#13;
The Branch county supervisors will&#13;
-have, jtja jsejttle a. cjaim fig MM® for&#13;
care of smallpox cases last winter.&#13;
Dr. Wilson, the attending physician,&#13;
was paid JCOO last June ou this claim,&#13;
but asks for $500 more.&#13;
The making of shoes Is now an Important&#13;
industry at Menominee, a new&#13;
j&gt;lant employing 12."» persons having&#13;
"just begun operations. The present&#13;
output is (KK) pairs per day. which&#13;
number will be shortly doubled.&#13;
The Detroit Bo»t club, with all Its&#13;
^rophles, raclug shells and other boats.&#13;
was cbiupTetely deslrbyed by fire&#13;
shortly aftoi* 8 o'clock Thursday evening.&#13;
The lire is supiixised to have&#13;
started froan defective.electric wiring.&#13;
Uev. S. M. Howland, ft Congregational&#13;
minister of Allendale, Mich.,&#13;
died shortly before midnight in Union&#13;
P-euevrlent hospital. Grand Rapids, after&#13;
taking a dose of some,narcotic poi.&#13;
son with the Intention of committing&#13;
suicide.&#13;
It Is'found that the steal of peaches&#13;
made by Watson from the farmers in&#13;
St. Joseph and vicinity, one day lasl&#13;
week, amounted to $1,000 Instead 61&#13;
$:i(K). as given out. The banksTn botr&#13;
cities are trying to collect the $1,00C&#13;
paid out.&#13;
It is believed that the burglars whe&#13;
attempted to rob the Farmers' Bank&#13;
of Piuconnlng early Monday morning&#13;
were amateurs. It Is thought profes&#13;
slonal cracksmen would not have lefl&#13;
tneir booty when It was almost within&#13;
tlicir grasp. ' _ '&#13;
Theodore Spoor and John Kmpy. of&#13;
Mio. have been held for trial on a&#13;
charge of stealing timber IVom the&#13;
school lands.&#13;
If he keeps up as he has started, an&#13;
unknown dog poisoner at Hancock will&#13;
soon have the city entirely depopulated&#13;
of dogs.&#13;
S. \Y. Ai/vott. of Menominee, died&#13;
Saturday. He was S*{ years old and&#13;
the first postmaster and tirst express&#13;
agent in that city.&#13;
A reorganization of the Port Huron&#13;
Increased&#13;
era andpromuda&#13;
a r^uc#Q» of tne taw« on&#13;
Madame T s l l l ^ w h o 1a with Mta*&#13;
It ii a*id:tiwrBa^J Buse^u; who.bjui&#13;
l l i o linglUh war office ha» ordered&#13;
the lniluedOate payment or the yeomanry&#13;
arrears of pny, tans removing^&#13;
Hee^iou* grievance^ -^ '•* '&#13;
Tbfe British . govermne^tf' W p n ^ :&#13;
chased 10.000 boraea* lauSoutfc Russia&#13;
at 120 rotrblefs per head.1 Several Uwusnnd&#13;
ef the Jtqtves: i»u^e already osy&#13;
rived atQd^sa, -Q , ,,&#13;
Recent aftioUU Jreturfis In I^oudon, itis&#13;
clain&gt;ed, confirm all pj^vioua reporto %&#13;
of tho comp^rt^tive, healthfulneae of&#13;
Unpe, Colony refugee campa and Xo/&#13;
some extent of the settletoent in Natal&#13;
The Japaneee cn$ine| says that If&#13;
the Anatrnliun Immigration and poatofilec&#13;
bills are passed Japanese stean&gt;&#13;
ers will fliseondnue ^rvlce between&#13;
Japan and Australia* thus greatly affecting:&#13;
c o m m e r c e . - a ~ -•-&#13;
The frequent meetings of Carlist&#13;
leaders at the residence of Don Carlos.&#13;
In Venice, have led the government, i t&#13;
Is rumored, to determine to exijel him&#13;
from Italy, as hia proceedtags, if continued,&#13;
would be likely to coinproxuiae&#13;
the friendly relations between Italy&#13;
nnd Spain.&#13;
Pljysiclan Feilberg, of Copenhagen.&#13;
Denmark, who recently jiaited -the-&#13;
West Indies, is suffering from' -astrongly&#13;
developed case of leprosy.&#13;
'. M;&#13;
•Jtr&#13;
case&#13;
which he is beHeved to have contracted&#13;
from a woman patient whom heattended&#13;
while in the West Indies.&#13;
Tlie case is rcgslrded as hopeless.&#13;
At a great durbar In Cnbus on Oct.&#13;
0 -Hablb Ulla formally took the oath&#13;
as ameer of Afghanistan. He announced&#13;
the appointment of hU three&#13;
brothers, Nasr Ullah, Mohammed&#13;
TTmar and Mniiiv Ullah to the headships&#13;
of the army, the rerenue'department&#13;
and the judicial department.&#13;
claim for $1."MM*, and its attorney say Engine .V Thresher Co. will take place&#13;
an appeal will be taken from the verdict.&#13;
Intelligence has been received from&#13;
Liberia cf the death of a remarkable&#13;
woman, Martha Ann Ricks, known as&#13;
Aunt Martha, who made a journey&#13;
from Liberia to England nine years&#13;
ego for the purpose of visiting&#13;
Queen Victoria. At the time of her&#13;
death she was 85 years old. Her father&#13;
was John M. Erskine, a s'ave/who purchased&#13;
his freedom and that of his&#13;
children, and became a Presbyterian&#13;
minister. Aunt Martha's greatest&#13;
achievement wa3 in 1841, when she&#13;
successfully defended the Haddington&#13;
Methodist Mission Station with three&#13;
others against a cannibal chief and 300&#13;
natives.&#13;
Apltn'* S a l a r y .&#13;
II. II. Aplin's resignation as postmaster&#13;
of West Bay City, tendered after&#13;
his nomination for congress, will be&#13;
accepted within a few days. His salnry&#13;
was $2,100 a year, but he will be&#13;
money ahead by resigning. There&#13;
seems to be no reason why, under the&#13;
rules of the house, he cannot draw a&#13;
congressmMn's salary of $.1.000 a year&#13;
from May 1- last, ihe day that his predecessor.&#13;
Crump, died. Aplin's daughter.&#13;
Mrs. Cane, who has been his chief&#13;
assistant In tlie postoftleo. at ¥000, will&#13;
very likely be appointed to succeed&#13;
him.&#13;
V&#13;
Popular sympathy with a suffering&#13;
animal and the readiness of the public&#13;
to relieve such suffering were illustrated&#13;
recently In St Louis when a man&#13;
risked his life to rescue a cat fr«m a&#13;
narrow ledge on the tide of a lofty&#13;
water tower. The cat had been pursuing&#13;
a swallow, and although it had&#13;
climbed down to the ledge alone, was&#13;
unable to clrmb back. For several&#13;
days it remained a prisoner, one hundred&#13;
and seventy feet from the ground,&#13;
and suffering severely from hunger&#13;
and thirst The man who! discovered&#13;
the cat's predicament climbed the two&#13;
hundred and twenty-five steps to the&#13;
top of the tower, and waa lowered by a&#13;
rope to the ledge, forty feet below.&#13;
In a H o l e .&#13;
Fr/ink* Belanger, an emplove of the&#13;
Muskegon water works department,&#13;
met with a peculiar experience which&#13;
almost resulted in his death from&#13;
fright. Workmen had dug a hole eight&#13;
feet deep and Belanger was at the&#13;
l&gt;ottom making a water connection.&#13;
Someone tried to lead a horse past&#13;
when it gave a spring and landed in&#13;
the hole. Belanger saw it coming but&#13;
could do nothing to save himself.'The&#13;
man and horse were wedged In tight&#13;
Being near one of the hose houses the&#13;
department was called out and both&#13;
were rescued unhurt.&#13;
A P e r e M n r q n e t t e W r e c k .&#13;
A north-bound freight train struck&#13;
several overhanging cars on the main&#13;
track at Milford. Wednesday morning&#13;
demolishing 10 or V&gt; freight ears. nn«i&#13;
causing a loss to the Pere Marquette&#13;
railway estimated at ¢20,000. A train&#13;
of 0,- cars went $n a siding that could&#13;
accommodate only 50 cars and the&#13;
others sto&gt;d on the main track \&#13;
flagman was sent ahead to worn thV&#13;
train but failed to do so. The enainrer&#13;
*tnck to his post, and although&#13;
the engine overturned, he was not injured.&#13;
The ti reman jumped.&#13;
A Little lafortunate.&#13;
Recently the Jackson police found a&#13;
c» months' old child in rooms occupied&#13;
by Dan Whitman and his wife. The&#13;
child was in a filthy condition and&#13;
showed evidence of ill treatment. An&#13;
investigation revealed the fact that&#13;
the babe was the child of an unfortunate&#13;
woman and It had been placed in&#13;
charge of the Galloway mission. The&#13;
officers took charge ef the babe and it&#13;
wag eg;j4ly adopted by a Mrs. Preston,&#13;
of Munlth, the mother gladly givluir&#13;
consent. ' »•»*«*-&#13;
and the new company will have a&#13;
capital stock of $750,000.&#13;
Quite a number of Berrien county&#13;
farmers experimented this season with&#13;
raising peanuts, and In every instance&#13;
a good yield was secured.&#13;
Miss Mluu Eastman died at Torch&#13;
Lake a few days ago, it Is supposed,&#13;
from taking the wrong medicine to relieve&#13;
an asthmatic attack.&#13;
The Pere Marquette has placed orders&#13;
for rwelve new coaches in addition&#13;
to tlie locomotives and other rolling&#13;
stock purchasefrthis year.&#13;
Safe cracksmen secured about ?2."&gt;&#13;
in currency and $(»30 in checks by&#13;
blowing open the safe of the United&#13;
States Graphite Co., Saginaw.&#13;
Arthur Coleman, arrested on a&#13;
charge of robbing a postoftlce at Buell,&#13;
Sanilac county, confessed his crime.&#13;
Several others are implicated with&#13;
him.&#13;
A. M. Todd has purchased 2.000&#13;
acres of land on the South Haven&#13;
division of the Michigan Central railway,&#13;
which lie will convert into a peppermint&#13;
farm.&#13;
Chas. C. Fenner, supervisor of&#13;
Bethel township, had 13 sheep killed&#13;
by dogs Saturday night and 20 more&#13;
so badly mangled that the greater&#13;
number will die.&#13;
Sherman Brown hanged himself in&#13;
a buggy shed on John Beeni's form,&#13;
south of Reading. Tuesday. His mind&#13;
has been weak for two years on the&#13;
subject of religion.&#13;
Arthur Coleman and Emerson Beatto,&#13;
who It Is alleged, were Implicated&#13;
In a postottlce robbery at Buell, Mich.,&#13;
about a year and a half ago, are in&#13;
Wayne county Jnll.&#13;
Guy W. Clark was killed at a camp&#13;
near Pemblne. at Brown's spur. He&#13;
was coupling cars and the projecting&#13;
end of a log struck him in the head,&#13;
fracturing his skull.&#13;
. Receiver Rhodes; of the defunct&#13;
Xlles Irank, says the'coast is now clear,&#13;
and* that the affairs of the bank will&#13;
be wound up. He expects to pay 100&#13;
cents on the dollar to depositors.&#13;
The rumor is again in circulation&#13;
tbnt &lt;»ov. Bliss lif contemplflHng calling&#13;
the legislature together in special&#13;
session in Dceemlier. The governor&#13;
refuse* to confirm or deny the rumor.&#13;
The Ouier depot was broken into,&#13;
the mail bag cut- open and 12 bank letters&#13;
were opened, but their content*,&#13;
check* and notes, were undisturbed&#13;
Officials cannot tell what mail has&#13;
been stolen. /&#13;
W..W. Griffith, of Milwaukee, who&#13;
is wanted' In Muskegon for forgery,&#13;
ltas been arrested In his home town&#13;
at tho instigation of the local authorities,&#13;
(trlffith is charged with forging&#13;
orders for the delivery of l&gt;ooks of a&#13;
Philadelphia'publishing, house.&#13;
A large number of carloads of potatoes&#13;
are being shipped from Montcalm&#13;
(ounty to the southern and eastern&#13;
states. Many of the tubers brought tiT&gt;&#13;
to 70 rents per bushel. Farmers are&#13;
pleased with the abundant crops this&#13;
year. Mortgages will be lifted.&#13;
The stare tax commission t has requested&#13;
the county boards of supervisors&#13;
to make another equalization of&#13;
their respective counties. The Ingham&#13;
county board has refused to accede to&#13;
tue request.-and lf is expected that a&#13;
majority of the others will do likewise.&#13;
The board of supervisors of Bay&#13;
county has just discovered that a $110,-&#13;
000 stone road bond issue will fall due&#13;
next. year. It was thought the bonds&#13;
fell duo in 100G. Xo provision has been&#13;
made to make a tax levy. The .people&#13;
may be asked to vote to refund the&#13;
issue.&#13;
James Benson, of Detroit, an employe&#13;
of the Michigan Telephone Co.,&#13;
who fell '27) feet from a pole on which&#13;
he was working, near Clio, sustaining&#13;
severe injuries, is resting comfortably.&#13;
No Ixmes were broken, and unless Internal&#13;
injuries develop, he will recover.&#13;
The Baldwin postoffice was entered&#13;
by burglars some time Monday night.&#13;
The loss, including registered packages&#13;
and postage stamps. Is estimated&#13;
between $«00 and $1,000. The safe&#13;
was found locked this morning, and&#13;
It is supposed the burglars worked the&#13;
combination.&#13;
Bangor has enjoyed a building boom&#13;
this year. A dozen new residences&#13;
have been erected and as many more&#13;
have been remodeled. The only drawback&#13;
In the village is the railroad&#13;
crossings, which are very .dangerous.&#13;
Serious accidents are narrowly averted&#13;
constantly.&#13;
The report of the Wayne eountv&#13;
auditors to the board of supervisors&#13;
shows that the account* of all the&#13;
county departments are overdrawn,&#13;
more money than was allowed by the&#13;
supervisors having been ftjxmt. The&#13;
increased receipt* in the liquor moneys&#13;
prevent deficits, however.&#13;
Mrs. Anna Edeon Tsylor, of Bay&#13;
City, who is anxious to win fame anil&#13;
dollars by going over Niagara Palls. In&#13;
a barrel, will probably not be allowed&#13;
to risk her life. Her manager, F. M.&#13;
Rutwell, has been notified that In case&#13;
the woman undertakes the feat and is&#13;
killed in the attempt, he (Russelli will&#13;
l&gt;e held to answer for the loss of her&#13;
Mfe.&#13;
Three men were Instantly killed in&#13;
a collision of two freight trains on the&#13;
Detroit. Grand Haves A Milwaukee&#13;
railroad early Friday .morning. The&#13;
wreck occurred just east of Stlnchfield's&#13;
farm, half way between Pontlac&#13;
and Birmingham, at a poiut&#13;
known as Maple Orchard. &gt;The men&#13;
were Engineer Moffatt. Fireman Luth&#13;
and Brakeman Vensenburg.&#13;
AM.USKMKNT&lt;1 W DlSTRuIT.&#13;
WEitK UtPlMQ OCT. Si.&#13;
£ 3 ? Y i ? ,TH «A&#13;
l l&#13;
T B *i Yaude«me-Prloes: after-&#13;
DETROIT OPEBA-'October *i, ii, 2S Joseph.&#13;
Jefferson ."-tit *. Saturday Matinee at t&#13;
LYCBTJM TKBATEH-Fudcrahcad W!laon.-Wed.&#13;
and Sat. Mat. i&gt;c; evenings. 13, a^Aj andTdc.&#13;
WiHixi\T 1N0S aYndQ iiibAttN: Dev-e"nFlonrs wH, e1r0 e. S~aVko ea.n"l -M*«a.t inee*&#13;
T H E M A R K E T S .&#13;
?}?¥*' •fWt^.BO; steers and heifers. $3.2»&#13;
%$V*: 1T5lxed butchers and tat cows. 12.75&#13;
II r!S.U%nnef,8 and common thin butchers,&#13;
J U ^ . W . 3ulIs-Good shippers. *3.50&amp;&#13;
MiL-i^A t o g o o d b u t c h e r s and sausage,&#13;
5^-Pe f, ^ l b s - Sheep-Uest lambs. $4.25&#13;
. o / ^ . l 1 - ^ 1 !(1 * 0 0 d a t , d K°o d mixed lots,&#13;
*v.U)(frU.); tnir to good mixed and butcher&#13;
sheep, fc».60@3.75; -.-ulla nnd common, $2.50&#13;
f r A "off8—Mixed and butchers, $6.0»&#13;
v^.&gt;-.V.x'^foHfi,9l0^; astt as,r6a1.0 :1 -8P 1o*l8t ;a nrdo ug"hKsh, t $5y.o25r(k8&gt;e5r.3so, .&#13;
LhicuKo.—Cattle—Good to prime steera&#13;
IViril0 ,!^' W.10«t3.80; poor to medium.&#13;
J^.™8. steers. *2.80rfW.75; western .steers.&#13;
$3.&lt;o&lt;fro.o0. Hops—Mixed and butchers'. $6&#13;
(fto.GO; good to choice heavy. $6.2036.70:&#13;
wugh heavy. $5.80*r&lt;5.15; light. $6.9Q@6.aS&#13;
bulk of Pales; $£345.20. S t e e p - G o o d to&#13;
?2l2!c .e 'w e t n *r f l - *3c»®8.90; western sheep.&#13;
I3@3o0; native lambs, $2.7B®4.75; western&#13;
lamb*. $i.i5®4.50.&#13;
Buffalo.—Cattle—Common grades dull,&#13;
others considered steady; veals. 514, $7.23&#13;
«7.,7. Hours-Mixed packers to beat&#13;
heavy. $6.50frG.70; yorkers, $6.20&lt;£S.5n; plga,&#13;
fci.QOWUO; roughs. $5.50@6. Sheep—Lambs,&#13;
tr^R. ,f4.9O0&gt;6.W: others. $3.50^4.80; sheep,&#13;
tops, mixed. $3.00^3.25; others $1.50@2.90:&#13;
wethers and yearlings, $3.40^3.75.&#13;
P i m b u r * . - C a t t l e — Choice, $5.750(1:&#13;
prime. $.r&gt;.5O«i5.70; good. $3.1&lt;*ffcr.33', tidy,&#13;
$4.70&lt;ff5; fair, $3.90(H&gt;4.35; common. $2.75«?&#13;
3.40: hi'ifora. $2.«WR50; oxen, $2.50&lt;S&gt;4; fat&#13;
cows. $1.50®4: bulls and stags. $2®4: common&#13;
cows to fresh. $20®8B: good fresh cows&#13;
$3*3C0. Hogs—Prime heavy. $0.7O®6.75;&#13;
fr&gt;: grasscrs. jrwfe.ii; roughs. $4.50$«.2S.&#13;
Sheep-Ht-st wethers, $3.4O#8.50; good. $3.20&#13;
©3.85; mixed, $2.50&lt;53; culls and common,&#13;
•""&gt;?: Yearlings. $2.50&lt;re3.90: spring lambs.&#13;
$.V».M0: v*al calves, $7(R?7.50.&#13;
Cincinnati.—Cattle—Heavy steers, choice&#13;
to extra. $5.25«x5.60; nominal, fair to good.&#13;
»4.5(Wi5.15; oxen, $1.75®4.10: butcher steers,&#13;
rhnice to extra. $4.40®4.$6: fair to jrood.&#13;
*3.?5fcM.25; heifers, good to choice. $8.25©&#13;
5.90; common to fair, $2®3.15; cows, good&#13;
tn choice. $3.2503.85; fair to medium, $2.50&#13;
f?3: common rough steers, poor cows and&#13;
flcata'vags. $Wrl.75; canners, .$L5MftS.25:&#13;
rtookers and feeders. $-2®4.' Hogs—B*»st.&#13;
W..T0: packers. $5.90*i&gt;6.40: trood quality. $6.10&#13;
fftfi 35. Sheen—extra. $2.85(^3: few choice&#13;
heavy yorrllng wethers at $8.15; good to&#13;
choice fhefp, tl23*Jftj.7S; rnmmon to fair,.&#13;
(W?: lambs. *xtra, $4.4004.50; good to&#13;
choice, $2.40©4.S5; common to fair, $2@3.26.&#13;
Grain, Etc.&#13;
• Detroit.~Wheat-.No. l. 73 3-4c. closing"&#13;
74c asked: No. 2 red. 73e, closing 78 l-4c;&#13;
October, 73 l-4c; December, 74 l-2c. beil&#13;
bid 74 »-4c, close 74 l-2c bid; May, 78 3-4c;&#13;
No. 3 red, 71 l-4c; mlxad wfttter. 78 l-4c&#13;
per bu. Com—No. 2 mixed, 58 He; No. 8&#13;
yellow, 68c. Oats—No. 8 white. 89,l-«o;&#13;
No. 3, 88 X-2e.&#13;
Chicago.—Wheat—No. 8 spring. 67 7-84P&#13;
8»c; No. 2 red. 71 ©73c. Corn—No. 2 ysllow,&#13;
57 1-Jc. Oats—No. 2, 28926 3-Sc: No.&#13;
2 white, £8 1-498S l-2c; No. 8 white, 87 3-+&#13;
638 3-4c.&#13;
Cincinnati.—Wheat—Demand in excess&#13;
of supply; No. 2 winter red sold at 74 l-2e&#13;
on track. Oats—No. .2 white. 38 l-3c; No. 2&#13;
mixed, 38c. Corn—No. 2 white and No. 2&gt;&#13;
yellow, 60c.&#13;
Toledo.-HWheat—Cash, 74 l-4c. Corn-&#13;
Cash. 58c. Oats—Cash, 87c. •&#13;
Duluth—Whe*t—Cash. No. 1 hard,&#13;
73 l-4c; -No. 2 northern, 87 l-8c; No. i northern.&#13;
70 l-4c. Corn-»c. Oats-85 l-2#&#13;
85 3-4C . y&#13;
Minneapolis,—Wheat-Cash. 68 3«8q; No.&#13;
1 hard. 71 1-8« on track.&#13;
Wheat prices the past week averaged&#13;
slightly better than the preceding week,&#13;
and closed Saturday l-C07-8c higher than&#13;
a week ago. The cash business aas been&#13;
fairly good for milling and etavator^aoconnt,&#13;
but foreign business Was somtwnat&#13;
unsettled by a firmer aenthrtsnt in&#13;
net an freight*, which had the effect of&#13;
wid«nhwr the differences between the prtcse&#13;
of this country and Engllrh markets.1.&#13;
* • • • Kmbtit&gt;tii%*M^kmm^^&#13;
WZK&#13;
\ f * • ! . •&#13;
: - / . : ^ ? . . • • • : : • &gt; ; , • :.- - v . , / . ' . " , , ' - ' - ; ; • - • : •;•,• • &lt; ; . . ; • ; , - . : - : ^ - • / . , • . , ' - ' • • • ' " - ' . . •.••:• r . . - .&#13;
v',';-;:. y'fv;:v-:^^y-i,.i;-: •"&#13;
. • • .•'•• t / r t -:.- '.••' • • • •••••&#13;
V " | « v r&#13;
WT"&#13;
StorV ^&#13;
882&#13;
If, -fj. MM&#13;
J-ST.1;&#13;
1^"&#13;
' mmmmmmmmmmmm&#13;
t.ftYLVANVS&#13;
iHinii tin! i \ft't i Y&#13;
/»&#13;
GtfAF***' ^%c^tiaa«dN si&#13;
M^ n^aT^ d^clti'UnM t&lt;^ ^ ^ broken at hi* feet, the. blood leaped&#13;
nifrw, and tried;** realise tfcf force; ot/ w i n t h ^ o ^ luMf^lwu -But ah^ had&#13;
5"5&#13;
M M * * P= •w* " * 1 ?'., ^^•i-v;)»-„&lt;.',.v.r,n; • r • / :&#13;
•i&#13;
J^;,^;(^l^i-V|^tN *«»'i^'-i»ir&#13;
• &gt; " •&#13;
H*ram stated, ft W»4§e|, and t**a&#13;
sank ba«k, and bnjrte* a * f s ^ *» M*&#13;
nands, Hia tfwaghts ha4,f«44eply&#13;
flown tr«»Vtt«&gt;tf«fj*-.!Bkt&amp;* present&#13;
neur to that otfcer-atory which he had&#13;
had heard on the night before; and&#13;
the crash almost took away hls-awise*&#13;
Omar, when f he saw how matters&#13;
atbod, felt called upon to speak; for&#13;
he believed that he Had discovered twtt&#13;
things; Plra^ tfcit b&gt;&gt; pld friend *no&#13;
, brother was struggling to open his&#13;
breast to his child;'and* ecfeond, that&#13;
Julian might $ e ' b o u g h t to' forgiveness&#13;
when heltiew'ibe whole truth.&#13;
"My friends/' he said, rising to hie&#13;
ieet as he spoke. *'the story is not yet . . . . „ . . ,.&#13;
not m u ^ £jH}or^tjr, tty tim&amp;U tot&#13;
the. king quicWy. advanced and took&#13;
hef hand, and ted net to Julian.&#13;
"My son, thia do I gire thee In token&#13;
of my sincerity! Now wilt thou own&#13;
me for thy father, 'and forget, all of&#13;
the past save that which tells that we&#13;
are of one flesh? Take this fair hand,&#13;
and wltX ItT my" forgiveness to you&#13;
hbth~my forgiveness to all who have&#13;
befriended* you, Take it, my son, and&#13;
ere Omar leaves us for his northern&#13;
realm he shall see Horam's own son&#13;
siting upon the throne of Damascus,&#13;
while Horam himself withdraws from&#13;
the world, that hfe last days may oe&#13;
spent in quiet, repose,"&#13;
. Na longer rested the cloud upon Jusmal)&#13;
' tt*w» In BrteJV: ;&#13;
• •*&#13;
JTfffkri..Qptt&gt; tt&gt; "ffjajainagrrmmtyrs 4&#13;
This fall Kawoe^lante the largest&#13;
acreage of wheat in her history, - . uHecreta^.of w b l t o o t H attJA1 to be&#13;
wry ill o n d . i ^ U j r ^ » ' f r ^ m *** c a b "&#13;
ine,t. ' &lt; ? ' •'&#13;
ho* Gatos, CaU lost four acres of&#13;
lt9!lMMine%8=vaect}on My fire Sunday&#13;
ijlght,&#13;
Senator Chnoxicey M. Dcpew Is to&#13;
marry Miss May Palmer in the near&#13;
futute.&#13;
Th* MoBonie Grand I-odge of Kentucky&#13;
has voted to build a aplendid&#13;
ten«ple in Louisville.&#13;
Congress is likely to provide for the&#13;
creation at a secretary of commerce,&#13;
with a cabinet portfolio, tbi» session.&#13;
Arkansas has 4.74» tuanufactur'm?&#13;
establishments with n capital of $»*.-&#13;
000,000, and a yearly product of $«,-&#13;
000.000.&#13;
The npprtrylTTinte totnl nf rlntnifl filed'&#13;
within his grasp, and sank down upon&#13;
his knees—sank down, he and Ulln,&#13;
one In love forevermore—and bowed&#13;
before the king.&#13;
"My father—I accept the blesdng! I&#13;
am thy son!"&#13;
THT END.&#13;
tab it"&#13;
Ben Hadad and Eza.be! gazed eagerly&#13;
up into, his face; nnd Julian leaned&#13;
toward him, with a beam of hope&#13;
struggling upon his brow.&#13;
"I am to blame In this matter; or,&#13;
at least, I was the innocent cause,"&#13;
continued the King of Aleppo, addressing&#13;
Ben Hadad and Ezabel. "It was&#13;
I who gave to Horam the evidence&#13;
upon which he condemned his wife. I&#13;
supposed the guilt of the lady Helena&#13;
was positive, as I had the Information&#13;
from officers who would not lie; and&#13;
I felt it my duty to acquaint the husband&#13;
with the circumstances. On my&#13;
way back to my capital, while stopping&#13;
in Balbcc, I gained information which&#13;
assured me that the Queen of Damascus&#13;
was innocent; and immediately I&#13;
sent back two of iny officers to convey&#13;
intelligence thereof to Horam.&#13;
But those, messengers never, reached&#13;
their destination. They must have&#13;
I pursued my course homeward, and&#13;
amid the duties of my realm, the thing&#13;
passed from my mind. Yesterday I&#13;
aaw Horam for the first time in threennd-&#13;
twenty years; and last evening I&#13;
revealed to him the fact that his first&#13;
and best beloved wife, Helena, was&#13;
wrongfully accused—that she was pure&#13;
and true^ When t^4s-tguth-bursLupQBhlm,&#13;
his grief overcame him, and I&#13;
feared that the shock would kill him."&#13;
VAye," cried Horam, starting up&#13;
again, "it did almost kill me; for Helena&#13;
was my first love, and her place&#13;
was never refilled. O, my brother&#13;
what can I do?"&#13;
•Do wh*t is right," replied Omar,&#13;
taking Horam'S outstretched hand.&#13;
"Be a man, and let the heart assert its&#13;
sway. Remember that you did the first&#13;
great deed of wrong; and that all tho&#13;
other evil has flowed out from that&#13;
one unfortunate act."&#13;
The king of Damascus stood for a&#13;
moment with his head bowed upon&#13;
Omar's shoulder, and his hand still in&#13;
Omar's grasps Then he started up&lt;&#13;
and his countenance had changed,&#13;
"By the blood of my heart," he exclaimed,&#13;
"the wrong shall not grow&#13;
deeper against me! What, ho! Without,&#13;
there! Slaves!—attend me!"&#13;
The executioners chanced to be&#13;
nearest, and they answered the call. v&#13;
"Bel-Dara, strike those irons from&#13;
that man's limbs! Strike off every&#13;
bond, and set him free! If you harm&#13;
him as much as the prick of a rosethorn,&#13;
your life shall answer Tor it!"&#13;
. The executioner stopped to ask no&#13;
questions—he did not even stop to&#13;
wonder at tho order; but he proceeded&#13;
to the work, and in a very few&#13;
minutes the prisoner was free.&#13;
Then the king started down fftm&#13;
the throne, and advanced to where&#13;
the freed man stood.&#13;
"My son," he said, extending both&#13;
his hands, "the truth has come so&#13;
naked and so plain, that there is no&#13;
room for doubt; • and I now see that&#13;
you bear upon your face the features&#13;
of your noble mother—God pardon me&#13;
for the wrong I was led to do her!&#13;
And, my son,—here, in the presence of&#13;
these witnesses, I ask you to forget&#13;
the past—I ask' you to be my son—&#13;
I ask you tb let me be your father;—&#13;
and then, 6, then, Horam will be no&#13;
more childless!"&#13;
Julian had no power to resist the&#13;
appeal; and as the old king tottered&#13;
forward the son supported him upon&#13;
his boBom, and sustained him in the&#13;
embrace of his stout arms.&#13;
And yet Julian was not content. Hla&#13;
face wore etfH a cloud; and there was&#13;
trouble in his heart&#13;
What could it mean?" Horam feared&#13;
that His son could not quite love him.&#13;
Omar saw the trouble; and divined&#13;
its cause; and stepping quickly forward&#13;
he whispered into the ear of his&#13;
brother. Horam caught at the word*, V1 1 0 0"0 5 ^'' sftid_Mr- Bent!fyand&#13;
the star of hope beamed again. He&#13;
clapped his hands and cried out:&#13;
"What, ho! Without! Where is&#13;
Benonl?"&#13;
The captain came, ,.&#13;
"Becpni, bring th? ladyUllnr*&#13;
Pale and trembling the prince* es.-&#13;
The Blind Bride.&#13;
By A m y Randolph.&#13;
ojojoo&lt;^jo;o;ojo;o^^&#13;
Bentley Grange was a pretty place at&#13;
all times of the year, but loveliest of&#13;
all when the reapers were at work in&#13;
the harvest fields and the yellow light&#13;
of the October sun turned the woodland&#13;
paths to enchanted aisles. A&#13;
long, low structure of warmly tinted&#13;
red brick, with mullioned windows,&#13;
velvet-smooth sweeps of lawn and box&#13;
borders, which gtood-up-Hke-waHs of&#13;
solid emerald on each side of the path,&#13;
it had a savor of the antique about it,&#13;
which one seldom sees in an American&#13;
houtse.&#13;
And old Brande Bentley, walking up&#13;
and down in the mellow sunshine, between&#13;
the walls of black-green box,&#13;
with his eyes bent on the ground, and&#13;
-his-hands clasped behind—his- track,"&#13;
corresponded well with the Grange.&#13;
Suddenly a cheerful footstep rang on&#13;
the stone terrace steps—tho sound of a&#13;
clear, flute-like whistle rose above the&#13;
click of the distant mowing machine,&#13;
and Harry Wade, the old man's nephew,&#13;
stood like an incarnation of youth&#13;
and sunshine before him.&#13;
"Uncle," he cried merrily, "you've&#13;
got the prettiest place in the world&#13;
here."&#13;
Mr. Bentley took out his bis, oldfashioned&#13;
silver watch.&#13;
"Two o'clock," said he, "and tho&#13;
bank don't close until four. Humph!&#13;
It appears to ine, young man, that you&#13;
don't stick very close to business&#13;
hours!"&#13;
"Like a limpet, uncle," said Harry,&#13;
"and juet for today. Will Caryl has&#13;
come to act as a substitute, for I really&#13;
wanted to see you, uncle."&#13;
"Hunph!" again commented Mr.&#13;
Bentley. "You're very fond of me—&#13;
just of late!"&#13;
"I'm always fend of ycu. Uncle&#13;
Brande," said Harry, gravely, "but I've&#13;
something to tell you."&#13;
"Some scrape you've got into," said&#13;
Mr. Bentley.&#13;
"Nothing of the sort, sir!"&#13;
"Want to borrow money, perhaps!"&#13;
"Upon my word, no!"&#13;
"You've fallen in love with some&#13;
girl, then!" .&#13;
"You are right this time, uncle,"&#13;
paid Harry, laughing and coloring;&#13;
"and, of course, I have come directly&#13;
to you to tell you of my good fortune.&#13;
It ia little Bessie Bird!"&#13;
"A milliner's apprentice!" snarled&#13;
the old bachelor.&#13;
"If she choos€3 to help her mother&#13;
along oy trimming hats in her ar.nt'3&#13;
millinery rooms, I see nothing derogatory&#13;
in that," said H-irry, valiantly.&#13;
"A mere child of seventeen!"&#13;
"But I don't want an' old lady of&#13;
forty-seven!"&#13;
"HumphJ" growled Mr. Bentley. &lt;cWhat do either of you know of life?"&#13;
"Not much, to.be sure, uncle, as yet,'&#13;
admitted the young lover, "but we&#13;
think we can easily learn—together."&#13;
"And where do you think the napkins&#13;
and tcbkcloths and bread and&#13;
butter and rent and water taxes are&#13;
to come from?" sardonically Inquired&#13;
Brande Bentley.&#13;
"I have my salary, IJncle Brando,'&#13;
said Harry, "and Beasie has been educated&#13;
to bo very economical."&#13;
"I'll have nothing to say to such&#13;
"But, Uncle Brando, all we wart&#13;
i s — " • .&#13;
"Nothing, I say—absolutely nothing!"&#13;
thundered the old man. "It's&#13;
folly—trash—sentimental tomfoolery!&#13;
Tf you want my opinion, there it Is!&#13;
Time enough for yon to think cf. matrimony&#13;
when yon are thirty. There&#13;
ought to be a law to prevent young,&#13;
people asking Jw&gt;lf: «f &lt;ttesnwetres7»&#13;
^ l a W ^ p d ^ B e n t i s y . ^r»W'on''.|tts;&#13;
heel and strode be** into the House. '&#13;
',:'.'. So ftnat Hi^rjf l # »jfc **ry,; Jwfcifr&#13;
itlng news fc&gt;r Bessie WrA wft*n h* met,&#13;
her„ a* usual, on th4t4otp*r of Broadway,&#13;
to waik home with her tlurough&#13;
the pleasant autumn twilight •« -' &lt;&#13;
"Was he very croas r said Bessie,&#13;
who was a whttc-kitteny sort of a girl,&#13;
with fluffy yellow hair, dimples In her&#13;
cheeks, and eyes the exact color of the&#13;
"flowing-blue/' china on our grandmothe/&#13;
V shelves^&#13;
"As, savage as Bluebeard!"&#13;
"Did he scold dreadfully?" asked&#13;
Bessie.&#13;
, "Told me I was a fool!"&#13;
'• '&lt;But if he won't consent-—"&#13;
"Then we must manage to get along&#13;
without his consent," said Harry. "Because,&#13;
you know, Bessie, I do love you&#13;
eo very, dearly, and you like-me a l i t -&#13;
tle, doh;t you?"&#13;
"But your mother has always counted&#13;
upon your being bis heir," said Bessie.&#13;
"And to lose all that money,&#13;
j u s t — " .&#13;
"Just for love and you," archly interrupted&#13;
Harry. "Darling, there is&#13;
nothing in all the world half so sweet&#13;
to me, or that I court half so ardently&#13;
as my little Bessie—so let there be no&#13;
further argument about i t These jolly&#13;
old coves down at the bank are going&#13;
to raise my salary fifty dollars at&#13;
Christmas, and so if you can get your&#13;
frock made well be married then. And&#13;
set Uncle Brax.de and the world at defiance,&#13;
eh?"&#13;
The first November snowstorm was&#13;
drifting its white flashes through the&#13;
air when a visitor was shown into&#13;
Brande Bentley's snug parlor.&#13;
**Eh?*-»a1d Ire,^^a stranger, Jones? i&#13;
never see strangers."&#13;
"But you will see me!" said a soft&#13;
voice—and a slender, golden-haired&#13;
girl stood before him, neatly yet plainly&#13;
dressed, her black cloak powdered&#13;
over with snow, and a spectacled old&#13;
lady by her side. 'I am Bessie Bird—&#13;
and this is my aunt, Miss Belton, the&#13;
milliner."&#13;
Miss Belton courtcsied. Mr. Bentley&#13;
scared.&#13;
"1 suppose you have ccme here to&#13;
speak to me about my nephew.''"&#13;
"Ycsi-sir," *aid Bessie.&#13;
"It will be of no use," said he, curtly.&#13;
"My opinions on the subject of his&#13;
marriage remain unchanged."&#13;
"But mine do not," said Bessie.&#13;
"Please to hear me through, Mr. Bentley.&#13;
I have written him a letter to give&#13;
him up this morning. And I came to banner year 1SJK5&#13;
£ » £ 4 * D 0 W '.?° t h a t yOU w l " f e e L -WrJ^Wfaite-hi 'Trader arrest in Chios&#13;
a result of the la*t Cuban insur&#13;
rection and the Spanish-American war&#13;
is $57,5S1,807.&#13;
Senator Fairbanks, of Indiana, and&#13;
Senator Dietrich, of Nebraska, have&#13;
formally opened the campaign of the&#13;
Nebraska Republicans.&#13;
John 1&gt;. Rockefeller has agreed to&#13;
jrivy Barnard College $200,000 if the&#13;
iustitutloa can raise another $200,00}&#13;
before Jnnuary 1, 1902.&#13;
About 21per cent of the total population&#13;
of the United States attend public&#13;
schools and 2 per cent of the rest&#13;
attend private schools.&#13;
Charles Denby, ex-United Stites&#13;
minister to China, iu an interview at&#13;
Indianapolis, declared that the partition&#13;
or China is sure to come. ^&gt;&#13;
Dr. Reuben Samuels, stepfather of&#13;
Frank and Jesse James, the notorious&#13;
Missouri bandits,, has been brought to&#13;
St. Joseph, Mo., a raving maniac.&#13;
lcindly towards him once more. Fhave&#13;
told him we never could be married.''&#13;
"You're a sensible girl," said Mr.&#13;
Bentley, smiting his hand on the table.&#13;
"And I have sent him back the little&#13;
garnet engagement ring that he gave&#13;
me," added Bessie, with a Eob in her&#13;
throat.&#13;
"Better and better!" said Uncle&#13;
Brande, exultantly.&#13;
"Not," bravely added Bessie, "because&#13;
I don't love him as dearly and&#13;
truly as I ever did. But because I see&#13;
now how wrong it would be for me to&#13;
fetter his whole life. For " She&#13;
stopped an Instant and a slight shudder&#13;
ran through her frame. "I may as&#13;
well tell you all, Mr. Bentley; I am&#13;
going blind!"&#13;
"Blind!" echoed the old man.&#13;
"Blind," repeated Bessie, gently, but&#13;
firmly. "I have had such strange blurs&#13;
and darknesses come across my vision&#13;
of late, and went to a doctor. And the&#13;
doctor told me, as kindly as he could,&#13;
that these are but the precursors of&#13;
total blindness. So, of course, all is at&#13;
an end between Harry and me. Will&#13;
you please tell him this? I have referred&#13;
him to you for ail particulars."&#13;
"I will," said the old man, huskily.&#13;
Harry Wade came to his uncle that&#13;
very morning in great perturbation.&#13;
'What does this mean, sir?" said he.&#13;
"Have you been endeavoring^to persuade&#13;
her to throw me over?"&#13;
"No, boy—no," said the old man, and&#13;
he told him all.&#13;
"I am bound to say that the girl has&#13;
behaved very well," said he. "Shall you&#13;
give her up?"&#13;
"No! Never!" shouted Harry, with&#13;
pale face and tightly clenched hand.&#13;
"Never! If she was dear to me before,&#13;
she shall be doubly treasured and sacred&#13;
now—my little smitten lamb—my&#13;
drooping, white lily-bud! I will never&#13;
give her up while we both live!"&#13;
The old man's eyes glittered, a faint&#13;
color had risen into his withered&#13;
ch'eks, as he rose and grasped both&#13;
his nephew's hands as in a vise.&#13;
"You're a trump, Harry Wade!" said&#13;
he. "I respect you more at this mln-&#13;
Margnret De Holland, of Cleveland,&#13;
21 years of age, was shot and almost&#13;
instantly killed by lovesick Verne&#13;
Rogers. He also fatally shot himself.&#13;
Dr. Mann, who attended President&#13;
McKiuley, says the president had&#13;
heart disease and no physician could&#13;
have saved his life after the shooting.&#13;
The lawyers cross-examiried Paul&#13;
Cftttlield. civil engineer, so hard in n&#13;
railway si&gt;it at Middletown, N. Y., that&#13;
h^ was seized with brain fever ami&#13;
^'led.&#13;
Senator Fcrakcr will ask congress&#13;
to vote $50,000 to Mrs. McKlnley and&#13;
a pension of $3,000 a year. It is said&#13;
the martyr's doctors will ask $50,000&#13;
for their services.&#13;
The apple crop of 1901 is placed by&#13;
the American'Agriculturist at 23,000.-&#13;
000 barrels, against 48.000.000 barrels&#13;
one year ago. and 70,000,000 for the&#13;
ftltkMt Award •« C*s» a*4 C*««ol«t~&#13;
guffsJo. N . . * * Oct 10, lWl.-r-Ttt*&#13;
flK^FiWnal* awJWded thtoi g d T&#13;
medals to Walte? Baker * Co. (limit*&#13;
ed)* ©erc&amp;ttto* Mast., for'.t!p.3p»P£'&#13;
riotlty of their, brsakfest coco* nnd&#13;
ail of their cocoa and chocolate pre&gt;&#13;
aratioal and the eseallence -of , t k t £&#13;
exhibit TWs is tne S7tfc highest&#13;
awnrd received by the* ffOm t»o&#13;
great expositions in Bvtop* *&amp;*&#13;
America,&#13;
. . - . « t •.•• ", I . I • 111 • , 'i'&#13;
p*atlL la Hetel Fir*. ,&#13;
Chicago dispatch: One man lost l i t&#13;
life, three persons narrowly escaped&#13;
suffocation, and a seore or more guests&#13;
of the Garden City Hotel, 43-49 Sherman&#13;
street were rescued from uppes&#13;
floors by firemen in a trcachtrens&#13;
blase in that hotel The dead me* »&#13;
Levi Whitman, who came to Chicago&#13;
from Fulton County, Ohio*&#13;
*-•— • T — r&#13;
Xx-AUtormaa a Saiekto.&#13;
former alderman of the old Thirteenth&#13;
ward, and once active in West Side&#13;
Republican politics, committed suicide&#13;
In his livery stable at 715 West Lake&#13;
street In sight of George WiUets, an&#13;
employe of the stable, he drank carbolic&#13;
add.&#13;
:^l&#13;
, * .,^.4:.&#13;
Awarded the Hlffbc*t Prise.&#13;
Buffalo, N. Y., Oct—The New Uomestic&#13;
Sewing Machine Co. baa today&#13;
been awarded, at the Pan-American&#13;
Exposition, the highest prize, tne coveted&#13;
gold medal, for the best family&#13;
sewing machine.&#13;
Keep* Aanrehlftt an AUea*&#13;
Baltimore, Md., t: leg ram: Judge&#13;
Stockbridge of this city will not issue&#13;
naturalization papers to anarchists.&#13;
Ever since McKinley*s assassination&#13;
Judge Stockbridge has asked witnesses&#13;
cago. accused of wheedling $7,000 out&#13;
of Mr*. I). R. Chaffee, while making&#13;
love to her. He was accused of similar&#13;
work in Ypsilanti, Mich.&#13;
Now it is -rumored that after the&#13;
Schley inquiry is finished Secretary&#13;
of the Navy Long will be retired from&#13;
the cabinet and Chandler, of New&#13;
Hampshire, will fill the place.&#13;
The estimates for the navy for the&#13;
fiscal year ending June 80, 1003. are&#13;
made public. The total amount is&#13;
•50S.910.084. against rT7.024.53T. appropriated&#13;
for the current year.&#13;
There- is chronic anarchy in Macedorirt,&#13;
owing to tin lawlessness of the&#13;
Albanians, whoso attitude toward tin*&#13;
Christian population Is worse than&#13;
that-of the Kurds toward the Armenians.&#13;
Chief of Tolice Donahue, of Omaha,&#13;
says, "the next move on the board is&#13;
up to Pat Crowe." Practically all the&#13;
conditions laid down for the surrender&#13;
of the "alleged kidnaper have been&#13;
complied with.&#13;
The war department has received&#13;
information from Secretary Root to&#13;
the. effect that his health has been generally&#13;
benefited by his sojourn in the&#13;
Adirondacks and that he expects to&#13;
resume his duties soon.&#13;
The somewhat familiar charge that&#13;
hcrse and mule meat is being dished&#13;
up in the form of hash and stews in&#13;
Chicago restaurants has been revived,&#13;
and the Illinois pure food commission&#13;
is preparing to "get busy."&#13;
John S. Pillsbury, former governor&#13;
of. Minnesota, and famous maker of&#13;
flour. (V'ert Thursday morning from&#13;
Bvight's disease. He had been 111 for&#13;
some time and his .death was not unexpected.&#13;
He was 73 years old.&#13;
The West Lndington iron mine,&#13;
near Iron' Mountain, was not a success&#13;
for 15 years, but in the hands of&#13;
the Illinois Steel Co.. with its name&#13;
changed to the Federal mine, it has&#13;
become a fine producing property.&#13;
Gen. Otis, reporting to the department&#13;
of the lakes, says desertion&#13;
among recruits is increasing, and&#13;
Chief Surgeon Kimball, department of&#13;
the Missouri, says recruits under 22&#13;
serve only to congest the hospitals.&#13;
Secretary of State Hay. in n letter&#13;
,_. . , , to Stat* Supt. of St:ite Prisons Collins,&#13;
ute than ever before. Give her up, in- detlin»»s the invitation of the latter to&#13;
deed! If you gave up that little jewel (designate an official representative of&#13;
of a girl you would give up the beacon&#13;
ctar of your existence. She is a pearl&#13;
the government to be present at the&#13;
electrocution of Cxolgosz. the murderer&#13;
of price, Harry—a true and noble worn- cf President McKinley&#13;
an, who wouldn't have hesitated to&#13;
sacrifice herself for your benefit. Marry&#13;
hor tomorrow if you will and bring her&#13;
right here to Bentley Grange. It shall&#13;
be her home and yours henceforward."&#13;
And in this strange and sudden way,&#13;
old Brande Bentley relented and took&#13;
his nlecc-ln-law-elect into his heart.&#13;
Bessie li all the flush of her rose-bud&#13;
Edna Wallace Hopper, the actress,&#13;
Is a wealthy woman, according to the&#13;
terms of an appraisement of the estate&#13;
of her mother. Mrs. Josephine Dunsmuir.&#13;
Nearly all of the estate of $20&amp;-&#13;
."Cti is represented by a rich farm- at&#13;
San Leandro. Cat&#13;
Coroner Hatcher has been informed&#13;
of tho examination made by Prof.&#13;
Curtis C. Howard, of Columbus. 0..&#13;
beauty could never have melted his of the remains of Mrs. Anna C. Pugh.&#13;
heart, but Bessie stricken down by God sister and alleged victim of Mrs. Mary&#13;
I became sacred an* predcua in his Belle Bituer. Howard said he found&#13;
£iSl;t. " '•&gt;•:•• ' arvcnlc In Mrs. rughV stenincb.&#13;
in naturalization cases If the applicant&#13;
was affiliated with any anarchistic society.&#13;
The question has been answered&#13;
in the negative until today in the case&#13;
of Christian Aubel of Gef*many. The&#13;
witness for Aubel replied that the applicant&#13;
belonged to Baltimore circle,&#13;
No. 1, of anarchists. The application&#13;
was refused.&#13;
I&gt;1M De Our Trial.&#13;
London dispatch: The hearing in the&#13;
case Of Theodore and Laura Jackson&#13;
was resumed in the police court The&#13;
last named is the woman well known&#13;
in America as Ann O'Della Diss De&#13;
Bar, the "spook priestess." There are&#13;
a number of charges against the pair,&#13;
one for obtaining money under false&#13;
pretenses from various young women,&#13;
and others against the man for assaulting&#13;
.several young women while pretending&#13;
to initiate them into the Jacksons'&#13;
cult, which was known as the&#13;
•'theocratic unity,"&#13;
Mm. Oyer'* ftleitvt.&#13;
McCarron, Mich., Oct. 21.—In April&#13;
last the sensational case of Mrs.&#13;
Samuel G. Dyer of this place was reported&#13;
in these columns. Mrs. Dyer&#13;
has suffered for years with a very&#13;
bad case of Heart Trouble and was&#13;
cured in a few weeks by Dodd's Kidney&#13;
Pills.&#13;
Since then Mrs. Dyer has received&#13;
hundreds of inquiries as to her condition&#13;
and many may be Interested to&#13;
hear that she is at present enjoying&#13;
the best of health and has not had the&#13;
slightest return cf the .Heart Trouble.&#13;
Formerly she had to sit up In bed&#13;
for hours to get relief; now she goes&#13;
about as smartly as any lady of 62&#13;
years in the State, Dodd's Kidnsy&#13;
Pills have made many friends in Chippewa&#13;
County through their cure of&#13;
Mrs. Dyer's case, and have proven beyond&#13;
doubt that their cures are not&#13;
only very complete, but absolute and&#13;
permanent.&#13;
For a Municipal Restaurants&#13;
British workingmen in London are&#13;
advocating the establishment of a municipal&#13;
restaurant where well cooked&#13;
mcal3 and pure tea, coffee and llquora&#13;
can be obtained amid comfortable surroundings&#13;
at moderate prices. A joint&#13;
deputation of the London Trades'&#13;
council and the Social Democratic&#13;
Federation will Invite the. London&#13;
County Council to make an experiment&#13;
with one such enterprise in the heart&#13;
cf Lcndoa, where the great new thorougnfare&#13;
will shortly be opened connecting&#13;
the Strand and Ho)born.&#13;
BoUer Explosion Kills fomr.&#13;
Clifton, Ariz., telegram: By the explosion&#13;
of a b-ilsr in t . e smarting&#13;
plant of the Dstrrit Coppar company,&#13;
W. W. Horgan, fireman; F. A. Adams,&#13;
fireman; Harry Davidson, converter&#13;
engineer, and Jose Antiveras, helper on&#13;
the engine, w^re ins antly k l l d an 3&#13;
several others were partially injured.&#13;
The condition of the fl ics and valves&#13;
on the wat-r supply line sh;ws the&#13;
fireman had peraitt-:d tho water to&#13;
inn too low in the b:i'e-\ and had than&#13;
fed the hot flues with cold water.&#13;
NOTHING EQUALS&#13;
St. Jacob's OIL&#13;
For Rheurnat.sm, Gout, Sciatica,&#13;
Neuralgia, Cramp. Pleurisy, Lumbago.&#13;
Sore?' Throat, Bronchitis, Soreness,&#13;
Bruise's, Toothache, Headache, Backache,&#13;
Feetache, Pains fn the Chest,&#13;
Pains In tbe Back, Pains in the Shoulders,&#13;
Pains in the Limbs, and all bod*&#13;
ily aches and pains, it acta like mag)©*&#13;
Saf0, sure and never failing.&#13;
&gt; • ' • ; • ! " • ' . ' ,&#13;
: ' " ; &gt; ^ - ' : #&#13;
..*«&gt;&#13;
' ft-'.•'-,'v*ay&#13;
• „4f&#13;
.-£-*&#13;
•n&#13;
• %&#13;
•••&lt;-..&lt;J!&#13;
s&#13;
• • • ' • &amp; : : •&#13;
v:•*:•"' '.»&#13;
?}% ^T W&#13;
-it C • * •&#13;
. ; . • # • ' • " "&#13;
% ! * ; * ; • * j » .&#13;
;V*' •&#13;
saa&#13;
'»,;.&#13;
,.*. .•V^VV t * ; ' f l l t . « * f c * ' ^ • • v : -v «•*&gt;'••*-',&lt;&gt;i , ! * . - • t - «.•• » j l - . , i»*,. 'XUttvMn.1 &gt;f. 'i--.-','. "&gt;**»"« -**,*-•» ny- &lt;.i**-'"»*!* (,«,„ -«,&gt;• •••r- » * - . . &gt; • • • ; - ' &gt; " .&#13;
£&lt;*&#13;
^ H'l'mIK H •»*»•&#13;
Mttfrta*&#13;
•MfPtM^N&#13;
:1.&#13;
-¾&#13;
j * : ' ^ 1&#13;
if&#13;
ft&#13;
; . . » • *&#13;
PAH6HAUVIUC. ^&#13;
Mrs. Ruia Browning of California&#13;
attended ohurch here Monday.&#13;
Bev. EatJ Pearce was in Detroit&#13;
on baaioees one day the past&#13;
w$ek. ;&#13;
Elmer White of Salt Lake City&#13;
was visiting friends here the past&#13;
week. x&#13;
Wells Townley «and wife of&#13;
Perry visited friends here over&#13;
t**&amp;&#13;
i \&#13;
Mi&#13;
St;&#13;
Mrs, Carrie Mason of Pontiac&#13;
is visiting her sister Mrs. Lacy&#13;
Wakeman. ^ ?&#13;
2£r^$bhft Wolverton has rerneij&#13;
home from her visit in&#13;
ork state.&#13;
Mrs. William Gostelo of Newago&#13;
who has been visiting her&#13;
brother Bryon Morgan, has returned&#13;
home.&#13;
An entertainment will be given&#13;
Saturday evening the 26 in the&#13;
M. E. church by Ellsworth Plum-&#13;
—-stead under the direction of the&#13;
Epworth League.&#13;
A very successful surprise was&#13;
given Almeran Holcomb and family&#13;
last, Wednesday afternoon&#13;
when a large number of neighbors&#13;
and fri ends gathered at their&#13;
home. Wheu all was in readiness&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Holcomb were invited&#13;
to the parlor where in behalf&#13;
of the com pauy Bev, Pearce&#13;
presented to them some very fine&#13;
and useful presents. They all&#13;
partook of a bountiful supper&#13;
ywhich^be IWdlfes of Parshallville&#13;
*" know so well how to serve.&#13;
¥$*&#13;
&amp;&#13;
ES' •&#13;
Sf&#13;
'-i&#13;
^ UNAOILLA.&#13;
Born to Wn&gt; Secor and wife on&#13;
Saturday Oct. »14, a boy.&#13;
A. C. Watson took in the sights&#13;
kt the Pan Am. last week.&#13;
^£rma Pyper is visiting frionds&#13;
(Howell and Webberville.&#13;
A. C. Watson and J . D. Coultou&#13;
were in Jackson Monday.&#13;
Miss Jane Wood is spending&#13;
the week with Inez Marshall.&#13;
Wirt Barnnm wife and son spent&#13;
Sunday with frieids in Munith.&#13;
K. Barn urn was the guest of&#13;
Hattie Sharp Saturday aud Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. J. 0 . Mackinder is spending&#13;
a few weeks in Toledo visiting&#13;
her sou.&#13;
Mrs. Mary Ives Bpent last week&#13;
in Chelsea und Stockbridge visiting&#13;
friends&#13;
Mrs. Parm Watts and granddaughter&#13;
of Adrian, is visiting&#13;
friends here.&#13;
Louis Barnes of Detroit has&#13;
been spending a few weeks with&#13;
Torn Gibney.&#13;
Mrs. Alice Secor .,o£ Detroit i»&#13;
spending the week with her son&#13;
Will and family.&#13;
Philander Buhl and wife and&#13;
Julian Buhl and wife spent Sunday&#13;
at Will Smiths.&#13;
Mrs. A. C. Watson and chil4ren&#13;
and Miss Jean Pyper visited* at&#13;
Frank Ives! in Stockbridge last&#13;
Week Wednesday.&#13;
WEST PUTNAM.&#13;
Sadie and Joie Harris visited in&#13;
Marion last Sunday,&#13;
II. B. Gardner attended the&#13;
Brighton fair last week.&#13;
jyiil and Mite Murphy were in&#13;
Chelsea on business last Saturday.&#13;
. Eli Plummer visited friends in&#13;
i: Wifliamston and Fowlervillc last&#13;
ureelL&#13;
JlAbel Tripp has gone to work&#13;
in Chelsea,&#13;
Bert VaoBUrioum is entertaining&#13;
a brother from Howell.&#13;
Lee and Mark Kennedy of.&#13;
Stockbridge, visited relatives here&#13;
over Sunday.&#13;
Richard May fel1 from his buggy&#13;
near Pinckney last Thursday&#13;
and was quite badly hurt&#13;
Miss Nellie Gardner is completing&#13;
her fall work in millinery at&#13;
Miss G. L. Martin's in Pinckney.&#13;
Patrick Kelly and wife visited&#13;
their daughter, Mrs. Wm. Mc-&#13;
Quillan in Hamburg last Thursday.&#13;
When in need of a man to pitch&#13;
corn stalks call on Bobt. Henderson&#13;
as.he is the champion of West&#13;
Putnam.&#13;
There was no^school last Thursday&#13;
and Friday the teacher, Miss&#13;
Miller attending -the teachers&#13;
examination at Brighton.&#13;
M»H&lt;I» I&#13;
M i *&#13;
NORTH LAKE.&#13;
Mrs. 0 . P. Noah visited at Ypsilanti&#13;
the first of the week.&#13;
Bora Get 4—to- Mr.-and Mrs^&#13;
Richard Webb of N. Dak. a* son.&#13;
Mrs. Ann Glenn of Chelsea is&#13;
visiting friends and relatives here.&#13;
Mrs* Wm. Glenn is spending&#13;
this week with her brother, Dan'l&#13;
Watts at Mason.&#13;
E. W. Daniels, auctioneer, had&#13;
his first fall sale on Tuesday, near&#13;
Four Mile lake.&#13;
Bert Gregory and wife of Gregory&#13;
visited at Wm. Hudson's the&#13;
first of the week.&#13;
John Witty who has been visiting&#13;
at Marion, Howell and other&#13;
places has returned home.&#13;
Mrs. E. Simonds, located at 0 .&#13;
P. Noah's, is an efficient fur seamstress&#13;
and has beeu busy the past&#13;
week repairing robes.&#13;
Frank Reason has finished his&#13;
summers work for R S. Whalian&#13;
and will go to Cleveland to study&#13;
to bacome Frank Reason, M. D.&#13;
Win. Gilbert, wife and daughter,&#13;
also Mr. Hawkins have arrived&#13;
from Arizona to Bpend the&#13;
winter here and perhaps will make&#13;
their home here.&#13;
sion o^ the paper followed by G.&#13;
E. Marshall, F. E. Ives, K Barnnm&#13;
and W, 0. Pyper; question&#13;
box, first question: Would it be&#13;
advisable to plant an apple orchard&#13;
for commercial purposes?&#13;
No.&#13;
Why would not three or four&#13;
fence wires twisted together make&#13;
as good a lightning rod as one&#13;
more expensive? It was decided&#13;
it would be just as good. What&#13;
is the best method of keeping up&#13;
the interest at the club; everyone&#13;
be interested and take part in the&#13;
exercises, not go in another room&#13;
to visit: music by Blanche Glenn.&#13;
Adjourned to meet the third Saturday&#13;
in November at Wm.&#13;
Smith's in Unadilla village.&#13;
HIa View • * It. MI don't see any reason why people&#13;
should interfere when fools want to go&#13;
through the Niagara rapids In barrels."&#13;
"But it does seem a shameful waste&#13;
3f good barrels, you know,"—Cleveland&#13;
iPlain Dealer.&#13;
- / / # - * ' • &gt; . ; -.1.,,»*•• . * v * &gt; - ^ f * . « . ^ &gt; * .• . ^ 1 . . 1&#13;
. . . . . . .. ;..; .jv1 '.#*.... y,. '•&#13;
.i..-).",*'» .&#13;
Dear Boy.&#13;
"Isn't young Mr. Dolley a dear little&#13;
thing?" asked Miss Duds.&#13;
'Tea. He's such a womanly man,"&#13;
replied Miss' Frocks.—Detroit Free&#13;
Press.&#13;
WOMAN AND FASHION&#13;
The Rnshton Sack.&#13;
The Rushton sack Is a neat little&#13;
house garment that will recommend Itself&#13;
on account of its utility and graceful&#13;
appearance. It has two clusters of&#13;
tucks on each side of the front, and&#13;
they are embroidered with a herringbone&#13;
stitch in silk. The garment is&#13;
made of figured French flannel and&#13;
this&#13;
EAST PUTNAM.&#13;
Albert Mills is iu Buffalo&#13;
week.&#13;
Louie Sweeney of Chiison was&#13;
a called at this place Monday.&#13;
Jas&#13;
moved into the&#13;
FRENCH FLANNEL AND VELVET BTBBON.&#13;
trimmed in three rows of black velvet&#13;
ribbon or ribbon of some harmonizing&#13;
shade. The collar turns over high and&#13;
soft in the neck, and the fronts of the&#13;
I garment fasten with frogs made of veljAffery&#13;
and family have i v e t ribbon with loops at each end. The&#13;
T . , , sleeve is loose and Is daintily trimmed.&#13;
Lewis tenart; _ L e d g e r Monthly.&#13;
house.&#13;
T _.,.A , , . - . Q l , ; French Cloaka Have Trains.&#13;
Jas. t itch aud wife of totocfc-! M a n y o f t h e F r e n c h cioaks have&#13;
bridge spent Sunday with their; trains and flare at the bottom like the&#13;
daughter here.&#13;
Wm. Shehan and family&#13;
I new skirts. They all have sleeves very&#13;
i wide at the bottom, and the revers&#13;
of , reach out beyond the shoulders. The&#13;
Dansvillo were guests of relatives o l d colonial coat is fashionable for this&#13;
% '4i • L I year, with its big revers and collar and&#13;
here this week. j gauntlet cuffs. Made up in colonial or&#13;
Mrs. Geo. Brown leaves today | «&gt;yal blue, with a darker shade for the&#13;
* /iu« *~ A +i^ TO«i.-_ i collar, cuffs, revers aud immense pockfor&#13;
Chicago to spend the winter e t ^ ^ w l t h a s t l t c b e d e d g e Qf ^ n i t e&#13;
with her daughter. • around the velvet, the pattern is unvi&#13;
J T\r c a,„««*v,«rt* ««A I usually handsome for a slender figure,&#13;
Mesdames W. S. bwarthoet and! a g &amp;£ a „ 8 k ] r t e d coata&lt; m g * w t ;&#13;
Nelson Burgess spent Sunday j pearl buttons should fasten this coal,&#13;
Gweitoh. tHhiecikr sp. areuts, Mr. and Mrs. a n d it should be worn with a lace Jabot&#13;
UNADILLA FARMER'S CLUB&#13;
and lace in the sleeves.&#13;
Deep, flat shaped capes are making&#13;
heavy strides toward popular favor.&#13;
The capes are to be doubled and trebled&#13;
and very much stitched and trimmed.&#13;
Another thing that Is winning favor&#13;
is the Norfolk.&#13;
Fall Traveling- Jacket*&#13;
The Glenham jacket is one of the&#13;
meeting wns called to order by&#13;
the secy., Wm. Pyper, and F. E&gt;&#13;
was appointed president protem.&#13;
A short program as follows:—&#13;
Siuging by the Club; prayer by&#13;
Eyal Barnnm; minutes of last&#13;
The Misses Fannie Murphy and | meeting read snd accepted; inst&#13;
Millie Gardner .attended the ex-j,] net by Mesdames A. C, Watson&#13;
MntoiitioiiKt;|5ri}&lt;htoii. last week. an&lt;l F;t»d Marshall; paper, Pure&#13;
•Ire. L M I M Per«:o i.f Det:oir, Seods, by Wirt Banmrn, which&#13;
tfwwks with btr( was well wor4h4i»»teuiug to; inst.&#13;
VB. G. W. Bates, music by Blanch Glenn; discus-&#13;
( . ' • ' •&#13;
The October meeting of the&#13;
Club was held at the pleasant&#13;
home of Mr. and Mrs.' Frank E.&#13;
Ives, last Saturday the 19LU. OWimngc&#13;
ttor, ttlhiae hbnus«&gt;v ssPeaftssoonn , tthnee aatttieennda-- 8^,m Pfllg€usrte l l|ttt l|eg dlne sQigUnQs Q, (a tnfdae fmorQ gat dpree tanco&#13;
was small. In the absence = girable. It is combined with the York&#13;
of the pjesident and vice pres., the! 8 k , r t and may be made of any of the&#13;
* fall cloths and colors. It will lend itself&#13;
to every material. This little suit&#13;
is made of tan colored cloth with a&#13;
bit of white trimming on the collar&#13;
and cuffs. The cuffs should be stiffened&#13;
with a piece of wire to help the&#13;
curves to keep in place. The Glenham&#13;
Jacket is so simple that it requires little&#13;
description. It is double breasted,&#13;
has but one row of buttons down the&#13;
front and comes in four stoat, M. 36,&#13;
8S and 40 inches bust measure.&#13;
*v, For n Little Olrl.&#13;
Ibis costume la of whitt nainsook&#13;
muslin made entirely ta sua feirisontftl&#13;
LZTTLS OIBL'S OOBTDIO.&#13;
plaits. The collarette and flounces are&#13;
edged with narrow guipure. The belt Is&#13;
of white leather.—Paris Herald.&#13;
Tae "Dog Collar** Jfeckaaaa.&#13;
Women of fashion-are adopting the&#13;
so called "dog collar" quite generally,&#13;
and its becoming character commends&#13;
It to all classes. It is a neckband of&#13;
velvet or even of soft leather overlaid&#13;
with filigree work of gold or silver oc&#13;
ornamented with jeweled nails. Its&#13;
name Is derived from the fact that the&#13;
collar fastens much in the style of a&#13;
harness or real dog collar buckle, some&#13;
of them showing a tiny padlock. In&#13;
Paris this fad has already spread rapidly.&#13;
*******&#13;
tiepairlaf f t m ; Jl '.v,- 0&gt;&#13;
I w^tW inform t b ^ W f t i | f Pinoknty&#13;
and ^ | i t a M * * i P ^ B ^ •* ° -&#13;
P. NoaJ»\^«rtfc Laie, /or ths pjpur*&#13;
pots or repairing hare. OW t o n&#13;
mtdt orer as ftoo* i t nair. Ltt uj do&#13;
your wdrfe i-PHass rsasontb b &amp; * ^ : ^ ^&#13;
Mrs. 1* Simonds. ; -•;,':•:-&#13;
I I I I I I I I in in i i' I'm i m i l ' ' i ni.Ji i I iw i^l ;.&#13;
a^NAflt&gt;fi9« :'•••&#13;
A few thoroughbred Shropshira&#13;
Bams. Ubeap while tbey Ust. '&#13;
t-44 y J.T.OHAMBntv&#13;
•'•• &lt; " . ' '&#13;
#&gt;&#13;
*arfl«le.&#13;
A good baby cab. Inquire at this&#13;
A married man to work oh farm by&#13;
the year. Enquire of'&#13;
C. V. VAwVynsnai.&#13;
House belonging to&#13;
All who have accounts with A7^ttr&#13;
Flintoft, Pettysville please call and&#13;
settle by Oct 25. . U 8&#13;
For Sale*&#13;
20 aore9 of land. About half good&#13;
mowing marsh, rest good secondgrowth&#13;
oak timber.&#13;
t-43 JOSXFH QUIKH.&#13;
~If~ you wanj your piano tuned&#13;
right/drop a (card to P. N. Monroe,&#13;
Howell, Mich. t-48&#13;
Pettysville eider mill is now ready&#13;
and will make ^ider whenever there&#13;
are apples to grind.&#13;
W. HOOKXB.&#13;
A Hard Character.&#13;
He—I went to the palmist's last&#13;
to have my character read.&#13;
She—Yes? What did he say?&#13;
He—He didn't say anything. He&#13;
looked at my hand, coughed a bit and&#13;
then gave me my money back.—New&#13;
York Times.&#13;
How to Qalt Chewing* Tohaeoo.&#13;
The "substitute cure" is worthy of&#13;
the attention of sufferers. We have a&#13;
citizen of Mobile who has tried it He&#13;
was an inveterate chewer of tobacco.&#13;
He stopped chewing and took to chewing&#13;
a pine stick. He always has this&#13;
bit of wood between his teeth, in waking&#13;
hours at least He has not tasted&#13;
tobacco in many years.—Mobile Register.&#13;
AGENTS WANTED,—To sell "McKinley's&#13;
Dying Words," the latest, great•&#13;
est and most pathetic copyrighted&#13;
song of the day. Over 15,000 were&#13;
sold in Chicago during first three days&#13;
ot publication. Regular 50 ceat sheet&#13;
music sise for 25 cents a copy words&#13;
by Howard Carleton Tripp, the celeorated&#13;
lecturer, editor and author.&#13;
Music by Charles E. Smith, the noted&#13;
band leader and musical composer. A&#13;
financial harvest made by energetic&#13;
canvassers. Send 25 coats for sample&#13;
copy and terms to agents ani retai I&#13;
dealers. Address, The Best Music Co.&#13;
Kmgsley, Iowa. We have several&#13;
copies of the song at this office that&#13;
are for sale.&#13;
i • »&#13;
Business Pointers.&#13;
ror Sale.&#13;
Second-hand coal stove as cood as new&#13;
WILL DUNNING .&#13;
For Sale.&#13;
A limited number of S. C. Brown*&#13;
Leghorn cockerals at $1.00 each, bred&#13;
from fowls scoring 91 to 94$ points.&#13;
F. W. Mackinder,&#13;
t44 Anderson, Mich.&#13;
These cool days remind us that winter&#13;
is approaching and our wood supply&#13;
is low. Any of ont many subscribers&#13;
who wish to help tis out along&#13;
this Hoe we would be pleased to have&#13;
them do so immediately.&#13;
rei\»ate.&#13;
Anyone in need of a well pump will&#13;
do well to call on us. Desiring to&#13;
put in a force pump we have a good&#13;
second band pump in good running&#13;
order. It was working well in a 58&#13;
foot well when changed for the force.&#13;
The pump may be seen at Teeple &amp;&#13;
Cad wells. &gt;'&#13;
WILLIAM M'KINLEY&#13;
4&#13;
HIS LIFE AND WORK,&#13;
BY&#13;
GEN. CHARLES H. GROSVENOR.&#13;
President's life long Friend, Com&#13;
rade in war Colleague in Congress.&#13;
Was near his side with other great&#13;
men when bis eyes were closed in&#13;
death. Followed the bier to the National&#13;
Capitol and to Canton. The&#13;
General requires a share of the proceeds&#13;
of his book to be devoted to a&#13;
McKinley Monument .Fund. Thus&#13;
every subscriber becomes a coDtributto&#13;
this fund. Millions ot copies will&#13;
be sold. Everybody will buytft. Orders&#13;
ior-the asking. Nobody will refuse.&#13;
Elegant Photogravure Portrait&#13;
of President Mc Kin ley's last picture&#13;
taken at the White House. Ton&#13;
can easily and quickly clear 11,006&#13;
taking orders. Order outfit quick.&#13;
Chance to prove success, secure yearly&#13;
contract and become manager. Send&#13;
12 2 cent stamps for elegant prospectus.&#13;
Taking 10 to 50 orders daily. 50-&#13;
000 copies will be sold in this vicinity.&#13;
Address,&#13;
THE CONTINENTAL ASSEMBLY,&#13;
Corcoran JBIdg., Opp. U. S. Treasury,&#13;
Washington, D. C.&#13;
LOST&#13;
On .Sunday night, Out, 20 an&#13;
gold pin, cameo set. ~~&#13;
leave at this office.&#13;
oval&#13;
Finder please&#13;
CAUTION.&#13;
Please do not shoot or chase with&#13;
a dog my deer and her fawn now es%&#13;
tray in the woods on the north side of&#13;
Portage Lake. I expect to get her&#13;
back in the Park soon as the lakt&#13;
freezes. . tf&#13;
T. BlRKBTT,&#13;
FOR SALE.&#13;
A few thoroughbred Goldth Wyanrtottf&#13;
ctvkrwU, also i«om« two year-old&#13;
Rice pop corn. Inquire of&#13;
H.G; Sms^Pinoknsy.&#13;
STEWART'S&#13;
AND&#13;
ROOM MATERIALS&#13;
for MkiK MEW HOOFS u i ramim&#13;
OLD HOOFS if « Ugh. UK h S t&#13;
•MM. SlH tor CttlJifM. , '&#13;
W. M. STEWART,&#13;
108 JOHN ST.. N. Y.&#13;
. 1 -&#13;
. . i * i - w * * y r / &gt;&#13;
.Wi&lt;«--!&#13;
• • • } • • ' !&#13;
4 •&#13;
m f l i i i i i f t f M ^ ^.,, V J &amp; J ^ ^ . , . . , ; , ^ .-^^^</text>
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              <text>Use the Windows Snipping Tool to capture the area of the document you want to save. If you want multiple pages printed please see staff to print the pages you want. &lt;a href="https://howelllibrary.org/technology/#print" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View the library's printing information.&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch October 24, 1901</text>
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                <text>October 24, 1901 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. XIX. PINCKNEY, LIVINGSTON CO., MICH., THURSDAY, OCT. 81, 1901. No. 4 4&#13;
L O C A L N E W S .&#13;
Halloween tonight.&#13;
Miss Flora Ouibaue of Dexter spent&#13;
Sunday with her parents here.&#13;
Mrs. Addie Lawrence ol Dakota is&#13;
tbo, guest of her sister Mrs. J. A. Cadwell.&#13;
Carl Sykesgave Geo. Green's residence&#13;
a coat of paint the last of last&#13;
week.&#13;
Will Steptoe and family of Dexter&#13;
were in town Sunday the guests of ? .&#13;
D. Johnson and family.&#13;
Mrs. NeUift-Stxeelejcand Miss Bertha&#13;
Bovee of Flint were guests of Eugene&#13;
Campbell and family the past&#13;
week.&#13;
Miss Ella Jackson, administratrix&#13;
of the 0 . B. Jackson estate, will sell&#13;
the personal property of the e3t.ate at&#13;
auction on the farm 1£ miles south of&#13;
this village, on Tuesday, Nov. 12, at&#13;
9i;8QLain. Lunch a t noon. See bills.&#13;
Edward A. Bowman,&#13;
DEPARTMENT&#13;
STORE . . . . .&#13;
HOWELL - MICHIGAN&#13;
BOWMAN'S&#13;
Special Sale of:&#13;
Battenberg and A r t Needle&#13;
Goods.&#13;
ALSO&#13;
Big New Stock of China.&#13;
Lower Prices than elsewhere&#13;
Trade at BOWITiail's » P«V»&#13;
T h e B u s y S t o r e ,&#13;
H o w e l l , Mich.&#13;
Mrs. Emma HazM of Ypsitanti spent&#13;
Sunday with relatives here. .&#13;
Mrs. Malachy Roche visited part of&#13;
last week with Jackson friends.&#13;
Mrs. VVm. Hendee is spending a&#13;
few weeks with Jackson friends.&#13;
Unless some change is made in the&#13;
program rhe Pan-Am. closes to-da,,.&#13;
J as. Jeffreys has hired out to Will&#13;
Dunning for a year and moved his&#13;
family there the past week.&#13;
Mike Dana has been suffering with&#13;
blo6d poisoning the past week m his&#13;
right hand, caused by husxinp corn.&#13;
Oue farmer near Chelsea raised 25,&#13;
GOO bushelsor' onion3 from his o w m&#13;
land this year and purchased as many&#13;
more.&#13;
* Miss Maude Cole teacher of the tilth&#13;
and sixth grades in -the Dexter High&#13;
school, spent Saturday with her uncle&#13;
P. L. Andrews and family.&#13;
The man who owns the engine and&#13;
4Jie one who owns the lighting plant&#13;
at Brighton have- been scraping for a&#13;
week or two and that village has been&#13;
in darkness.&#13;
A goodly number turned out to the&#13;
bee Monday and Tuesday and helped&#13;
in the work of repairing the dam.&#13;
The dinner furnished by Mrs. Peters,&#13;
was equal to a banquet.&#13;
M. I, Buinett of Stockbridge has&#13;
been engaged to work at the basket&#13;
factory here for the winter. We understand&#13;
that he will move his family&#13;
here soon. He began work Monday.&#13;
Mr. E. W, Lake of Forest Hill Gratiot&#13;
Co. formerly of this place raised&#13;
and delivered to the Alma Beet factory&#13;
beets that tested the highest degree&#13;
of any that has been delivered&#13;
being 18 9-10 per cent.&#13;
The CongM church and socity desire&#13;
to thank all wl.o so kindly contributed&#13;
of merchandise etc. and assisted in&#13;
making toe festival a success. We&#13;
shall make this an annual festival.&#13;
Keep watch of the DISPATCH for announcements.&#13;
THE HARVEST HOME FESTIVAL&#13;
Equal to most of thejlillage Fairs in Point of&#13;
^^^txfiibits.&#13;
The harvest ho me festival held at&#13;
the opera house last Friday and Saturday&#13;
was a success in every particular&#13;
and if followed up next year will&#13;
be a hummer as people are just beginning&#13;
to get interested. The display&#13;
of farm products, apples, corn, beans,&#13;
pumpkins etc. also the fancy work&#13;
display was as good as at any other&#13;
fair this season and about as much of&#13;
it. One of the arood things about the&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Younglove are! Mrs. I. J . Cook of Brighton was the&#13;
visiting relatives in Owosso. j guest of her many friends here t h e&#13;
P. D. Johnson and daughter Hazel past week.&#13;
Electric cars are now ranning from&#13;
Chelsea to Ann Arbor, i t required a&#13;
little over an hour to make the first&#13;
trip.&#13;
A Mr. Lewis of Ann Arbor will&#13;
speak in the North Hamburg church&#13;
on Friday evening of this week on the&#13;
teraperence subject. Everyone invited&#13;
to come and bear this excellent&#13;
speaker on the above question. He&#13;
will illustrate his lecture with steroptican&#13;
views.&#13;
At JACKSON'S,&#13;
New line of Black and Colored Dress Goods&#13;
ranging from 50c to $1.50 a yd&#13;
New line Black Taffeta Silk&#13;
New Tennis Flannels ranging from 5c to 12c yd&#13;
New patterns in Fancy Prints&#13;
Ladies' Fleeced Wrappers at $1 and$1.25&#13;
A complete line of Men's, Ladies', Misses' and Children's&#13;
Cotton a n d Wool Underwear at prices in reach of all.&#13;
fair was that everything on exhibition&#13;
was donated to the Ceng'l society and&#13;
was sold to people thus swelling the&#13;
pocket book of the society by a goodly&#13;
sum.&#13;
Nearly every business man donated&#13;
something of use or beauty and while&#13;
we have not space to speak of all'some&#13;
of the exhibits certainly deserve mention^&#13;
From those out of town we noticed&#13;
a lot of fancy glass vases etc. from&#13;
Brokaw and Wilks/m of Howell; a&#13;
french flannel waist from McPhersou&#13;
Sons. Howell; An oil beater from the&#13;
Glaszier Stove Works, Chelsea; satin&#13;
waist, Fbtcher &amp; Hall, Stockbridge-,&#13;
and a fine line of baked goods from&#13;
Patter man's. Bakery, Jakson; Bartlett&#13;
of Jaokson one half barrel of flour; J .&#13;
H. Bishop of Wyndotte one dozen&#13;
dusters.&#13;
Teeple &amp; Uadwell gave a washing&#13;
machine, 100 pounds of flour etc.; P.&#13;
A. Sigler a tea set of Haviland China;&#13;
P. G. Jacksao pair^mull curtains, fancy&#13;
towels, doilies, centerpieces; VV.&#13;
W. Barnard 2 shopping bags, towels&#13;
etc; Geo, Reason clothes wringer.&#13;
Darrow, Murphy, Wr.gbt and others&#13;
all gave liberally towards making it a&#13;
success.&#13;
Among the farm and garden products&#13;
were apples, corn, baggas, potatoes,&#13;
squashes, pumpkins, citrons etc&#13;
etc. in great abundance and of the&#13;
best quality, and everything found- a&#13;
ready sale. Th« popcorn and candy&#13;
stand received its share of patronage&#13;
as well the ice cream and when supper&#13;
time come the usual big 10 cent supper&#13;
was served Friday, and Saturday&#13;
evening a chicken pie supper for 15c.&#13;
Altogether the affair was a success&#13;
and should be repeated next year.&#13;
The societv took in $$156.&lt;X).&#13;
are at the Pan-Am. this week.&#13;
The O'Connor girls are in Plainfield&#13;
this week sewing for Sirs. 8. G.&#13;
Topping.&#13;
Walter Barry and wite of Tectmseh&#13;
were guests of Louis Dryer and&#13;
family the past week.&#13;
B. F. Andrews and wife ol Parshallville&#13;
spent part of last week with&#13;
their son F. L. and family here.&#13;
E. W. Lake of Forestviile, Micb.i&#13;
raised 186 bushels of Al, potatoesj&#13;
from one acre of ground. He is a son |&#13;
of R. W. Lalte of near here. \&#13;
i&#13;
J. Wr. Placeway took first premium J Geo. Collins of Webster came in one&#13;
on his driving team at the Fowlerville ' day laat week and bought Malacby&#13;
frir. He has since sold one of the j Roche's driving hors^ for the president&#13;
team for $200. ot the Michigan Central railroad&#13;
A good deal i3fbeing said these days! which he shipped from Dexter Friday&#13;
about the President dining with a | t ° Mr. Ledgehard of Detroit; Mr.&#13;
colored man. We admire Mr. Roose- Ledgehard sent a special to Dexter for&#13;
velt in the stand he has taken and ev-1 the horse. Mr. Collins judgement&#13;
ery true American citizen s h o a l ^ ^ —never,&#13;
stand up for him. In this country of! would have the order from the presi-&#13;
A GOOD HORSE DEAL.&#13;
all colors and nationalities the President&#13;
should show no favor.&#13;
When the jewier said that he had a&#13;
clock that would run eight hours&#13;
without winding, the cbeerfull idiot&#13;
wanted to know how long it would&#13;
run if wound. When a merchant&#13;
says that his business is running all&#13;
right without advertising, you may&#13;
safely ask him the same question.&#13;
There are some 32 graduates from&#13;
the Howell high school attending the&#13;
university at Ann Arbor this year,&#13;
there are about 20 others from Livingson&#13;
county who are not graduates,&#13;
making a total of 50 or \ruore from&#13;
Livingston county. Thi- is plain as to&#13;
the intellectual tendency of the people&#13;
of this county.—Republican.&#13;
dent to bny him a horse. Mr. Roche&#13;
has good judgement of a driver or be&#13;
would never have had a horse to fill&#13;
the bill.&#13;
Two New Bridges.&#13;
When the water went out from the&#13;
pond last week the foundations of the&#13;
two bridges below, the one on the&#13;
road soutb from the village and the&#13;
othe»* on the Dexter road were damaged&#13;
to such an extent that they have&#13;
been condemned. The stone arch&#13;
south ot the dam stood all right so the&#13;
next bridge will ue bailt after the&#13;
same plan. The one on the Dexter&#13;
road will be repaired. We understand&#13;
that bids will be received for t h j&#13;
building.&#13;
BOLD BAD BURGLARS.&#13;
ials in Shoes&#13;
Men's Fine Shoes ranging from&#13;
Ladies' "&#13;
Boys' and Youths' fine shoe from&#13;
Misses and Children's "&#13;
$1.50 to $4.00&#13;
1.50 to 3.50&#13;
2.25 to 2.00&#13;
.72 to 2.00&#13;
m^^^^£^&amp;^£^£^£^£^£^£^^H^&#13;
20 th Century Stove Greeting.&#13;
The old reliable firm that have built up their trade with&#13;
your valuable assistance, are happy to inform you that&#13;
they are in better position to serve youi wants than ever&#13;
they were in the 19th Century, and cordially invito you&#13;
to our store and investigate the truth of the statement&#13;
that we have the best line of&#13;
Range &amp;. Base Barter,&#13;
Coal ancl Heating Stores&#13;
an in Pinckney,&#13;
and at prices that defy competition.&#13;
Always .Yours,&#13;
Burglars wrecked the safe and also&#13;
the glass front of L. F. Peet's store at&#13;
Parser's corners on Thursday night&#13;
of last week. There were seven men&#13;
in the gang and part of the in guarded&#13;
the different houses in the place while&#13;
the rest robbed the store, If anyone&#13;
showed himself at a window or door&#13;
he was told to keep still or take the&#13;
consequences and of course the kept&#13;
still.&#13;
Before they commenced operations&#13;
they tied the doors of Mr. Peet's residence&#13;
by twisting ropes to the door&#13;
knobs and a board across the door so&#13;
tey could not be opened from the inside.&#13;
When the explosion o ecu red&#13;
Mr. Peet managed to open a door at&#13;
little but was ordered to keep still at&#13;
the point of a revolver.&#13;
The explosion caused a complete&#13;
wreck of the safe and front of the&#13;
store but the robbers only secured&#13;
about $15 as they did not tret at t h e&#13;
money drawer.&#13;
After the robbery the drbve away&#13;
in a riff they brought with them and&#13;
another stole from Chris Cephleas&#13;
near there. Mr. Cephleas had a horse&#13;
stole about four weeks ago but the&#13;
horse was allowd to come home after&#13;
being driven reveral miles.&#13;
Sheriff Finley and deputies are&#13;
looking the matter up but with little&#13;
hopes of catching the burglars as they&#13;
have no clue.&#13;
•Drugs,&#13;
Medicines,&#13;
Books:&#13;
Stationery,&#13;
Fancy and&#13;
Toilet&#13;
Articles.&#13;
A Full Line of the Finest Candies&#13;
We sell you more Stick Candy&#13;
for the money than others dare&#13;
offer.&#13;
GIVE US A CALL&#13;
Yours for trade,&#13;
F. A. SIGLER.&#13;
BOOK BINDING.&#13;
Having settled down to business in our new&#13;
quarters, secured new tools, stock, etc., we are&#13;
better prepared than ever to do book binding of&#13;
ail kinds.&#13;
Magazines,&#13;
Pamphlets,&#13;
Receipts,&#13;
Blank Books, Etc.,&#13;
Bound in a substantial manner in Leather, Cloth&#13;
or Paper. Brtngu^your magazines and let&#13;
make them wtoaMi *4oWo*t tr/ovr library.&#13;
3. £.&#13;
Yx&amp;Uakum «f lttsutrti.&#13;
•«fc&#13;
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4¾ $&#13;
ftVvk mL*- '&#13;
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T»"&#13;
TALMAGE'S SEfiMON.&#13;
V1GHTEOU8NESS OF RELIGION IAST&#13;
8UN0AY'S SUBJECT.&#13;
J o b XXXVI (I a» Follows* "Canst&#13;
Bind the Most Influence* of t h e&#13;
,M—The Bfeanla* of the P * s -&#13;
ClMtdj Defined.&#13;
teopyrlfbt, 190X, by Louts Klopsch, N. Y.]&#13;
W a s h i n g t o n , Oct. 27.—la t h i s d i s -&#13;
Dr. T a l m a g e demonstrates t h a t&#13;
affected b y forces t h a t w e s e l -&#13;
r e c o g n i s e a n d enlarges upon h u -&#13;
a c o o u n t a b i l i t y ; t h e text ia J o b&#13;
aocxviit, 81, "Canst thou bind t h e s w e e t&#13;
M L a e n c e s of P l e i a d e s ? "&#13;
W i t a t i s t h e m e a n i n g of that Question&#13;
God p u t to Job? H a v e w e a l l , o u r&#13;
b e e n reading i t a n d are m o s t o t&#13;
i g n o r a n t of i t s beauty a n d p o w e r&#13;
practical s u g g e s t i v e n e s s ? A m e a n -&#13;
passage of Scripture m a n y&#13;
* f c o n g h l i t t o be. B u t t h e telescopes&#13;
m i n n w a g e after a g e and a s t r o n o m -&#13;
i c a l o b s e r v a t i o n s kept o n q u e s t i o n i n g&#13;
s k i e s n a l i l t h e m e a n i n g of m y t e x t&#13;
o u t l u s t r o u s l y . T h e P l e i a d e s i s&#13;
a c o n s t e l l a t i o n of s e v e n stars appeari&#13;
n g t o t h e naked e y e , but scientific i n -&#13;
s t r u m e n t s reveal more than 400 prope&#13;
r t y b e l o n g i n g t o t h e group. A l c y o n e&#13;
l a the name of t h e brightest star ot&#13;
g r o u p called t h e Pleiade3. A R u s -&#13;
. a s t r o n o m e r observed that A l c y o n e&#13;
fc t h e c e n t e r of gravitation of our solar&#13;
H u g h Macmillan s a y s t h a t t h e&#13;
a n d i t s p l a n e t s wheel around t h a t&#13;
-oeater a t t h e rate of 422,000 miles a day&#13;
team o r b i t w h i c h i t will take 19,000,000&#13;
lo_CQmple±e._„The Pleiades_ap=.&#13;
i n t h e s p r i n g t i m e and a r e a s s o -&#13;
c i a t e d w i t h flowers a n d genial w a r m t h&#13;
a n d g o o d weather. T h e n a v i g a t i o n ot&#13;
t h e Mediterranean w a s from May t o&#13;
N o v e m b e r — t h e rising and t h e s e t t i n g&#13;
«ff t h e Pielades. T h e priests of B c l u s&#13;
n o t i c e d t h a t rising a n d s e t t i n g 2,000&#13;
y e a r s before Christ.&#13;
X o w , t h e glorious m e a n i n g of m y&#13;
tort i s plain a s well a s radiant. T o&#13;
g i v e J o b t h e beautiful grace of h u m i l -&#13;
i t y G o d a s k e d h i m , "Canst thou bind&#13;
t k e s w e e t Influences of t h * P l e i a d e s ? "&#13;
H a v e y o n a n y p o w e r o v e r the l a w s of&#13;
g r a v i t a t i o n ? Can y o n modify or c h a n g e&#13;
•an influence wielded b y a star more&#13;
&lt; h a n 400,000 m i l e s a w a y ? Can y o u c e n -&#13;
t r e d t h e w i n d s of the springtime? Can&#13;
:ywn caai o u t th? flowers? H o w little&#13;
toiow r a m p a r e d w i t h o m n i s c i e n c e ! ,&#13;
l i t t l e y o u c a n do compared w i t h&#13;
o m n i p o t e n c e !&#13;
\ A r m e d with Interrogations.&#13;
Called npon, a s we all are at times,&#13;
to d e f e n d our holy religion, instead of&#13;
a r g u m e n t t h a t can a l w a y s be a n s w e r e d&#13;
&amp;y a r g u m e n t let us try the power of&#13;
i n t e r r o g a t i o n . W e ought to be loaded&#13;
w i t h a t least half a dozen questions,&#13;
rioA a l w a y s ready, and when Chrlsvl&amp;&#13;
nnity i s assailed a n d w e are told there&#13;
i s n o t h i n g i n it, and there i s n o God,&#13;
:. ABB" t h e r e n e v e r w a s a miracle, and&#13;
t h a t t h e Scriptures are unreasonable&#13;
: a n d cruel, a n d that there never will be&#13;
a. J u d g m e n t d a y . take o u t of your porta&#13;
b l e HTmory o f interrogation s o m e -&#13;
t h i n g like t h i s : W h a t m a k e s t h e cona&#13;
t i o n of w o m a n i n Christian l a n d s&#13;
s e t t e r t h a n In h e a t h e n lands? D o y o u&#13;
th'irffe i t w o u l d b e kind i n God to turn&#13;
t b e h u m a n race i n t o a world w i t h o u t&#13;
; a a y w r i t t e n revelation to explain a n d&#13;
• tanconrage a n d elevate and save? A n d&#13;
1 i f a r e v e l a t i o n w a s made which do y o u&#13;
.ix-eler, t h e Zenda-Vesta of the Persian&#13;
vor t h e Confucian writings of t h e Chii&#13;
t e s e o r t h e K o r a n of Mohammed or&#13;
o o r "Bible? If Christ i s not a divine&#13;
b e i n g w h a t did h e m e a n w h e n he said,&#13;
"fBefore Abram w a s I a m ? " If t h e&#13;
/ 3 i b l e i s a bad book, where arc t h e evil&#13;
' r e s u l t s of reading it? Did you s e e a n y&#13;
' d e g r a d i n g influence of the book in your&#13;
f a t h e r « r m o t h e r or sister, w h o used&#13;
• t o r e a d i t ? D o y o u n o t think t h a t a&#13;
J u d g m e n t d a y is necessary in order t o&#13;
• e x p l a i n a n d fix u p t h i n g s that were&#13;
mtvtr e x p l a i n e d or fixed up? If our&#13;
xvfigkra i s illogical and an i m p o s i t i o n&#13;
HBira h u m a n credulity, w h y were&#13;
J H e n s c h e l a n d W a s h i n g t o n a n d Glads&#13;
t o n e a n d W i l l i a m McKinley i t s adv.&#13;
v a c a t e s ? H o w did it happen t h a t our&#13;
r a c U g i o n furnished t h e theme for t h e&#13;
*?creafeest p o e m ever written, "Paradise&#13;
; Tjusly" a n d t o t h e painters their greate&#13;
s t t h e m e s : i n ' t h e "Adoration of t h e&#13;
' Mafd," " T h e Transfiguration," " T h e&#13;
; X a s t Supper," " T h e Crucifixion," " T h e&#13;
f « a t e m b m e n t , " "The Last Supper,"&#13;
t h a t all t h e schools of p a i n t i n g&#13;
forth their u t m o s t genius i n p r e -&#13;
.- a e a t i u g "The Madonna?"&#13;
• • ' • *#&#13;
S w e e t Influence from Afar.&#13;
A s t r o n o m e r s c a n easily locate t h e&#13;
\ P l e i a d e s . T h e y will take y o u into their&#13;
u b f . 1 \ atoriea on. a clear n i g h t a n d a i m&#13;
' t h e i r r e v e a l i n g i n s t r u m e n t s toward t h e&#13;
i n t h e h e a v e n s where those s e v e n&#13;
h a v e t h e i r habitude, and t h e y&#13;
w i l l point t o t h e constellation Taurus,&#13;
•• a a d yori c a n s e e for yourself. B u t i t&#13;
&lt;tm I m p o s s i b l e t o point t o influences fai&#13;
t h a t h a v e affected o u r character&#13;
w i l l affect our destiny. W e k n o w&#13;
influences near by—paternal, m a -&#13;
conjugal—but by t h e t i m e w e&#13;
g o n e back t w o generations Or a t&#13;
t h r e e o u r i n v e s t i g a t i o n s falter&#13;
fail. T h r o u g h t h e modern interesth&#13;
a b i t of s e a r c h i n g back t o find t h e&#13;
il tree w e m a y find a l o n g l i s t&#13;
1. b u t t h e y a r e o n l y n a m e s . T h e&#13;
u—tferration o r a b a n d o n m e n t of «nme&#13;
o n e 200 y e a r s a g o w a s n o t recorded.&#13;
It -would n o t be t o i m p o r t a n t i t y.ou&#13;
and Z b y o u r good or bad behavior&#13;
blessed or blasted o n l y t h o s e i m m e -&#13;
diately around u s b u t o u r g o o d n e s s o r&#13;
our badness will reach a s far a s t h e&#13;
strongest r a y of A l c y o n e — y e a , a cross&#13;
t h e eternities. Under t h i s ' c o n s i d e r a -&#13;
t i o n w h a t do y o u t h i n k o f t h o s e w h o&#13;
g i v e t h e m s e l v e s u p t o frivolity or idlen&#13;
e s s and t h r o w a w a y fifty y e a t e of&#13;
their e x i s t e n c e a s t h o u g h t h e y were&#13;
shells o r pehhi?* or pods Instead cf&#13;
embryo eternities?&#13;
SorprUea o t t h e Next World!.&#13;
I suppose o n e of t h e g r e a t e s t s u r -&#13;
prises of t h e n e x t world will b e t o s e e&#13;
w h a t wide, far-reaching influence for&#13;
good or evil w e h a v e all exerted. I a m&#13;
s p e a k i n g of ourselves, w h o a r e o n l y&#13;
ordinary people. B u t w h o c a n f u l l y&#13;
appreciate t h e far-reaching g o o d d o n e&#13;
by m e n of w e a l t h In Great B r i t a i n f o r&#13;
the w o r k i n g classes—Mr. Lister of&#13;
Bradford, E d w a r d A k r o y d of H a l i f a x ,&#13;
T h o m a s S i k e s of Huddcrsfield, J o s e p h&#13;
W e n t w o r t h a n d J o s i a h Mason a n d S i r&#13;
Titus Salt? T h i s last great s^ul, w i t h&#13;
his vast w e a l t h , provided 756 h o u s e s&#13;
at cheap rent for 6,000 w o r k i n g people&#13;
and chapel a n d cricket ground a n d&#13;
croquet l a w n a n d concert hall a n d&#13;
s a v i n g s bank w h e r e t h e y m i g h t deposit&#13;
s o m e of their e a r n i n g s and life i n -&#13;
surance for t h o s e w h o looked further&#13;
ahead and b a t h i n g h o u s e s a n d parks&#13;
and m u s e u m s a n d lecture halls w i t h&#13;
philosophical apparatus, t h e g e n e r o u s&#13;
example of t h o s e m e n of a previous&#13;
generation b e i n g copied ih m a n y&#13;
places i n Canada a n d t h e U n i t e d&#13;
States, m a k i n g life, w h i c h would&#13;
otherwise be prolonged drudgery, a n&#13;
inspiration a n d a j o y ;&#13;
A t Dunfermline, Scotland, i s a&#13;
stone house, t h e room o n t h e second&#13;
floor t w e l v e feet b y fourteen i n size.&#13;
T h e annual rent of this room years&#13;
ago w a s $7.50. T h a t w a s t h e o n e room&#13;
In w h i c h t h e father a n d m o t h e r of&#13;
Andrew Carnegie lived with t h e w h o l e&#13;
family. Influences w e r e started there&#13;
w h i c h m a d e A n d r e w Carnegie ^ t h e&#13;
m o s t distinguished philanthropist of&#13;
all time, a n d w h a t h i s gifts of great&#13;
libraries o n both sides t h e s e a will d o&#13;
for t h e c o m i n g g e n e r a t i o n s I do n o t&#13;
think a n y angel of God would have&#13;
enough capacity t o calculate. W h o&#13;
could bind t h e s w e e t influences of t h a t&#13;
Pleiades?&#13;
. Influence of Other Worlds.&#13;
Notice also i n m y text the Influence&#13;
of other w o r l d s upon this world, W e&#13;
all regard TEe effect whien our cbhtin&#13;
e n t h a s upon other cont n^nts or one&#13;
hemisphere upon t h e other hemisphere.&#13;
Great harvest or drought o n&#13;
one side of our. world affects t h e other&#13;
side of o u r world. A panic in&#13;
Wall street. N e w York, h a s i t s echo&#13;
in Lombard street and t h e bonrse.&#13;
The nations of the earth cablegrammed&#13;
t o g e t h e r all feel t h e , s a m e&#13;
thrill cf delight o r shock of w o e . B u t&#13;
we do not appreciate t h e influence of&#13;
other worlds upon our world. T h e&#13;
author of m y t e x t rouses us t o t h e&#13;
consideration. It takes all t h e worlds&#13;
of k n o w n a n d u n k n o w n a s t r o n o m y t o&#13;
keep our world i n i t s orbit, every&#13;
world dependent o n c t h r r wo: Ids. T h e&#13;
stellar existence i s fe'.t a l l t h r o u g h t h e&#13;
heavens. Kvery constellation i s a s i s -&#13;
terhood. Our planet feels t h e benediction&#13;
of A l c y o n e and a l l t h e other&#13;
stars of t h e Pleiades. Yea, there a r e&#13;
t w o other worlds that decide t h e fate&#13;
of our world, i t s redemption or i t s d e -&#13;
molition. T h e s e t w o worlds a r e t h e&#13;
headquarters of angelology a n d d e m -&#13;
onology. F r o m t h e o n e world came&#13;
Christ, come m i n i s t e r i n g spirits, c o m e&#13;
all gracious influences. F r o m t h e&#13;
other world rise all satanic a n d diabolic&#13;
influence. F r o m that world of&#13;
moral n i g h t ' r^se t h e power t h a t&#13;
wrecked our poor world 6,000 y e a r s&#13;
ago, and all t h e good w o r k done since&#13;
then h a s n o t been able t o g e t our'&#13;
world out of t h e breakers. B u t t h e&#13;
signals of distress have be?h hoisted&#13;
and t h e life l i n e s are out, a n d o u r&#13;
world's release i s certain. T h e good&#13;
influences of t h e consecrated people i n&#13;
our world will be centupled by t h e&#13;
help from t h e h e a v e n l y * world, and t h e&#13;
divine power will o v e r c o m e t h e demoniac.&#13;
O m a n , O w o m a n , expand&#13;
your idea a n d k n o w t h e m a g n i t u d e of&#13;
a contest i n w h i c h three worlds a r e&#13;
specially interested. F r o m all t h e&#13;
seven worlds w h i c h m y text calls t h e&#13;
Pleiades there come n o such powerful&#13;
influences a s from t h e t w o worlds&#13;
that I am n o w m e n t i o n i n g . My o n l y j&#13;
hope for t h i s world i s i n t h e r e -&#13;
enforcement t h a t is t o come from a n -&#13;
other world. B u t t h a t i s promised,&#13;
and s o I feel a s sure of t h e ratification&#13;
of all evil a s t h o u g h l o o k i n g o u t of&#13;
m y w i n d o w t o d a y 1 s a w t h e parks a n d&#13;
t h e gardens flowering i n t o a n o t h e r&#13;
paradise a n d t h e apocalyptic a n g e l&#13;
flying through t h e m i s t of h e a v e n&#13;
w i t h t h e n e w s t h a t t h e k i n g d o m s of&#13;
this world h a v e become t h e k i n g d o m s&#13;
of our Lord.&#13;
The Wife's Influence.&#13;
N o t sufficiently d o w e recognize t h e&#13;
s w e e t influence of t h e wife. W e m e n&#13;
are of rougher mold, a n d our voice i s&#13;
loud, and o u r m a n n e r s n e e d t o b e&#13;
tamed, a n d g e n t l e n e s s i s n o t a s m u c h&#13;
of a characteristic a s i t o u g h t t o be,&#13;
and w e often s a y t h i n g s w e o u g h t t o&#13;
t a k e back. It i s t o c h a n g e t h i s t h a t&#13;
the good w i f e c o m e s in. T h e interests&#13;
of t h e t w a i n a r e Identica'. T h a t which&#13;
f r o m outsiders, w o u l d , be, c p n s i d e r e d f&#13;
c r i t i c i s m . a n d t o . b e resented b e c o m e s&#13;
Wndly S u t w T i o n T r ^ i t f t a m t i # * * « « « * « « , h u d W e n t '&#13;
w n a i y j w g g e s u o n , Bweet J M ^ a w * , a c l e r g y m a n , and that t h e p r i e s t s *&#13;
t h a t m a k e u s better m e n . t h a n w e f&#13;
o t h e r w i s e w o u l d h a v e b e e * o r could&#13;
h a v e been. &lt; -&#13;
T h e l a s t chapter of P r o v e r b s recog*&#13;
u i z e s t h e g o o d wife's influence w h e n i t&#13;
s a y s , "Her h u s b a n d is k n o w n In t h e&#13;
g a t e s w h e n h e s i i t e t h a m o n g tho elder j&#13;
of t h e land"—that i s , h i s apparel&#13;
i n d i c a t e s t h a t h e h a s s o m e o n e t o look&#13;
after h i s wardrobe, a n d h i s m a n n e r s&#13;
s h o w that h e Is under refining Influences&#13;
a t h o m e . Bv.t n o o n e -fully a p -&#13;
preciates t h e s w e e t influences of t h e&#13;
w i f e until t h e dark day conies a n d t h e&#13;
s l i g h t s y m p t o m s become s e r i o u s a n d&#13;
t h e serious p h a s e s of t h e disorder pass&#13;
i n t o t h e fatal a n d t h e temperature i s&#13;
106 a n d m e n t a l i n g e n u i t y $9 e x h a u s t e d&#13;
a n d y o u a r e told for your c o n s o l a t i o n&#13;
t h a t "whHe there i? life t h e r e Is hope,"&#13;
w h i c h m e a n s there i s n o hope a t a l l ,&#13;
a n d t h e precious life flutters a n d is&#13;
g o n e and y o u m u s t put o u t of s i g h t&#13;
t h e o n e w h o from t h e d a y s h e took&#13;
the v o w a m i d t h e o r a n g e b l o s s o m s&#13;
under t h e marriage bell h a d b e e n t o&#13;
y o u more t h a n all t h e world b e s i d e s .&#13;
T h e n y o u realize a s never before w h a t&#13;
had been t h e s w e e t influences.&#13;
The World of b u n i o n . "&#13;
T h e s w e e t influences of t h e h e a v e n -&#13;
l y world, w h i c h m a n y w i s e m e n&#13;
t h o u g h t for a l o n g while w a s A l c y o n e ,&#13;
t h e center of the constellation of t h e&#13;
Pleiades, world of our future residence,&#13;
a s w e hope; world of chorus&#13;
a n d illumination, world of reunion,&#13;
world w h e r e w e shall be everlastingly&#13;
complete, world where our old facu&#13;
l t i e s will b e intensified a n d quickened&#13;
a n d n e w f a c u l t i e s implanted, w o r l d of&#13;
high association with Christ, through&#13;
w h o s e grace w e g o t there a t all, and&#13;
apostles a n d p o e t s — H a b a k k u k and&#13;
St. J o h n of P a t m o s a n d Edward&#13;
Young, h i s " N i g h t T h o u g h t s " turned&#13;
i n t o eternal day, and H o r a t i u s Bonar&#13;
of modern h y m n o l o g y a n d H a n n a h&#13;
More a n d Mrs. H e m a n s a n d Mrs. S l g -&#13;
ourney, w h o struck their harps till&#13;
n a t i o n s listened, and David, t h e victor&#13;
over Goliath w i t h w h a t s e e m e d i n -&#13;
sufficient weapons, and J o s h u a of t h e&#13;
prolonged d a y i n Glbeon, a n d Havelock,&#13;
t h e e v a n g e l i s t hero, a n d those&#13;
t h o u s a n d s of m e n of t h e sword w h o&#13;
fought o n t h e right side. W h a t c o m -&#13;
pany t o m o v e i n ! What g u e s t s t o e n -&#13;
t e r t a i n ! W h a t personages t o v i s i t !&#13;
W h a t choirs t o chant! W h a t banquets&#13;
w i t h lifted chalices filled w i t h&#13;
"the n e w w i n e of U i e J t m g d o m r " W h a t ,&#13;
victories to celebrate!&#13;
The stories of that world and its&#13;
holy hilarities come in upon our soul&#13;
s o m e t i m e s in song, s o m e t i m e s in sermon,&#13;
s o m e t i m e s in hours of solitary&#13;
reflection, a n d they are, t o u s e the&#13;
words of m y text.' sweet Influences.&#13;
B u t there i s one star t h a t affects us&#13;
more w i t h i t s sweet influence than&#13;
the center star, the Alcyone of t h e&#13;
Pleiades, a n d that is what o n e Bible&#13;
author calls t h e Star of Jacob&#13;
and a n o t h e r Bible author calls&#13;
the Morning Star. Of all the&#13;
s w e e t influences that h a v e ever&#13;
touched our earth those that radiate&#13;
from Christ are t h e 3weetest. Born&#13;
a n Asiatic villager In a mechanic's&#13;
home, l i v i n g more a m o n g h a m m e r s&#13;
and s a w s and planes tiian among&#13;
books, y e t a t t w e l v e years of a g e confounding&#13;
robed ecclesiastics a n d starti&#13;
n g o u t on a mission under which&#13;
those born without optic nerve took&#13;
in t h e clear daylight, and t h o s e afflicted&#13;
w i t h unresponsive t y m p a n u m&#13;
w e r e m a d e t o hear, and t h o s e almost&#13;
doubled u p w i t h deformities were&#13;
straightened into graceful poise, and&#13;
the leprous became rubicund, a n d the&#13;
widow's o n l y s o n exchanged t h e bier&#13;
"" " ' '-'•• " ••v {&amp;/.'"' 1."&#13;
( . • o l e o s a i n d i f f e r e n t ^&#13;
Cso'grs*. I n U o w r t h h bmtfctr. ,W;&#13;
w h o t&#13;
tfna — 1&#13;
Threaten t o Sonlp IMBntA&#13;
attt *fcifchaPJbaph Lingdon&#13;
arrived here, having in custody&#13;
' : \ •'••:,&#13;
h a d visited^iti^i bad donft&gt; *»dS&amp;»tMti*Uw»» lad*wBtr i l e h i a i d ThrtWiai Oarbo.&#13;
o w u volition. "What g3od c a u priests T h o u g h h e w a s tfajeatea*d~-with b e l a i&#13;
do m e ? " said he, " t u t * a r e all h u m - 8 C f j p e d b e m a d e t h e a r r e s t T h e d e p -&#13;
^H?!8, . „ , ' , • u t y m a r s h a l ' c l a i m s t h e r e - a r e ' about&#13;
yUlP'.aUl h e e x i t e d t o d i e T u e s d a y , u w « » » • « » * • « w » f , w s n j , » n j , «uvi**&#13;
a n d w o u l d m e e t d e a t h l i k e n m a n , but slaty c a s e s * * * s*n*tt|fts;%ft6ng*he In-&#13;
-*—&#13;
wtpreased n o sorrow f o r hl« crime, dlans. T b ^ ' J ^ r t o r altaoJWd h i m a n d&#13;
Wheu a s k e d w h a t he w i s h e d d o n e w i t h ^ 6 ^ m e i n b w * * * t h e ^ffcrty stood&#13;
bis body h e replied: n don't cai:e w h a t ready t o bacjjr .^hern npv* T h e y a r e&#13;
becomes of it." , ( c h a r g e d w i t h breaking quarantine a n d&#13;
V ' i T e d i d ' a c t a c t a n y different than r e s i s t i n g an* officer, .l*1* ~&#13;
w h t * ! ? l\\n aw h l : V 8^:1 Wftldek,&#13;
"He wlli uoi u.uke .1 c o u f t r s l c n , nud&#13;
if a n y paper or priest s a y s h e h a s done&#13;
so, y o u c a n s a y for me It i s a lie. H e&#13;
believoa in ( i o d and a hereafter, but&#13;
I'ns n o u s e f&lt;,r priests. H e will, take&#13;
hh* c f c n W . ' *» t o the hereafter."&#13;
Hi* brother said t h a t Csolgo.:-* • did&#13;
not care to h a v e h i s c a s e appealed.&#13;
"What's t h e use," he raid. "I w o u l d&#13;
h a v e t o g o a n y w a y , and t h e sooner t h o&#13;
better."&#13;
T h e m a n w h o U h o t oottsalous o f h i s&#13;
o w n f a u l t s h a s n o c h a r i t y f o r another;.&#13;
inn&#13;
jtJ|i3WWe^3^X^^'^&gt;X^|yj^^XX^'&#13;
M a e t c c u B u r n e d t o Pi&gt;ath.&#13;
A tiro in w h i c h t h e police s a y 10&#13;
persons lost their lives, m a n y more&#13;
were s e r l o u s i y s»nd perhaps fatally injured,&#13;
occur red Friday in t h e heart of&#13;
the b u s i n e s s section of Philadelphia.&#13;
T h e nine-story •bnlldinff. a t 121» and&#13;
1*221 Market street, occuploil by Hunt.&#13;
Wilkinson Jc' Co., upholstcivrs7»mTTmr -&#13;
nit tiro dealers, and t w o unoccupied&#13;
buildings a t Vl'SJ aud V2&amp;i Market&#13;
street were destroyed. .Many other&#13;
bi'.Iitllniss w e r e d a m a g e d a n d t h e loss&#13;
is estimated to be u p w a r d s oT .^(.10.-&#13;
MX1.&#13;
C u b a n AnuexntlonixtM.&#13;
A petition asking t h a t Cuba be annexed&#13;
to t h e United S t a t e s is being&#13;
circulated a m o n g Cubau b u s i n e s s m e n ;&#13;
ami e v e r y effort Is being centered upon&#13;
aunexntlou a s business m e n generally,&#13;
ft 1» alleged, believe t h a t t h e reciprocity&#13;
m o v e m e n t will a m o u n t to nothing.&#13;
A meeting h a s been arranged for In&#13;
H a v a n a a t which, although held under&#13;
thp g u i s e of reciprocity, it Is snid.&#13;
the first j»im in t h e c a m p a i g n for annexation&#13;
will bo tired b y Cuba's orator*.&#13;
So-nors Dosvernino a n d Lanuza&#13;
and t h e Marquis Do Montoro.&#13;
Gets n Fins- C o m m a n d .&#13;
Hear Admiral Crowninshield for&#13;
over four y e a r s cjilef of t h o navigation&#13;
bureau, is soon to be relieved from&#13;
that d u t y a n d assigned t o h i * first flag&#13;
com maud afloat. It is understood that&#13;
he does not relinquish duty under t h e&#13;
l-iivy department entirely voluntarily,&#13;
although it is said that h e l m s rfo$1fe»T&#13;
an a c t i v e c o m m a n d afloat for several&#13;
months and above all preferred c h a r g e&#13;
of the European station.&#13;
Keirs i n firlef.&#13;
The bank at D a n e Station. Wis., WTTS&#13;
blown and cleaned out Monday.&#13;
K a r s a s w a n t s 1&lt;I(V acres o f St; Lonis&#13;
fa!»• s p a c e for an alfalfa exhibit.&#13;
Firo in t(ie H a m m o n d P a c k i n g Co-.'s&#13;
plant, at H a m m o n d , Ind.. W e d n e s d a y&#13;
night, caused a $-1((0,000 loss.&#13;
Tho I l u s s m n American-built battleship.&#13;
Iietvi/.an. developed 1N.OI knots&#13;
ovt'i' a "JO-mlle course a t Boston.&#13;
The pope had a n alarmimr reoccurrence&#13;
of Ids intestinal trouble o n Saturday&#13;
niuhr, a n d is in a state of great&#13;
w e a k n e s s .&#13;
At t h o close of The fiscal year T!H)0&#13;
theiv w e r e Tii.OKS postottices, in t h e&#13;
1'nited States, or o n e to every 1.000&#13;
inhabitants.&#13;
Safe-1 d o w e r s worked three Ohio&#13;
towns near Lancaster, stole about $1.-&#13;
tx!0 in money ami haJf a dozen horses,&#13;
then escaped.&#13;
A plague of lings has visited the entire&#13;
Lake Michigan, w e s t shore, for&#13;
-!i&gt;t&gt; miles. Milwaukee included. Chicago&#13;
is"not affected".&#13;
Mrs. L o u i s e Nostz. fiO y e a r s oid:, at&#13;
Astoria. L. 1.. killed herself a n d h&gt;r&#13;
grandson. Willie Colletti. O y e a r s old;&#13;
some time W e d n e s d a y night.'&#13;
Senator McMillan s a y s ho does not&#13;
o n which h e lay lifeless for t h e a r m s i think t h e tariff l a w will be changed&#13;
of h i s overjoyed mother, a n d pron&#13;
o u n c i n g n i n e benedictions o n the&#13;
Mount of Beatitudes and d o i n g deeds&#13;
and s p e a k i n g words w h i c h a r e filling&#13;
the centuries w i t h s w e e t influences.&#13;
Christ started every ambulance, kindled&#13;
every electric ray, spread every&#13;
soft hospital p i l l o w and introduced all&#13;
t h e a l l e v i a t i o n s a n d pacifications and&#13;
rescues a n d mercies of a l l t i m e . H e&#13;
w a s t h e l o v e l i e s t being w h o e v e r trod&#13;
our earth, more beauty i n h i s e y e ,&#13;
more tenderness i n h i s m a n n e r , more&#13;
g e n t l e n e s s i n h i s footstep, m o r e music&#13;
i n h i s voice, more dignity i n h i s brow,&#13;
more gracefulness i n t h e l o c k s that&#13;
rolled upon h i s shoulders, m o r e c o m -&#13;
passion i n h i s soul.&#13;
OSlclnl Monralns Paper.&#13;
All departments of t h e g o v e r n m e n t&#13;
are n o w u s i n g m o u r n i n g stationery,&#13;
a n d will c o n t i n u e t o u*e i t u n t i l the&#13;
thirty d a y s of mourning for t h e late&#13;
president s h a l l h a v e expired. A t first&#13;
o n l y t h e e x e c u t i v e m a n s i o n , t h e state&#13;
and t h e treasury departments adopted&#13;
m o u r n i n g stationery, b u t President&#13;
R o o s e v e l t ordered t h a t a l l departm&#13;
e n t s a t t h e capital s h o u l d u s e the&#13;
s a m e paper. S o great w e r e t h e dem&#13;
a n d s of t h e w h i t e house, t h e state&#13;
and treasury' departments f o r this paper&#13;
t h a t t h e supply in W a s h i n g t o n&#13;
w a s quickly exhausted a n d telegraphic&#13;
orders w e r e s e n t t o other cities. Black&#13;
bordered paper i s used for all comm&#13;
u n i c a t i o n s t o t h e world outside ol&#13;
t h e n a t i o n a l capital. Such paper cost!&#13;
a goodly price, a n d t h e total expense&#13;
of this g o v e r n m e n t mark of respect tc&#13;
the la4 e chief will, be $20,000.&#13;
ar tiie c o m i n g session, hut perhaps,&#13;
the Cuban s u g a r duty will be changed'.&#13;
Before 0 a. m. Monday, if e v e r y t h i n g&#13;
is ready, Czolgosz will b e - e l e c t r o c u t e d&#13;
in tho Auburn. X. Y., penitentiary.&#13;
T w e n t y - s i x w i t n e s s e s only will IH* admitted.&#13;
Kx-l'rosident Cleveland attended" t h e&#13;
funeral in X e w York of Frederick M.&#13;
Benedict, son of K. C. Benedict, w h o&#13;
w a s killed hist Saturday b y h i s automobile.&#13;
During t h e last 19 d a y s five men&#13;
have been killed a n d t h r e e w o u n d e d&#13;
while limiting in t h e w o o d s of Maine.&#13;
Most of t h e v i c t i m s | r e r e m i s t a k e n&#13;
for bear or deer.&#13;
The cold rn»ins. it i* t h o u g h t , will&#13;
drive t h e brigands, w h o captured Miss&#13;
Stone, o u t of t h e m o u n t a i n s , w h i c h&#13;
will m a k e them speedily accept t h e&#13;
ransom and release her.&#13;
T w o fatalities resulted from the destruction&#13;
by tire of th« s t a t e insane&#13;
hospital at Norfolk, Xeb. T h e x l e t l m s&#13;
were Victor Casper and J a n s Jasperson,&#13;
of C h e y e n n e eonnty, patient*.&#13;
Sir Tbumnft Llpton will not be a&#13;
challenger for t h e America's c u p n e x t&#13;
year. "1 think there a r e n o girls like&#13;
American girls, but y o u m a y s a y for&#13;
me that I will never- g e t married until&#13;
I lift t h a t cnp."&#13;
It Is said that t h e Commercial Cable&#13;
Co.. w h i c h Is controlled by J o h n W.&#13;
Mackny, h a s already ordered w i r e for&#13;
a cable from t h e United S t a t e s t o H a -&#13;
waii a n d t h o Philippines, a n d will begin&#13;
construction very soon.&#13;
T w o copper a x e s have been unearthed&#13;
near t h e life s a v i n g station a t the&#13;
Portage L a k e ship canal. T h e y a r e&#13;
evidently relics o f tho m o u n d bnlMer*.&#13;
lielng similar to t h e copper utensils&#13;
which h a v e been found In m a n y of the&#13;
'mu'.uuk; in Hu' Mississippi valley.&#13;
Trifling that Costi.&#13;
Neglect&#13;
Sciatica and Lumbago&#13;
And you truw be dlMbled and&#13;
iocapiciUted for work for&#13;
many Ion* days.&#13;
St Jacobs Oil Will cure surely, rirht sway,&#13;
and save time, money and&#13;
suffering. It&#13;
Conquers Pain&#13;
Price, 35c and 50c.&#13;
BOLD BY ALL DEALERS IK 11 EDICTS,&#13;
I N V E S T I G A T E T H E&#13;
GUARANTEED&#13;
'0&#13;
OF THE CUBAN&#13;
P L A N T A T I O N C O . ,&#13;
73 Home Bank Building,&#13;
Detroit, Mlct&gt;.&#13;
YOUR MONEY IS SAFE&#13;
YOUR INVESTMENT SURE.&#13;
DIRECTOR* XXD OFFICERS:&#13;
!&#13;
HON. A. T. BLISS. Governor oC MiobU-an.&#13;
F. T. DL'CHAKME. Treasurer Ireland &amp;&#13;
Mathews Co., Detroit.&#13;
DAVID D. CADY. Lee&amp;Cady, Wholesale&#13;
Growrs, Detroit.&#13;
aEN. F. W. GREEN, Inspector General&#13;
M. N. G.. Ypsilttnti.&#13;
J. H. WATERMAN, Grain Merchant, Detroit.&#13;
J.G.GRAY. Delaware Corporation Co.&#13;
WARD L ANDIiUS, President, Whole&#13;
sale Fruits, Detroit.&#13;
CHAS. H. HOWARD. Vice President, formerly&#13;
Hodcson. Howard &amp; Marks. Detroit.&#13;
H. W. NOBLE, Treasurer. Banker,Detroit.&#13;
COL. C. W. HARRAH. Secretory, Director!&#13;
Toledo &amp; Monroe Railroad, Detroir.&#13;
WM. C JOHNSON. Timber Lands, Detroit.&#13;
Call or Wrft« for Particulars.&#13;
Big Bargain&#13;
In Railway&#13;
Travel&#13;
O n l y one'fare plwa f £ f o r ft&#13;
round-trip t i c k e t t o K a n s a s&#13;
Colorado, Oklahoma, T e x a s *&#13;
N e w Mexico, Arizona,.&#13;
S a l t L a k e City.&#13;
D e c e m b e r 3 a n d 17..&#13;
T o u r i s t sleepers a n d c h a i r carsv&#13;
S e e t h e g r e a t S o u t h w e s t — i t s&#13;
i r r i g a t e d lands, c a t t l e ranches,&#13;
m i n t o t o i l w e l l s a n d orchards.&#13;
T h e place t o g e t a borne or m a k *&#13;
• f e o f i t a b l e investments.' -&#13;
Santa Fe&#13;
.Oflfa»,A&gt;T.»S;T.yy,&#13;
HstBfwv Pricelett ReiMSV;&#13;
M.O. PHELPS BROWN**&#13;
OMnWKHT&#13;
% CstttTbftsfhth* Ptrsj&#13;
wtrohutbol e.&#13;
^ - ^ , SeadTi&#13;
Dr.d.y.Biawn.asn^rax,&#13;
l . idbtSStBjlMft,&#13;
attain.&#13;
sw&#13;
tor yew&#13;
6%&#13;
8AVE FUEL&#13;
NEAT ADDITIONAL R00K8&#13;
by sttachlnf BCBTONtl FIJBL&#13;
»TXM»Otfral?lfto yottt 'stove Pipe.&#13;
Save* oae-ttird fuel Price, $ 4 J 0 .&#13;
Your dealer will xupply you. It&#13;
not, order direct from tw.&#13;
W . J . B U H T O N ^ C O .&#13;
I l l CAM STHET, • MTtMT, NUQL&#13;
Catalogue *&amp;6 teattmonUli on raqvaek&#13;
N S U M f 1 I O N&#13;
&gt;*.fl ;A.l yaiiA^s.eH^huiLfa. lifri&#13;
-. ,vn.... M*&#13;
? * • :&#13;
m&#13;
{Old Favorites Series.)&#13;
the snow, tin beautiful, snow, nlling the&#13;
sky and the earth aelcW;&#13;
Over tlw attOsetopsy over e*e street, over&#13;
the bc*d&gt; of the ptejfte you meet, ( P a n d a s , fllrtlrxf. •kimmbe along, feeautl-&#13;
• i i a a s s w l it esn do wothing wrong.&#13;
P l y i n g ^ »U*a a fair la*r*» cheek: clinging&#13;
to Hpe In a irottoscme freak;&#13;
BeaattMl. enow, from tJh« heavens above,&#13;
pure as an angel and Aokle at. love!&#13;
01 the snow,the beavffifnl snow! How the&#13;
takes gither a»d laugh aa they go!&#13;
_ _ ^ _ „ , _ Whirling about in lUmaddenin* fun, It&#13;
IT\_. ^ ^ J ^ ' .v- /Jftw in its glee with everyone.&#13;
Chaalna; laughing, hurrying by, it lights up the face and Us&#13;
- - Mpsdfclts th« ore; . ^&#13;
And etwn the dogs with a bark and a bound, snap at the crys-&#13;
. tsite that eddy around.&#13;
£he bswnJs alive and its heart is aglow, to welcome the com*&#13;
How-tthe wild crowd go swaying alette, hailing each other with&#13;
Stumor and soavr&#13;
i Bow the gay sledge* like meteors fiash by—bright for a mol&gt;&#13;
.'ment, then loett to the eye.&#13;
Wafting, swinging,, dashing they « o over the crest of the&#13;
^ . beautiful snow;&#13;
Baww so pure when it fall* from the sky, to be trampled in mud&#13;
by the crown rushing by;&#13;
To be trampled «nd tracked by &lt;Ohe thousands of feet, till It&#13;
blends with ithe horrible filth in the street&#13;
Once I was pure tout flakes, from heaven—to hell&#13;
puns as the snow—trot I&#13;
fell; fell, like the snowfrom&#13;
hell;&#13;
Fell, to be tramped as the filth In the street: fell, to be scoffed.&#13;
to be spit on and beat&#13;
Kneaddiin g, cursing, dneadlng to die, belling my soul to whoever&#13;
would buy,&#13;
iDealing" 1» shtane for a moraei'of bread, hating the living and&#13;
fearing the dead.&#13;
Merciful God*.!have I fallen taUow? And y e t I was once like&#13;
this beautiful snow!&#13;
Once I was ftalr as the beasstlful enow, with an eye like its&#13;
crystals, a heart like its Kglow;&#13;
Once I was Moved for my InsRcent grace—flattered and sought&#13;
for the charm of my tat*.&#13;
Father, mother, sisters all, Clod, and myself, I have lost by&#13;
my fall.&#13;
The veriest wretch that g*j*s shivering by will take a wide&#13;
sweep. Kest I wander ts» nigh;&#13;
For of aU'that is on or about me. I know there is nothing&#13;
that's:pure but the beautiful snow.&#13;
How strasfge It should be «fcat this beautiful snow should tell&#13;
'sinner with newfreie io go!&#13;
Itwr a *oa-ln-h%w by Uflfrr her that&#13;
you're got the enuro* contract*&#13;
"Heaven Wise | * Father/ sett&#13;
yotfor "Jww," «UpfWT•***•• the&#13;
TtTBiKtTTll*&#13;
And, aa Father OTlaharty had exported,&#13;
Mrs. Mullaney's s o d a l ambltioas&#13;
for her daughter reoofnised a&#13;
wide dlffereaee between a "common"&#13;
teamster who drove hie o w n single&#13;
team a n d the "contract teamater" who&#13;
regofteed in four teams and the church&#13;
contract&#13;
T h e n e a t little house was replaced&#13;
Doaf#*w Oaaoee Bo fttteel&#13;
local applications, aa they eaaaot reach the&#13;
" portion of the eat. .There U only one&#13;
._. _ that is by eooatt.&#13;
Deafness is ©eased by aa&#13;
Inflamed oocdition oMhe ansae lining "&#13;
used or aa&#13;
flag of the&#13;
is inflamed&#13;
you have a ruabuag sound of laperfeet bear*&#13;
tag, and when tt la entirely closed deateet* Is&#13;
the result, and unless the mnammatioa eaa be&#13;
taken out and this tube restored to ita normal&#13;
condition, hearing will be destroyed forever,&#13;
nine eases oat of tea are eansed by catarrh,&#13;
waleh is nothing but aa Inflamed ooodltlon of&#13;
(he mucus surfaces.&#13;
circulars, free,&#13;
F. J. CHENEY a CO., Toledo, a&#13;
Sold byDruggists, tte.&#13;
HAU'S FamiTy Pills are the beat&#13;
HBS. i. x eoaanx&#13;
to to i l l Sick Women* m9hm&#13;
Hn. PiaiJuun * €km*&gt; W&#13;
Know She Cam Hribj&#13;
She Did Me."&#13;
on a&#13;
Seamen nearing land can tell t h a t&#13;
fact by the deposits of dew on the vessel.&#13;
IJropsy treated free by Dr. H. H. Green's&#13;
Boos, of Atlanta, Oa. The greatest dropsy&#13;
specialists in the world. Read their advertisement&#13;
in another column of this paper,&#13;
Peter the Great was half crazy most&#13;
of his life, through drink and rage.&#13;
FITS Permanently fiuwd. ^«fltsornenroosi»s«saftar&#13;
Brst day* u«e nf Dr. KtlneV Great Karvs liastorer.&#13;
Send tor F R E E SS.OO trial bottle and tuaaitsa.&#13;
Urn. a. H. KLUHU LtO..«KU Area 8 t . 1 hllartntnhla.T'a.&#13;
" D B A B H a t . PutKnxKrTBav&#13;
praises great reformers; t h e i r&#13;
and fames are in t h e earaef r&#13;
and the public press help* _ _&#13;
cod tidings. Among t h e m a l l I^efim.&#13;
£ Pinkham'a name proea t o&#13;
We are all living under a sentence of death.&#13;
Sooner or later the sentence will be enforced.&#13;
AVOID FRAtTDULKXT IMITATIONS&#13;
Use the genuine HUMS Bleaching Blue and&#13;
preserve your cothea. All grocers, 10c&#13;
The devil would soon be on the run if one-talent&#13;
people would do nil ttie good they could.&#13;
How stravge It would be. "«*hen the night comes again, U tbe&#13;
show, und the ice strunk my desperate brain!&#13;
Fainting,'freezing, dyiac **lone, too wicked for prayer, tee&#13;
weak for my moan&#13;
To be &gt;er.,rd in the era** &lt;*T the cracy town, gone mad tit Its&#13;
Joy s*t the snow's &lt;*mifng down;&#13;
To lie ami to die in my earribie woe, with a bed aad a canemfl&#13;
of Hie beautiful sawev.&#13;
- J . W. Watsoa, VSSL&#13;
W.J .&#13;
s ^ n &amp; B&#13;
imI."LI u't/u I A A w u i i r\f\f\f\r\i~\f\f~y* x !•&gt;••• 11 &gt;«-HI~I * i n n n r r&gt;r&gt; - n n n n n r w v i r n n » i n n i i « i w » n n i»&#13;
fatter O'Flatierty's Tactics.&#13;
BY ETWEI, M. COLS03C.&#13;
•fCopyrlght, l«n,*jy Dally Story Pnib.- Co.)&#13;
It was a ueal. little house iiioi.neat&#13;
aittle street, DEnnls MullaneyHs -vesidence,&#13;
but it wns not alone baenuse of&#13;
dts neatness Us-t Mrs. Mullaxsy was&#13;
rproud of It fflie had bougM r that&#13;
i o u s e — o n thet installment plam. naind&#13;
»ou—out of her own-earningas A S a&#13;
•eeamatresfi. olied by the liiito she&#13;
could save outief her husband!* wages&#13;
iof two dollaraiia day-. And sihe had&#13;
mever, as she herself expreseed at. hart&#13;
*"liss than elgki chllder ter ikape"&#13;
awhile the house was in court* «ot ac-&#13;
SQUirement Per these beloved "li.hllfcer"&#13;
the social ambitions were' laigh.&#13;
.Tit was no partdff her plans that Holly,&#13;
ifcer eldest and.Che flower of UMB ^ock,&#13;
Should marry&#13;
although you&#13;
c w n e d a fine team.&#13;
It is doubtful If the young popple&#13;
avould ever hair had a chane* .tc be&#13;
Jiappy—without snaking a run Sor it,&#13;
which Molly wauld never hare 'Consented&#13;
to do—sait for Father OTlaaerty's&#13;
assistanes.&#13;
.Father O'Flaherty was tho boyishfaced&#13;
priest at Sst. Michael's, a roung&#13;
osan just out from Ireland, and, osrce&#13;
more to quote Mrs. Mullaney, ""awirrekin'&#13;
iolke the «ery divvle ter bate&#13;
ther faver of homesickness," which&#13;
was consuming htm. Father OTiaherty&#13;
was fond of &lt; calling at the Mul-&#13;
Isaey cottage because Mrs. Mulbuse-y&#13;
reminded him of the good, hard-worfelaf,&#13;
affectionate mcther who had&#13;
"common teaaosler,'&#13;
"Jamesy" Slurphy&#13;
"It's hankeria' after Jameay Maryay.**&#13;
riflced her owe Joy la his presence for&#13;
the sake of his future well-belag. He&#13;
was sorry, upoa'the dacasion of the&#13;
call which directly followed Mrs. Mullaney's&#13;
flat agaiaat "Jamegy" Murphy&#13;
to see that Molly looked pale aad troubled&#13;
aad4hat her eye% showad traces&#13;
of tears, &gt;&#13;
"It's haaaerin' after Jamesy Marphy&#13;
that she do be,* ithe indignant mother&#13;
burst forth in auuwer Ac .the good&#13;
priest's kindly innuiry. "fiutiit's cry&#13;
she'll have ter, unlike i!&amp;m.esy .Alters&#13;
his ways."&#13;
"A good lad, Mrs. Mrtbutey,'' said&#13;
Father O'Flaherifo"* "and Arery steady&#13;
for his years."&#13;
Molly shot htm a grateful ^glance,&#13;
but Mrs. Mullaney a;i*ew jnore indignant.&#13;
"He may be ctaady as 12ie church fer&#13;
awl I care." sflue declanod. roundly,&#13;
"an' as harneocne a s ?I^Ur t h i n k s him.&#13;
But no young omn &amp;xa&amp;6 wlllrn' ter&#13;
dhriye team these days is eood^emough&#13;
fer my Molly. It's «ddAcation an'&#13;
s t h y l e t h o t betjts a moot up .In ther&#13;
wurruld these days."&#13;
"It's love thsst m a t e t ipetQiee happy,"&#13;
ventured Molly, emboldened by&#13;
the priest's evident sympathy.&#13;
"I believe you're right, my girl,"&#13;
Father O'Frahertr jtold fcer A few moments&#13;
later, as site showed iDimiOut at&#13;
the front door. "Keep « p A good&#13;
heart and a good courage, Molly, and&#13;
you'll be a happy wcraan e r e of 1 these&#13;
days.&#13;
Straight home to the stssdy Where a&#13;
committee of "BoHd" parishioners&#13;
waited to discuss plans for Ihe .building&#13;
of the new church w e a l Father&#13;
O'Flaherty. thinking of Modfr and&#13;
"Jamesy" and Mrs. Mullaney a s ;he&#13;
w e n t And thinking a little, toe, perhaps,&#13;
of the bright-eyed, rosy-eheeked&#13;
Irisn girl for whose sake he had been&#13;
hurried off to college a little earlier&#13;
than he had expected, but of w&amp;ose&#13;
charms a man dedicated to the priesthood&#13;
from his Infancy had no right to&#13;
think. She, too, had looked a ttttle&#13;
pale and troubled when last he saw&#13;
her. The thin face of Father O'Fhvtherty&#13;
looked thinner than ever as He&#13;
ifaced his parishioners.&#13;
"I'll leave most of the details to yea,&#13;
Sentlexnen," he said, preseatiy, "bat I&#13;
w a n t young James Murphy to&gt; have&#13;
t h e contract for the teaming. He's a&#13;
gjeod lad and the contract will , help&#13;
atsi. None of you will have a a y objection,&#13;
I am sure."&#13;
"Jamesy isn't prepared fort.** suggested&#13;
o n e of the three contract teamsters&#13;
sa the room.&#13;
"I aaderstand he soon will be," was&#13;
Father OTlaherty's quiet reply.&#13;
That night he had an interview with&#13;
the young teamster.&#13;
"I'm thinking, James," was the substance&#13;
of this conversation, "that you&#13;
could borrow the money for a couple&#13;
of new teams from your father If you&#13;
had a good contract in sight, ooaMn't&#13;
you? And I myself shall he ated to&#13;
lend yon the money for still aaother&#13;
good team and wagon. With three or&#13;
four teams you'd be in shape t o undertake&#13;
the teaming contrast l o r the&#13;
new church of S t Michael"&#13;
"Never mind thanks, lad." ha conefaded&#13;
the Interview by a a t s i&#13;
and talk to your fathei saw.&#13;
you can't overcome Mrs. MoUaney's&#13;
prejudice against having a teamster&#13;
Mrs, Wlnnlow'a S o o t h i n g Symt*.&#13;
For children tcethinz, soften* tha tjnnu. r»Saom ln-&#13;
AaaitbaUoa. aliajr» paia cura^ wtoil ooiio. Ste a battle.&#13;
Bcpgars are promptly arrested in Vienna,&#13;
Austria, if caught begging on the street.&#13;
BEMBTN. Zooklzoo, tae great larigorstor, sets&#13;
at ooce. Seat for Sf| pottage paid. Address&#13;
~ .Mich.&#13;
"Heaven bless ye, father."&#13;
'by a tall flat building some time ago,&#13;
and Mr. and Mrs. James Murphy, blissfully&#13;
happy and successful, are joint&#13;
owners with Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Mullaney.&#13;
of this new building. Father&#13;
O'Flaherty, albeit t h a t j i e n e v e r J ! t o d • X ? ^ ^ A 1 " R l U i ! , l ^ t • , ! ? ! i ' ? t ,&#13;
the new building quite s o snug and&#13;
homelike as the old one, calls there&#13;
quite offen and he is usually a little&#13;
happier for every v i s i t&#13;
The sweet little Irish girl of whom&#13;
Father O'Flaherty has no business to&#13;
be thinking slipped out this life last&#13;
winter, and it comforts the man who&#13;
h a s no business to think of her to&#13;
know that Molly Murphy, nee Molly&#13;
Mullaney, was made happy for her&#13;
sake.&#13;
A self-scale man spoils his work every time&#13;
he opens his mouth to praise himself.&#13;
Piso's Cure cannot be too highly spoken of as&#13;
a cough eure.—J. W. O'BBKIN, 3*2 Third Ave.,&#13;
KM Minneapolis, Minn., Jan. ti, lOOi.&#13;
She Got Her Potwtoe*.&#13;
There is a young commission merchant&#13;
who resides near Darby, aad&#13;
who is the happy husband of a beautiful&#13;
wife and father of t w o children. He&#13;
is, like many other husbands, however,&#13;
possessed of a memory which occasion-)&#13;
ally proves a severe trialjfeL i b e - p a -&#13;
tience of his wife. Recently *he had&#13;
asked him on several occasions to sena&#13;
home a bag of potatoes, with tbe usual&#13;
results—apologizes and excuses o n his&#13;
return home for his forgetfulness. The&#13;
other morning, before he left home,&#13;
Mrs. M. gave him a sealed letter, with&#13;
the request that he should promise not&#13;
to open it till he had reached his place&#13;
of business. Her husband wondered at&#13;
this, but in answer to all his inquiries&#13;
she repeated the, request so earnestly&#13;
that he at last consented. All the way&#13;
in on the car he thought of his w i f e s&#13;
strange request, and he had hardly entered&#13;
his place of busiess when he tore&#13;
open the letter. This is What he read:&#13;
"Dear John: For some time past I have&#13;
thought long and earnestly on what J&#13;
have to say to you, and I have decided&#13;
that this was the best metnod to c o m -&#13;
municate it. I have hesitated several&#13;
times alxuu writing to you in this way,&#13;
but I find that I cannot conceal my&#13;
thoughts longer. I must and will tell&#13;
you all"—here he turned over the page.&#13;
his hair rising slowly on end—"the potatoes&#13;
have been out for a week past.&#13;
Please send home a bag. I thought by&#13;
this method you would not be likely&#13;
to forget." And he didn't.—Philadelphia&#13;
Public Ledger. l&#13;
If mothers could die for their children no&#13;
man's life woukl.be in danger while bis mother&#13;
lived.&#13;
Hot Weather Health.&#13;
During the heated terra of Jnly and&#13;
August one should be careful to keep all&#13;
t h e organs of the system in free working"&#13;
condition.&#13;
Haxter's Mandrake Bitters taken be*&#13;
lore meals will ward off diseases inei-&#13;
&lt;ient to this trying season.&#13;
ilRS. U. F. BOBEBTST,&#13;
County President of W. C. T. U .&#13;
City, Mo.&#13;
with a softly breathed blessing;&#13;
the lips of thousands upon&#13;
of women w h o have been resuswsa saa»&#13;
their families w h e n life hung- b y av&#13;
thread, and b y thousands of&#13;
whose weary, aching limbs yow&#13;
quickened and whose pains j o t s&#13;
taken away.&#13;
" I know whereof I speak, f o r II&#13;
received much valuable benefit i&#13;
through the nee of Lrdfta E-."&#13;
b a r n ' s V e g e t a b l e C o m p o i n a s l .&#13;
for years I have known dosessMsf^&#13;
men w h o have suffered w*th " *&#13;
ment, Ovarian troubles*&#13;
a^n4 irt^^^ra^l'm whn mrft aimnsr ssssLwell&#13;
to-day, simply t h r o w n thswaoeaV&#13;
your Compound."—Maa* If. F. Baaaaatav.&#13;
1404 McGce S t , Kansaa City, Isev&#13;
$6000 forftlt If aboc* tutimonlet ht aaggswisBk&#13;
Don't hesitate to write t o !&#13;
ham. She w i l l rnderstsnal&#13;
perfectly, and w i l l treat y o n&#13;
kindness. Her advice i s free,&#13;
address is Lynn* Mass.&#13;
HANDSOME * ™ w » ^ A ^&#13;
. band.&#13;
• entry m-h. want*&#13;
AOdrew* Mas. K. »7 Market 81- U .&#13;
DROPSY"*" wmm- eaaea.&#13;
qnlckratJafan*&#13;
Book of tuturonlais i * t M n*TW as* si* u&gt; aasn'a sols. Baz s. M»a&#13;
W, N. U . - D E T R O I T - N O . - 1 9 0 K&#13;
when Aaswerfaff Xdvertiseaeats&#13;
Hestiea This rapec&#13;
UNION MAOE&#13;
W. LDcg1»$4ei:tEdsUtrw ,&#13;
Cssflfft be Equaled at As/ Voce.&#13;
_ FarnaT*lbaaaO,aar&lt;»ra5aC*aaxr*&#13;
.be reputaitaaof W. L. Doat;la*S*.o&gt;&amp;B*f&amp;£&gt;&#13;
shoe* lur style, comfort rvnd wear has exstued&#13;
all other nufces sold at tiiese petit?*. Tills excellent&#13;
«r»n:-vtk&gt;n haa bwn won by merit ataw.&#13;
. U'.LDoapli* shoes h»Y« to Kiwbet-&#13;
, trr satisfaction than oibtt **•«• and&#13;
&amp;IW&#13;
m&#13;
OL&#13;
.UDoaplu Te jriw betfer&#13;
sat-sfactioii other fs.ss am&#13;
faso sliors because Tils reputation for&#13;
t!&lt;e best SX#«and S3J0 shoes must Be main-&#13;
I &amp;lned. Tbe standard baa always been pJaoM&#13;
so Ulzh that the »r(aarer reeeires rooreTaltss',&#13;
for bis mon*y In the W. 1« Doaclas s&gt;V/&gt;0 and&#13;
X&amp;J.0 s!:oc* than be can **•. elsewhere. \\\ '&#13;
Doadas m~.'.:es and sella more $100 and ( U 0 fJioes t&#13;
any other two mannlacrnr»ni tnt'.ie world. F i a t Col&#13;
r . ^ | r : « n « " i l . W. L.D««Tta«Sta»eSS.se&gt;a*Maf«s&#13;
afi&gt;«aasMWtasTa«*lMiWM n « l k S4 a*4 Sa SSSMS, • N iaat as a«a&lt; im every way.&#13;
£sM Hr C3 fr*/rr?as $*orea in Anrriritn cifm sefltmfdirtet&#13;
' wearer at one profit; and Ike bnt ihoe dealer*&#13;
1a«M aa*s&gt; l«»ta« W. L. toa«tt«&#13;
aaS arte* «!••••&lt; —i tWjia, 8* _&#13;
whera on tarelpt of pirire aaA sfte. addi-'&#13;
tiomil fnr carriajre. Take&#13;
menu of foot as shown:&#13;
deMred; sue and wWtn&#13;
asnally worn; phjuaflTCs\P&#13;
toe; be»Ty, icediaiu. or light tales.&#13;
Vf. Io IkreciiB. Srockton. Visa.&#13;
"Qo&#13;
if&#13;
A New F j e l Gas.&#13;
Much interest is felt in England in&#13;
the Mond fuel gas, which is made from&#13;
the cheapest cUss of small coal and&#13;
dust, known as "bituminous slack."&#13;
This gas. which is intended for furnaces&#13;
and gas engines, can, it is&#13;
iclalmed, be supplied at a cost of four&#13;
cents per thousand cubic feet. It is&#13;
•not a lighting gas. as it burns with a&#13;
pale blue flame, and its heating value&#13;
re lower than that of illuminating gas,&#13;
brat greater than most other "producer&#13;
caves." In the proces3 of manufacture&#13;
a very large proportion of the&#13;
nitrogen of the coal is recovered in&#13;
the form of sulpbate of ammonia,&#13;
worth nearly two dollars for ev^ery ton&#13;
of slack gasified.&#13;
ID HMD g&amp;3&#13;
ArtiSclai Ie« In Arixcrfut.&#13;
A company has just been formed at&#13;
Phoenix for the unique purpose ol&#13;
making iee by electrical currents and&#13;
storing it in artificial glaciers in high&#13;
altitudes, for purposes of irrigation.&#13;
The Inventors claim that their scheme&#13;
will not only solve the water problem,&#13;
but will tend to greatly reduce the&#13;
summer temperature in the arid regions.&#13;
They declare that while, heretofore,&#13;
only heat has been produced&#13;
by electricity, they, by a simple process,&#13;
reverse the method and secure&#13;
the opposite results, producing intense&#13;
cold.&#13;
Delicate situations are usually morn&#13;
indelicate than otherwise.&#13;
THE POPULAR LINE TO&#13;
COLORADO SPRINGS, PUEBLO, CRIPPLE CREEK*&#13;
LEADV1LLE, QLENWOOD 5PR1NQ5. ASPEN,&#13;
GRAND JUNCTION, 5ALT LAKE C1TYV OODEN.&#13;
BUTTE, HELENA, SAN FRANCISCO, LOS ANQELES*&#13;
PORTLAND, TACOMA, SEATTLE. &gt;« &gt;&lt; N* N« V**&#13;
REACHES A a THE PWNOPAL TOWNS AND MINING CAMPS IN&#13;
AND NeW NeXJOO.&#13;
COLORADO. UTAH&#13;
THE TOUfclST'S FAVORITE ROUTE&#13;
TO ALL MOUNTAIN RESORTS&#13;
The Only Line Passinf Through Salt Lake City Emoote ft»&#13;
the Pacific Coast.&#13;
THROUGH&#13;
SLEEPING&#13;
GARS&#13;
BETWEEN D E N V E R ^&#13;
CRIPPLE CREEK SALT LAKE d T T&#13;
LQADVUXE OGOEN&#13;
GLBNWOOD SPRINGS PORTLAND&#13;
GRAND JUNCTION SAN FRANCSOO&#13;
LOS ANGELES&#13;
CHICAGO, ST. LOUIS AW SAI FRAIttStt&#13;
DIMM MRS SERVICE A LA CAXTB&#13;
CN ALL THOUGH TRASS&#13;
T.JBPPBRY.&#13;
DENVER. COLO.&#13;
A, 5» HU0HE3. OsSlTrsffie&#13;
DENVER. COLO,&#13;
S. K. HOOPER, OssVl&#13;
J. a MBTCALP, OssVl&#13;
DENVER. COLO.&#13;
X H. EAECOCK, AaaL OssVl Tt&#13;
SALT LAKE CITY. UTAH.&#13;
aad Tkket A*«s*. DENVER, COLflC&#13;
i'V.w' ^ . ^ , : . . ^ ^ - : , . - . / - ^ . - . - - : . - - ^ ^ . , / - : - , - . • - . ' . ' - - • , / - ; - • ' - . • » ^ j . , - ' • • - . ( • • • • : - ; . ' ••• • » - - - : : . " : . - - - . - - - : - - , - / -. , - . - - . / . : ^ - ^ - - -&#13;
I&#13;
fA&#13;
t't:&#13;
r&gt;s&#13;
m&#13;
%\u §mrttnftt Dispatch.&#13;
F. L. ANDREWS'A CO. PROPRIETORS.&#13;
THURSDAY, OCT. 31,1901.&#13;
MONTHLY REPORT&#13;
Of the Pinckney Public Schools for the&#13;
month ending Oct. 25,1901.&#13;
HIGH SCHOOL DEPARTMENT.&#13;
38.&#13;
593.&#13;
30.&#13;
14.&#13;
20.&#13;
Whole number of pupils&#13;
Total days attendance&#13;
Average attendance&#13;
Aggregate tardiness&#13;
Number of days taught&#13;
PUPItS NEITHER ABSENT NOB TARDY,&#13;
Mae Reason. Glenn Gardner&#13;
Ellery Durfee. Ethel Durfee.&#13;
Rex Read Fred Bead.&#13;
Eva Grime* Ethel Graham&#13;
STEPHEN DURFEE, Supt,&#13;
GRAMMAR DEPARTMENT.&#13;
Number of pupils 14&#13;
Total attendance 239&#13;
Aggregate tardiness 11&#13;
Daily attendance 12&#13;
Number days taught 20&#13;
PUPILS NEITHER ABSENT NOR TARDY.&#13;
Nellie Bowers Rnel Cud well&#13;
Norma Vaughn.&#13;
C. L. GRIMES, Teacher.&#13;
Blowings Mot aud Cold;&#13;
They wen* posxipinj; olayouugjpoup!&#13;
e who liiitl l-.roii run-roily, married a&#13;
few days befuiv. without the consent of&#13;
tin-Mr p«tiv:iu\&#13;
!K&gt; party, "his&#13;
mother&#13;
: hem !'&lt;?&#13;
:/(!!• Sl!i&#13;
• :i tiiviv&#13;
;ii!&lt;, ! &lt;;:u&gt; t /&#13;
!-!M w o n ! ' i nc&#13;
•'at&#13;
-:lt»'.-:'.&#13;
• &lt;!('(•{•!v\r.:; hov ?:.'):] thon weiit&#13;
!fv:'.-!&gt;t t!:f::s /&gt;r- l:;nj&gt;-t I'ft'ritfH'-&#13;
vc.\\U\ V.V.Ci !:&gt; help them Start&#13;
l-.cUM'iuM'iila'-r Uiis hot weaih'-&#13;
\-•••-•• • i : : i H ? ' y l / i M t n : . ' ; t h i ' i i '&#13;
i :-....: tl:ti .voua;.; womai'&#13;
;.. : •:• ;\ «•*&gt; '&#13;
' ' : ••:-." jMM'.'iiii'd t!:o luir-&#13;
:,, I'.••-' i.-.:«.-! s t y l e of ,vas&#13;
' :..- '. • •&gt; ('o r.M-i!- roi 'aif.;^."&#13;
'..-..: *&gt; a- &lt;vraiiiily &lt;&gt;!'i&gt; sort o*&#13;
HUMOR Or THE HOUR&#13;
Be Won.&#13;
"The wretch! I'd like to have nil&#13;
blood!" snapped the pretty girl in blue.&#13;
"I would;* 80 there! I'd like to know&#13;
vor Torsive j w h a t he meant hanging around here if&#13;
•f)\i:-. .•Mi,).&#13;
i oaaan.-tfil&#13;
Va:1'- T-Mias.&#13;
tie&#13;
Stepped into Lire Coals.&#13;
"When a child I burned my toot&#13;
frightfully," writes W. H. Eads, ot&#13;
Jonesville, Va., " which caused horrible&#13;
leg sores for 30 years, but Bucklen's&#13;
Arnica Salve wholly cured me&#13;
atter everything else tailed. Infallible&#13;
tor Burns, Scalds, Cuts, Sores, Bruises&#13;
and Piles. Sold by F. A. Sigler 25c.&#13;
INTERMEDIATE DEPARTMENT.&#13;
Whole number of days taught&#13;
Total number days attendance&#13;
Average daily attendance&#13;
Whole number belonging&#13;
Aggregate tardiness&#13;
PUPIL NEITHER ABSENT NOR&#13;
Kate Brogun&#13;
Lloyd Grimes.&#13;
Viola Peters&#13;
Lucy Cook&#13;
Bangs Richmond.&#13;
20&#13;
G25.5&#13;
31.42&#13;
35&#13;
38&#13;
TARDY.&#13;
Lucy Jeffreys&#13;
Orpha Hendee.&#13;
Lola Moran.&#13;
Mary Love&#13;
Mary Lynch&#13;
MRS. J . A. GREENE, Teacher.&#13;
PRIMARY DEPARTMENT.&#13;
Whole number of days taught 20&#13;
Total number of days attendance 687.5&#13;
Average daily attendance 34.37&#13;
Whole number belonging 31.&#13;
Aggregate tardiness 39&#13;
PUPILS NEITHER ABSENT NOR TARDY.&#13;
Gladys Brown Bernardine Lyncli&#13;
Theo Crate Claude Black&#13;
Iva Richmond Josie Culhane&#13;
La Rue Moran Kathleen Roche&#13;
Carlton Mclntyre.&#13;
JESSIE GREEN, Teacher.&#13;
What's Your Face Worth?&#13;
Sometimes a fortune,-but never, if&#13;
you have a sallow complection a jaundiced&#13;
look, moth patches and blotches&#13;
on the skin, all signs of Liver Trouble.&#13;
But Dr. KingY New Life Pills give&#13;
Clear Skin, Rosy Cheeks, Rich Complexion.&#13;
Only 25c tit F. A. Sigler's&#13;
drug store.&#13;
Credence In Medicinal Charm*.&#13;
It is not only among the rude savages&#13;
of India that the virtue of medicinal&#13;
charms is implicitly credited. The illiterate&#13;
and simple minded of England&#13;
repose all necessary, faith in the same&#13;
fascinating delusions, and there is no&#13;
ancieut woman in any,of our remote&#13;
YTttrrges who prefesses-thecustomary&#13;
.knowledge and superiority of her age&#13;
who lias not a specific charm for&#13;
whooping c-otigli. a.g««». teething, convulsions,&#13;
opih'psy a ml every oth'ir common&#13;
ailment and disease.&#13;
Every one is acquainted with the ef-&#13;
Scnry of tin1 "royal touch" in cases of&#13;
the king's evil, or scrofula, and scarcely&#13;
a week passes that we do not see in&#13;
sur newspapers an advertisement for&#13;
flic disposal of a child's cold or a serious&#13;
form of deafness. — London Tit-&#13;
Bits.&#13;
Tot causes night Alarm.&#13;
"One night mr brother's baby was&#13;
taken with Croup." writes Mrs. .1. O&#13;
Snider, of Crttenden, Ky., "if seemed&#13;
it would strangle before we could get&#13;
a doctor, so we gave quick&#13;
1 :JCI t r&gt;i«J:jl&gt;le.&#13;
"Why tlo ,vou waiuie,- aimlessly from&#13;
place to piara'.'" inquired the philanthropist.&#13;
"Well." answared Meandering Mike,&#13;
"eight hours' sleep a day is enough for&#13;
anybody. ASM! we's gutter do'somet'ing&#13;
(\it' de other 1;! hotirs. ain't we?"—&#13;
Washiiv.^on Star.&#13;
he didn't mean business! I handled&#13;
that young man as I would a basket of&#13;
eggs on a slippery pavement! Mad?&#13;
Of course I'm mad! You'd be mad If&#13;
)you had to put up with what I have!&#13;
He was here the other evening, 'and&#13;
something told mc that the supreme&#13;
moment had arrived. He was awfully&#13;
nervous and seemed to have&#13;
something on his mind. No, it wasn't&#13;
a case of tight shoes, stupid! Don't&#13;
be silly! Do you think I was born&#13;
yesterday? I got ready my oh-thls-Is-&#13;
80-sudden look, and none too soon, for&#13;
he leaned over and said tenderly:&#13;
" *WTould you marry me i r I proposed?*&#13;
"You needn't tell me what I should&#13;
have said. I know just as well as you&#13;
do that I should have told him to ask&#13;
me if he wanted to find out. But he Is&#13;
the only eligible young man that I&#13;
know, and I couldn't afford t s take&#13;
any chances, so I murmured, 'Yes/&#13;
" 'By Jove,' said he, 'I've won the&#13;
bet! You see, one of the boya at the&#13;
club bet me the cigars that you&#13;
wouldn't have me, and I took him up.'&#13;
"What followed Is a mere blank.&#13;
For the life of me I can't remember&#13;
whether I sent for the police or turned&#13;
in a fire alarm."—Detroit Free Press.&#13;
T h e B a d Boy's B r a v e r y ,&#13;
I ain't afraid of lickin's,&#13;
And I ain't afraid to stay&#13;
Away from school sometimes&#13;
When no one says I may,&#13;
fastf&#13;
relief and&#13;
petmantly cured it. We always keep&#13;
it in the house to prefect our children&#13;
from Croup and Whooping Cough . It&#13;
cured me of a chronic lironchiai trouble&#13;
that no other remedy would relieve.&#13;
Infallible for Coughs, Colds, Throat&#13;
and Lung troubles. 50c and $1.00.&#13;
Trial bottle* free at F. A. Sigler's&#13;
drug store.&#13;
\&#13;
I ain't afraid to jump&#13;
On cars that's runnin'&#13;
I ain't afraid of horses,&#13;
And I bet you that I daat&#13;
Throw pebbles at the grocery bof&#13;
When he goes drivin' past.&#13;
I ain't afraid of grandma,&#13;
And I ain't afraid of pa;&#13;
I ain't afraid of nothing-&#13;
A body ever saw,&#13;
And once I shot a pistol&#13;
And nearly hit the mark,&#13;
But I wish folks needn't ever&#13;
Go to bed up where it's dark.&#13;
—Chicago Record-Herald.&#13;
C a n t i o n In HI* S t a t i s t i c s .&#13;
"How large a permanent population )&#13;
has Crimson Gulch?" Inquired the tourist.&#13;
"Wrell," answered Broncho - Bob,&#13;
"we've got about 407 livin' here, but&#13;
f»with so much boss stealln' and brace&#13;
faro goln' on I wouldfft allude tojuiy_-&#13;
body as beln' particular permanent.&#13;
Explained.&#13;
Customer—Waiter, it is nearly half&#13;
an hour since I ordered that turtle&#13;
soup,&#13;
Waiter—Sorry, sir. but you know how&#13;
slo;v turtles are. sir.&#13;
Arthur Foley Winnington-Ingram&#13;
Lord Biohop ot London, eontibutes an&#13;
interesting paper to the November&#13;
Cosmopolitan on "The Overcrowding&#13;
of Great Cities and Remedies for It."&#13;
Apropos of the discussion of tbe invasion&#13;
of England by Americans, Edmund&#13;
Goss« furnishes in tbe same&#13;
number an e?say scoring Englishmen&#13;
for their narrowness ot intellect. Incidentally&#13;
he has a hit at American intellectual&#13;
life in the»t\ventietb century.&#13;
A I iendish Attack.&#13;
An attack was lately made on C. F .&#13;
Collier of Cherokee, Iowa, that nearly&#13;
proved fatal. It came Ibrouyfi his&#13;
kidneys. His back got so lame be&#13;
could not stoop without great pain&#13;
nor sit in chair except proped by cushions.&#13;
No lvmedy helped him uutil he&#13;
tried Electric Bitters which effected&#13;
such a wonderful change that he&#13;
writes he feels like a new man. This&#13;
mrvaelous medicine cures backache&#13;
and kidney trouble, purifies the b'cod&#13;
and builds up your health. Onlv 50;&#13;
at P. A. Sigler's drug store.&#13;
L BraiH-Food Nonsense.&#13;
Another ridiculous food fad has&#13;
beer, branded by the most competent&#13;
authorities. They have dispelled the&#13;
silly notion that one kind of food is&#13;
needed for brain, another tor muscles,&#13;
and still another for bones,. A correct&#13;
diet will not only nourish a partic&#13;
ular p';rt of the body, but it will sustain&#13;
every other part. Yet, however&#13;
good your food may be, its nutriment&#13;
is dfls'roynd by indigestion or dyspepsia.&#13;
You must prepare for their appearance&#13;
or prevent their coming by&#13;
taking regular doses of Green's August&#13;
Flower, tbe favorite medicine of&#13;
the healthy millions, A few dos^-s&#13;
aids digestion, stimulates the liver to&#13;
healthy action, purifies the blood, and&#13;
makes you feel buoyant and vigorous.&#13;
You ean get Dr. G. G. Green's reli- j&#13;
able remedies at P- A. Sigler s drug&#13;
s'ore, Piockuey. Get Green's special j&#13;
Almanac.&#13;
Muggins—Ah, Mrs. Fopple! I was a&#13;
very great friend of your late dear husband.&#13;
Yes, yes! Now, have you any&#13;
little, thing you could let me have to&#13;
remind me sometimes of your dear departed&#13;
?&#13;
Mrs. Hopple-*-Why, what's the matter&#13;
with rhe, Mr. Muggins?&#13;
A ravine In the northeast corner of&#13;
Yellowstone National park. In Wyo?&#13;
mlng, It known by those living near by&#13;
as Death gulch. Grewsome as is the&#13;
name, It is exceedingly appropriate. It&#13;
Is a V shaped trench cut in the mountainside&#13;
and begins about 250 feet&#13;
above Cache creek. Apparently it&#13;
forms a natural shelter for the beasts&#13;
of the forest as food, water and shelter&#13;
are there, but entrance to tbe gulcb&#13;
means death to any^ animal, for the&#13;
poisonous vapors thaY rise out of the&#13;
ravine are more deadly than the bullets&#13;
of the huntsmen.&#13;
For ages this death trap in the Rocky&#13;
mountains has probably been luring tbe&#13;
inhabitants of the forest to their doom.&#13;
With the rains of spring the bones of&#13;
the dead of the preceding year are carried&#13;
down to the creek and the gulcb&#13;
cleared for the death harvest of the&#13;
summer and winter.&#13;
The geologists say that the lavas&#13;
which fill the ancient basin of the park&#13;
at this place rest upon the flanks of&#13;
mountains formed of fragmentary volcanic&#13;
ejects. Gaseous emanations are&#13;
given out in great volume. These come,&#13;
the scientists say, from deposits of altered&#13;
and crystalline travertine mixed&#13;
with pools in the creek. Above these&#13;
deposits the creek euts-into-a-baak-ef-}&#13;
sulphur. In the bottom of the gully is&#13;
a small stream sour with sulphuric&#13;
acid.&#13;
No wonder the poor animals seeking&#13;
shelter in the gulch meet death there.&#13;
A Cnrions Trap.&#13;
A curious labyrinth in which elephants&#13;
are captured alive is to be seen&#13;
near Ayutbia, formerly the capital of&#13;
^la_m,_jrhe__labyrinth Is formed of a&#13;
double row of immense tree trunks set&#13;
firmly in the ground, the space between&#13;
them gradually narrowing.&#13;
Where it begins, at the edge of the&#13;
forest, the opening of the labyrinth is&#13;
more than a mile wide, but as it approaches&#13;
Ayuthia it becomes so narrow&#13;
that the elephants cannot turn&#13;
around.&#13;
Suspecting no danger tbe wild elephant&#13;
enters the broad opening at the&#13;
forest end, lured on by a tame elephant.&#13;
The gradual narrowing of the boundaries&#13;
is not observed until the elephant&#13;
finds himself in close quarters.&#13;
Having reached the end of the labyrinth,&#13;
the tame elephant is allowed to&#13;
pass through a gate, while men lying&#13;
In wait slip shackles over the feet of&#13;
the captives. The sport is a dangerous&#13;
one, for the enraged elephanlg^some^&#13;
times crush the hunters under their&#13;
A TMltATTLRM&#13;
f@tEC5&#13;
MAGAZINE'&#13;
feet&#13;
Preparing For the Work.&#13;
"But," they protested, "if you have&#13;
no intention of marrying, why do you&#13;
accept the attentions of so many young&#13;
men and, in fact, encourage them?"&#13;
The practical girl hesitated.&#13;
"To tell the truth," she said at last,&#13;
"I am writing a society novel in which&#13;
the hero proposes marriage to six&#13;
different girls, and I am extremely&#13;
anxious that there shall be nothing of&#13;
repetition and monotony in his methods.&#13;
To be successful in literature one&#13;
must study life."—Chicago Post.&#13;
Aggrieved.&#13;
"It was an outrage!" exclaimed the&#13;
excitable young man with the very foreign&#13;
accent. "The father of the young&#13;
lady offered a marriage settlement of&#13;
a hundred thousand dollars."&#13;
"It isn't much of a dowry."&#13;
"My dear friend, it is not a dowry at&#13;
all; it is a tip."—Washington Star.&#13;
' He Favored Arbitration.&#13;
A. B. Seamen of Denver is one of tbe&#13;
men prominent In Colorado politics&#13;
who took an active part in the campaign&#13;
when Waite was elected governor.&#13;
One day Waite made a white&#13;
hot threat to go and chastise Seamen&#13;
for some fancied wrong. Waite had&#13;
nerfcr seen Seamen, and when the two&#13;
men met a day or so after the threat&#13;
by Waite the matter was amicably ad-&#13;
Justed. Seamen weighs about &amp;SC&#13;
pounds and stands six feet high.&#13;
Waittv who did not weigh over 100&#13;
pounds, said to one of his friends apol&#13;
ogetically after seeing Seamen; "A&#13;
quarrel never does any good. It* is always&#13;
best to arbitrate."&#13;
Oar R e m a r k a b l e Langaage,&#13;
Mrs. Snaggs—They must have some&#13;
big pistols out west&#13;
Mr. Snaggs—Why ?&#13;
Mrs. Snaggs—There's something in&#13;
the paper about a train robber covering&#13;
a conductor with a revolver.—Pittahurg&#13;
Telegraph.&#13;
Frequently.&#13;
"Are your mother's slippers felt?"&#13;
asked the visitor.&#13;
"Are they felt?" echoed the youngster,&#13;
who had just returned from the&#13;
wood shed. "Well. I should think they&#13;
were!"—Philadelphia Record.&#13;
Her Snga-estlon.&#13;
Mr. Gusher—I've written some verses&#13;
to Miss Ann Teek, but I hardly know&#13;
what to call them. "Ode on Ann's&#13;
Face" expresses the Idea, but that&#13;
doesn't sound right.&#13;
Miss Peppery—Why not make It&#13;
"Lines on Ann&gt; Face?"—Philadelphia&#13;
Press.&#13;
gf«p tlic Couth ««d work* off the&#13;
Cold.&#13;
L s l a t i v e Bromo-Quinin* Tablet* cure&#13;
a coid in one day. No * ure, no pay.&#13;
Price 25 cenfs.&#13;
• f\ &gt;&#13;
Germany Imports vast quantifies of&#13;
red wiui? each year for mixing wines of&#13;
her own y ^ w i h . In l^XJO 4.7SS tons&#13;
were fin ported from Italy .for this purpose,&#13;
1,319 tons from France, 1,272&#13;
tons from Greece, 4,878 tons from Austria-&#13;
Hungary and 8,478 tons from&#13;
S ^ ' P v ••'- . •— —&#13;
WILLIAM M'KINLEY&#13;
H I S L I F E A N D W O R K ,&#13;
BY&#13;
GEN. CHARLES H. GROSVENOR.&#13;
President's lite long Friend, Comrade&#13;
in war Colleague in Congress.&#13;
Was near his side with other great&#13;
men when bis eyes were closed in&#13;
death. Followed the bier to the National&#13;
Capitol and to Canton. The&#13;
General requires a share of the proceeds&#13;
of his book to be devoted to a&#13;
McKinley Monument 'Fund, Thus&#13;
every subscriber becomes a contributtj&#13;
this fund. Millions ot copies will&#13;
be sold. Everybody will buy it. Orders&#13;
for the asking. Nobody will refuse.&#13;
Elegant Photogravure Portrait&#13;
of President McKinley's last picture,&#13;
taken at the White House. You&#13;
can easily and quickly clear $1,000&#13;
taking orders. Order outfit quick.&#13;
Chance to prove success, secure yearly&#13;
contract' and become manager. Send&#13;
12 2 cent stamps for elegant prospectus.&#13;
Taking 10 to 50 orders daily. 50-&#13;
000 copies will be sold in this vicinity.&#13;
Address,&#13;
THE CONTINENTAL ASSEMBLY,&#13;
Corcoran Bldg , Opp. U. S. Treasury,&#13;
Washington, O. G.&#13;
A LAMS'MAGAZINE.&#13;
A ftm; beautiful eolortd plttat; Ut«t&#13;
fualou: drMimtklag «conamiM ; fancy&#13;
work; hou««hold hints; fiction, etc. Sua-&#13;
Mrib* todfcy, or, wad je. .for 4*t«»a *opy.&#13;
Lady af tnta wanted, sand for terms.&#13;
Stylish, Reliable, Simple, Up-ta*&#13;
data. Economical and Absolutely&#13;
Per/ect-Flttlag Paper Pattern*.&#13;
.am B A Z A R * \ fittlERNS&#13;
/nth&#13;
Al S U M Allowed atd Perferathm shew&#13;
tfes Btstbfl awl Sewtn Use*.&#13;
Only 10 and 15 cents each—none higher.&#13;
Ask for them. Sold in nearly every city&#13;
and town, or ky mail from&#13;
T H E M o C A L L C O . ,&#13;
113-115-117 West 31ft St, NEW VOtJL&#13;
&amp;&amp;A&#13;
TWa signature is on every box . Ithe genuine&#13;
Laxative Bromo-Quioirie Tablets&#13;
the remedy that c u r e s a c o l d 1 B OBM d a y&#13;
Subscribe for Dispatch.&#13;
POSTAL 4 MORIY,&#13;
The •&gt;SOF»*ltTOHa.&#13;
Griswold&#13;
ill)USC Ho^sss&#13;
* * v * * ^ v ' ' in the heart of&#13;
D E T R O I T , to*®**&#13;
-tit&#13;
Rates, $2, $2.50, $3 per Day.&#13;
COM. ONAND H I V I H 4 aniawoLa ST.&#13;
AGENTS VVAJTTID.—To sell '• McKinley&#13;
's Dying Words," the latest, great*&#13;
est and) most pathetic copyrighted&#13;
song of the day. Over 15,000 were&#13;
sold in Chicago during first three days&#13;
of publication. Regular 50 cent sheet&#13;
music size for 25 cents a copy words&#13;
by Howard Carleton Tripp, the oeleorated&#13;
lecturer, editor and author.&#13;
Music by Charles E. Smith, the noted&#13;
band leader and musical composer. A&#13;
financial harvest made by energetic&#13;
canvassers. Send 25 cents for sample&#13;
copy and terms to agents a n l retail&#13;
dealers. AddrtJI. The Best Music Co.&#13;
Kingsley, low*. We have several&#13;
copies of the w o f a t this office that&#13;
are for sale.&#13;
STATE OF MICHIGAN, County of Livingston&#13;
At ft session of the Probate Court for said County,&#13;
held at the Probate Office In the Village of&#13;
Howell, on Monday tbe 30th day of September, in&#13;
the year one thou-and nine hundred ftod one.&#13;
Present, Eupene A. Stowe Judge of Probate, in&#13;
the Matter of the Estate of&#13;
UKUA B.JACKSON, Deceased.&#13;
On reading and filing the petition duly verified of&#13;
Ella M. Jackson, praying that a certain instrument&#13;
now on file in this court, purporting to be&#13;
the last Will andTestaraeDt of said deceased, may&#13;
be admitted to probate.&#13;
Thereupon it is ordered that Tuesday tbe 29th&#13;
day of October next, at 10 o'clock In the forenoon,&#13;
at said Probate Office, be assigned for the&#13;
hearing of Baid petition.&#13;
It is further ordered that a copy of this order be&#13;
published in the PINCKNEY DISPATCH, S newspaper-&#13;
printed and circulating in said county, three&#13;
succet-siye weeks previous to said day of bearing.&#13;
ECJGKNB A. Srovnc,&#13;
t-43 Jndge of Probate&#13;
Railroad Guide.&#13;
&gt; AXD STLAMSHIP LINES,&#13;
Popular route for Ann Arbor, Toledo&#13;
and points East, South, and for&#13;
Hovy,elI, Oyvo*so, Alma, Mt Pleasant&#13;
Cadillac, Manistee, Traverse Citv and&#13;
points in Northwestern Michigan.&#13;
W. H . BENNETT,&#13;
G. P . A. Toledo&#13;
T O t u r s a C«il« in One'.Dny&#13;
Take Laxdtava JkiHgo Quinine Tablets.&#13;
All d r o p u k l f O f n n d the money&#13;
ii it fails to c u r t . % VV. Grove's signature&#13;
is on eads box. 25c.&#13;
PERE MARQUETTE&#13;
Z^ailxoa^L, Tava.. 1., 1 9 0 1 .&#13;
Trains leave South Lyon as follows:&#13;
For Detroit aud Eest,&#13;
10:36 a. m., 3:04 p. m.f 8:58 p. m.&#13;
For Grand Rapids, North and West,&#13;
9:45 a.m., 2:08 p. m, 6:20 p. ja.&#13;
For Saginaw and Bay City,&#13;
10:36 a. m., 3:04 p. m,, 8:58 p. m.&#13;
For Toledo and South, 10:36 s. m,&#13;
KKAKK B*r, ' B. F. MOKLLER,&#13;
Agent, bouth Lroti. I*.. P. A„, Detroit.&#13;
WraudTrnak Hail w a r System.&#13;
« 9.44 s. m.&#13;
&gt; 6:43 p.m.&#13;
ft&#13;
Jackson, i &gt;etroit, snd&#13;
ijternieiU.il e ststlnuS&#13;
mail and exp.&#13;
Jackson. Lenox, and&#13;
£ 4:45 p. m. lntermeainte&#13;
!__ mixed.&#13;
Btlfia. m.&#13;
tiTlb p, m.&#13;
7:55 a.m.&#13;
S3&#13;
1 i&#13;
The 9:18 a. m. snd 8:4&amp; p. m. trains hare throug*&#13;
coach between Jackson and Detroit.&#13;
W. J.BlMk, A Ploskaey&#13;
rm&#13;
V^tf of&gt;',wr!tei?f uiiad and&#13;
reWag* a*k* t h # &amp;ap Mall&#13;
{Fh#9keray wa» »n# T.f*\tke&#13;
w _ f pf .writers and,bpaitedtthat If&#13;
# ^ r txade* failed he could get bis HVlag&#13;
feylr'ritlDff the Lord's Prayer on a&#13;
iktiUoffr Keau wrote like a clertt, and&#13;
tifcayt Tom Moore, Leigh Hunt and Sir&#13;
Walter Swtt all used rnnniog tji&amp;ndt,&#13;
•Which were legible without ^any, marked&#13;
characteristics. The same may be&#13;
paid of the writings of ^.nthony Trol-&#13;
Jorje and Professor Tyndall, noae. perhaps,&#13;
of these writers being much&#13;
4rtven .to .subtlety of e^pcesslon.&#13;
Carlyle, on the other ha'nd, is said to&#13;
h#ve produced the most untidy and&#13;
awful scribble that ever puzzled a compositor,&#13;
and Victor Hugo, Browning&#13;
amd Tennyson were nearly as bad.&#13;
.Tet although this looks as if there&#13;
might be some sort of a rule In such&#13;
matters, we find .Napoleon, wpo certainly&#13;
never failed in directness, of expression,&#13;
writing a band tbflt he could&#13;
not read himself, and Macready, the&#13;
actor, whose order for the theater was&#13;
once taken for a prescription for a&#13;
cough mixture.&#13;
One thing seems pretty certain—that&#13;
the mere size of the letters has little&#13;
to do with character.&#13;
WASHIIffi«OW LETTER, | g g g g &gt; * «.«*Wm&#13;
Baleljrh's F a v o r i t e Tipple.&#13;
Sir Walter Raleigh seems to have had&#13;
a pretty taste in stimulants, to judge&#13;
by his "cordial water," the recipe for ,&#13;
which Is copied from a cookbook nearly&#13;
800 years old. This is how Sir Walter&#13;
concocted his favorite drink:&#13;
"Take a gallon of strawberries and&#13;
put them into a pint of aqua vitae&#13;
(brantSy). Let them stand so four or&#13;
-five-daya. Strain them gently out and&#13;
sweeten the water as you please.with&#13;
fine sugar or else with perfume."&#13;
Queen Elizabeth was exceedingly&#13;
fond of perfume8, and* according to&#13;
this old book, her favorite scent was&#13;
made in tibia manner: "Take eight&#13;
spoonfuls of compound water, the&#13;
weight of twopence in fine powdered&#13;
sugar.and boil it^n,hot embers or coals&#13;
softly. Add half an ounce of sweet&#13;
marjoram, dry it In the sun, the weight&#13;
of twopence of powdered benjamin&#13;
(benzoin?). This perfume is very.good&#13;
and sweet for the time."&#13;
Short* In,a Corner.&#13;
"Yes," said young Mr. Bashful to his&#13;
best girl, "the stock market has been&#13;
through considerable excitement of&#13;
late."&#13;
"Oh, yes," tfae-gfri-responded, eager to&#13;
take part in conversation on a topic&#13;
which Interested her Adolphus. "I&#13;
have read a lot about it in the paper&#13;
—all about those dreadful bulls and&#13;
bears and things."&#13;
"Yes," Adolphus went on; "they got&#13;
the shorts in a corner and effectually&#13;
squeezed them."&#13;
"Did theyr&#13;
"Yes."&#13;
"I think;" the demure maid added,&#13;
after a few minutes' meditation, "that&#13;
if ever I become a speculator I shall be&#13;
a short."&#13;
A few minutes later she found it was&#13;
not necessary to speculate in stock in&#13;
order to be treated as a "short."—Pittsburg&#13;
Commercial Gazette.&#13;
The Lemon.&#13;
The, lemon contains various acids,&#13;
citric acid among them, with citrate of&#13;
potash, and these acids oxidize in the&#13;
blood into carbonates of potash and&#13;
carbonic acid. As scurvy is believed to&#13;
IK* due to a lack of potash salts in the&#13;
blood, we see how substances like lemons,&#13;
potatoes and fresh vegetables generally&#13;
act as preventives of the ailment.&#13;
Also in rheumatism, in which&#13;
it is desirable to maintain the alkaline&#13;
character of the blood, lemons arc of&#13;
service. Beyond this I do not tbink&#13;
anybody can vaunt the properties' of&#13;
the fruit A healthy person has uo&#13;
more need of lemons than of, say, tea.'&#13;
for his ordinary food will supply him&#13;
with all that is necessary for the&#13;
maintenance of a sound body. People&#13;
who talk about lemons as "good for the&#13;
liver," and so forth, found their belief&#13;
rather on faith than on knowledge.—&#13;
London Chronicle.&#13;
A Bit of B o w e r y Dialog-He.&#13;
This gem of metropolitan English is&#13;
Touched for by the New York correspondent&#13;
of the Pittsburg Commercial&#13;
Gazette:&#13;
I heard this bit of dialogue between&#13;
two Bowery hoodlums the other day:&#13;
Said one as be pointed to his shiny&#13;
black trousers: "Oh. Chimmy, howcher&#13;
like me blacks?"&#13;
"All right," was the response, "but&#13;
dey ain't ez good ez yer lightest"&#13;
"G'wan, yer guy; git wise. Deae is&#13;
lose, only 1 had 'em dyed."&#13;
And then they got aboard a car.&#13;
A Card*&#13;
I, the undersigned, do hereby ajrree&#13;
to refund the money on a 50 cent, bottle&#13;
of Green's Warranted Syrup of&#13;
Tar if it failes ro core your cough or&#13;
oold. I also guarantee a 25-cenY bottle&#13;
to prove satisfactory or money refunded.&#13;
423&#13;
Will R. Darrow.&#13;
UnseJal CDrrssDondenos.1&#13;
Brigadier General John M. Wllaon,&#13;
retired, who as chief of the corps oi&#13;
engineers of the war department perfected&#13;
the plans and arranged the details&#13;
of the architectural competition&#13;
for the proposed memorial bridge, wai&#13;
the first to revive the present merest&#13;
In that enterprise' by suggesting thai&#13;
the proposed McKinley memorial arch&#13;
be made a part of the Washington, end&#13;
of the bridge.&#13;
General Wilson knew President Me-&#13;
Klnley'a great interest in having the&#13;
bridge built, because of the favorable&#13;
sentiment It would create in cementing&#13;
the growing feeling of good will&#13;
between the north and south. In discussing&#13;
the matter General Wilson&#13;
went briefly over the history of the&#13;
proposition, recalling several interviews&#13;
between President McKinley&#13;
and himself relating to the matter,&#13;
and one in particular, in which the&#13;
president, when asked to suggest an&#13;
appropriate name for the bridge, said,&#13;
"Let it be a monument to American&#13;
patriotism."&#13;
After the death of Mr. McKinley and&#13;
a spontaneous suggestion had been&#13;
made for. a monument to his memory&#13;
General Wilson said^the Idea~bf connecting&#13;
the bridge with that arch at&#13;
once suggested itself to him as the&#13;
most appropriate place. .&#13;
A Conscience Contribution.&#13;
Secretary Gage has received in an&#13;
envelope, postmarked New York, Sept&#13;
25, 1901, $6,150 in bills of denomina&#13;
tions ranging from $50 to $500. Thii&#13;
large sum of money was accompanied&#13;
only by the following statement:&#13;
"After much, thought I have beer&#13;
convinced that duties were not tullj&#13;
'paid as desired, difference estimated at&#13;
about 2 per cent The wish is now tc&#13;
rectify what was done during some&#13;
years ago, and amount is being senl&#13;
which Is felt must be paid to the U. S.&#13;
|A. treasury to discharge those duties&#13;
and do the right Above has beeu&#13;
great grief."&#13;
No name was signed to this communication.&#13;
The secretary expresses gratification&#13;
wjth this evidenceof a citizen's desire&#13;
to make good former evasions of the&#13;
law. "There are others," said Secretary&#13;
Gage, "who would no doubt find it&#13;
morally healthful to follow this, contftbutor's&#13;
example. A friend of mine&#13;
recently landed from a trip abroad. 'I&#13;
paid, $i,000 duties, on my goods/ he&#13;
TBald;—T never pa1frnro~mtrcbbefore.&#13;
This time it was art "honest count"&#13;
with me. It cost money, but I feel a&#13;
good deal more respectable.' "&#13;
The Pan-American Congress.&#13;
John Barrett, ex-minister to Siam,&#13;
had a talk with the president about&#13;
the work to be done by the pan-American&#13;
congress, which meets at the City&#13;
iof Mexico Oct. 22.&#13;
"Reciprocity, international sanitary&#13;
laws, arbitration and an international&#13;
court of claims will be the principal&#13;
subjects discussed by the congress,"&#13;
said Mr. Barrett. "Of these the court&#13;
of claims Is the most likely to be unanimously&#13;
adopted, though there is a&#13;
strong feeling in favor of arbitration.&#13;
President Roosevelt made a speech up&#13;
at Minneapolis a few weeks ago while&#13;
vice president that showed him in perfect&#13;
accord with President McKinley&#13;
on reciprocity. We are much pleased,&#13;
therefore, that as president he stands&#13;
for the same principles as the man&#13;
who appointed us to represent the&#13;
United States at the congress. Better&#13;
steamship service between United&#13;
States and South American ports will&#13;
probably receive some attention from&#13;
the congress."&#13;
McKinley'a B a d g e s .&#13;
, Among the numerous trunks and&#13;
boxes that were removed from the&#13;
White House containing the personal&#13;
effects of Mrs. McKinley and the late&#13;
president was a wooden box of considerable&#13;
size filled to the top with campaign&#13;
and committee badges and ribbons;&#13;
These are souvenirs of every&#13;
national campaign' in which Mr. Mc-&#13;
Kinley was ever a candidate and of his&#13;
tours while president around the continent&#13;
While traveling on his presidential&#13;
trips some local committeemen&#13;
at each place he visited always pinned&#13;
a badge or ribbon on his coat and&#13;
Mr. McKinley preserved these as mementos&#13;
of his numerous visits among&#13;
the people.&#13;
Roosevelt's First Pardon.&#13;
The first pardon granted by President&#13;
Roosevelt was one to restore to civil&#13;
rights William R. Boyle, a deserter&#13;
from the United States army. Boyle&#13;
enlisted July 23. 1900, and deserted&#13;
Sept. 14, 1900. He was convicted by&#13;
court martial, discharged and sentenced&#13;
to eighteen months in prison. This&#13;
sentence was subsequently modified by&#13;
the general commanding the department&#13;
of the i-aat to imprisonment to&#13;
expire July 1. UXn. The secretary of&#13;
wav recommended that he be restored&#13;
to civil rights, aud the president signed&#13;
the pardon.&#13;
Guests at W h i t e House Board*&#13;
There is every probability that the&#13;
informal dinners at the White House&#13;
Will be quite a feature of President&#13;
Roosevelt's Incumbency. As men of&#13;
note come to hie office he likes to incite&#13;
them to accompany him to luncheon&#13;
or dinner, at the case may be. Thus&#13;
he la able to bare agreeable cempan*&#13;
iojubJiuand improve. pjH&amp;ttnntttei icon&#13;
Wmat Cams** tac Paaiof&#13;
The WM department is making a&#13;
tborougn inveathratJon of the panic&#13;
which occurred at the east front or the&#13;
capitoi on the day of the McKinley obeequief&#13;
in an effort to fix responsibilities&#13;
for the unfortunate affair. Acting&#13;
Secretary Sanger has called for statements&#13;
from all army officers having&#13;
any knowledge of the occurrence with&#13;
a view of fathering facte. "&#13;
GABL ScHoratLD.&#13;
i^w^T^^jiW SE5 WP W 3&#13;
B e W a s No Hoar*&#13;
"Well," said the doctor, peeping Into&#13;
the room where Wellington Pra»hV the&#13;
great poker expert, was waiting for&#13;
the returns. "I suppose you will regard&#13;
this as a mere formality, but I&#13;
must congratulate you nevertheless on&#13;
the fact that you have a fine boy across&#13;
the hall."&#13;
"Hi!" said Mr. Frash. 'That*s good!&#13;
Come In and take something."&#13;
"Excuse me for a moment," the doctor&#13;
replied. Presently he returned, put&#13;
his bead into Mr. Flash's den and said:&#13;
"Let me congratulate you again. You&#13;
have two fine boys across the* hail."&#13;
Mr. Frash opened bis mouth as if to&#13;
respond, but before he could do so the&#13;
doctor was gone again. Presently Jje&#13;
bounded in the new father's presence,&#13;
saying: "By George, you have three&#13;
fine boys across the hall!"&#13;
He was starting back when Mr.&#13;
Frash hurried forward, grasped him&#13;
by the shoulder and in excited tones&#13;
cried:&#13;
"Say, doc. bold on. Three of a kind&#13;
are good enough for me. 1 stand pat"&#13;
—Chicago Herald.&#13;
T h e Earthquake.&#13;
To the average resident of the temperate&#13;
zones an earthquake is a rare&#13;
and terrible event, creating more consternation&#13;
than any other visitation of&#13;
nature. In the tropics, however, particularly&#13;
in Central America. It is wonderful&#13;
bow easily the residents become&#13;
accustomed to these shocks,&#13;
which do not come, however, wholly&#13;
without warning.&#13;
You are sitting on a piazza on a hot&#13;
afternoon chatting with your friends&#13;
when sudden4y-4be sky seems to grow&#13;
hazy and the crows stop cawing. There&#13;
Is a general rush, and. though you may&#13;
not know what is the matter, you cannot&#13;
help feeling uneasy.&#13;
The old natives say, "We're going to&#13;
have a little shake," and then the&#13;
house begins to rock. the_tnmbiers fall&#13;
CHOICE MISCELLANY&#13;
' - * — ••• . . •&#13;
Caane-e Maklaa Maeaiaaa.&#13;
Machines that handle coins In a&#13;
wonderful way, counting them and actually&#13;
giving change automatically, are&#13;
now' coming on the market. They are&#13;
hew inventions and have just been patented.&#13;
One of them has pieces of money&#13;
arranged in separate compartments&#13;
In trays, and on top is a series of keys.&#13;
A purchase ef 35 cents, say, being&#13;
made, the key numbered 35 Is struck.&#13;
Instantly the apparatus throws out 65&#13;
cents in change, supposing that a dollar&#13;
has been received from the buyer, a&#13;
tablet with the number 35 being uplifted&#13;
at the same Instant and 35 cents&#13;
added on the register inside.&#13;
A cashier is In charge of the machine,&#13;
but the latter does all the thinking.&#13;
In another contrivance of the kind&#13;
there is a separate receptacle for each&#13;
denomination of com up to a dollar.&#13;
The placing of a com in its proper&#13;
place sets the mechanism so that when&#13;
a key is pressed corresponding to the&#13;
amount of the purchase the difference&#13;
is thrown out. There Is no bother&#13;
about counting the change, which Is always&#13;
right.&#13;
Other machines which are much&#13;
more simple are for the sorting of coins&#13;
~and~are intended to be used where a&#13;
stream of small change is continually&#13;
flowing in. The pieces of money are&#13;
thrown indiscriminately into a kind of&#13;
hopper and sort themselves, a performance&#13;
that saves the cashier an Immense&#13;
deal of trouble. In one or two&#13;
cases the mechanism for automatically&#13;
giving change is combined with the&#13;
sorting device, reducing the labor of&#13;
the person in charge very materially&#13;
and at the same time doing away with&#13;
all possibility of mistakes In reckoning.&#13;
off the table, you feel deathly sick at&#13;
the stomach, and the thing is all over.&#13;
The sky clears, the crows begin their&#13;
noisy screams, and things are soon put&#13;
right again.&#13;
Thm Chances In Policy.&#13;
The retired "poke" shopkeeper was&#13;
explaining- to his interested hearers&#13;
some of the mysteries of bis former&#13;
business.&#13;
"The chances of winnipg at the policy&#13;
game," he said, "are about like this:&#13;
You take a bushel basket and fill it&#13;
with small white beans. Then you&#13;
put one small black bean Into the basket&#13;
and shake the lot up. After that&#13;
go to some 'skyscraper* building, say&#13;
one about 29 stories high, and place a&#13;
penny on the'sidewalk in front of It&#13;
This done, shoulder your bushel of&#13;
beans and take the elevator to the roof&#13;
of the building. Then lean over the&#13;
edge of the roof and. aiming at the&#13;
cent on the sidewalk below, dump out&#13;
the beans in the basket all together.&#13;
Then hurry down on the elevator * and&#13;
rush out to the sidewalk. If you find&#13;
that the black bean has fallen upon the&#13;
penny, you win."^New ^crk Times.&#13;
Letting; His Hair Grow.&#13;
When a distinguished If not beautiful&#13;
foreign pianist came to this country&#13;
three years ago, his wife was allowed&#13;
to accompany him on the condition&#13;
that she keep In the background and&#13;
not let the fact of her identity be&#13;
known. She tried to do this, and by&#13;
keeping to her hotel all day and rarely&#13;
leaving her room the fact that the&#13;
player had a wife did not become&#13;
known. The intention was of course&#13;
to prevent women from losing Interest&#13;
in him because he was married.&#13;
He did not make a success and might&#13;
have been a Mormon so far as the women&#13;
paid any attention to him. Now&#13;
an actor is on his way here with the&#13;
Alphabetical Abase.&#13;
• The prosecuting attorney in a law&#13;
suit had waxed especially indignant at understanding that he" also shall keep&#13;
the defendant, whom he characterized secret the fact that he is married and&#13;
as an "abandoned, baneful, cynical, that another member of the company&#13;
diabolic, execrable, felonious, greedy, ts n iS wife&gt; This is called for in his&#13;
hateful, irresponsible, Jaundiced, knav- contract, and he has been told by his&#13;
ish, lazy, meddlesome, noxious, outra- manager that his success here depends&#13;
geous and profligate rowdy."&#13;
"The learned counsel on the other&#13;
side,'r said the attorney for the defendant&#13;
when he rose to reply, "should&#13;
have put his adjectives In a hat and&#13;
shaken them up a little before using.&#13;
You must have noticed, gentlemen of&#13;
the Jury, that they were in regular alphabetical&#13;
order. This shows that he&#13;
selected them from a dictionary, beginning&#13;
with 'a.' He stopped at *p,'&#13;
but in his manner of reproducing them&#13;
he has given us the 'cue' as to how he&#13;
got them."&#13;
This turned the laugh against the&#13;
other lawyer, anil b^ lost the case.&#13;
in a large degree on absolute secrecy&#13;
as to'the facts of his married life. As&#13;
he is likely to become a matinee hero&#13;
the manager believes that it must not&#13;
be known that he is married.—New&#13;
York Sun.&#13;
50 YEARS'&#13;
EXPERIENCE&#13;
TRADE M ' . R K *&#13;
DEMONS&#13;
COPYRIGHTS 4 c&#13;
qaAtonkytoyn aes soeenrduitnng oaa srk oetpcihn iaonnd fdreesec ription may&#13;
itlon is probably patentable. &lt;&#13;
•onrts&#13;
_nn a&#13;
•pacta* noctot, without charge, lathe&#13;
invention ts Commnnto*.&#13;
trsney for sso_&#13;
'Patents taken through Mann&#13;
tsieonnts f srtereic. tOlyl dceosnt fiad ential,&#13;
ether an&#13;
. _ _ omnntea.&#13;
book on Patents&#13;
tents.&#13;
receive&#13;
rtngpatents.&#13;
4 To. net&#13;
Scientific JfeKrtam. A handsomely mustreUd&#13;
eolation of any setemtno Was&#13;
Lamest «tr»&#13;
Tama, t&gt; a&#13;
S t r a n g e H i d i n g P l a c e s .&#13;
There are standing at the present day&#13;
Elizabethan houses known to contain&#13;
hidden chambers. The very positions&#13;
of these chambers can be shown, yet&#13;
their secrets bave remained Inviolate&#13;
for centuries, the spring that should&#13;
serve as the open sesame being undlscovcrable.&#13;
Some day the accidental&#13;
touch of a girl's finger may set a column&#13;
of stone rotating or a panel slid*&#13;
Ing or a door in a picture frame retreating&#13;
on Invisible binges, and the secret&#13;
—if any remain—will be revealed.&#13;
The place of mystery In these an*&#13;
cient granges that served as shelter to&#13;
a friend in distress might equally prove&#13;
the death of an enemy of the house.&#13;
The priest's hole behind a fireplace was&#13;
easily converted into an oven. There&#13;
were staircases which the foot of a&#13;
friend might press in perfect security.&#13;
Another, not instructed bow to tread,&#13;
sets his foot apparently on the same&#13;
place, the stair yawns open, and at the&#13;
end of the pit Is the water. Hers is&#13;
much romajice^—London Chronicle, j&#13;
rA»s&gt;. '•••&#13;
W« the n n s k w i f ^ drwi^ts, pit.&#13;
•r a. swa/d of 50 esmts to lbs/ pmom&#13;
who parana*** of us, two &amp;$* box*&#13;
of Barter's H*n4rak* p t t « « TaWatsy&#13;
if it fails to core constipation, bihottsne*&#13;
s. «ick-head-»cb*, jaundies, lots of&#13;
appetite, soar stomach a, drtpapti*&#13;
liver complaint, or any of tbo disea***&#13;
for wbieh it is recommended. Prior*&#13;
&lt;s5 centM tor either tablets or liquid.&#13;
We will also ret and the anney on on*&#13;
package of either if it fails to gw*&#13;
satisfaction,&#13;
P. K. 8igler,&#13;
W. B. Darrow,&#13;
Pk&#13;
FUBUsaso avaav TVOTUOAY voaxxxe BY&#13;
F R A M K L. A N D R E W S 4fr CO.&#13;
COITOftS q&gt;° MOHttETORS.&#13;
subscription Pries $1 i s Advance&#13;
Entered at toe Postofflce at Piockner, Michigan&#13;
as second-class matter. *&#13;
Advertising rates mads kaown*ba application.&#13;
Business Cards, $4.00 per /ear.&#13;
I&gt;eatn and marriage uotlcss published free.&#13;
Announcements of entertainments may be paid&#13;
for, 11 desired, pj or ••anting the office wltb tickets&#13;
pi admission. In case tickets are not brooffbt&#13;
to tbe office, regular ratsswlilbscnargsd.&#13;
*%l&#13;
' . « * • *&#13;
ISl&#13;
All matter in local notice column will be cnarasd&#13;
at5 cents per Use or fraction thereof, for each&#13;
insertion. WhertnotImeisspedned,aUnoUeM&#13;
5 . 4 ^ ^ r i * an*U ordered du^&amp;noso^and&#13;
•ill be charged for accordingly. * ^ * U c n * U M a&#13;
H gdfertisemeats MUCTreacn thSofflce asMrl*&#13;
as TtmsoAT morning to insure an insertion the&#13;
•sine week. .&#13;
^jf^i*? *FF&amp;&amp; * •Pteieltj. We have all kinds&#13;
and the lateet styles orTjpe, etc., which enables&#13;
ns to execute all kinds ofwork", such M Bosks.&#13;
Pamptets, Fosters, Programmes, BUI H e S f S X&#13;
Heads, Statements, dSds, Auetieh B S S ^ C : ^ &amp;&#13;
enperier^leejnpen thosnoriest n o i l c ^ ^ r i S s i V ^&#13;
OTSJ good work can b^aone. - - « — — -&#13;
«LL BILLS PATlBCr FXBST Ot l/KaY MOifrK.&#13;
THE VILLAGE DIRECTORY.&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICERS.&#13;
PMSIBBNT.. ^....,^^,,^ , . . , 0 . L,Sigler&#13;
TMCSTMS R. Baker, R. H. Brwlu, ^ o g l " r&#13;
r. O. Jackson, Geo. Reason Jr.&#13;
Chaa. Love, Malachjr Roche.&#13;
!j£*,B* •—- ••••«• - ••.HW E, B. Brows&#13;
TBmAsunsB «« . ^ ^ . . , , j . A. Csdwell&#13;
.^MJ.l**oa«.-««_._»««—•'*** ._M.Jas. A.Greene&#13;
^••itlioiiBgseMiTrTKTTiT^r^r.-TVT-.i-.-TgJ. Parker&#13;
a i u T H U r n o u Dr. H. F. Slgler&#13;
ATTOBJIBY...^^....^^.....^. ^. w. A. Carr&#13;
JaaBStiAi,L,«MMM....MW *.,^j. s, Brogan&#13;
T h e P r e s i d e n t s of t n e U n i t e d S t a t e s .&#13;
The north has had sixteen presidents&#13;
and the south nine. The executive office&#13;
has been occupied by northern men&#13;
a few days less than sixty-three years&#13;
and by southern men a few days over&#13;
fifty-three years. This Is based on the&#13;
supposition that Roosevelt will fill out&#13;
his present term.&#13;
Only two of the southern states have&#13;
furnished presidents. Virginia and&#13;
Tennessee. OTthiriiertfiern~ presidents&#13;
three have come from the New England&#13;
states, six from the middle states&#13;
and seven from what is now called the&#13;
middle west&#13;
No president has ever been elected&#13;
from the territory west of the MissisjdpjLrlver,,^&#13;
nd^^nly two men have W-BTHQOIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH.&#13;
been nominated bjTthe great political | Sii^^t^^^^iS^^^P^^V^L&#13;
parties from that territory—Fremont&#13;
of Missouri by the Republicans in 1856&#13;
and Bryan of Nebraska by the Democrats&#13;
in 1896 and 1900.&#13;
Divided politically, nine Democrats,&#13;
two Federalists, four Whigs and eight&#13;
Republicans have occupied the presidential&#13;
office. In the above I do not&#13;
Include Washington, the first president.&#13;
It is unjust to assign the first&#13;
and only real nonpartisan president&#13;
of the country to any political party,—&#13;
Galveston News. "&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
Sunday morning at lO:So, and erery Sunday&#13;
evening at 7:00 o'clock. Prayer meeting Thursday&#13;
evenings. Sunday school at close of morn*&#13;
lng service. Cats. HBMSY Sapt.&#13;
CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH.&#13;
Rev. C. W. Rice pastor. Service every&#13;
Sunday morning at 10:80 and erery Sunday&#13;
evening at 7:0C o'clock. Prayer meeting Thars&#13;
day evenings. Sunday school at close of morn&#13;
Ins service. Mrs. Thos. Read, Sapt,, Mocco&#13;
Teeple ttec&#13;
CT. MAUTT8'CATHOLIC CHURCH.&#13;
O Rev. M. J. Commerford, Pastor. Services&#13;
every Sunday. Low mass at 7:30 o'clock&#13;
nigh mass with sermon at »;3Ga. m. Catechism&#13;
aU:0u p. ua., vespers ana benediction at 7:«o p. m&#13;
SOCIETIES:&#13;
fPne A. U. II. Society of tnls place, -neeiravary&#13;
1 third Sun Uv ia tne Vt. * itttnw il »11.&#13;
John Tuomey and vl. T. Kelly. Ovi itf D*l-igatea&#13;
L&gt;PWQRTH LEAGUE. Meets~~every Sunday&#13;
-Cjevenio* at 8.-00 oclock in the M. B. Church. A&#13;
cordial invitation is extended to everyone, especially&#13;
you ug people. F. L. Audrews, Pre*.&#13;
CHRISTIAN EtfDE.WOR SOStBrV- I n&#13;
_ i a « every Sunday eveain* nt 0:3J. Pred. tau&#13;
Misa L. M. tJo*; Seoretary, Miss liutte Carpm:*&#13;
1&gt;H£ vv. C. T. U. meets the first Friday of eaol&#13;
month at 2:3C p. no. at the home of Dr. H. r&#13;
Sigler. Everyone interested in temperance&#13;
coadialiy invited. Mrs. l*al Sigler, Pres; Mr»,&#13;
Ktta Dnrfee, Secretary.&#13;
I^he C. T. A. and ti. society of this place, n&gt;*«&#13;
. every third Saturoav evening in the Fr. feat*&#13;
tbewHall. John Donohue, President.&#13;
NIGHTS OP MAOCABgJIS.&#13;
Meet every Friday evening on or before fall&#13;
of the moon at their hall in the Swarthout bids.&#13;
Visiting brothers are cordially invited.&#13;
CHAS. U4KPBSXL, Sir Knight Commands}&#13;
Livingston Lodge, No. 7«, F 4 A . M . Regular&#13;
Communication Tuesday evening, on or before&#13;
the lull of the moon. Kirk VanWinkle, W. M&#13;
ORDKR OF EASTERN STAR meets each month&#13;
the Friday evening following the regular F.&#13;
4A.M. meeting, Mng, MABY RBAD, W. fl.&#13;
ORDER OF MODKRN WOODMEN Iteet the&#13;
first Thursday evening of each Mooth in the&#13;
Maccabee hall. C. L. Grimes V. C.&#13;
LA DIES OF THE MACCABEJCS. AUst every is&#13;
t. " i ^ ^ t ^ ^ o f e a c h m o n t h a t a w p in. a&#13;
k. o. T. M. halL Visiting slaters wrdiaUy la&#13;
vited. JUUASIGLBU, Lady Com. K KNIGHTS or THB L07AL GUARD&#13;
meet every second Wednesday&#13;
evening of every month in the K. O.&#13;
T.M.Hal) at 7; 30 o'clock. Ail visiting&#13;
Guards welcome.&#13;
F. L. Andrews P. i l .&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
J. W. MONKS.&#13;
DOCTOR OF DENTAL SURGERY&#13;
PfNCKNEY, MICH.&#13;
OFFICE OVtft SIOUX'S DftUO STOSt.&#13;
$&amp;&#13;
H. F. STQ1ER M. t&gt; C, L, SlOi.fR M, D&#13;
ph DRS. SIGLER &amp; SIGLER,&#13;
Physicians and Surgeons. Ail calls prosBpt)&#13;
aPtitnecnkdneedy t, oM daiyen .o r night. Office on Kate sir . ,^,\&#13;
VETERINARY S U R Q B O N&#13;
Graduate of Ontario Veterinary College. *»-*&#13;
the Veterinary Dentistry C O U M&#13;
Toronto Canada.&#13;
Will promptly attend to all diseases Cf^ke d«&#13;
mestieated animal at a reasonable prJea. '&#13;
Home teeth exajninodiFrce.&#13;
OrPICCatAlLL,RlWp»iC^&#13;
J&#13;
\ptr&#13;
Jfc:;&#13;
L'f"&#13;
gmrfmw&#13;
*INCKKEY, • MICHIGAN,&#13;
Much n e l t u s s n t prevails among&#13;
pearl hunters at Taylor's Fall*, Minn.&#13;
John Emery toimd a slxo'.l in tike river&#13;
which contained a large pearl perfectly&#13;
round and of that peculiar luster&#13;
which makes It very valuable. Those&#13;
who claim « • know *ay it is the finest&#13;
ever found In the w o t and U worth at&#13;
-least $2,000.&#13;
m&#13;
Outbreaks of typhoid and diphtheria&#13;
of a moat serious character have ocsorred&#13;
a t Belfast. In ten days 9S cases&#13;
of typhoid, all of a severe type, were&#13;
admitted to the hospital, the total unfler&#13;
treatment being 254; while 19 cases&#13;
Df diphtheria had been admitted in&#13;
two days. One nurse has died of typhoid&#13;
and several others are ailing.&#13;
The number of doctors and nurses 13 to&#13;
be increased.&#13;
T h e singing of the favorite hymns of&#13;
the late president was perhaps the&#13;
most remarkable feature of the sery-&#13;
:teeB~heW*in memory of him, across the&#13;
Atlantic u s "Well as rn his own land,&#13;
in synagogue as well as in church. The&#13;
etrenmatance shows that "Nearer, my&#13;
God, to Thee' 'and "Lead, Kindly&#13;
Light' ^express emotions that are felt&#13;
tn every religious heart, be the body&#13;
(bat encloses it Jew or Gentile.&#13;
A Bloody Tragedy in the Upper&#13;
Peninsula.&#13;
A GRAND RAPIDS SENSATION.&#13;
11i« Facta. F»nel«f mn&amp;&#13;
Not* Wfcloh the Two rMltttolM Affor*&#13;
Gttfcerod ««d Briefly Told For Baay&#13;
Header*.&#13;
&amp;*&#13;
There was quite a sensation in Rutland&#13;
square, Dublin, recently, when a&#13;
Boer flag was found floating from the_&#13;
roof of the Orange Hall. How it got&#13;
there 1s somewhat. a mystery. It is&#13;
surmised that some of the members,&#13;
remembering, that their patron of&#13;
"glorious, pious and immortal" memory&#13;
came of the same stock as the&#13;
Boere, took this method of showing&#13;
theirssympathy with the burghers who&#13;
are still in the field.&#13;
I&#13;
Owing to the incessant rains the&#13;
river Judrio, which flows along the&#13;
borders of* Italy, Austrla,~anar the district&#13;
of the Frluli, overflowed its&#13;
b a i k s one night recently, inundating&#13;
all the land, the surrounding towns of&#13;
Romans, Medea and Varsa. Alarm&#13;
bells were kept ringing, and the country&#13;
people fled in haste to the towns,&#13;
but-^eleven persons are reported to&#13;
have been drowned, and much- damage&#13;
has been done to property and crops.&#13;
ft'.&#13;
Sven Hedin has discovered a second&#13;
Dead Sea in the Highlands of Thibet-—&#13;
a vast lake so impregnated with salt&#13;
that .indigenous life is out of the question.&#13;
It was impossible for him to get&#13;
his boat close to the shore, so that he&#13;
and his companions had to wade out&#13;
two boat lengths before she would float&#13;
and this was sufficient to coat their&#13;
legs and clothes thickly with salt. The&#13;
entire bed of the lake appeared to consist&#13;
of salt, and the density of the lifeless&#13;
water was, of course, very high.&#13;
t&gt;v«* t h e Halls She Went.&#13;
Mrs. Anna Edison Taylor, of Bny&#13;
City, 4a years old, went over Niagara&#13;
Falls on the Canadian side Thursday&#13;
afternoon a ml survived, a feat never&#13;
before accomplished. She made the&#13;
trip in ii barrel. Not only did she survive,&#13;
but she escaped without, a broken&#13;
bone, her only apparent Injuries l&gt;eing&#13;
a sealj) w.ound, *»ne and a half inches&#13;
long, a slight •concussion of the brain,&#13;
A shock to her nervous system and&#13;
bruise* about tl»e body. She was conscious&#13;
when taken out of the barrel.&#13;
Mrs. Taylor's trip covered a mile ride&#13;
through the Canadian rapids before&#13;
she reached the brink of the precipice.&#13;
As her barrel jwnwed-overtlve brink It&#13;
rode at an angle of about 4.r&gt; degree*&#13;
on the outer surface of the deluge, an.!&#13;
descended as gracefully as a barrel can&#13;
descend to the white foaming waters.&#13;
15S feet below. Seventeen minutes after&#13;
going over the falls the barrel was&#13;
secured and ten minutes later Mrs.&#13;
Taylor was taken out. She thanked&#13;
God she was alive, thanked all who&#13;
had helped her In any way. said she&#13;
would never do it again, but that she&#13;
was not sorry that she had done it, "if&#13;
It would:helpTier^nanciatty." Ifei&#13;
reason for performing the reckless feat&#13;
was to advertise herself among theatrical&#13;
and museum managers. Her barrel&#13;
was built by a Bay City beer cask&#13;
manufacturing concern.&#13;
The Grand Rapid* ftenantlon.&#13;
The alleged attempted bribery of&#13;
witness Garman in the Salsbury case&#13;
Is the chief topic of conversation in&#13;
Grand Itapids. Wi 1 am Leonard, the&#13;
only man as yet taken lu'o custody in&#13;
connection with th&gt; br/bu-y case, and&#13;
"who^vairi'Trked^Hp-fH-4lvtLMiU-teltsLiL&#13;
As* rNi»e» t w u l t c a f e a , ^&#13;
A t the «*ss!oa of the Ful&gt;r inquest&#13;
tft Saginaw considerable testimony ot&#13;
an unimportant nature was Introduces:,&#13;
the only Item ttf sensational Interest&#13;
being derived from'Mrs. Frank Fuller,-&#13;
thja wife 0f the man wha died uuder&#13;
such peculiar circumstances. Mrs.&#13;
P u l l e r s testimony showed that A S A&#13;
Fuller, the younger brother of the dead&#13;
man, had kissed her and rubbed his&#13;
face against hers, leaving a sore spot&#13;
which he said came from his having&#13;
the barber's itch. She a so said that&#13;
Asa told her he would be her second&#13;
husband.&#13;
The Asylum la the Pine*.&#13;
T. A. Upton, o* Adrian, was shot at&#13;
Saturday n..ernoon by a demented&#13;
nephew, Archie Hodges. Upton was&#13;
moving his sister's poods when her son&#13;
became Iniurlnted and fired; the UScaltber&#13;
ball passing through Upton's&#13;
fedora hat. Upton grabbed the young&#13;
man nun held han until officers arrived.&#13;
Application for his admission&#13;
to the Kalamazoo asylum has been&#13;
made. Hodge* has been troublesome&#13;
before, but never vicious. It is not&#13;
known wnere he pot his revolver and&#13;
ammunition.&#13;
brief story of h's connection with the&#13;
case. He says he was engaged by a&#13;
tall, swarthy man. a stranger, to take&#13;
some papers to Garman. The package&#13;
h'.' took was a large brown envelope,&#13;
sealed, and contained something evidently&#13;
bulky, as th? envelope was well&#13;
padded. 'Leonard says-he took thl&lt; to&#13;
Ganuaii's room at the Livingston and&#13;
MINOR M I C H I G A N MATTERS.&#13;
Governor Bliss is to move back to&#13;
Lansing.&#13;
Bertha Cass, a Lansing waitress,&#13;
took morphine and is dead.&#13;
Charles Seeley. of Muskegon, aged&#13;
1« years, is under arrest, on a charge*&#13;
of forgery&#13;
Lansing Masons will lay the eoraerstoue&#13;
of the new Masonic temple on&#13;
November 12.&#13;
l a w l e s s n e s s is on the Increase* in&#13;
Hart and a law and order league has&#13;
been organized.&#13;
A nmi\ pouch WHS stolen from-the&#13;
Washington street depot. Saginaw.&#13;
Wednesday night.&#13;
South Haven people are ti. d of living&#13;
in a village, and want the place incorporated&#13;
as a city.&#13;
A bank has been established at Flat&#13;
Rock by Messrs. Power*, of Pontine,&#13;
and Loose, of Trenton.&#13;
Henry Albach, a brakeman on the&#13;
Ann Arbor road, fell under his train&#13;
near Marlon and was killed.&#13;
Saginaw Is agitated over the question&#13;
of Frank E. Fuller's death. Did&#13;
-he&#13;
4Th« nwclal election at Jftfc* to ratify&#13;
a*do&amp;fttJoR W m W to « e c u $ « J j *&#13;
factory* ^ Uie^NAtlonnl Printing $ *&#13;
Engraving Co.. from Chicago, r e s u l t e d&#13;
In the carrying of the plan.&#13;
• Eugene Beaudette, of Lake Linden,&#13;
stands six feet tall, weighs W&#13;
pounds, lifts 500 pounds with h l s ^ t t l e&#13;
ttjbger and, among other feats raises a&#13;
dead weight of 1,500 pounds with his&#13;
teeth.&#13;
The barns on the farms of John&#13;
Voorbeig and Thomas Jones, located&#13;
on the EMxnlteth lake road, three miles&#13;
west of Puitlac, burned Wednesday,&#13;
together with their contents. Loss,&#13;
$8,000.&#13;
Bob Leonard, tho 13-year-old son of&#13;
Ward Leonard, had hit right leg shot&#13;
off at Onekama by his cousin. The&#13;
shooting was accidental. He was&#13;
brougiK to Manistee and his leg wus&#13;
amputated.&#13;
Ignatius Brandt, charged with forgery&#13;
and burglary, has escaped fvom&#13;
the Alger county Jail. He,locked the&#13;
&amp;&amp;&amp;££yMtaeeriM*&#13;
K «4 *&#13;
Prospect, • #&#13;
POWERS AGAIN FOUND GUILTY.&#13;
Current Ev«oU, Major aan»dd Mloor Gat*-,&#13;
er*4aact UK*A&gt; GJv*a for the B n v&#13;
K»ttd»i'a lofocmsttoo, WUh FMta and&#13;
Fsoolo* Intjci woven.&#13;
-,' Chicago PovtoOtce Rob*e«I.&#13;
A Beiisntional robbery which nettetl&#13;
the- i&gt;en)etrators $74,010 in stumps,&#13;
was discovered Monday morning wheji&#13;
tho wholesale stamp departraeut of&#13;
the Chicago postortice was opened for&#13;
liusiness. The work of gaining an entrance&#13;
to the vault had evidently been&#13;
going forward with the greatest patlence&#13;
for many days, it ls believed.&#13;
Ktn t i^forp th« nfHi.f»r c o u d make »»»e\es «au oecu to ewer. Tne^iisu^*."&#13;
"siTicTtle or was he poisoned?-&#13;
One humlietl acres of timber&#13;
Plain well was ablaze Friday.&#13;
farina were Threatened by the&#13;
Wnyno county state and&#13;
taxes this year will be&#13;
wl.lcli is *n4..•&gt;(!.*; larger&#13;
D. K. Fnemail's dry&#13;
Jorevin de Rochefort, who published&#13;
in Paris in 1671 an account of his travels&#13;
in England, tells the following:&#13;
"While we were walking about the&#13;
town. (Worcester) he asked me if it&#13;
was the custom in France as in England&#13;
that when the children went to&#13;
school they carded in their satchel&#13;
with their books a pipe of tobacco,&#13;
which their mother took care to fill&#13;
early in the morning, it serving them&#13;
instead of breakfast, and that at the&#13;
accustomed hour every one laid aside&#13;
his book to light his pipe, the master&#13;
smoking with them and teaching ;hem&#13;
how to hold their pipes and draw In the&#13;
tobacco."&#13;
I here handed it in person to Garman.&#13;
Witness Garman sa? s he opened tlie&#13;
envelope that Leonard gave him and&#13;
that it contained ban'i Mils, and thaihe&#13;
waited only long enough for the&#13;
messenger to depart before he too!«&#13;
the envelope with Its contents to the&#13;
onlce of Mr. Ward and delivered it t )&#13;
him. There was an eye-witness to the&#13;
transaction in Gannan's room. Arthur&#13;
Stowe. a young mail who was first&#13;
called to the s and by Mr. Ward Satur- j&#13;
day to give testimony in the contempt j&#13;
proceedings. If th•» \ v secuting at-j&#13;
torney's chain of e^Lleuce*''•» sufficient- |&#13;
near&#13;
Nearby&#13;
lire.&#13;
county&#13;
.$1.1."&gt;!V&gt;"^ S*.&#13;
ihan last year.&#13;
goods st r.\&#13;
vK+Hi-by--tire—FrHarfllTUM);&#13;
insurance, .fltJ,-&#13;
start before the officer could make&#13;
himself heard.&#13;
Mrs. James CnssUly. of Lawton, has&#13;
located her misslug husband on a farm&#13;
near Mlshawaka Intl. There was a&#13;
stormy scene between the couple. The&#13;
oftieerwho was with Mrs. (Jassidy had&#13;
to restrain her.&#13;
Judge Mayno, of the Circuit Court,&#13;
has upheld the city's right to prevent&#13;
the Traverse City Gas Co. from laying&#13;
Us mains in the principal streets. T%»&#13;
ordinance provides that the mains shufi&#13;
tie laid in alleys.&#13;
State Senator A. E. Palmer, who resides&#13;
a short distance from Kalkaska,&#13;
was refilling his acetylene gas machine,&#13;
when the apparatus exploded and he&#13;
was terribly burned about the bead&#13;
and on both hands.&#13;
Ernest Fost, a farmer, two miles&#13;
from Attica, took | 8 0 and went to lmliiy&#13;
City. It is sairf lie drank heavily"&#13;
and returned at a late hour. He was&#13;
found dead in the morning, at his&#13;
home, his money gone.&#13;
Colby Ostrander, aged 70 yen's, was&#13;
found dead la his home in Tekonsha&#13;
Friday morning. He lived alone, having&#13;
separated from his wife.. It is h«-&#13;
lleved TO be a case of suicide, and the&#13;
coroner will investigate.&#13;
Tht»ttiutUatetl -body of ^a—man was&#13;
found between Battle Creek and Bedford&#13;
station, on.the Michigan .central&#13;
tracks. Thursday morning. Letters indicate&#13;
that his name was Eugene C.&#13;
Dexter, of Danville, 111.&#13;
Fifteen of the surviving supervisors&#13;
of Oakland comity who held office&#13;
from 18(KJ to ix7&lt;l were given a banl&#13;
*&#13;
ly strong it will place the two attorneys&#13;
in extremely unpleasant p' sitioin&#13;
and may lead to sensational developments&#13;
Lud Madison, who was to have been&#13;
hanged at Parkersburg, W. Va., for&#13;
murder recently, has been respited by&#13;
Gov. White for sixty days. Madison&#13;
claims that he has already been legally&#13;
executed, and that it is not lawful to&#13;
hang a man twice for the same offense.&#13;
Two years ago lie was sentenced to be&#13;
hanged, but a stay of execution was&#13;
granted, and the state supreme court&#13;
granted him an appeal. Through an&#13;
error, the records of the court in which&#13;
he was convicted showed that he was&#13;
executed instead of respited. Madison's&#13;
lawyers claim that, according to the&#13;
records, Madison is dead and cannot be&#13;
lawfully hanged again. They will appeal&#13;
the case to the Supreme Court of&#13;
the United States.&#13;
*•.&#13;
At a regular meeting of Magnolia&#13;
Lodge, Knights of Pythias of Sharpsburg,&#13;
Md., resolutions were adopted denouncing&#13;
United States Senator Wellington&#13;
of Maryland, a member of the&#13;
order, for the remarks he is alleged to&#13;
have made in regard to the assassination&#13;
of President McKlnley, who was&#13;
also a member of the Knigbts of Pythias.&#13;
The resolutions dee'ars tbat the&#13;
remarks made by Smator Wellington&#13;
were most disgraceful, unpatriotic and&#13;
unbrotherly; that he violated the principles&#13;
of the order, and that he is no&#13;
longer fit to be a member. They conclude&#13;
by demanding the fixators expulsion&#13;
from the organisation. Mountain&#13;
City lodge, Knights of Pythias 61&#13;
Fredfrtck, Md., passed similar resolu-&#13;
SSjawW»««w&#13;
A Bloody TruarcilT.&#13;
The bloodiest tragedy of recent years&#13;
In the upper peninsula took place near&#13;
Beechwood. Iron Co.. Saturday mornlug.&#13;
CraiMMl with anger. Andrew Israelson.&#13;
wi h a 4ri-c:rl!bre repeating&#13;
rifle, killed his wife, hpr father ;md&#13;
mother and IT tie sister and then b'ew&#13;
off the top of his own head. Israelson&#13;
and his wife, a Miss Llnstrom, had&#13;
frequent quarre's. her lather and&#13;
mother taking part, and a divorce was&#13;
to have been appled for. So angerel&#13;
was I s r a e l i i that he shot his mothe.'-&#13;
in-law. and his wife as she tied from&#13;
the house, ihrn bis inw which was in&#13;
the field, his father-in-law and ihe&#13;
horse which the old man bad hitched&#13;
up. His next move was to apply a&#13;
match to Ihe house, which was soon in&#13;
flames. He then threw the body of the&#13;
old lady into the flames and stood hv&#13;
and watched it consumed. He then&#13;
went to where his wife's body was&#13;
and. lying down bes'de It. .sent a bu*l?t&#13;
crashing into his own brain. Previous&#13;
to his marriage Isrnetaon wag. a quiet&#13;
and law-abiding citizen, having the&#13;
confidence and respect of the neighborhood&#13;
acquaintances. His family&#13;
troubles must have FO worked on his&#13;
mind that tie was goaded lo this awful&#13;
deed.&#13;
WiRfamn Confeaaea.&#13;
, After several hours of the sweat box&#13;
ordeal. Henry Wiseman, the convict,&#13;
has finally yielded to the Irresistible&#13;
logic and close examination of Prosecutor&#13;
Rockwell and make a full and&#13;
complete confession of the murder of&#13;
Mrs. flirlstopher Huss on the afternoon&#13;
of flept«mlM&gt;r 20. 101)0. The strain&#13;
to which he has been subjected since&#13;
Wednesday night w a s too much, 'tw.fi&#13;
he finally broke down completely and&#13;
exclaimed: "I killed the woman.''* He&#13;
then *a1rt that his statement made&#13;
Wednesday of how Hale killed Mrs.&#13;
Huss was In reality a descrii'.ion of&#13;
his own bloody deed. He refuses to&#13;
assign a motive for the crime. Thix&#13;
confession completely clears up the&#13;
mystery which has been occupyhig&gt; the&#13;
attention of the Oakland county&#13;
authorities for three weeks.&#13;
Lansing is short on small dwellings&#13;
and carpenters and masons to build&#13;
new ones.&#13;
Allegan 1R to have nn Autumn Festival,&#13;
which will take place October&#13;
30 and at.&#13;
i night.&#13;
I 1KK».&#13;
j llalph Itlakcly, of Detroit. Was in-&#13;
\ st:nitl.v killed Wednesday while trying&#13;
to board a moving freight train at&#13;
Northvdle.&#13;
Herman Felston. of Detroit, makes&#13;
attidavit that on Tuesday noon ne&#13;
completed a fast of forty-two and onehalf&#13;
days.&#13;
'Isabel Vreeland. aged i'A years, is&#13;
under arrest charged with sitting tinto&#13;
the residence of .lolin W. Arnold, of&#13;
Fast Gilead.&#13;
Some one broke into the Owosso jail&#13;
Sunday awl stole two fine new blankets&#13;
just purchased for the use of prospective&#13;
prisoners.&#13;
Miss Nellie Brown, aged 10. and (515-&#13;
year-old John G. Brown, a veteran,&#13;
with a big pension, were married&#13;
•Wednesday at I*reseott.&#13;
Capt. Walter C. Short. Thirteenth&#13;
Cavalry, has l&gt;een derailed for general&#13;
recruiting service for a period of two&#13;
years at Grand Rapids.&#13;
Despondency over domestic trouble&#13;
cniiM'd Bert Wilbur, of Algonsee township.&#13;
Branch county, to commit suicide&#13;
Monday by taking poison.&#13;
John .tardin, of Lapeer," who was&#13;
wounded whl'e serving In the Philippines,&#13;
has received $l."&gt;n back pay and&#13;
a pension i-f !f*J per month.&#13;
Len W. Feighner. po; Minister of&#13;
Nashville, who has been seriously ill&#13;
since Oct. 11. is yet in a critical condition&#13;
and is gradually failing.&#13;
Frank Mallow, of Grass Lake, who&#13;
lms been In the employ of the Michigan&#13;
Central railroad for :*4 years, is&#13;
takinsr his first vacation this week.&#13;
Judge Cnhlil has accepted the cut&#13;
I made by the Ingham county supervisors&#13;
in his bilL for srrvices in the&#13;
state military cases, under protest,&#13;
j The corn crop in Van Buren county&#13;
J is much better than expected. Late&#13;
potatoes'are also of a very tine quality,&#13;
as well as generous in quantity.&#13;
John McDonald has found two large&#13;
copper axes In the river bed a short,&#13;
distnwo from Marquette. They are&#13;
probably relics of a pre-historlc race.&#13;
Allie Bedford, of Cold water, though&#13;
hardly men' than a mere "boy. gets two&#13;
years anil nine months at . l a * son for&#13;
enticing a girl under age away from&#13;
home.&#13;
Gov. Bliss has received the resignation&#13;
of John D. B. Goodrich as judge&#13;
of probate for Ottawa county and has&#13;
appointed Edward P. Klrby to fill tne&#13;
vacancy. C&#13;
The American Can Co.. capital $S.-&#13;
OOO.OM. lias offered its articles of Incorporation&#13;
to the secretary of state&#13;
for tiling. It has $:240,000 invested in&#13;
Michigan.&#13;
Officers have arrested Alfred Duclo,&#13;
OIin (.'lark and Kdwnrd Laboc. three&#13;
Monroe boys, charged with assaulting&#13;
Kdwnrd Donnelly and robbing him&#13;
Monday night.&#13;
Alonzo Young, n young farmer of&#13;
Fargo, is in Jail and a charge of criminal&#13;
assault is registered against him.&#13;
Maude Thomas, aged IS, is the.com-&#13;
1 lalujng witness. •&#13;
quet by former Jrtljeof"Probate"TTiosT&#13;
L. Patterson. Some of the guests were&#13;
more than WI years old.&#13;
' Some of tin- suj&gt;ervisors of St. Clair&#13;
county are opposed to making repairs&#13;
to tlu- |&gt;resent court bouse and favor&#13;
the building of a new court house when&#13;
the lease of the present one, which has&#13;
(&gt;t&gt; years ro run. expires.&#13;
As the result of a tight at a dance&#13;
held at the home of Peter Poupard.&#13;
Wesley Duclo. a member of a Monroe&#13;
lough gang, lies at the point of death&#13;
with JI wound in his head, caused by&#13;
!iis being !dt with an ax.&#13;
Alger (Mtmty is literally a hunter's&#13;
paradise this fall. Partridges are so&#13;
numerous that bags of *_&gt;." nnd M) are,&#13;
common. Deer are everywhere reported&#13;
as very plentiful. Bears, too,&#13;
arc unusually .numerous.&#13;
Maud Boals, of Bay'Clty, was granted&#13;
a divorce from Edward Boals Wed'&#13;
nesday and immediately took out a il-&#13;
&lt;r:ise and was married Thursday to&#13;
Edward Rouse, although the decree&#13;
Wat- not tiled until Friday.&#13;
Ingham county supervisors are&#13;
.wrestling with the bill of Judge Cahill&#13;
for assisting Prosecutor Tuttle in the&#13;
state military cases. It amounts to&#13;
SM.lol.tlO, and the supervisors kick on&#13;
saddling it upon the county.&#13;
While walking on the Michigan Central&#13;
railroad track Wednesday, f.mr&#13;
miles west of Battle Creek. Eugene E.&#13;
Dexter, of Danville. 111., was killed by&#13;
tho express coining east. He was&#13;
j crushed to a shapeless maw.&#13;
William Hodgson has been appointed&#13;
deputy game warden for Iron&#13;
county. There Ins been a fr eat&#13;
slaughter of deer in the eoupty during&#13;
the pa"st two mcntlis, • because there&#13;
was no officer to make complaint.&#13;
Leon Idas D. Dibble, who built the&#13;
Peninsular railway from Lansing to&#13;
Chicago, is dead nt Bnttle Creek. The&#13;
road Is now the 'Grand Trunk Western,&#13;
and Dibble was its president from&#13;
1SG5 to 187.'l. Pie was 77 years old.&#13;
The Michigan Central Railway Co.&#13;
has let a contract to a Chicago man to&#13;
double the shops and capacity of the&#13;
engine works in Jackson. Some $40o,-&#13;
(XX) will be spent In new shops. When&#13;
finished next May. 800 instead ef 400&#13;
men, will be employed. .&#13;
George Robinson (white), of Church-&#13;
Ill, is Ul years old. Wednesday he was&#13;
married to Miss Lottie Henderson, his&#13;
••coal-black lady." Miss Henderson&#13;
acknowledges to 40 summers. bu% Js&#13;
the possessor of property valued at&#13;
$30,000. The groom Is a luliorer.&#13;
Three section men were instantly&#13;
killed by the Wabash fast mall going&#13;
west near Milan at 3 o'clock Thursday&#13;
nirirnlug. The men were ordered out&#13;
to drive some cattle off- the track.&#13;
They were returning on a hand-car&#13;
when the fast mall struck them.&#13;
Difficulties in securing the right of&#13;
way for the new United Railway ex»&#13;
tension, which has been surveyed from&#13;
Farniington via Nov! to lousing, have&#13;
led to i r n e w survey, which is now&#13;
in progress on a route going to tne&#13;
capital from Nortbvllle via South&#13;
L y o n . • / •&#13;
vault, in which there was $3o,o\)0 in&#13;
money nnd stamps valued at hundreds&#13;
of thousands of dollars. The bottom&#13;
of the vault is of steel, half an inch&#13;
thick. In this «7 holes were bored until&#13;
a space 18 inches square—just&#13;
enough to allow the entrance of a&#13;
man's body—had been so weakened&#13;
that it was possible to take out ihe&#13;
whole pinto with little difficulty. Of&#13;
the $74,010 in stamps taken. » 4 . i l 2&#13;
were In "postage due'' stamps and&#13;
$2,000 in special delivery stamps; so&#13;
the convertible stamps amounted to&#13;
$07,828, but 01" these $4t»»S were Pan-&#13;
American stamps of eight and teucent&#13;
denominations.&#13;
Long i.omt Daughter Found.&#13;
Nine years ago the 10-yeur-old&#13;
daughter of Peter Bell, a miller living&#13;
at Sf. Marys. Mercer county, 0.. failed&#13;
to-returo homo from_school. The lndlef&#13;
wus general that she had been&#13;
drowned. Her father, however, refused&#13;
to believe the story nnd spent his&#13;
meager savings searching for her. He&#13;
finally became convinced, • however,&#13;
that the girl was dead. A gypsie told&#13;
him recently that s h e w a s stolen and&#13;
gave information by which the father&#13;
found his daughter with a band of the&#13;
nomads at Carthage. la. The young&#13;
w o m a n say* she hn» -been- compelled&#13;
to beg food and clothing for the entire&#13;
band of gypsies, who at all times have&#13;
treated her cruelly.&#13;
WD'M Cheerful Tronpcct.&#13;
The report that Chinese Minister&#13;
Wu may be recalled and given a position&#13;
on the new board of foreign af-&#13;
-fa4f-«^-buw--ttIvcjj-i;lKo to gossip Hi:U Wtl&#13;
is altogether too popular in America&#13;
to be loyal To China. According to&#13;
talk in diplomatic circles, one of the&#13;
mandarins said recently to an American&#13;
army officer: "Why do the people&#13;
of the Cnlted States make such a fuss&#13;
over that Chinese coolie?" "We think&#13;
hlra a very clever and, useful man."'&#13;
responded the officer. "Bah! When&#13;
Earl Li dies we will brlyg him home&#13;
and cut his head off." Wu says he&#13;
has received no intimation , that liix&#13;
government is dissatisfied with him.&#13;
Kin or B«&gt; *TU rdV«. Ran.&#13;
Society has been stunned by the announcement&#13;
that King Edward ha*&#13;
placed the ban of his disapproval upon&#13;
Sunday entertainments of every sort.&#13;
The news of the king's change of view&#13;
came out as a result of his declining&#13;
to leave Scotland for the return journey&#13;
to London on Sunday. The kUigr&#13;
it Is said, now restores a rigid preshyterlnn&#13;
regime. The restaurant keepers&#13;
are really more perplexed than&#13;
Ihelr patrons, and predict that the&#13;
restaurants will soon be closed on&#13;
Sunday evenings. Sunday dinner parties&#13;
will be regarded as vulgar.&#13;
P O W P M AKftin ConTlrtetl.&#13;
Ex-Secrekary of State Cnlsb Powers&#13;
was again convicted of being an accessory&#13;
before the fact to the nirrner o"&#13;
Gov. William Goebel. of Kentucky. i»&#13;
January. 11XK). and for the second t"m^&#13;
has been seuteuced to imprisonment&#13;
for life. The second trial bejrau October&#13;
8, and has continued with three&#13;
pesslons daily, court adjourning l » t ° a t&#13;
night. The present term expired Saturday&#13;
night. Arguments were limbed&#13;
so that the case went to the jury at 2&#13;
o'clock p. m.. and a verdict of gailry&#13;
soon followed.&#13;
A i l Obftcene Piny.&#13;
Senor Taniayo has annuled the order&#13;
prohibiting the Havana theatrical managers&#13;
from producing the play "Los&#13;
Reyes Del Toelno;' (The American&#13;
Pork Kings). The play ridicules the&#13;
Americans generally and grossly questions&#13;
the honor of the women* of the&#13;
United States. It Is so olweene that&#13;
the queen regent of Spain stopi»ed It*&#13;
production iu Madrid on t h e eve of the&#13;
Spanish-American war,. when feellnwr&#13;
against the Americans was at its bight&#13;
tn Spnin. The play was also tabo*u»l&#13;
In Paris.&#13;
Ed Stokes' Dylufr.&#13;
Haunted by the face of Jim Fisk,&#13;
whom he shot ami killed for a pretty&#13;
woman's sake thirty years ago. when&#13;
he was a hail-fellow-well-met. Edward&#13;
S. Stokes, now a wreck of his former&#13;
self, is dying at the home'of his sister.&#13;
Mix Mary MeXutt, New York. The&#13;
direct carse of his illness Is necrosis&#13;
of the kidney*, from which he has for&#13;
years been a sufferer and which has&#13;
resisted all attempts to effect a cure.&#13;
Senator Chauncey M. Depew Is to&#13;
marry Miss May Palmer tn the near&#13;
future.&#13;
No will was left by the late John S.&#13;
Plllsbury. fornier governor of Minnesota.&#13;
His estate is estimated to )w»&#13;
j worth $,1,000,000.&#13;
&lt; *&#13;
' I&#13;
i^A. . i ^ ty\^^rv;ii,^8dbfcl^L t ^ M t a m m a ^ ^ m ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ m&#13;
&lt;*•«".&#13;
: / - •&#13;
f * .&#13;
&gt; ' / •&#13;
as &gt; M M N W W M § » •HI"", illjt-..*• rr&lt;-. -&lt;-"j :*•» nipy jsassixfK,j.i. &gt;,^-*i'K»i»V.*G***^-*l» '-*&#13;
V&#13;
fri&#13;
^CHAPTER I.&#13;
The afternoonof a hot Juac day was&#13;
drawing -ttrwaTdr cvtBlto^, arfd the&#13;
great world of Londcri-T-tpr it wag the&#13;
height cf the 8"a:on—waabeginnlD^ to&#13;
think of.diaaer. In a w?;!, f urnlahed&#13;
dressing ro:m, the wlnlo.va betas open&#13;
tor air. the blinds drawn down to exclude&#13;
the sun, Etood a lady whose maid&#13;
-was giving the touch/to her rich attire.&#13;
Jt was Lady £arah iff ope."&#13;
"What bracelets, my lady?" asked&#13;
-the xmid, t i k ' n g a small bunch of&#13;
keys from hsr pocket.&#13;
"None, now; it.is so very hot, Alice,"&#13;
Added Lad7. Sarah, turning to a young&#13;
iady who was tearing back on the sofa,&#13;
•"have them ready displayed for me&#13;
"when I como up, and I will decide&#13;
then."&#13;
"I b-ve th:ra ready, Lady Sarah?"&#13;
returned Miss Seaton.&#13;
"If you v/i.l be- s o H i n d . Hughetv!&#13;
give the key to Mi&amp;8 Seat on."&#13;
Lady Sarah left the room, and then I&#13;
the maid, Hughes, began taking one&#13;
of the small key3 off the ring. "I have&#13;
got leave to go out, miss," she explained,&#13;
"and am going directly. My mother&#13;
is not wall, and wants to see me.&#13;
This is the key, miss."&#13;
As Miss Seaton .took It, Lady Sarah&#13;
reappeared, at the door. "Alice, you&#13;
may as welt-briny the Jewel-box down&#13;
to the badk drawing room. I shall not&#13;
care to come tip here after dinner; we&#13;
shatl_.be late as it is."&#13;
"What's tialWbcut a Jewrl boiTHn-"&#13;
quired a jpre-.y look.ng g rl, who had&#13;
come fr:m anoLhcr apiitmeni,&#13;
' "L:;rly Sarah wishes-me to bring her&#13;
bvrcelcts tfewn to the drawing room,&#13;
thr.t she may chocs3 which to put on.&#13;
It was too hot.to dine in them,"&#13;
" A T you not coming in to dinner todry.&#13;
Alice?" ,&#13;
' No. I w a l k e d out, and it has tired&#13;
me, as usual. I have had some tea instead."&#13;
"1 wculd not be you for a'l the&#13;
world. Alice! To possess so little capability&#13;
£or enjoying life. No, not even&#13;
for y;.u, Alice."&#13;
"Yrt if you were as I am, weak in&#13;
-h*ait*vand—a!r,ng b, your lot wou'.d&#13;
have been so smoothed to you that you&#13;
wouM not repine at or regnet U."&#13;
' Y u m e n I shcu'd b** content,"&#13;
laug: ol the young lady." "Well, there&#13;
,1s r.oth'ng like contentment, th-3 sage3&#13;
tel! us1. One of my detestable school&#13;
rocm copi2s used to be "Contentment&#13;
is happiness.' "&#13;
"I can hear the dinner being taken&#13;
In," said Alice; "you will be late in the&#13;
•dining r o m . "&#13;
As Lady Francis Chenevix turned&#13;
away.to, fly t'o,vn the stairs, her light,&#13;
rounded form, her clastic step, all telling,&#13;
of health and enjoyment, prcsentod&#13;
a maiked contrast to that of A'ica Seaton.&#13;
Alice's face was indeed strangely&#13;
beautiful;, almost too refined and delicate&#13;
for the wear and tear of common&#13;
life; but her figure was weak and&#13;
stoopirg and her gait feeble. Of exceedingly&#13;
goc-d family, she had suddenly&#13;
been thrown from her natural&#13;
position of wealth and comfort to comparative&#13;
poverty, and had found refuge&#13;
a s •'companion'* to Lady Sarah Hope.&#13;
Colonel Hope waa a/thin, spare man,&#13;
with sharp brown eyes and sharp features,&#13;
looking s o shrunk and short,&#13;
that he most have been smuggled into&#13;
the army under weight, un'ess he had&#13;
since been growing downwards. N o&#13;
stranger eould have belkvcd him at&#13;
ease in his circumstances, any more&#13;
than they could have believed him a&#13;
colonel who had seen hard service in&#13;
India, for his clothes Were frequently&#13;
threadbare. A black ribbon supplied&#13;
the place of gold chain, as guard to his&#13;
watch, and a b ' u e , tin-looking thing&#13;
of a galvanized ring did duty for another&#13;
ring on his finger. Yet he wa3&#13;
rich; of fabulous riches, people said;&#13;
but he was of a close disposition, especially&#13;
as regarded his personal outlay.&#13;
In his home and to his wife he&#13;
was liberal. T%hey had been married&#13;
several years, but had no children, and&#13;
his large property was not entailed;&#13;
It was b:lieTwd that his nsphsw, Gerard&#13;
Hope, would inherit it. but s:m2&#13;
dispute had recently . occurred, and&#13;
Gerard had been turned from the&#13;
house. Lady Francis- Chenevix, the&#13;
sister.of Lady Sarah, hut considerably&#13;
younger, had been paying them an&#13;
eight months* Tislt in the country, and&#13;
had now come up t o town with them.&#13;
Alice Seatcn ,lay on the sofa for half&#13;
an hour, and then, taking the braceletbox&#13;
in her hands, descended to the&#13;
drawing rooms. It W M intensely hot;&#13;
a sultry, breathless heat, and Alica&#13;
threw open the back windows, which,&#13;
in truth made It hotter, t*»r the sun&#13;
gleamed right thwait the leads which&#13;
stretched thems2iv;s fceyend the window,&#13;
over ths out buildings at the&#13;
back of the row of houses.&#13;
She eat down near ^he back window&#13;
and b*ran to put out *onie of the&#13;
me. Last Chr stmaa he suddenly sent&#13;
for me, and told me ft was h i t pleasure&#13;
• p l a l n g QM Qf and Lady Sarah's that I should take&#13;
f Z _ r r _ f ^ o f n r ^ V t o n ^ . One ub my abode With them.' S V l did,&#13;
*l}t*'?fp^;tP^?JJ!i% "tudded glad to get into such good quarters,&#13;
of them was of , i » « i n * . , '.TJ ••&gt; and stopped there, like an innocent,&#13;
with diamends. It Was very vai.1«btvt •auspicious Iambi t i l l - w h e n was it,&#13;
aad , t a i boen tfr* present of Colonel f &gt; - - _ A ril T n e a t h p l t&#13;
,"X«s&gt; X ; * P 0 * w U t an ejabOTassed i&#13;
man the Earl Ja&gt; i t you allude to t h a t *&#13;
But I am g r a v e d to niar about yourr&#13;
aaW. It the Colonel implacable?-What&#13;
was the cause of i h e quarrel?" •&#13;
Hope to his wife on tor recent birth&#13;
day. Another diamond hracalet was&#13;
there, but it was- not t o beautiful o r so&#13;
costly as this. When b:r task was&#13;
done, Ml3S Seatcn passed into the&#13;
frcnt drawing room, and threw up one&#13;
of its large windows. Still there was&#13;
no air in the room. As she stood at&#13;
it a hand ome young man, tall and&#13;
powerful, who was.walking on the opposite&#13;
side of tb.3 street, caught her&#13;
eye. He nodded, hesitated, and then&#13;
crossed the straet as if to enter.&#13;
"It is Gerard!" uttered Alice, under&#13;
her breath. "Can he be coming here?""&#13;
She walked away from the window&#13;
hastily, and sat down by the bedecked&#13;
table-in the ather room. ..._ -&#13;
"Just a i I supposed!" exclaimed&#13;
Gerard Hope, entering, and advancing&#13;
to Alice with, stealthy steps. "When&#13;
I saw you at the window, the thought&#13;
struck me that you were alone here,&#13;
and they at dinner. Thomas happened&#13;
to be airing himself at the door, so I&#13;
crossed and asked him, and came up.&#13;
How are you, Alice?"&#13;
"Have you come to dinner?" inqulrangry&#13;
at her own agitation.&#13;
"I come to dinner!" repeated Mr.&#13;
Hope. "Why, you know they'd a3 soon&#13;
sit Sown wlth)tbe~hangmah."~&#13;
. "Indeed, I know nothing about it. I&#13;
was in hopes .ycu and the Colonel&#13;
might b* reconciled. Why did you&#13;
come in? Thomas will tell."&#13;
"No, he won't. I to'd him not. Alice,&#13;
the idea of your never coming up till&#13;
June! Some whim of Lady Sarah's&#13;
I suppo&amp;e. Two or three times a week&#13;
for the last month have I been marching&#13;
past this hcu3e, wondering when&#13;
it was going to show signs of life. 13&#13;
Francis here still?"&#13;
"Oh, yes; she is £0ln*j t? remain here&#13;
some time."&#13;
"To make up fo;'—Alic?, wa3 it not&#13;
a shame to turn me out?"v&#13;
•'I was extremely sorry far what&#13;
happened. Mr. Hope, but I kaew nothing&#13;
of the details. Lady Sarah said&#13;
you had di&amp;pleased.the Colcn?l. and&#13;
after that she nive:- mentioned your&#13;
name."&#13;
"What a show of smart thinjs you&#13;
have got here. Alicz! Are you going&#13;
to set i:p a bazaar?",&#13;
"They- a;e Lady S u a h ' s bracelets."&#13;
"So they are. I see! This is a grem,"&#13;
added Mr. Hop:, taking up the fine&#13;
diamond bracelet already mentioned.&#13;
I don't renumber this one."&#13;
'"It U&gt; now. The Colonel h i 3 just&#13;
given it to h?r."&#13;
"What did it cost?"&#13;
' D o you think I aru ll;?ly to linow?&#13;
I question if Lady Sarah heard it herself."&#13;
"It never cDit a farthirg less than&#13;
200 guinea*:," named Mr. Hop?, tuvnin'r&#13;
the b.acelct in various dlrectians, that&#13;
its l u h diamonds n i g h t give out thsir&#13;
gleaming'light. "I wish it was mine."&#13;
"What sh'.uld y u do with it?"&#13;
laughed Alice.&#13;
"Spcut It."&#13;
"I do not unaerstanJ." returned&#13;
Alice. She r v a l y did not.&#13;
"I b:g ycu? p . r i c n . Alica. I -wis&#13;
thinking of the col'oquial lingj familiarly&#13;
applied to such tiansa.ticns. instead&#13;
cf to wiurn I was ta k.ng. I&#13;
meant ID raisa money u*:cn it."&#13;
"Ob. Mr. Hope!"&#13;
"Alic*?, that's twiC3 y , u h.vc; called&#13;
me 'Mr. Hope.' I thought I was Gerard'&#13;
to you before I w . n t away."&#13;
"Time has el p3ed since, and yju&#13;
seem Ilk** a stranger again " rsturnad&#13;
A'ic-?, a flush rising to her sensitive&#13;
face. 'But ycu s p ; k i of raising&#13;
money. I h:p2 ycu ar? not in temporary&#13;
embarrassment."&#13;
* A Jelly good thing for me if it&#13;
turns out only tempoiary," he rejoined.&#13;
"Lock at my po:itlcn! D.-bts&#13;
h i n s i r g cv.r my h:al—!or you may&#13;
be sure, Alic?, all young*men, with a&#13;
limited a l l o w i n c ; and large expectation"),&#13;
contract them—and thrust out&#13;
of my uncle's home with the loos? cash&#13;
I had In n~y po.k?ta, and my clothes&#13;
sent after me." ~*&#13;
•*Has the Colon: 1 stopptd your al-&#13;
Icwar.c-??"&#13;
out This n a d fl:cel u p o n a w i f e f o r&#13;
me; and 1 was V h o ! ! l ^ ^ - ^ ^ -&#13;
,, ing J to" the^ vigilance" o f U e u t&#13;
*ma§ M. Bains, JrM o f the l&gt;th&#13;
United States Infantry, . another&#13;
sin lighter of American troops by infc-&#13;
arg^nts has been averted. B a i n s discell&#13;
at&#13;
here sevbole&#13;
that bad been let in the wall. An investigation&#13;
shoTved a . r 1 ^ to fill the&#13;
Jail with bolo men aiiil to call the&#13;
guard which wonld be necessary to&#13;
get. t h e door open and then to attack&#13;
the garrison. It also developed that&#13;
the instigators were a priest and the&#13;
president1?? !?ntn C? 77!;?!? 1 ^ . ^ 'l"^"&#13;
arrested* together with several otuer&#13;
prominent persons,&#13;
t i i d « r Tons of feock.&#13;
With the value of that at my disposal"&#13;
ed Anna,^peakir^-iit-j-andQm, and [ -r-nodding at the bracelet---"!should&#13;
says: "Walter4 Baker 4 C ^ / o i l k f c&#13;
cheater, Mass., U. S. A.f have given&#13;
yeajpi of study to, the skilful preparation&#13;
of cocoa and chocolate, and hare&#13;
devised machinery and S y s t e m s peculiar&#13;
to their methods of treatment&#13;
whereby the purity, palatabillty, and&#13;
highest nutrient characteristics are retained*&#13;
Their preparations are knowjrr&#13;
the world over and have received the&#13;
highest indorsements from the medical&#13;
practitioner, the nurse, and the intelligent&#13;
housekeeper and caterer."&#13;
IHrm at tke Uaffaio Fair. ' )&#13;
Buffalo, N. Y., telegram: New England's&#13;
building at the Pan-American&#13;
M . - . - t -,.-. • - - - - • " •«•»• «* «*»«-». I exposition waa destroyed by Are. The&#13;
nes* to marry her £ W ^ v ^ » « - JS&amp;*™ ? ' t J a T n . T f W n „ M ]«&gt;****&gt; contistlng of rich fumishingi&#13;
ment." -I ^ - 2 2 ° ^ . t u n . n e ! - n t O n 0 ?™**? ! of histcric value, costly oil painting,&#13;
and other articles of great value, were&#13;
also entirely destroyed. The building&#13;
cost $a0,000, and the less of the contents&#13;
is estimated at $100,000. The fire&#13;
was discovered at 11:10 o'clock, and an&#13;
hour later the building w a s in ashes.&#13;
The structure was one of the finest of&#13;
the so-called trCate buildings on the ex*&#13;
position grounds.&#13;
Major J. K. B1U RMlgos Port.&#13;
Springfield, HI., telegram: Word waa&#13;
received at Lincoln that former Mayor&#13;
James Edgar Hill of that city, brother-&#13;
in-law of the late Governor Richard&#13;
J. Oglesby, and now major in the Unit'&#13;
ed States army, has resigned his position*&#13;
as treasurer of Rizal province,&#13;
Philippine islands. He says he finds&#13;
the responsibilities and labor of his&#13;
office1 too much for him, especially as&#13;
t h e government makes him responsible&#13;
financially for all his native dennties.&#13;
f .• - ' «&#13;
. . i . . »~ - i a n d Sixty-seventh street and Broad*-&#13;
"Who was i t r inquired Alic?, Hr ft , wny, Xew York, Friday, carrying&#13;
w tone, a? she bent her head ov^r low j u^ath to an undetermined number of&#13;
the bracelets.&#13;
"Never mind," said Mr. Hope, "it&#13;
wasn't you. I said I would not have&#13;
her, and they both, be and Lady Sarah,&#13;
pulled me and my taste to- pieces,&#13;
and assured me I w a s a monster of ingratitude.&#13;
It provoked me into- confessing&#13;
that I liked somebody else bet'&#13;
ter, and the Coltmel turned m e out-'*&#13;
Alice looked her sorrow, but she did&#13;
n e t express it. ,.&#13;
"And since then I have been* having&#13;
s fight with m y creditors, putting them&#13;
off with fair words and promises. But&#13;
they have grown incredulous, and it&#13;
has come to dodg.ng. In favor with&#13;
my uncle and his acknowledged heir,&#13;
they would have g.ven me unlimited&#13;
time and credit, but the breach is&#13;
known, and it makes all the difference.&#13;
CHAPTER II.&#13;
Mr. Hop3 laid down the bracslet&#13;
from whence he had taken 4t. before&#13;
f he replied.&#13;
' H e stopped It then. £nd I have not&#13;
had a shill.ng since, except from my&#13;
own resonrce?. 1 first went upon tick;&#13;
then I dtapese J of -my watch and chain,&#13;
and ail my other little matt?r» of&#13;
value; and now f am&gt; upon tick again."&#13;
"I'lrtfn w h a t ? ' vtte.ed Alice.&#13;
"You don't understand these free&#13;
term*. Al!c3."' he siid. looking fondly&#13;
at h e r ^ ' a n d I hrpe you may never&#13;
have occasion. Frances would, she&#13;
t m c c l i t s on the table before it. They i tiis lived in their afco:pl:er:.'&#13;
stop some pressing trifles and go on&#13;
again for awhile. So you see, Alice, a&#13;
diamond brac*Ut may bs of use even&#13;
to a gentleman, - should some genial&#13;
fortune drop such into his hands."&#13;
"I sympathize with you very much,"&#13;
said Alice, "and I wish I had it in my&#13;
power to aid you."&#13;
'•Thank you for your kind wishes; I&#13;
know they are genuine. When my&#13;
uncle sees the name of Gerard Hope&#13;
figuring in the insolvent list, or among&#13;
the outlays, he—Hark! can they be&#13;
coming up from dinner? '&#13;
"Scarcely yet," said Alice, starting,&#13;
up simultaneously with hims3lf, and&#13;
listening. "But they will not sit long&#13;
today because they are going to the&#13;
opera. Gerard, they must not find you&#13;
here."&#13;
"And g:t ycu turned out as wall as&#13;
myselt: No"! not—if—r can help it.&#13;
Alice"—suddenly laying his hands&#13;
upon her shoulders, and gazing down&#13;
into her eyes—"do you know who it&#13;
was I had learned to love, instead of&#13;
—of the other?"&#13;
She gasped for breath, and her color&#13;
went and came.&#13;
"No—no; do not tell me. Gerard."&#13;
"Why, no, I had better not under&#13;
present circumstances, but when the&#13;
good time comes—fcr all their highroped&#13;
indignation must and will blow&#13;
over—then I will! and here's the&#13;
pledge cf it." He bent his head, took&#13;
cne long, earncit k'&amp;s from her lips,&#13;
and was gone.&#13;
A£Rated a'mo3t to sickness, trembling&#13;
and confused. Alice stole t o look&#13;
cft:r him, terrified lest he might not&#13;
escape unseen. She crept partly down&#13;
s-airs. so as' to ob ain sight of the&#13;
hall doer nn&lt;\ make sure that he got&#13;
out in safety. As he drew it open,&#13;
there stood a lady juet about to knock.&#13;
She said something to him and he&#13;
waval his hand toward the staircase.&#13;
Alice saw that the visitor was her sister,&#13;
a lady well married and moving&#13;
in the fashionable world. She met her&#13;
and took her into the frcnt drawing&#13;
loom.&#13;
"I cannot stay to sit down. Alice; I&#13;
mwst make haste back to dress, for I&#13;
am engaged to three or four places tonight.&#13;
Neither do I wish to horrify&#13;
Lady S^rah with a v'slt at this untoward&#13;
hour. I had a request to make&#13;
to you-and thought to catch you before&#13;
you went in to dinner."&#13;
"They are alone and are dining&#13;
earlier than usual. I was too tired to&#13;
appear. What can I do for you?"&#13;
"In one word—1 «am in pressing need&#13;
for a little money. Can you lend it&#13;
me?"&#13;
"I wish I could," returned Alice; "I&#13;
am so very sorry. I sent all I bed to&#13;
poor mamma the day before we came&#13;
to town. It was only £25."&#13;
"That w c u d hava b x a of no use to&#13;
me; I want more. I thought if you&#13;
had be?n misering up your salary you&#13;
might have had a hundred pounds o*&#13;
so by you."&#13;
Alice shook her head.&#13;
"I should be a long whi'e saving up&#13;
a hundred pounds, ev.n if d ar nmmma&#13;
had no wants. But I send to her&#13;
what I can spare. Do not be in such&#13;
a hurry." continued Alice, as her sister&#13;
was moving to the door. "At least&#13;
wait one minute till I fetch you a letter&#13;
I received from mamma this morning&#13;
in answer to mine. You will like&#13;
to read it. for it is full of news about&#13;
the old place. You can take it home&#13;
with yow."&#13;
(To be continued.) \&#13;
tht&gt; 40 men who were nt work far&#13;
d o w r , below the surface In the burrow.&#13;
Foreman Madden waa found&#13;
pinned down, by tons of broken rock,&#13;
only the feet being clear of the mass&#13;
of debris. Many of the other workmen&#13;
were imprisoned In a small chamber&#13;
at tlie excavation, nud their fate&#13;
wfH not be known until the rescuers&#13;
reneli tk*ua.&#13;
Starving: R n i i l a n i ,&#13;
Th&gt; persslan minister of the interior&#13;
lias proclaimed famine conditions in&#13;
five more districts iu the province,&#13;
namely, Samara district. Bogoulminsk.&#13;
Navemussensk. Nicolaevesk&#13;
and Stavropol. This means that vu'e&#13;
bad harvest has already made itself&#13;
so keenly felt that a special inedicnt&#13;
and relief organization is deemed' necessary&#13;
for these districts. It is likely&#13;
that the li»t will be added to tiroru&#13;
time to time during the winter.&#13;
^ - -- - Tk+WrGneU'Way*&#13;
"It has transpired," says n special&#13;
dispatch from Tails, "that the French&#13;
government warned each member of&#13;
the-miners' committee, which adjourned&#13;
Wednesday at Etieuue without&#13;
making public the result of its deliberations,&#13;
that, in ordering a strike under&#13;
present conditions he would render&#13;
himself liable to JI sentence of death&#13;
for inciting to clviT war and that the&#13;
government wonld prosecute if neces,v&#13;
sary. This action. !t is l&gt;elieved. caused&#13;
the committee to temporize,"&#13;
The hundred or so students and citizens&#13;
of Olivet who were poisonpd by&#13;
tinned meats at a social given by the&#13;
ladies of the Congregational church&#13;
are all out of danger, although it was&#13;
necessary to work over some of them&#13;
nearly all night.&#13;
Fernando Bjirber. of Oxford, aged r _,. . . , , - w&#13;
77. dropped dead .Saturday while walk- I Dodd's 'Kidney Pills for her many&#13;
ing with Mr. Dunbar, of Flint, whom.I p r h p a aiid_pains^_Kow—both mother&#13;
Th« Teacher's Tfffei&#13;
CTarfssa, Minn., Oct.* 28th.&#13;
Clara Keys wife of Charles Keys,&#13;
school teacher of this place, tells a&#13;
wonderful story.&#13;
For years her life was cue of misery.&#13;
Her back ached all the time; her&#13;
head ached all the time; neuralgia&#13;
pains dtrove her to desperation. She&#13;
used much medicine, but failed to get&#13;
any relief till she tried Dodd's Kidney&#13;
Pills. Sbe says:&#13;
"Very soon after I began nsing&#13;
Dodd's Kidney Pills all my aches and&#13;
pains vanished like the morning dew.&#13;
I consider this remedv a God-send to&#13;
suffering womanhood/&#13;
Encouraged by their cuccess in her&#13;
own case. Mrs. Keys induced her&#13;
mother, an old lady of 74 years, to use&#13;
he w a s visiting.&#13;
AMUSKSIKNTS IN D E T R O I T .&#13;
WEEK ENUINU NOV. -.'.&#13;
AVENUE THEATRE—Vaudeville—Prices: afternvou.&#13;
)0.15, &amp; -JS: evening, 10. -JO, •.' c: res-?rv. .iOo.&#13;
DETBorr OPERA—-Mr. James O'Neill,' —Mat.&#13;
t&lt;a-. at 2 o'cltA'l" shurp.&#13;
LYCEUM TDEATER-J^VU Eye.'—Wed and&#13;
Sai. Mat. 2-'K; evening*. 14. .' . .*&gt;J and loc.&#13;
VVIIITNKY GRAND— -la a Woman's Power."--&#13;
Aiat. luc. U uud 2bc; eveaiu,'s, liK*. -I* aui &amp;)c:&#13;
THE MARKETS.&#13;
Detroit.—Hood to choico butcher steer.",&#13;
!4.60&amp;*&gt;: iglu to good, .?'.S-"»''r»."«c; ligm t&gt;&#13;
gjod butclur steers and heifers. $-i.¥&gt;&gt;v . . . . .. „ »,„ ^„„_ »*,,. „».~i»&#13;
4.50; mixed butchers and fat cows. *2.%&lt;fr \ nation in the climates over the whole&#13;
3.8"&gt;; dinners' and common thin butchers.&#13;
and daughter rejoice in perfect freedom&#13;
from illness or suffering which&#13;
is something neither had enjoyed for&#13;
years before.&#13;
San-Spols and the Weather.&#13;
As w e are believed now to be at&#13;
the beginning of a new maximum sunspot&#13;
period, the question of the relation&#13;
of the sun-sp^U to the weather&#13;
is coming again to the frcnt. The observations&#13;
of Prcf.sscr E. Bruckaer&#13;
indicate that there i3 a p.rioIleal va-&#13;
31.50^2.73. Hulls—Light to good butt i;«.ra . , . . na.&#13;
ul fuuisage. $.\00*I3.*HJ: stockera and Ugh; i being about oo years&#13;
Kedeis, £^&lt;3.&amp;. Veal calves—Active at&#13;
$ynC&gt;.Zr&gt; per IJ0 lbs. Sheep—Best lambs. H&#13;
®4.io; light to sood and good mixed lo'.».&#13;
$3.25fti3.^&gt;; fair to good mixed and-butcher&#13;
sh(tp. J"J^i3; cults and common. *l..VX/2.&#13;
earth, the mean leng h of the pariod&#13;
Mr. W. J. S.&#13;
Lcckyer believes It has b:en demonstrated&#13;
that there is a vacation in the&#13;
intensity of sun spoL phenomena also&#13;
Hogs-Mixed and biurhrrs^iV.V^Vn.sV bufti j having a mean length of about 35&#13;
at So.S"?r5.S*i: pigs ?nd lisht yorkers. $o.ti"&gt; i&#13;
C«o.T3; stags. T.-3 off; roughs. $5.1*f/i.^&gt;. ,&#13;
v'hicasci.—Good to prime steers. stf.2"»^r j&#13;
6.3;; poor to medium. $3.75^5.90: ttoi-kevj [&#13;
and I'etc'crs. J2.LTJf t.25: cows. SI .2.&gt;^i4.i&gt;&gt;:&#13;
heifers. i2.'2bHji&gt;: canncrs. 41."iVn2."i."&gt;; bulls.&#13;
il.loC'H.'O; calves. $306; Texas steers. J2.7J&#13;
SjCTo; western stetr^. 53.0(^5.-10. h o g s -&#13;
Mixed and butchers. $5.9"&gt;£M.5o; good to&#13;
choice heavv, ?S.10fi^.55: rough heavy. $5.50&#13;
05.95: light. Ja.t^w&amp;ti.iO; bulk of salts. $5.95&#13;
(«6.20. Sheep—Good to choice wethers.&#13;
$3.40^3.75: weMerr; sheep. $3413.40: ' Rathe&#13;
lambs, $2.50^4.75; western lambs. $3.^5&lt;S&#13;
4.40.&#13;
years. The spot maximum, whose beginning&#13;
is new at hand, will, according&#13;
to Mr. Lockyer, resemble that&#13;
which culmimtsd In 1370, and which&#13;
waa remarkable fcr its intensity. A&#13;
cycle of dry, hot wsather corresponds&#13;
with this type of maximum.&#13;
Cincinnati.—Heavy&#13;
(go.W) nominal, fair&#13;
steers, choice, $5.2&#13;
to good. $4.50Ti 5.15;&#13;
good&#13;
choice, $3.25A;3.75; fair to medium. $2.50@&#13;
3: canners. $1.50^^.25; common rough&#13;
steers, poor cows and scalawags. $l(frl.,5:&#13;
stockers and feeders. $2¾4. Hogs—Selected&#13;
heavy shippers. - $6.L5; assorted mediums&#13;
around 175 lbs average $6&lt;56.10:&#13;
good packers and butchers. $5.95©6: a&#13;
Few choice butchers". $6.15; mixed&#13;
packers. $5.50475.90; sta?s and heavy fat&#13;
sows. $3.75(^5.75: IKht shippers. $5.5095.80;&#13;
pigs, ID lbs and less. $4/35.40. Sheep—Extra.&#13;
i^.754i2.85; good to choice. $2,10&gt;&lt;?2.85;&#13;
common to fair, flfi'l. Lambs—lixtra. $4.15&#13;
&amp;4.2S; good to choice, ri.10^4.10; common&#13;
Buffalo.—CaU'-*- c ; : . : j ; veals. K.2ZZ&#13;
7.50. Hogs—Heavy. $u.5C.^fi.«): mixed, $6.35&#13;
'H6.45; light. $6446.15. Piss-$5.1A&gt;&amp;6; bulk.&#13;
f6; grassers. $6.25$i6.40. as to quality: rougli&#13;
*5.404i5.7o: stags. $4.5iXf5. Sheep and lambs&#13;
-Top lambs. $4.«5f?4.75. few to $4.80; culls&#13;
to good. $304.80: sbeep. mixed, 13.25^3.40;&#13;
ejlls to good, $1.50^3.15: wethers and yearlings,&#13;
$3.5o«fi3.r&gt;; heavy ewes, $3.40(63.¾. but&#13;
have to be prime.&#13;
Pittsburs".—Cattle—Choiee, $5.7*456, prime.&#13;
?5.50frf3.70; good. $5.104i5.30: common. t&gt; 1.754«&#13;
J.40. H*»gf—Heavy hogs. $8.55©«.60; heavy&#13;
Inedir.ms. $6.40^6.45: light mediums. $6.30&#13;
"76.35; heavy yorktr^. $6.20@6.K; light&#13;
vorkcrs. $6.0^4 6.15: pigs, $5.90fi«; skips, $4&#13;
Wo; roughs. $3V©6. Sheep—Supply fair:&#13;
;H&gt;w; best wethers. $3.3063.40: good. $3.15&#13;
*?3.25; mixed. *2.501i3; cuds and common.&#13;
n*i2: vearllngs. $2.50¾ 3,75: spring lamb3,&#13;
}5©4.0&gt;; vec.1 calves. $6¾ 6.5).&#13;
Care of the Complexion.&#13;
Many persons with delicate skin suffer&#13;
greatly in winter from chapping. Frequently&#13;
the trouble arises from the use&#13;
Th«&#13;
only in&#13;
A little&#13;
mutton tallow or almond oil may b*&#13;
used after the bath to soften the skin.&#13;
ELIZA R PARKER.&#13;
"Thirteen of my fruit cans exploded&#13;
last night. Doesn't that s w m ominous&#13;
Ti "1 should cafl It uneanay."&#13;
^ i&#13;
r.RAi*. i?Tr.&#13;
Detroit.—Wheat—No 1 white. 74 l-4c; N&gt;-&#13;
i red. 74 l-4c. Corn-^59 1-4*159 3-4c: No 3&#13;
svllow. 60c. Oat:*—No 2 white. 40 l-2c; No&#13;
5, 40c: rulinv price. 39 l-2c.&#13;
Cincinnati.-AVhe;it—No 2 winter red. 74&#13;
B74 l-4c. torn-Demand light; No i&#13;
mixed. 60c on track; No 2 white,, dull at&#13;
3?: No 2 vellow. A) l-2c. Oats—N.» 2&#13;
mixed. 38 !-2c or. track; No 2 white, hell&#13;
U 393139 l-2c. I&#13;
»"*hlei»Ko. —Wheat—No 3 spring Wheat. 6"!&#13;
TiiS l-2o: No 2 r»&gt;d. 71 1-»?J72 3-4C;NNO •».&#13;
vellow corn. 57 l-44i57 l-2c. No&gt; 2 oats. 37&#13;
«37 i-4c: No 2 white, 39it39 l-4c; No- a&#13;
white, » V-2&amp;39 l-4c.&#13;
New York.-Wheat—No 2 red. 80 5-Sc f.&#13;
S. b. afloat; No 2 red. 77 o-$c elevalar^_N&lt;"» !&#13;
1 Northern Dulrth. 7* 7-V afloat: No I '&#13;
Flowlog of aietaia.&#13;
It is, perhaps, not gen.rally known&#13;
that one of the most important properties&#13;
cf metals employed in at: iking&#13;
coins and meda's, and stamping and&#13;
shaping articles of jewelry, is that of&#13;
flowing under pre sv.r?. St.-.rda d silver&#13;
is r c m . k - j b fcr this propsrty,&#13;
which precisely resembles the flowing&#13;
of a vUcoiu fluid. The flow takes&#13;
place when the metal is subjected to&#13;
rolling, stamping or hammering, and&#13;
tho particles cf metal are thus carried&#13;
into the sunken pirts of the die without&#13;
fracturing, and a perfect Impression&#13;
is produced.&#13;
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES color&#13;
sUk,wool or cotton perfectly at one boiling.&#13;
Sold by druffgiats, 10c. per package.&#13;
If tombstones were reliable, the devil&#13;
wpnld soon be wearing morning.&#13;
If everyone koerv how {rood a remedy&#13;
waa Hanlin's Wizard Oil its sales&#13;
would doable in a day.&#13;
A pnre heart is a jewel which should&#13;
adorn every blood-t ought sotrf,&#13;
• • • • ' ••'»&#13;
IX)N*T *POI(. YOVR CLOTHWI&#13;
V%e Rim Bleaching *Blue an&lt;l keep them&#13;
white as mow. Aiigrooer». 10c a,package.&#13;
;' •: ' .. I.T"&#13;
• . ' • •&#13;
-*—»•- ^-—'"'•^•yir'ri&#13;
I • . , . « . ' - ,&#13;
• : • • ' , ; - ' * !&#13;
• • • • ' . • • $ * . * &amp; •&#13;
• " ' ' W&#13;
'7,'* -.'V" 4. • &lt; ; • . 1 » "&#13;
I&#13;
tvti'ti f&gt;v:lv.th. Stt.'.-J'c (.- 0: fa. -afloat.&#13;
A chalk line drawn around an article&#13;
will keep away ants.&#13;
i&#13;
tf- •*• :W?&#13;
•v :.. &lt;&amp;i M- *.&#13;
«a&#13;
ear*'&#13;
»&#13;
'fe:&#13;
i ^ . ; ^ '&#13;
^ ! ' " ' •l,\-'-'-&#13;
t.r&#13;
ft.*-..-&#13;
.* ..,&#13;
to;&#13;
'/;&#13;
PARSHALLVILLE.&#13;
Mrs. Hjtaggie Stewart of Canada&#13;
is visiting among her many friends&#13;
here.&#13;
Rev. F. S. Lyons of Owosso visited&#13;
AC. G. Andrews the past week.&#13;
The entertainment given by&#13;
y Mr. Plumstead Saturday evening&#13;
was a success. A good house and&#13;
a first class entertainment.&#13;
B. F. Andrews and wife wh o&#13;
have been visiting their son at&#13;
Pinckney returned home Saturday.&#13;
NORTH LAKE.&#13;
School will commence nexc&#13;
Monday.&#13;
Oeo. Webb took in the Pan-Am.&#13;
last week.&#13;
- Jas. Gilbert and wife of Chelsea&#13;
^ v ^ p e n t Sunday at home.&#13;
'*''• Luelly Rielly returned home&#13;
from' Chicago Saturday.&#13;
J3. L. Leatch and family Sundayod&#13;
at Mrs. Wm. Woods.&#13;
Lawrence Rabbit has been taking&#13;
in the sights at Buffallo.&#13;
L. Allyn and wife visited at&#13;
Howe',1 the first of r4)e,week.&#13;
Born to Geo. Goodwin and wife&#13;
of Lyndon a daughter, Oct. 22.&#13;
Maggie Hudson of Lynia is visiting&#13;
her father Wm. Hudson.&#13;
Potatoes are potatoes ttrs fall&#13;
but B. S. Whalian had 80 bushels&#13;
on one-half acre.&#13;
Chandler Lane finished work&#13;
forE. W. Daniels last week and&#13;
returned home at Unadilla.&#13;
Several from here expect to attend&#13;
the S. S. Convention at Dexrs&#13;
PSP&#13;
ter Tuesday and Wednesday.&#13;
PETTYSVILLE.&#13;
Bay Beed of Oceola visited at&#13;
J. W. Placeways the first of the&#13;
week.&#13;
Elva Bandall of Howell is the&#13;
guest of her aunt Mrs. P. W. Coniway.&#13;
r&#13;
Miss Anrj£*Jfc Miller closed *&#13;
very successful term of school in&#13;
district No. 8, Tuesday, with appropriate&#13;
exercises.&#13;
ANDERSON.&#13;
Louis R o y has rented Chas.&#13;
HofFs farm.&#13;
Will Singleton was1 in Stockbridge&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
J a n e t P y p e r of Unadilla visited&#13;
Miss E d i t h Wood S a t u r d a y and&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Messrs. J a s . Marble and J a s .&#13;
Hoff a n d wives were in Howell&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
Geo. P h e l p s and wife of Stockbridge&#13;
visited relatives in this&#13;
place last week.&#13;
Will Roche, Lucius Wilson&#13;
and Dillivan Durkee are enjoying&#13;
their vacation.&#13;
Mell Hartsuff and family of&#13;
near M u n i t h visited relatives iu&#13;
this place Sunday.&#13;
Mesdames Eugene Smith and&#13;
H&amp;ttie Stephenson visited in&#13;
Stockbridgo Monday.&#13;
Mrs. G u s Wagner and son of&#13;
Banfield are visiting Mrs. W's&#13;
mother, Mrs. C. M. Wood.&#13;
F r e d Merrill, wife a n d son of&#13;
Iosco visited Mrs. E. J . D u r k e e&#13;
t h e last ot last week and took in&#13;
t h e party at G. W. Blacks.&#13;
Forty-nine numbers were sold&#13;
at Geo. Black's Friday night.&#13;
J u d g i n g from the wee small hours&#13;
when they adjourned all were having&#13;
a fine time.&#13;
W h i l e J a s . Marble was assisting&#13;
F r a n k Birnie drawing stalks a&#13;
bundle fell off scaring Mr. Birnies&#13;
horses and throwing Mr. Marble&#13;
off the load b u t no bones were&#13;
broken.&#13;
The Anderson farmers club will&#13;
m e e t at t h e home of Willis T u p -&#13;
p e r and wife irstead of Jas. Liverinors's&#13;
as announced, it being&#13;
impossible for it to be held at Mr.&#13;
= 4&#13;
fACTSTSTFEW&#13;
The area under wheat in Manitoba&#13;
exceeds 2,000,000 teres.&#13;
Swiss emigration is decreasing. Last&#13;
year the total wa* only 3,816.&#13;
It has been observed that as a rule&#13;
single women life longer than single&#13;
men.&#13;
The value of the wine raised in the&#13;
vineyards of Boumania last year was&#13;
17,500,000.&#13;
The first agricultural newspaper was&#13;
the American Farmer, begun at Baltimore&#13;
in 181&amp;.&#13;
Cairo is much the biggest town in Africa,&#13;
with 400,000 people, of whom 26,-&#13;
000 are Europeans.&#13;
Last year England imported nearly&#13;
6,000,000 tons of wheat of the 7,000,000&#13;
that were consumed.&#13;
Recent observations seem to indicate&#13;
that the incubation period of malaria&#13;
is about eighteen days.&#13;
The board of trade of Dusseldorf.&#13;
Germany, urges the necessity of restricting&#13;
the number of fairs.&#13;
Nearly 70,000 tons of corks are needed&#13;
for the bottled beer and aerated waters&#13;
consumes annually in Britain.&#13;
The Egyptian Sudan has twelve&#13;
provinces, with an area of 1,000,000&#13;
square miles aud 10,250,000 people.&#13;
An ounce of gold was worth fifteen&#13;
ounces of silver in the year 1880. It&#13;
would buy twenty-one ounces in 1900.&#13;
The city of Portland, Me., has in its&#13;
streets 30,000 shade trees, some of&#13;
which were planted more than half a&#13;
century ago.&#13;
Denmark leads the world in agriculture.&#13;
Each inhabitant ha« oh an "average&#13;
a capital of £137 Invested in farming.&#13;
British people have only £05 a&#13;
head.&#13;
The big gray kangaroo of Australia&#13;
measures about seven feet from the tip&#13;
of its nose to the end of its tail. It can&#13;
run faster than a horse and clear thirty&#13;
feet at a Jump.&#13;
The Greek government has secured&#13;
a monopoly of the picture postal card&#13;
business. It has just issued cards with&#13;
sixty-four different views of famous&#13;
cities and other scenes.&#13;
In ten Irish counties there are advertised&#13;
GG7.000 acres of shootings, and&#13;
the rental asked is £7,885, or a trifle&#13;
A new law regarding hotels and&#13;
boarding bouses requires a rope of&#13;
half an inch in diameter to be&#13;
placed in every sleeping room, the&#13;
rope to be of sufficient length to&#13;
reach the ground.&#13;
Bhelf. I expected him to turn over the&#13;
ovcr~2% pence per acre.' lu' most cases, * pages and look up my trouble under&#13;
All Pan-American stamps not&#13;
sold by the last of this month&#13;
will be withdrawn from circular&#13;
tioiL The object of issuing the&#13;
stamps by the government was to&#13;
popularize and help the exposition.&#13;
Some of our people should&#13;
keep a few of the stamps as souviners,&#13;
as they will become valuable&#13;
in time. While the stamps are&#13;
made of the prettiest designs ever&#13;
issued, they have not proved as&#13;
popular as was anticipated. When&#13;
the' stamps were first issued to&#13;
postmasters the instructions were&#13;
not to sell them to anyone unless&#13;
they were a*ked for- So few persons&#13;
asked for them, however,&#13;
that a great many post masters&#13;
have a big surplus on hand, and&#13;
the latest instructions received&#13;
trom headquarters were to sell&#13;
them out if possible by Oct. 30.&#13;
* *&#13;
Simple and Effective, but Coatly.&#13;
"When I cutne to town, I noticed a&#13;
little, round swelling on my wrist,"&#13;
said a visitor from the country. "It&#13;
bothered me, and one day when I saw&#13;
a sign, 'Dr. John Doe,' I thought I'd&#13;
go In and have it looked at. Well, I&#13;
was shown into a fine room, and in a&#13;
minute a pleasant looking man came in.&#13;
" 'Dr. Doe?' I says and held up my&#13;
wrist.&#13;
" 'Alu a weeping sinew/ says he, as&#13;
If he'd been waiting years for a chance&#13;
tq. study a case like mine.&#13;
"I didn't say anything, but kept my&#13;
Wrist out with the hand hanging limp&#13;
while he took down a book from the&#13;
When in Hawaii don't fail to go to&#13;
Brokaw A Wilkion't. It will do yon&#13;
good to see their fine atook of furniture,&#13;
china, glass-ware etc To say&#13;
the least, tbeir stock it complete.&#13;
Wm. McPherson's SODS have more&#13;
of ttaoqe beautiful, ready*made French&#13;
Flannel waists in color and size to fit&#13;
eyery lady. Call and see them at&#13;
their Mammoth Department store in&#13;
Howell.&#13;
We hope the time is near when we&#13;
will see many of the Glazier stoves&#13;
used in our town and vicinity. They&#13;
are all right.&#13;
J. H. Bishop of Wyandotte Mich.,&#13;
can fit the gentleman in any locality&#13;
with fur coats so the cold will not find&#13;
them, write him for particulars when&#13;
in need of any thing in his line..&#13;
Fletcher &amp; Hall ai-H showing an elegant&#13;
Hue of satin waists at their store&#13;
in Stockoridge. Call and Archie DOTfee&#13;
will let vou see them and make&#13;
prices right.&#13;
m m • •&#13;
Business Pointers.&#13;
WANTED: A man or boy to do&#13;
chores at the Sanford House. Boy&#13;
can go to school. Call or address,&#13;
SANFORD HOUSE, Pinckney.&#13;
House to rent, apply to&#13;
For Sale.&#13;
A limited number of S. C. Brown-&#13;
Leghorn cockerals at $1.00 each, bred&#13;
from fowls scoring 91 to 94£ points.&#13;
F. W. Mackinder,&#13;
t44 Anderson, Mich.&#13;
too, there are mansions attached.&#13;
The longest horee drawn railway in&#13;
the world runs from Buenos Ayres to&#13;
the town of San Martin, a distance of&#13;
fifty miles. Thirteen hours is allowed&#13;
for the distance, and trains run every&#13;
hour.&#13;
The business of Insuring individuals&#13;
and firms against losses from bad&#13;
T , . x^ . ^ debts above a certain amount is one&#13;
Li s in November. .Program next i w l i k . u h a s g r o w n a n d extended rapidly&#13;
week. in New York city within two or three&#13;
years.&#13;
In the eighteen years of its existence&#13;
the Woman's Relief corps, auxiliary to&#13;
50&#13;
to 143,000 members and disbursed $2,-&#13;
aid to veterans and their&#13;
The people of Anderson believe&#13;
in "iinperalism." Tuesday evening,&#13;
Oct. 29, a force of about 100 j the Grand Army, has grown from&#13;
Eugene Dunning and wife of ] fr ie nds and neighbors with several i 500(m .Q&#13;
Oceola were the guests of Myer d f t y s r a t i o n 8 , surrounded the home j families.1&#13;
r.-&#13;
If&#13;
.V? I&#13;
Davis and wife Saturday and Sunday.&#13;
Wm. Benham and J. W. Placeway&#13;
delivered horses at Stockbridge&#13;
Monday which they had&#13;
sold to Leslie parties.&#13;
Our blacksmith is tbe happiest&#13;
man iu town these days all on account&#13;
of an 8-lb. baby girl which&#13;
arrived at their home one day last&#13;
week.&#13;
The Putnam and Hamburg farmers&#13;
club was entertained by Myer&#13;
Davis and wife on JSatureay&#13;
last owing to the busy season&#13;
theie was not a very large attendance&#13;
yet a very, interesting meeting&#13;
was held. The next meeting&#13;
will be heljLat the home* of Jklrs.&#13;
James H a H / * t n a t is the day for&#13;
the annual election of officers it&#13;
was decided to'nave an oyster dinner.&#13;
S or \V and then prescribe something.&#13;
Instead he gave me a crack on the&#13;
wrist like a thousand of brick! It was&#13;
right on the swelling and hurt like a&#13;
cannon ball. I jumped high In the air&#13;
and yelled.&#13;
" 'Your weeping sinew's gone,' says&#13;
the doctor quietly. 'Three dollars/&#13;
"I was too much surprised to say a&#13;
word, and I paid it. But no wonder&#13;
your city doctors get rich. Three dollars!&#13;
Any blacksmith would have&#13;
done that job for the fun of doing it.**—&#13;
New York Post.&#13;
i&#13;
of Chas Hoff and wife and after&#13;
but short resistance succeeded in&#13;
capturing and taking possession.&#13;
Mr. Hoff having rented the farm&#13;
and that they may have a reminder&#13;
of the people of Anderson and&#13;
the pleasant evening spent, will&#13;
take with them to their future&#13;
home in Lansing, a beautiful rocker&#13;
presented by those present as a&#13;
token of esteem. Among those&#13;
present from abroad, were Mrs.&#13;
Jas. Eaman, Detroit; Floyd Randall&#13;
and Kittie Hoff, Lansing;&#13;
Henry Whipple and wife and&#13;
Elva Hoff of Howell and others&#13;
from Gregory and Pinckney.&#13;
Addttloal Local.&#13;
WEST PUTNAM.&#13;
Airs. E. Chapman is visiting at&#13;
S. E. Barton's.&#13;
H. B. Gardnei and son Glenn,&#13;
were in Howell Saturday.&#13;
Wm.'Cooper was in Eowlerville&#13;
the first of the week on business,&#13;
S. E. Barton enjoyed a day's&#13;
outing on the banks of Patterson&#13;
lake recently.&#13;
W. S. Kennedy of Stockbridge&#13;
is spending a week with relatives&#13;
d friends here.&#13;
w. Hudsou, wife and daughaggie&#13;
of North Lake visited&#13;
m. Gardner's Friday last.&#13;
e Misses Fannie and Mabel&#13;
'Jldtik* visited at John Watson's&#13;
" ^ C b n W # ^ r n e r s last Wed-&#13;
A uood rain would be very acoeptabl&#13;
•» at this time.&#13;
Chas. G. Smith and wife of Lakeland&#13;
were in town Wednesday.&#13;
This (Thursday) is tbe las-t day of&#13;
Oct. 1901. How time flies.&#13;
Mrs. V. L. Andrews is \isitin« i\ latives&#13;
in Howell and Brighton.&#13;
Mrs. Stella Grabam visited her&#13;
brother in Stockbiiclge this week.&#13;
Xbe Anderson Farmers Club will&#13;
be held at WiUis Tapper's Saturday,&#13;
Oct. 9.&#13;
In F. G. Jack.^on's adv. on page 1,&#13;
Misses and and Children's shoes should&#13;
read 75c to 12.&#13;
The Kennedy basket tactoiy slipped&#13;
several hundred baskets to Detroit&#13;
this week and. are still behind in their&#13;
orders.&#13;
Kev. H. \V. Hicks, enjoyed a days&#13;
fishing at Poi-tape with Mr. Fisk&#13;
Tuesday. Ye editor enjoyed a tisb&#13;
dinner as a re&gt;ult.&#13;
The seniors of the P. H. S. organized&#13;
tbe past week with tbe following&#13;
officers: Hernard Glenn, Pre?.; Fannie&#13;
Murphy, Vi.e Pr**.-; Milli« Gard-i&#13;
ner, Sec; Marion Re.tson Treas.&#13;
In e.'ery state and territory prizefights&#13;
are now forbidden by law. Not&#13;
one of tbe fighters is a successful j 8ity, now being constructed, with tbe&#13;
It is reported that a camera has been&#13;
placed so as to take each day one picture&#13;
of the new building of the department&#13;
of physics of the Cornell univer-&#13;
"star" in any theater, and nearly all of&#13;
them have lost money in the keeping of&#13;
barrooms.&#13;
A writer in the Cologne Gazette declares&#13;
that servants in the United&#13;
States do only half as much work, demand&#13;
twice as much free time and&#13;
four times as much wages as servants&#13;
In Germany.&#13;
The trade and wealth of Canada are&#13;
Increasing far more rapidly than its&#13;
population. With only one-tifteenth of&#13;
the population Canada has a trade of&#13;
more than one-sixth of that of the&#13;
United States.&#13;
The packing of sweet corn in Maine&#13;
has grown rapidly in the last few&#13;
years, until now only New York and Illinois&#13;
exceed Maine in the number of&#13;
cans put up. Last year about 22.000.-&#13;
000 cans were produced.&#13;
New York has long been distinguished&#13;
by its excellent breed of horses.&#13;
This year's census record shows 305,-&#13;
000 in the state, of which 73,000 are in&#13;
the county of New York, 38,000 in&#13;
Kings. 18,000 in Erie and 7,100 in&#13;
Onondaga county. •&#13;
The danger of living in a bouse that&#13;
harbors consumptives is illustrated by&#13;
the fact'that of C.273 patients officially&#13;
examined by 'the German imperial&#13;
board of health 2,177, or 34.7 per cent,&#13;
belonged to families that included other,&#13;
victims of tuj^ereuloste.&#13;
A Bright Jury.&#13;
In a larceny case in Maine it was&#13;
agreed to go on with only 11 men on&#13;
the jnry. The trial lasted several&#13;
hours, and then the Jury retired to&#13;
deliberate upon the evidence add find&#13;
a verdict. After being out four hours&#13;
the jury reported that it could not&#13;
agree, and accordingly, it was discharged&#13;
from further duty in the case,&#13;
and tbe prisoner was remanded to the&#13;
Jail. A Httle later the attorneys for the&#13;
respondent "got at" one of tho Jurymen&#13;
and asked him how the vote stood&#13;
in tbe Jury room. &lt;&#13;
"Well." said he, «*we balloted about&#13;
20 times, and eacb time there were 11&#13;
votes for conviction, but at no time&#13;
could we get 12 votes for conviction, so&#13;
we had to report a disagreement**&#13;
object of producing hereafter a moving&#13;
picture of the building from Its beginning&#13;
to its completion.&#13;
In Sicilian cities an appliance which&#13;
is in general use and has been for a&#13;
long time is an arrangement by which&#13;
the wind of a horse is shut off when&#13;
he attempts to run away. Standing&#13;
out from the nostrils of the horses are&#13;
little leather disks, which the pulling&#13;
of a little rein by the driver claps down&#13;
upon the animal's nose, thus shutting&#13;
off his wind if he tries to get beyond&#13;
control.&#13;
With its several hundred monster&#13;
mills Minuesota easily leads tbe country&#13;
in its milling industry. The annual&#13;
output of Minneapolis mills&#13;
amounts to over 13,000,000 barrels, and&#13;
the combined capacity of the state's&#13;
mills is considerably over 100,000 barrels&#13;
a day. The Minneapolis mills are&#13;
the finest in the world, and one system&#13;
of five of them grinds about 20,000,-&#13;
000 bushels of wheat a year.&#13;
FOR SALE.&#13;
A few thoroughbred Golden Wyandotte&#13;
cockrels, also some two-year-old&#13;
Rice pop corn. Inquire of&#13;
H. G. BRIOOS, Pinckney.&#13;
f o r Sale.'&#13;
A few thoroughbred Shropshire&#13;
Rams. Cheap while they last.&#13;
t-44 J.T.CHAMBERS.&#13;
by&#13;
iv A N T E D :&#13;
A married man to work on farm&#13;
tbe year. Enquire of&#13;
C. V. VANWINKLE.&#13;
A d v e r t i s i n g&#13;
S p a c e&#13;
F o r&#13;
S a l e .&#13;
i. Write,&#13;
For&#13;
Prices&#13;
And&#13;
Particulars&#13;
Pinckney Dispatch,&#13;
P i n c k n e y , Mtch.&#13;
To Rent.&#13;
House belonging to &lt;&#13;
STELLA GRAHAM.&#13;
These cool days remind us that winter&#13;
is approaching and onr wood supply&#13;
is low. Any of onr many subscribers&#13;
who wish to help us out along&#13;
this line we would be pleased to have&#13;
them do so immediately.&#13;
For Sale.&#13;
Anyone in need of a well pump will&#13;
do well to call on us. Desiring to&#13;
put in a force pump we have a good&#13;
second band pump in good running&#13;
order. It was working well in a 58&#13;
toot v ell when changed for the force.&#13;
The pump may be s«en at Teepie &amp;&#13;
Cad well.-.&#13;
I&#13;
STEWART'S&#13;
ROOFING&#13;
A N D&#13;
ROOFINXT MATERIALS&#13;
for liking NEW ROOFS and ripiirlng&#13;
OLD ROOFS of all kinds, Best in thi&#13;
aarket. Send for Catalogue.&#13;
W- H. STEWART,&#13;
108 JOHN ST.. N. Y«&#13;
. *&#13;
•A&#13;
LOST&#13;
On Sunday night, Oct, 20 an oval&#13;
gold pin, cameo set. Finder please&#13;
leave at this office.&#13;
CAUTION.&#13;
Please do not shoot or chase with&#13;
a dog my deer and her fawn now estray&#13;
in tbe woods on the north side of&#13;
Portage Lake, I expect to get her&#13;
back in the Park soon as—tbe—4akefreezes,&#13;
tf&#13;
T. BlRKETT.&#13;
£.*!&amp;*•; :-^&#13;
FLOYD JACKSON .&#13;
&lt;V&#13;
p*&#13;
•r&#13;
^w</text>
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              <text>Use the Windows Snipping Tool to capture the area of the document you want to save. If you want multiple pages printed please see staff to print the pages you want. &lt;a href="https://howelllibrary.org/technology/#print" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View the library's printing information.&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch October 31, 1901</text>
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                <text>October 31, 1901 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>1901-10-31</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. xix. PINOENBY, LIVINGSTON CO.,MiaH., THTJBSBAY, NOV. 7. 1001. Na 45&#13;
LOCAL N E W S .&#13;
H.OuluftheUat Bushton husking&#13;
Corn.&#13;
J.. Drown and wife spent part of&#13;
hut week with friends in Duraud.&#13;
Tas flourix\g mil I wasPoB'figecrEb r un&#13;
with steam last week to keep up with&#13;
orders. -&#13;
Win. Pitts of near Powlerville is the&#13;
guest of bis daughter Mrs. Stephen&#13;
Bur tee.&#13;
Boss and Eibel Bead of Ann Arbor&#13;
spent Saturday and Sunday at their&#13;
homehere.&#13;
Florence Andrews spent Suuday&#13;
with Mips Florence Kice of North&#13;
Bam burg.&#13;
Word came to this place last Saturday&#13;
that Mrs. Melissa Bullisof Jackson&#13;
was buried that day.&#13;
Rev. U. W. Hicks was called to&#13;
JJexter Friday last to officiate at the^&#13;
funera). of Elias Litchfield.&#13;
The;e will be a county Sunday&#13;
School convention for this county at&#13;
Hartland on Friday, Nov. 15. Everyone&#13;
invited.&#13;
This,office has oeen busy this week&#13;
issuing several more thousand circulars&#13;
for the Smith Surprise Spring&#13;
Bed Co. of Hamburg.&#13;
A small snow storm Monday morning&#13;
casued the youqp kids to rejoice&#13;
—most of 'era like to see winter-they&#13;
do not have coal bills to pay.&#13;
We received the pa9t week a tine&#13;
box of Strawberry from the vines of&#13;
G. W.Sykas, Detroit. The box was&#13;
fine but there was trot-otw-rtrawberry&#13;
However as it was just picked from&#13;
Mr. Syke's vines we considered it a&#13;
rarety. Keep on George you may&#13;
rival ttie fruit growers of southern&#13;
California in- producing strawberries&#13;
the year round.&#13;
Circuit court win session this weejc I&#13;
at Howell... There is a full calender.&#13;
The Hallow'een pjanks were small&#13;
and consisted mainly in a display of&#13;
old buggies and wagons an the square.&#13;
M. Mortenson and wife of Howell&#13;
-spent Sunday and Monday with"-bis&#13;
parents here. Mort is partly laid up&#13;
with a sore kand. ,&#13;
The book bindery in connection&#13;
with this office turned out a large lot&#13;
of magaz nes for Rev, C. W. Rice of.&#13;
Grand Blanc tbis-week.&#13;
Gen. Hendwe, daughter Orpha and&#13;
Miss Alma Swarthout visited in Dansville&#13;
the last ot last week. Miss&#13;
Swarthout will return to her home&#13;
near Harbor Beach from Dansville.&#13;
We wish our Readers to remember&#13;
that we want the news, and we want&#13;
all of it. We are not printing a paper&#13;
for any particular class, clique or clan&#13;
but for ]the whole people—everybody.&#13;
Therefore send us items, we can't get&#13;
all of 'era ourselves!&#13;
A gentleman, who is conversant&#13;
with the affairs of the Hawks-Angus&#13;
syndicate, informed the Leader a few&#13;
days that that company wonld baye a&#13;
spur line in operation into Dexter by&#13;
the first of next June. As to whether&#13;
the spur would be continued farther&#13;
north than Dexter he did not say.—&#13;
Leader.&#13;
The business man whose advertisement&#13;
seldom, if ever, appears in the&#13;
local newspaper is the one who whines&#13;
the most about people sending away&#13;
to mail-order houses for goods. He&#13;
can't half appreciate the fact that it is&#13;
the advertising that diverts trade to&#13;
thfl pity stprpi and tha nptfWt nf ftdver-&#13;
Card of Thank*.&#13;
I desire to thank alt the friends who&#13;
so kindly turned in and helped repair&#13;
the break in the milt dam. Your assistance&#13;
and good eheer is very much&#13;
appreciated. F. U. PETERS.&#13;
A CARELESS TRICK.&#13;
Good If It Proves True.&#13;
Almost "Too Good to be Trae."&#13;
May Cost Someone a Broken Limb Some Day.&#13;
Looking out our window one day&#13;
last week we saw a lad coming down&#13;
the street pealing a ban nana and&#13;
seemed very careful to lay the peal&#13;
on the walk. He probably do;s not&#13;
know that there is a law against such&#13;
acts and even it there were not common&#13;
courtesy would suggest a better&#13;
way to get rid of the treacherous&#13;
things. - Many a broken limb has resulted&#13;
from such carelessness and that&#13;
is why they are not to i e left *bn the&#13;
sidewalk. Your mother may be the&#13;
one, my boy, to slip on that peal.&#13;
— * • » • • • — -&#13;
ACLOSE CALL.&#13;
Coal Gas Came Near Causing a Disaster.&#13;
Edward A. Bowma n,&#13;
bEPARTMENT&#13;
STORE . ' . ' . . ' .&#13;
HOWELL MICHIGAN&#13;
BOWMAN'S&#13;
tisinpr that causes the country merchant&#13;
to lose touch with the people,—&#13;
Ex.&#13;
, ^ ^ * r&#13;
Dress Making*.&#13;
M i s s e s B o y l e 6t H a l s t e a d&#13;
Saturday evening Prof, and Mrs. S.&#13;
Darfee retired as usual leaving&#13;
their coal stove burning. Their son&#13;
Archie drove ,over from Stockbridge&#13;
arriving home about 3 a. m. and on&#13;
entering the house smelled coal gas&#13;
very strongly. On trying to awaken&#13;
them he found it hard wor* but managed&#13;
to arouse *bem. Dr. Sigler was&#13;
called and restoratives applied andthey&#13;
were soon out pf vianger altbough&#13;
feeling the effects all day Sunday.&#13;
Had they not been disturbed jantil&#13;
morn«n« the gas would have proven&#13;
fatal. The stove was tefHrs tbey-bad--&#13;
always been in tbe habit of leaving it&#13;
but the chimney having been cleaned&#13;
the day before some soot had lodged&#13;
above thus stopping the flue.&#13;
There is still talk ot another el«»3lric&#13;
line through' this place to Lansing&#13;
and while it may be like JIB last one&#13;
and -and amount .la nuLhinx but .talk*&#13;
still it is quit** a fe&amp;sab'e route We&#13;
clip the following fiora the Dexter&#13;
Leader in reward to it:&#13;
"The Ute*t prr.ji«cj, to reach the&#13;
ears of th* Leadm- h a road to connect&#13;
Detroit, Mason and LansitiL'. it.*&#13;
route is to be through Piytiioutb,&#13;
Northville and westward on an air&#13;
^ine to strike Hud-f&gt;n-em nwr^ tb*» between&#13;
the Portages to Pintkney and&#13;
on to Mason.&#13;
Last, Monday, ex senator S. Bi ownell&#13;
of Detroit, who represents tbe Ev&#13;
e ^ t t interest was in this lo.'.'.lity&#13;
looking the ground oyer, lie visited&#13;
Hon. Wm. Ball of Hamburg ;nd I mm&#13;
there came down through the takes to&#13;
consultation with him, to whom he&#13;
stated th« object of his plans, which&#13;
are brinifly as follows:&#13;
It is the intention of the Fyndicat*&#13;
to build the line mentioned abo«e and&#13;
we have to use water power in develt&#13;
oping their electricity. It is Imleived&#13;
that iy buying the. Hudson water&#13;
powav and flowage and -yaisiag t W&#13;
level of thr) lakes several leet, a 20 ft.&#13;
head can be obtainedat Hudson, which&#13;
would furnish enormous power the&#13;
.year round/rivalling the great power&#13;
at Allegan. Alter looking the ground&#13;
o ^ r thoroughly, Mr. Biownell, who is&#13;
a practical railroad man,, pronounced&#13;
the plan-entirely feasible and promised&#13;
to see Mr. Birkett in the near fu«&#13;
turf, to further consider 'he matter.&#13;
This road would l^ave !)« xter about&#13;
four miles to tbe south but like&#13;
Hawks &amp; Angus. Mr. Brownell said&#13;
that we should be cared for. While&#13;
it is possible that nothing may come&#13;
from it, it is nevertheless interesting&#13;
to watch tbe developments of ssueb a&#13;
M4v4UUt-eU!*i.-.-..l.liL-spejil some time in Iscbenifl and it may perhaps become a&#13;
reality.&#13;
Have added dress&#13;
making to their&#13;
millinery department.&#13;
All work&#13;
cut from French&#13;
Is the place to buy iancy&#13;
goods of all kinds.&#13;
Art Needle Goods, Fancy&#13;
Bhina, Albums, Celluoid ( T s y s t e m a n ( j&#13;
Goods, Dolls, Toys, Medal- j ' y / -&#13;
^T ' . : guaranteed to fit&#13;
lion, Statiogery etc.&#13;
Our prices will s a v e you&#13;
money.&#13;
Tpaaide B o w m a n ' s .&#13;
Busy Store,&#13;
Howell, Mich.&#13;
Next to Postoffice.&#13;
i perfectly.&#13;
Parlor* over the Bank.&#13;
-¾^¾)^&#13;
A Merciful Man is&#13;
Merciful to His Beasts. 99&#13;
There is no better way to show mercy these&#13;
saw windy days than to by a Northern&#13;
Ohio Blanket Mill's blanket and vise it. For&#13;
sale by&#13;
TEEPLE &amp; CADWELL&#13;
AN EXPLANATION.&#13;
We are sometimes asked why so&#13;
many errors get into the DISPATCH,&#13;
and why we are not more careful etc.&#13;
In tbe first place we have to&#13;
be editor, compositor, Job printer and&#13;
a little of everything else combined as&#13;
we 1 a? proof-reader.&#13;
In the second place, we cannot afford&#13;
to hire a proof-reader, consequently&#13;
errors will occasionally he found but&#13;
they are not intentional. We guarantee&#13;
that there will be more erros in&#13;
any daily paper you pick up in one&#13;
day than we get in a year and they&#13;
hire a man to do nothing else out read&#13;
proof.&#13;
In the th'rd place we are trying to&#13;
give you all the news up to t b e last&#13;
minute and set new advs. at the same&#13;
time, consequently cannot give the&#13;
proof the attention that we might it&#13;
we were running a literary Journal.&#13;
IN MEMORIAL&#13;
Wm. Daily was born in Putnam.&#13;
Livinston Co., Mich., J an. 28 1864 and&#13;
died at his home in the same township&#13;
Nov. 1 1901 in his 38th year.&#13;
He was the only son in a family of&#13;
six children; of whom hi.&gt; father and&#13;
mother and four sisters survive him.&#13;
He was married to Mrs. Ella Collins&#13;
February 14 1889 and to them were&#13;
born two children, Oladys and Percy,&#13;
who with his widow and a lartre circle&#13;
of friends and relatives a n urn the&#13;
loss of a kind and affectionate husband&#13;
father, neighbor and friend.&#13;
He was a successful farmer honest&#13;
and upright in his *Wlinir$, cheerful!&#13;
and generous in disposition gaining&#13;
the respect and esteem ot all who&#13;
knew him. Funeral services were&#13;
conducted at bis late residence by Rev.&#13;
Mr. Hicks last Sunday afternoon and&#13;
a very large concourse of people including&#13;
tbe Macc*b*«s of which be&#13;
was a member* lUended the services&#13;
and followed his remains to their last&#13;
resting place in the Gilks cemetery. .&#13;
The Maccabees bad charge of the&#13;
burial services. -. ^ ¾ ¾ .&#13;
This cut should have appeared&#13;
in the article, "Read&#13;
What Dr. Habermaas Says&#13;
about the Smith Surprise&#13;
Spring Bed," on page 5 of&#13;
this issue. Do not fail to&#13;
read it as it should interest&#13;
you.&#13;
Surprise Spring BeO.&#13;
/ '&#13;
;&#13;
w\iir&gt; I hid ona, o^v! r s ^ n g s sad,&#13;
Drugs,&#13;
Medicines,&#13;
Books:&#13;
Stationery,&#13;
Fancy and&#13;
Toilet&#13;
Articles.,&#13;
A Full Line of the Finest Candies&#13;
We sell you more Stick Candy&#13;
for the money than others dare&#13;
offer.&#13;
em us A CALL&#13;
Yours for trade,&#13;
F. A. f&gt;rtiflfgri»f*&#13;
.*''? . '&#13;
• - 4 _ ; J •'&gt;• ^ 4 . 1 /&#13;
•'•ft*&#13;
&gt; • ; : &amp;&#13;
.m&#13;
•v '•••^i&#13;
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- * •&#13;
m&#13;
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t&gt;r»&#13;
l&#13;
: / • *fi&#13;
v / .&#13;
' * •&#13;
v*: • J v ';£, ...• * ;-&#13;
1%'.&#13;
• ' » ' . ; ' * " • ' /!•'•• ." ••' '. • • •&#13;
.,&gt;, i ^ . + •.'- , •• . ,.&#13;
&gt;:C:*'••''•'.'''&#13;
'f.&#13;
••".-V,. ;'.*:. '.&#13;
. ' : - • * •'••;- --1- .&#13;
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v. •'&#13;
,-.-.^'.-" • " - • • % , •Jf "• »*&#13;
t&#13;
kv&#13;
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tf'&#13;
&amp;&#13;
Mr.&#13;
, ' ( " . ~ . • « •&#13;
. /&#13;
•up**&#13;
» ! * • « &gt; ' &lt; . . &gt; • * " • &gt; V&#13;
... :^r^ .'V v- By IVfRS,&#13;
-Author.oi&#13;
J'Hm '"£,&#13;
Lynn*, Etc '&#13;
^&#13;
• • • &gt; ;&#13;
CHAPTER ttj.&#13;
, Alice left nsr sister standing in the&#13;
-room and went upstairs, But she m&#13;
amors than one minute away; the was&#13;
tare* or four, for she could not at first&#13;
lay her hand upon tfc* Jettar. Whan&#13;
aae raturned her sister advanced to her&#13;
tronv the back drawing room, the fold'&#13;
Ins doors between the two rooms being&#13;
a* before, wide open.&#13;
"What a fine collection of bracelets,&#13;
Alice!" she exclaimed, as she took the&#13;
letter. "Are they spread oat for&#13;
ohowJ!"&#13;
"No," laughed Alice; "Lsdy Sarah&#13;
is going,to the opera, and will be in a&#13;
hurry when she comes up from dinner.&#13;
She asked me to bring them all down,&#13;
as she had not decided which to&#13;
wear."&#13;
"I llUe to dress before dinner on my&#13;
opera nights."&#13;
"Oh, so of course does Lady Sarah,"&#13;
returned Alice, as her sister descended&#13;
the stairs, "but she said it was too&#13;
hot to dine in bracelets."&#13;
"It is fearfully hot. Good-by, Alice,&#13;
Don't ring; I will let myself out."&#13;
Alice returned to the front room&#13;
and looked from the window, wondering&#13;
whether her sister had come in&#13;
her carriage. No. A trifling evening&#13;
breeze was arising and beginning to&#13;
move the curtains about. Qentle as it&#13;
was, it was grateful, and Alice eat&#13;
down in it. In a very few minutes the&#13;
ladies came up from dinner.&#13;
"Have you the bracslets, Alice? Oh,&#13;
I see." -&#13;
Lady Sarah went to the back room&#13;
as she spoke, and Btood before the&#13;
Cable looking at the bracelets. Alice&#13;
rose to follow her, when Lady Frances&#13;
Chencvix caught her by the arm and&#13;
began to speak in a covert whisper.&#13;
"Who was that at the door just&#13;
now? It was a visitor's knock. Do you&#13;
know, Alice, every hour since we came&#13;
to town I have fancied G:rard m'ght&#13;
he calling. In the country he could&#13;
•not get to us, but here—. Was it&#13;
Gerard ?"&#13;
"It—it was my sister," carelessly answered&#13;
Alice. It was not a true answer,&#13;
for her sister had not knocked,&#13;
bat it was the readiest that rose to&#13;
tclottsly proud of bis handsome per*&#13;
son, his herculean strength, his towj&#13;
erlng forn&amp; called feonu and^piantad&#13;
d©wn,.by ttafjdeot a. pretty and noble&#13;
lady, on purpose that he mlghl" fall in&#13;
lovm with ho&gt;^Ady » « n « ^ OhjnevUt&#13;
And yet the well-laid project' failed;&#13;
failed because there happened to be&#13;
another at that young lady's side, a&#13;
sad, oaist, feeble-framed girl, whose&#13;
very w^akacsa may have seemed to&#13;
place her beyond the pale of man's&#13;
love. But love thrives by contrasts and&#13;
it was the feeble afrl who won the&#13;
love of the strong man.&#13;
Yes; the knowledge diffused a&#13;
strange rapture wi'.h'n her as s^e&#13;
lay there at night, and she may be, excused&#13;
if^ for a brief period, she gave&#13;
range to the sweet fantasies it conjured&#13;
up? For a brief period only;&#13;
too soon the depressing- consciousness&#13;
returned to her that these thoughts&#13;
of earthly happiness must be subdued,&#13;
for she, with her confirmed ailments&#13;
and conspicuous weakness, must never&#13;
hope to marry as did other women.&#13;
She had long known—her mother had&#13;
»«,!.',.«" • M&#13;
VV.. NHWIW'iW*' juzjtp •, «wf«r&#13;
her lips, and she wished to escape the&#13;
questioning.&#13;
"'Only your sister," sighed Frances,&#13;
turning to the window with a gesture&#13;
of disappointment.&#13;
"Which have you put on?" inquired&#13;
Alice, going toward Lady Sarah.&#13;
"These loose fancy things; they are&#13;
itbe coolest. I really am so hot; the&#13;
; e:np was that favcrite eoup oi the colonel's,&#13;
all capsicums and cayenne, and&#13;
the wine was hot; th3re Ind baen&#13;
some mistake about the ice. Hill&#13;
trusted the new man, and he did not&#13;
understand it; it was all hot together.&#13;
What the house will be tonight I&#13;
dread to think of."&#13;
Lady Sarah, whilst she spoke, had&#13;
been putting the bracelets into the&#13;
Jewel bcx, with very little care.&#13;
"I had better put them straight," rermarked&#13;
Alice, when she reached the&#13;
table. J,Do not trouble," returned Lady&#13;
Sarah, shutting down the lid. "You&#13;
are looking flushed and feverish, Alice;&#13;
you were wrong to walk so far today;&#13;
Hughes will set them to rights tomor-&#13;
TOW morning; they will do till then.&#13;
Lock them up and take possession of&#13;
the key."&#13;
Alice did a3 the wa3 bid. She&#13;
locked tte case and put the key into&#13;
her pocket.&#13;
"Here is the carriage," exclaimed&#13;
"Lady Frances. "Are we to wait for&#13;
coffee?"&#13;
"Coffee in this heat," retorted Lady&#13;
Sarah, "it would be adding fuel to&#13;
Are. We will have some tea when we&#13;
return. Alice, you must make tea for&#13;
the colonel; he will not come out&#13;
without it. He thinks this weather&#13;
Just what it ought to be; rather cold,&#13;
if anything."&#13;
Alice had taken the bracelet box in&#13;
her hands as Lady Sarah spoke, and&#13;
when they departed carried it upstairs&#13;
to its place in Lady Sarah's bedroom.&#13;
The colonel speedily rose from the&#13;
table, for his wife had laid her commands&#13;
on him to join them early.&#13;
Alice helped him to his tea, and as&#13;
•soou as he was gone, she went upstairs&#13;
to bed.&#13;
To bed, but not to sleep. Tired as&#13;
she was, and exhausted in frame,&#13;
sleep would not come to her. She was&#13;
living over again her inteiview with&#13;
Gerard Hope. She could not in her&#13;
conscious heart affect to misunderstand&#13;
his implied meaning—that she&#13;
had been the cause of his rejecting&#13;
the union proposed to him. It diffused&#13;
a strange rapture within her, and&#13;
though she had not perhaps been&#13;
wholly blind and unconscious during&#13;
the period of Gerard's stay with them,&#13;
she now kept repeating the words:&#13;
-dan If be? can it be?"&#13;
It certainly was so. Love plays&#13;
ifllrflufe pranks. Ttuj wai Gerard&#13;
•Hope, heir to fabulous wealth, conprepared&#13;
her tor it—that one so afflicted&#13;
and frail as she, whose tenure- w a s she who returned them to the case;&#13;
of existence was likely to be short*;&#13;
ought not to become a wife, and it had&#13;
been her earnest hope to pass through&#13;
life unloving and unloved. She had&#13;
striven to arm herself against the daiF&#13;
ger, against being thrown Into the&#13;
perils of temptation. Alas! it had&#13;
come insidiously upon, her; all her&#13;
care had been set at naught, and she&#13;
knew that she loved Gerard Hope with&#13;
a deep and fervent love. "It is but another&#13;
cross/' she sighed, "another&#13;
burden to surmount and subdue, and&#13;
I will set myself, from this night, to&#13;
the task. I have been a coward,&#13;
shrinking from self-examination; but&#13;
now that Gerard has spoken out, I can&#13;
deceive myself no longer. I wish he&#13;
had spoken more freely that I might&#13;
have told him it was useless."&#13;
«* es^a«i«2 raf tt^^^^cass/*&#13;
•a;d-Ance. -*A1T are there except what&#13;
Ledjr Sarah had: on* You matt-saw&#13;
rflv^odke*^^; :¾^¾r#-47^ ,;--,-&#13;
* *t' must be- a great donkey it; J,&#13;
have," frumbled the girl. "It must be&#13;
at the yery bottom, amongst the cotton?&#13;
she soUloeutied, as she returned&#13;
to Lady, Sarah's apartments, "and I&#13;
have just got to take every individual&#13;
article out to get at it. This comes&#13;
of giving up one's keys to other folks,"&#13;
Alive hastened 'down, bsggieg pardon&#13;
for her late appearance. It was&#13;
readtty acrorded. AUce's ;pffic£ Js Jh.g&#13;
bouse waf nearly a staecure^ wheS&#13;
sfie had -first entered upon it Lady&#13;
Sarah was 111, and reouired some one&#13;
to sit with and read to her; but now&#13;
that she was well again Alice had lit*&#13;
tie to % *•*.. : r;&#13;
Breakfast was scarcely over when&#13;
Alice was called' into the*? room.&#13;
Hsihes stood outside.&#13;
"Mist," said she, with a long face,&#13;
"the diamond bracelets not in the&#13;
box. I thought I could not be mis*&#13;
taken."&#13;
"But it must be in the box," said&#13;
Alice.&#13;
"But ft is NOT," persisted" Hughes,&#13;
emphasizing the negative; "can't you&#13;
believe me, miss? What's gone with&#13;
it?" ^ •"-.. -&#13;
Alice Seaton looked at Hughes with&#13;
a puzzled, look. She., was thinking&#13;
matters over. It tooned cleared again.&#13;
"Then Lady Sarah must have kept&#13;
it out when she put in the rest. -It&#13;
1&#13;
37&#13;
CHAFTER IV.&#13;
It was only towards morning that&#13;
Alice dropped asleep; the consequence&#13;
was, that long after her usual hour&#13;
for rising she was still slej^ing^_The-4-bos bad&#13;
opening of her door by some one&#13;
awoke her; it was Lady Sarah's maid.&#13;
"Why, miss! are you not up? Well,&#13;
I never! I wanted the key of the jewel&#13;
box, but I'd have waited if I had&#13;
known."&#13;
"What do you say you want?" returned&#13;
Alice, whose ideas were confused,&#13;
as is often tb^e case on being&#13;
suddenly awakened. '&#13;
"the key of the bracelet box, if you&#13;
please."&#13;
"The key?" repeated Alice. "Oh. I&#13;
remember," she added, her recollection&#13;
returning to her. "Be at the trouble,&#13;
will you, Hughes, to take it out of&#13;
my pocket; it is on that chair under&#13;
my clothe3."&#13;
The servant came to the pocket and&#13;
speedily found the key. "Are you&#13;
worse than usual, miss, this morning?"&#13;
asked she, "or have you overslept&#13;
yourself?"&#13;
"I have overslept myself. Is it&#13;
late?"&#13;
- "Between nine and ten. My lady Is&#13;
up, and at breakfast with master and&#13;
Lady Frances."&#13;
Alice rose the instant the maid had&#13;
left the room, and n^ade haste to dress,&#13;
vexed with herself for sleeping so&#13;
long. She was nearly ready when&#13;
Hughes came in again.&#13;
"If ever I saw such a confusion as&#13;
that jewel box was in!" cried she, in&#13;
as pert and grumbling a tone as she&#13;
dared to use. "The bracelets were&#13;
thrown together without law or order&#13;
—just as if they had been so much&#13;
glass and tinsel from the Lowther&#13;
Arcade."&#13;
"It was Lady Sarah did it,'; replied.&#13;
Alice. . "I would have put them&#13;
straight, but she said leave it for you."&#13;
I thought she might prefer that you&#13;
should do it, so did not press it."&#13;
"Of course her ladyship is aware&#13;
there's nobody but myself knows how&#13;
they are placed in It," returned&#13;
Hughes, consequently. "I could . g3&#13;
to that or to the other jewel box, in&#13;
the dark, and take out any one thing&#13;
my lady wanted without disturbing&#13;
the rest"&#13;
"I have observed that you have a&#13;
gift of order," remarked Alice, with a&#13;
smile. "It is very useful to those&#13;
who possess it, and saves them frjom&#13;
trouble and confusion."&#13;
"So it do, miss," said Hughes. "But&#13;
I came to ask you for the diamond&#13;
bracelet."&#13;
"The diamond bracelet!" echoed&#13;
Alice. "What diamond bracelet? What&#13;
do you mean?"&#13;
"It is not In the box, miss."&#13;
"The diamond bracelets are both in&#13;
the box," rejoined Alice.&#13;
"The old one is there,, not the new&#13;
one. I thought you might have taken&#13;
It out to show some one, or to look at&#13;
yourself, miss, for I'm sure it's a sight&#13;
for pleasant cyci." * -&#13;
I did not Perhaps she wore it-last&#13;
night." /&#13;
"fto, miss, that she didn't She wore&#13;
only those two "&#13;
—^saw-whatehehad ou,"^ tnterrupted&#13;
Alice. "But she might also have&#13;
put on the other without my noticing.&#13;
Then she must have kept it out for&#13;
some purpose. I will ask her. Wait&#13;
here an inBtant, Hughes, for, of&#13;
course, you will like to be at a certainty."&#13;
"That's cool;" thought Hughes, as&#13;
Alice went into the breakfast room,&#13;
and the colonel came out of It with&#13;
the newspaper. "I should have said&#13;
It was somebody else who would like&#13;
to be at a certainty instead of me.&#13;
Thank goodness It wasn't in my&#13;
charge last night,, if anything dreadful&#13;
has came to pass. My lady don't&#13;
keep out her bracelets for sport. Miss&#13;
Seaton has left the key about, that's&#13;
what she has done, and it's hard to&#13;
say who hasn't been at it; I knew the&#13;
"Lady Sarah," said Alice, "did you&#13;
wear your new diamond bracelet last&#13;
night?"&#13;
"No."&#13;
"Then did you put it into the box&#13;
with the others?"&#13;
"No," languidly repeated Lady&#13;
Sarah, attaching ho importance to the&#13;
question.&#13;
"After you had chosen the bracelets&#13;
you wished to wear, you put the others&#13;
into the box yourself," exclaimed&#13;
Alice. "Did you put in the new one,&#13;
the diamond, or keep it out?"&#13;
"The diamond was not there."&#13;
Alice stood confounded. "It was on&#13;
the table at the back of all, Lady&#13;
Sarah," she presently said; "next the&#13;
window."&#13;
"I tell you, Alice, it was not there.&#13;
I don't know that I should have worn&#13;
it if it had been, but I certainly looked&#13;
for it. Not seeing it, I supposed you&#13;
had not put it out, and did not care&#13;
sufficiently to ask for it."&#13;
Alice felt in a mesh of perplexity;&#13;
curious thoughts, and v^ry unpleasing&#13;
ones, were beginning to come over&#13;
her. "But, Lady Sarah, the bracelet&#13;
was indeed there when you went t:&gt;&#13;
the table," she urged. VI put it there."&#13;
"I can assure you that you labor&#13;
under a mistake as to its being there&#13;
when I came up from dinner," answered&#13;
Lady Sarah. "Why do you&#13;
ask?"&#13;
"Hughes has come to say it is not&#13;
in the case. She is outside, waiting."&#13;
"Outside now? Hughes," called out&#13;
her ladyship; and Hughes came in.&#13;
"What's this about my bracelet?"&#13;
"I don't know, my lady. The bracelet&#13;
is not in its place, so I asked Miss&#13;
Seaton. She thought your ladyship&#13;
might have kept it out yesterday evening."&#13;
"I have neither touched it nor Been&#13;
it," said Lady Sarah.&#13;
"Then we have had&gt;thleveB at work."&#13;
"It must be in theNwx, Hughes,"&#13;
spoke up Alice. "I laid it out on the&#13;
table, and it is impossible that thieves&#13;
—as you phrEsa it—oou'.d have come&#13;
there."&#13;
"Oh, yes, it is Ift the box, no doubt,"&#13;
said her ladyship, somewhat crossly,&#13;
for she disliked to be troubled especially&#13;
In hot weather. "You have not&#13;
searched properly Hughes."&#13;
"My lady," answered Hughes, "I&#13;
can trust my hands, and I can trust&#13;
my eyes, and they have all four been&#13;
into every hole .and crevice of the&#13;
box."&#13;
Lady Frances Chenevix - laid down&#13;
the Morning Post and advanced; "Is&#13;
the bracelet really lost?"&#13;
(To be continued.)&#13;
gaaicoiDe, 1 reasurerSouth&#13;
End society qftiGin^^iv MnAe^^^^&#13;
«D«ARMftSi I^NKUM:~#hen Hf6 looked btf^eiit to toil&#13;
sustained a hard fall and internal complications wersj the result&#13;
I was considered inflamed, d#;not feel that I could walk, and lost^&#13;
my good spirits. I spent mone£ doctoring without an/Jelp^vheni'£&#13;
relative visited our home. She ?eas so enthusiastic over L y d l a J£y&#13;
P i n U i a m ' s V e g e t a b l e Compound, having used it hiraelf^ thaT&#13;
nothing would satisfy her until"Xseni for a bottje, I have thanked&#13;
her a hundred times for it since, tor it brought 'blessed health to me&#13;
und cured me within seven weeks.&#13;
I now wish to thank you, yojr m.edicine is.a friend to suffering&#13;
women/'—LILLIE DEGENKOLBE,&#13;
$0000 FORFEIT W THE ABdVE LETTEB IS NOT GEJCUINE,&#13;
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they should remember there is one^tried and true remedy. JLydia E .&#13;
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Refuse to-buy any other medieme, for you need the best,&#13;
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She has guided thousands to health. Address, Ey&amp;n, HassC&#13;
j r , ;&#13;
J&#13;
It is said that the commonest name&#13;
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The Bible Is a. window in thta prison of&#13;
hope through which w« look into eternity.&#13;
Brooklyn. N. T., Oct Ott.-Aft»r Investigating&#13;
Garfield Tea, which M Quite&#13;
universally acknowledged to be the Deat&#13;
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ORIGINAL herb euro for constipation&#13;
and sick headache.&#13;
BE MEN. Zooklxoo, tn« «reat inrlgorator, sett&#13;
U once. Sent for SI; po»rage paid. Addreat&#13;
Jookl Co., 1.01 Ruwell bt.t Detroit, Mich.&#13;
When a man tears a leaf off a calendar&#13;
he realises that his days are mrmbered.&#13;
I do not believe Plsou Cure for Consumption&#13;
las an equal for cou?ta» jind colds.—JoHP» F.&#13;
3OYER, Trinity Springs, lnd.t Feb. 15. 1WW.&#13;
Milton was blind in his old age and&#13;
often lacked in comforts of fife.&#13;
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES *&gt; not&#13;
stain the hands or spot the kettle (except&#13;
green and prarple). Sold by druggists,&#13;
10c per package^&#13;
On an average every woman enrrtee&#13;
40 to 60 miles oi ft air upon her bead.&#13;
-w , _ ^ _ _ _ Foolish and obstinate people* alone&#13;
"""•••— =— —-"" For tney can always sec are Wizard Oil&#13;
and e-ore themselves.&#13;
He tm the best arccotrrrtairt .who carr cast&#13;
up- correctly the sum- e»f his own errors; ;-&#13;
Mrs. Wlntilow** Boothia*- Syrae*&#13;
ror flaim ruhtaMliorena, tao beatby*lm b MftwH th« gum*. rwlnoM ia&gt;&#13;
Umt&#13;
pala.&#13;
\&#13;
m m wiaii&#13;
Beranger, the French poet, was the soat&#13;
Df a tailor, and himself a tavern waiter,&#13;
SOZODONT dPtRFECT LIQUID DCHTJFWCE FOR TM&amp;&#13;
TEETH « » BREATH&#13;
SJO EACH&#13;
SOZODONT&#13;
TOOTH POWDER&#13;
HALL ARUCKEU NEW YORK&#13;
,Depg»r» are- promptly arrested in. Vienna&#13;
Austria, if caught befrgta r on the street&#13;
SAVE FUEL HEAT ADDITIONAL ROOMS&#13;
by attsefclnsr BURTON ^ FUKL&#13;
tiCttNOMlZER to your store pipe.&#13;
Raves eae-tnird fuel. Price, $4.90.&#13;
Your sealer will supply yea. If&#13;
not, order direct from us.&#13;
W . J. BURTON A C O .&#13;
aSCASBSTtEFT. - DETROIT, MM&#13;
CstalocTM and teatlmonlala on request. r&#13;
$8.00 For this&#13;
^ ^ f O W g T A T I O t l .&#13;
Warnwted Aeearato&#13;
Otbas-riaei xiaslly ism.&#13;
B W OP TMt MAKER&#13;
ktHsFaystaeftaigbU&#13;
:[ dOO LB&#13;
General Health.&#13;
Gentlemen:—I used two bottles of&#13;
Baxter's Man. rake Bitters and it had&#13;
a decidedly good effect along the line&#13;
of general health. 1 took it for digestive&#13;
troubles and was mach pleased&#13;
with the result. G. A. Botsiord* Onaway,&#13;
Midi.&#13;
wits ether frocsttes mat md»e»at est&#13;
prieea. TdaaMaewMlei freetosew&#13;
eustumera. BeaaeftghtSeLetasM*&#13;
fovourcautecuwsetaiisit our bis;&#13;
bersaia* sMaowl«&gt;««ier. We rebets&#13;
tSotswoe SratBoeery order socatar&#13;
ixovaothtaav SitfJf»ntpJbr Afftnto. sva&#13;
SCiiTns COM Importera a Jobbar»,rwiraSw&#13;
B/tun** n u t AMKKICABT L A D Y . IT*****.&#13;
hBaAndP.J UAOddvreMaaC Mwfco*a. iKr. 8n7 tKh*.r fwe«—« mSt» g Cootadt cbaog&amp;o.a a1t1 1.1&#13;
laf I f W r%* ¥ oetBkfsUsIand n&#13;
saaea. pBao.o ak ,o sfv t esistahMvoPdSlasiShH aa ds iiss a B. AATwS*aa iu . a»&#13;
• ii W H I I wii • ii — — a — —&#13;
ITiaftifflrlSaTBifr' •&#13;
••*-i*- rjs'y --'^lf''"^. s&amp;caans^2Sfi&amp;^&#13;
+•". I *&#13;
O / .'.',* 'l»/* . ,' J*'.&#13;
tf*!''. •jt:-' *r.&lt;-&#13;
&gt;' ' * « .&#13;
• D » f * m « f i&#13;
. &lt; - , .&#13;
TMiitt s»v SVsysrtay ,*-«••"•--•&#13;
The aim should be to produce from&#13;
IW (o 200 pound ' f t f ^ W j k f w m&#13;
Bjofith»-old&gt;bfor tne f r t i W K profit, f w&#13;
the Jsemex Haittafi Kaof, on&#13;
frisndjy terms wttfr. y e s * herd, cttltj-&#13;
Hts quiet dispositions. *Ia*s tfr« hogGP&lt;&#13;
&lt;o that you can handle $hem with eafSv&#13;
Quietness and j*Uajws*;irill-aid'in doing&#13;
tjtfs^AS aoonr^a your toga are&#13;
&gt;aady, sell team, you h a w no furta**&#13;
' profluble use for them on too fsam&#13;
Taxman, who seep* Me h6a»«fterl»uy&#13;
are ready fo^io expecting to.get more J *&#13;
per poaa* wIM^e^rery; s * t * ^ o s o &gt;&#13;
; money; w * U e &gt; e i ^ j | * j s « 1 k&#13;
. 5vacy /armer has to aoownmodate&#13;
.btimtt to Wre&gt;tWfi«MWbs^so^ti a**&#13;
food is concerned. It U tUs&lt;endeavur&#13;
to use that w s i e * he .ejs£JWr.o4uceJ6ept&#13;
^ t h e r e f o r e , requires e*ejr» farmer&#13;
to rely la 4pB«mra^pA»;^|nislf--8t''&#13;
rmust think oter^hia business-, and d &gt;&#13;
^ d a after oarc^tU lhc|ighvt which are,&#13;
kU beat methods to. pursue. Give the&#13;
i o » a iarge rsug* ot pasture* Wfceit&#13;
** aay pasture we do not mean a large&#13;
[jot tnat hogs 'neve run* in for years&#13;
' opntainint; not:a apajx of grass, hut *&#13;
mk* grassy pasture, ^hinkof yours«K,&#13;
sitting down to a tal)le wifhont any-&#13;
'"thing.on jt to See**and y©« being ex-'&#13;
poetsd; to make at. square meal Aosl&#13;
again, the no** need exercise, sunahtoe&#13;
and corn mixea with the grass,&#13;
Just the same as we enjoy and require&#13;
4 rariety of food.:&#13;
The man with the good stnft and&#13;
^rbo. is not overstocked, reaps the&#13;
greatest reward, while the one who Is&#13;
overstocked, of,course, underfeeds and&#13;
fails to «et out o r t i i s business woei&#13;
he should. A breeder who will accomplish&#13;
anything by permitting his ani*&#13;
*asje^ j o „ I e e O _ ^&#13;
expense and ho work ifotae. The fault&#13;
with the young breeder ia In keeping&#13;
. more ^tock than be can properly ca/e&#13;
/for.- There should be no' difficulty in&#13;
seeing which is the right road to puris.&#13;
% -•&#13;
Exercising Hpr*«i»&#13;
An English' army officer, writing on&#13;
too care of horses, says:&#13;
Regularity of exercise is an important&#13;
element in the development of the&#13;
highest powers of - the" horse. The&#13;
horse in regular work will suffer less&#13;
in his. legs: than another, for he becomes&#13;
gradually and thoroughly accustomed&#13;
to what is required of him.&#13;
The whole living machine accommodates&#13;
itself to the regular demands on&#13;
Jt, the body becomes active and wellconditioned&#13;
without superfluous fat,&#13;
the muscieffTiird tendons gradually&#13;
develop. Horses in regular work are&#13;
also nearly exempt from the many accidents&#13;
which arise from over-freshness.&#13;
As a proof of the value of regular&#13;
exercise we need only refer to the&#13;
stage-coach horses of former days.&#13;
Many of these animals, though by no&#13;
mean* of the best physical frame,&#13;
ouid trot wijth a heavy load behind&#13;
for eight hours at the rate of&#13;
en miles an hour without turning a&#13;
r, and this work they would conue&#13;
to do for years without ever beng&#13;
sick or sorry. Few gentlemen can&#13;
y as much for their carriage horses.&#13;
honea, in fact, were la harder conon.&#13;
On the other hand, if exercise&#13;
naglected, even for a few days in a&#13;
orse in high condition, he will put on&#13;
He has been making daily the&#13;
ge amount of material needed to&#13;
ustaln the consumption caused by his&#13;
ork. If that, work, cease suddenly,&#13;
iature will, notwithstanding, continue&#13;
supply the new material; and fat,&#13;
ilowed by plethora and frequently&#13;
y-disease, will be the speedy conseence.&#13;
„ r oCBtarrhiA ifc&amp;.4eaJo»«Mh»&#13;
'" souatrr l&amp;atb sir other IUHMM put i&lt;&#13;
mm&#13;
sad uaitt the la»t te Inourtbts. Forasn w y&lt;*r*wasi&#13;
fther/&#13;
_ taaany yean doctorstf rfbroelt&#13;
s»a dlo-fcaaxf doleeeaeeatesr, ist^lyn sHMinotr*i o-Jmd lcoecrael&#13;
sad thj&#13;
l i t r e s red by&#13;
the only COM&#13;
JSQttlres&#13;
cdnatitucoasll-&#13;
*uu*et'&#13;
wfoxfc.Jiw. CuL9B. I _&#13;
are the Dec*.&#13;
«**a—»*—", i t w i'\i»m&#13;
4m 9S * s #\M Yoa t«iaf .$to*n** liK»t-»Mef&#13;
ft is ths only eure for SwoHen..&#13;
Smarting/ Bstnfat* Bwsatlng rset,&#13;
Coras sad Bunions. Ask for Allen's&#13;
Poot-Base, m^powder-to ba shaksn i s to&#13;
the show. A* aU Druggists s*d ^ o e&#13;
gtores, 2*c Sasaplev seat, P R S R Aa&gt;&#13;
^ * drass AHea 8, Olaisted. l^Boy^ J t t .&#13;
&lt;a«tlM •f!"**'**** •/"'&#13;
^J&#13;
TF«ntM or tit* Ken.&#13;
The mineral matter of the food eatis&#13;
not entirely.assimilated by the&#13;
tody. A n d ^ ° composition of hen&#13;
laaure, given below, proves that this&#13;
likewise true of the nutrients.&#13;
[COMPOSITION O F H E N M A N U R E .&#13;
Water 5S.00&#13;
Organic matter ...:.25.60&#13;
Nitrogen . . . . . . .&#13;
Phosphoric acid&#13;
Potash . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .85&#13;
Lime .....'"»• . . * • . . « . . SJmo&#13;
_ Magnesia t%^. .*_... .j,.-. ^16&#13;
* Insoluble residue, ate. 11.80&#13;
• . • . • J.60&#13;
• . • . ^ A . « 0&#13;
Total aOO.00&#13;
ie unassimilated fat and. oarho-hyare&#13;
included in the "organic*&#13;
^tter,M and the undigested portion&#13;
•nitrogen." J&#13;
CUUsiaa Cow&#13;
noultryman reports that an acre.&#13;
cow peas was left uncut hear his&#13;
ultry yard, and duriag this winter&#13;
hens attended to the haryesfing of&#13;
r jpemt. He was surprised* to receive&#13;
tost double the usual amount of&#13;
during that season, and asked if&#13;
peas bad anything to dp with i t&#13;
peas* are rich' in protein, therefore&#13;
assist In forming eggs. The&#13;
to securing the peas is anfactor&#13;
which recommends this&#13;
lea to the poultrymajl. in search.&#13;
eggs; At would bo a good&#13;
to glvs sow poas a triai.--QoMfi&#13;
&gt; ^&#13;
Ich feathsts are afi article of&#13;
fromVths Argepttao repoblfc&#13;
Men and 'Woasea -have moss, fags 4a&#13;
eaeh «tAf&gt; thai they have ta their OWB&#13;
m^jm . . . .&#13;
GOOD HOUSKKEXPKSS&#13;
_ _ the be**. Th»t &gt; wby tber boy,&#13;
Biet^nioff Blue., AU good grooer*, ice.&#13;
m&#13;
X U8C&#13;
^ W M iMgMd m Mfc*&#13;
** Coetof Heettof ottlySfperd»T. Peeewi sad fuel of au Carrlate.&#13;
PR DRtV&#13;
UsMIItt&#13;
nsCAlsCil^i&#13;
UMMSJIBRM., Mfrt., 10 lead f t . Maw Yark,&#13;
Xentloa khl* payer wkes writiaff.&#13;
JAMES JR, ERWttfiEg,&#13;
W&#13;
^ a ^ t g i T h i s ^ p t a V t E l i Wttaf [\¥. ff. U ^ D B T W O &gt; T ^ N O 1 48.-&gt;t&#13;
&amp;&#13;
•+&gt;&amp;&#13;
. : • &gt; ? * •&#13;
X,&#13;
}•&#13;
35' .'^•i: *&gt;'... I I&#13;
mm&#13;
mm*&#13;
PROM&#13;
.A&#13;
wtWTA4t.&#13;
I *&#13;
m&gt;r**4. tortti.&#13;
S9nu.&#13;
IttfO* S7X0*&#13;
C0TA4S,&#13;
*z " ^&#13;
-STA R"&#13;
HORSESHOE&#13;
SPEARHEAD"&#13;
STANDARD NAVY&#13;
T&#13;
ff &lt;J.T. f »&#13;
PIPER HEIDSIECK&#13;
BOOTJACK&#13;
u M&#13;
(i ff&#13;
u&#13;
1..(&#13;
*va*t*M&lt;Ka*c. uSQta*. Pttte TOBACCO,&#13;
HUT srr&#13;
i+0 TAGS&#13;
SUV£t? PLATCD&#13;
u&#13;
DRUMMOND NATURAL LEAF&#13;
OLDPEACH&amp;HONEY&#13;
NOBBY SPUN ROLL&#13;
JOLLY TAR&#13;
E.RICE.6REENVILLE ff&#13;
19 O 2 .&#13;
TOOL&#13;
/St ue*,&#13;
•&gt;m*&#13;
3STA9*.&#13;
tsntu&#13;
mi/utut&#13;
AMI mo.&#13;
1*0 TAGS. Mtr$U0M&lt;Kirte*n*t cwrrttucco.&#13;
u~\ OUTTCRKMM UttMS: 60TA9S&#13;
SU6A* SMtit 'AM/JTS' CO TAtS&#13;
ii&#13;
60 7X4S.&#13;
W/rrAUtK*.&#13;
MATCH SOX.&#13;
J09 JACS.&#13;
AIM, lock&#13;
GRANGERTWIST&#13;
2GXMSZBTWIST TASSbeing equal to one of others mentioned&#13;
*V$HP*t ser&#13;
I&#13;
•»Good L u c k , " " C r o s s B o w , " " O l d H o n o s t y , "&#13;
•• M a s t e r W o r k m a n , " '•• S i c k l e , " •• B r a n d y w i n e , "&#13;
• • P l a n e t , " " N e p t u n e , " " R a z o r , " " T e n n e s s e e&#13;
Cross T i e , " "QJe V a r g i n y . " 3&#13;
TAOS MAY BE ASSORTED IN SECURING PRESENTS.&#13;
Our new illustrated&#13;
CATALOGUE OF PRESENTS&#13;
FOR 1902&#13;
will induce many articles not shown here. It will contain the&#13;
most attractive List of Presents ever offered for Tags, and will&#13;
be sent by mail on receipt of postage—two cents.&#13;
(Catalogue will bo ready for maikng about January xst, 1902.)&#13;
• • ' •' f " •'» ' • I ' M ,&#13;
Our offer of Presents for Tags wfO oxptro Nov. aotl^iooa*&#13;
COKTWSNTAL TOBACCO COMPANY.&#13;
SO&#13;
TAOS.&#13;
SALT Am P€PPt» ser.&#13;
•toones&#13;
W/HQ&#13;
OStT&#13;
TAPt mtASo/te.&#13;
touts.&#13;
Write your nana and s4dreas/ArittA? on outside of packages&#13;
containing Tags, and send them and requests for Presents to&#13;
C. My. BROWN,&#13;
4241 FOtsojB Ave*,&#13;
„ S t - Louis, Mo.&#13;
co CA*r.&#13;
sort ACM,&#13;
ntnrs AAVAems:&#13;
tffCXAV**&#13;
MAJfOtfS.&#13;
Tsntis,&#13;
TS TA4S.&#13;
m* W * * 4&#13;
m - jv»-&#13;
t J.&#13;
0 • )-¾-&#13;
1 J.-I&#13;
••&gt;¥•&#13;
• ; » • •&#13;
V&#13;
Mi&#13;
I&#13;
•tf*&#13;
,-Ht&#13;
" +4&#13;
a&#13;
"tea&#13;
.jwfl&#13;
"f..&#13;
» &gt;&#13;
Ww*&#13;
•RT-:&#13;
!'&#13;
' * : •&#13;
H ? j ' ' •"»&#13;
&lt; • " • '&#13;
-. * *^&#13;
i * &lt; * ' ,&#13;
i ".'•&#13;
•'':tV.'.'&#13;
V:-']--.^&#13;
Itt' v&#13;
. : • &gt; •&#13;
w&#13;
JSTTv&#13;
fr*v&#13;
^y\:j -¾ : , vl fV ;-i'^'t •'.' ..V&#13;
:V :*V&#13;
V;'&#13;
. / • • * : . , ; *r,T?w ':•-. i : « . / - .&#13;
. - : . / , : •&#13;
.•r • ^ ^ • X ' .&#13;
'-#&lt;*'.'&#13;
ifc,j!- - *V-&#13;
.,«&lt;-r&#13;
• r t i ^ ^ ^ ^ « * i ^ .&#13;
9fct ftoduus fwpatrl&#13;
F. L ANDREWS A CO. p*QP«,tTO*s.&#13;
THUBSDAY, N(^V. 7,1901.&#13;
The St. Joeheph grape district&#13;
extending for 30 miles south of&#13;
that city, has become one of the&#13;
largest grape-growing regions in&#13;
the west. The present has been&#13;
the banner year, showing a yield&#13;
of 12,000*500 pounds, or 1,542,500&#13;
baskets, representing to the growers&#13;
$154,250. Nine-tenths of this&#13;
year's crop have been sent to Minneapolis,&#13;
St, Paul and Sioux City,&#13;
while two cars were sent to Spokane,&#13;
Wash.,; and several hundred&#13;
baskets went as far as San&#13;
Francisco—the first time Michigan&#13;
grapes have been sold iu&#13;
Califoi nia.&#13;
— , .&#13;
That Throbbing Headache,&#13;
Would quickly leave you, if you&#13;
used Dr. Kind's New Life Pills.&#13;
Thousands of suffers have proved their&#13;
matchless merit for sick and nervous&#13;
Headaches. They make pi re blood&#13;
and build up your health. Only 25c,&#13;
Money back if not cured. Sold by F.&#13;
A. Sigler, druggist, Pinckney.&#13;
THE MICHI6M BOOK.&#13;
v~&#13;
Sihu FamtHa*. feteW AmM ittfiqm*&#13;
tabhWorkonthitStai*&#13;
Ml* KirilnrriiASiac:;!.&#13;
( . i n k d ! T ! , y s:iy you tm- tiitaiir,ally&#13;
«»:n!i:ifinssi ii h o you owe JI very&#13;
iiii.LTf . u i i o t m i ' :&#13;
Cracl-ctt-1 il'.m'i ov.'f au.vthiny. tint&#13;
thnv ;i-c sevi r::t |H'»:p!&lt;&gt; who owe me.&#13;
and I haven't tin' .•I'lirn.u't' in fisk for it.&#13;
— Boston Tniuscnpt.&#13;
In !I::.N .m pin In Thomas Clarke, in&#13;
rointmny with -lulin Wlntlirop find others,&#13;
put in operation an "iron worke" nt&#13;
New Hnveu. Conn. This ontcip:-isc ovahrarnl&#13;
a blast funifw-e and a refinery&#13;
fnrpe.&#13;
Great Luck of an Editor.&#13;
"For two years all efforts to cure&#13;
Eczema in the palms of my&gt;handa tailed,'&#13;
writes Editor H. N. Lester, ot&#13;
Syracuse, Kan., 'Mlien I was wholly&#13;
cured by Bucklens Arnica Salve." l i s&#13;
the worlds best for Eruptions, Sores&#13;
and alt skin diseases. Only 25c at F.&#13;
A. Sigler's drug store, Pinckney.&#13;
1&#13;
Cleaaluic L i g h t F u r .&#13;
One who says she has tried It recommends&#13;
naphtha for cleaning light fur.&#13;
She says: Tour naphtha over the fur.&#13;
then Huff and pat the article until the&#13;
soil lias been worked out, and when&#13;
this is done press the naphtha out by&#13;
drawing the hand firmly over the fur.&#13;
Then shake and hang iu the air to dry.&#13;
Be careful of fire.&#13;
W l l j Coatijran.&#13;
Casey—Costigan got bis life Insured&#13;
for tin clnts.&#13;
Conroy—How wus that?&#13;
Casey —Me borrowed tin cints av th'&#13;
foreman, and the foreman won't put&#13;
him on a dangerous job as long aa he&#13;
»\ves him tin eints!— Puck*&#13;
Spreads Like Wildfire.&#13;
When things are "the best" they&#13;
become "Mm best selling." Abraham&#13;
Tlare, a l«adinar druggist, ot Belleville&#13;
.0., writes: "Electric Bitters are the&#13;
best F.elltngr bitters I have handled in&#13;
20 years." Yon know why? Most diseases&#13;
begin ir disorders, of Stomach,&#13;
liver, kidneys bowels, blood and nerves.&#13;
Electric Bitters tonrs up the&#13;
stomach, regulates liver, kidney* and&#13;
bowels, purifies the blood, strengthens&#13;
the nerves, hence euros m u l t i t u d e of&#13;
maladies It builds up the entire system.&#13;
Puts new life and vigor into&#13;
aoy weak, sickly, ruji down man or&#13;
woman. Price 50c. Sold by F. A.&#13;
Sitfler drupKist^iuckney.&#13;
Mr. -Silas Farmer, the welU&#13;
known authority on Detroit and&#13;
J Michigan, has just issued a little&#13;
work which will prove itself indispensable&#13;
to those who wish to&#13;
be informed aboutj Michigan.&#13;
I t is a small volume printed on&#13;
thin, though opaque paper, but&#13;
within its 350 pages can be fount!&#13;
pretty nearly every fact that anyone&#13;
is likely to care to inquire for&#13;
concerning our state, and the reputation&#13;
of the author is sufficient&#13;
warrant 4or the accuracy of the&#13;
statements.&#13;
Under the head of each county&#13;
will be found an accurate map&#13;
with the townships and sections&#13;
marked out. Every farm of 40&#13;
acres in the state can thus be accurately&#13;
located without difficulty.&#13;
One of the more valuable special&#13;
points is the population figures&#13;
of unincorporated villages, som e&#13;
of them having as high as 3,000&#13;
people which are not enumerated&#13;
in the United States Census. J&#13;
Another is the careful statementof&#13;
the amendments to the&#13;
constitution, showing at a glance&#13;
not only what the reading now is,&#13;
but what it used to be.&#13;
Along with the bock Mr. Farmer&#13;
is publishing a map of state&#13;
prepared on paper with cloth back&#13;
which is likely to supersede all&#13;
others. Like the county maps in&#13;
the book, it shows section as&#13;
well as township lines and indicates&#13;
accurately not; only railroads&#13;
but interurban electric lines, the&#13;
latter in red. It is the only map&#13;
that shows the whole state, including&#13;
Isle Koyale, in its proper geographical&#13;
position. It gives the&#13;
exact area of cities, and in many&#13;
other minor matters is a destinct&#13;
improvement in mfip-making over&#13;
anything hitherto prepared for&#13;
the state. It is sure of a wide circulation.&#13;
"The size of the Map is 35x40&#13;
inches, with cloth back. The&#13;
price both Book and Map is $1.00&#13;
Agents are wanted."&#13;
M Women and Jewels.&#13;
Jewel?, candy, flowers, man—that is&#13;
the. order ot a woman's preference?.&#13;
Jewels torm a magnet of miffbty power&#13;
to the average woman. Even that&#13;
greatest of all jewels, health, is often&#13;
ruined in the strenous efforts to tnako&#13;
or save the money to purchase them&#13;
U a woman will risk b^r kealtb to set&#13;
a coveted u&lt; m, then let her fortify&#13;
herself against the inaiduous consequences&#13;
nt* coughs, colds and bronchial&#13;
affections by the regular use of Dr.&#13;
Hooschee's German Syrup. It will&#13;
promptly arrest consumption in its&#13;
early stages and heal the affected&#13;
lun^s and bronchial tubes and- drive&#13;
the dread disease from the system,&#13;
It is not a cure ail. but it is a certain&#13;
cure for coughs, colds and all brou&#13;
chial troubles. You can get, Dr. G. G.&#13;
Green's reliable remedies at F. A. Sig-&#13;
1 r's drug store, Pinckney. Get&#13;
Green e Special Almanac.&#13;
V J'.J.M «.!!•. T&#13;
T h e C h a n g e In t h e T e n d e r f o o t .&#13;
"This is a remarkably healthy climate,&#13;
they say," said the easterner.&#13;
"You're right tlinr," said Arizon:i Al.&#13;
"F'r instance, not long ago a tenderfoot&#13;
with a weak chest an' a pale face drop&#13;
ped inter the Miners' Delight, called me&#13;
a Hnr an' o' course I had to clean up.&#13;
'Bout two jnoutbs after a big sunburnt&#13;
cowboy stopped me on the street, wiped&#13;
the earth up with me an' slammed mc&#13;
up iu a tree to recuperate. Same feller.&#13;
Best ellniate^in the world, pard.v&#13;
—Indianapolis Sun.&#13;
Slop Hie Court* tin* work* off the&#13;
C o l d .&#13;
Li-xative Broino Quinine Tablets cure&#13;
a cold in one &lt;1.iy. No * niv, no ji.iy,&#13;
i'rice 25 cents.&#13;
H e * P e t Name,&#13;
"All!" he sighed after she had blushlngly&#13;
whispered "Yes" in his bosom.&#13;
"My own Mehitabel! Oh, that name's&#13;
so forma!! Surely your friends use&#13;
pome shorter one, some pet name!"&#13;
"Well," she murmured, "the girls at&#13;
boarding school used to call me Pickles."—&#13;
Philadelphia Press.&#13;
Astounding Discorery.&#13;
From Coopersville, Mich, comes&#13;
word of a wonderful discovery of a&#13;
pleasant taxiing liquid that when used&#13;
T.&#13;
m&lt;U "'&gt;•&#13;
' The name of France la tferlv«d ftota&#13;
the FrancI, or Franks, % people of Ge&gt;&#13;
many who sensed that part of the&#13;
country nearest the Rhine and settled&#13;
there. Later on they subdued Paris&#13;
and made that the,royal seat of their&#13;
Increasing empire.&#13;
The origin of other geographical&#13;
names is interesting and will serve to&#13;
"f'lVi1*- * •»,_. , -&#13;
lUUtflUM I * * * T t M A t M l .&#13;
Italians more than^ny other people&#13;
Tilfis' tomntnoi anil each one- thai&#13;
comes to perfection Is a* carefully tended&#13;
as though it were an apple pf goW,&#13;
Not only do the housewives.deught 1»&#13;
-the fresh vegetables themselves* but/&#13;
generally spoaklng« those home tended&#13;
are better than any purchased- at the&#13;
market and so each on*-ft jealously&#13;
i saved to make tomatoe sauce for the&#13;
enlighten us when we read of, for in-1 J ^ JJi 9 ^.. JL. TTtK„.»,t&lt;, #*« r~,\ ^*^2Su**Zk u»iu« a~A TTIKJ^IO ' •pagDetti, without wnten no Italian&#13;
! ^ ^ ^ i 2 S J S r £ U ft&#13;
H^n^8inday would be Bunday. One, soapbox&#13;
is said to be derived from a Pboeni-1 __-J „*.• A .H««:„ OA,i Ah,*ii»K •««.•&#13;
elan &lt;word moanim* "farthest hablta. ^ ^ 0 8 1 ^ o n e ***&lt;«» sold enough toma-&#13;
JBP'i^SL???»«^5 J » S S w &gt; » l n ^ ; t o e a t 0 »l v e B e r ^0 1 ^ » Wtte-plB money.&#13;
S ± J t? M}1 ?« y i No one who knows the Italian wait will&#13;
inPemor twugeastl oQrb&amp;tauinne.d its name fr.o m. Por- \,T ^Z Jg™u rp"P'Tt eZe da^^tZ0 *|'*ea* r q t*hZa^t rmJ!aZn~yl noZf \hthZel to, t*hue« *ha-v™en o^r per..*t „w.uh ere *thi_e nG»a.u.ilas /toies are devoted to peppers, for they&#13;
landed their stores. This is Oporto,&#13;
called by the Portuguese 6 Porto (the&#13;
port). The town was given as a dowry&#13;
to Teresa when she married Henry de&#13;
Lorraine, who styled himself f3arfc~ef&#13;
Portugal because the place was known&#13;
as the portus Gallorum (the port of the&#13;
Gauls). The name was finally extended&#13;
to the whole country.&#13;
Russia took its denomination from&#13;
the Rossi, or Russi, a people of the&#13;
south of Russia, who possessed themselves&#13;
of the country in the declining&#13;
days of the Greek empire. Being the&#13;
predominant inhabitants, they imposed&#13;
their name on all the rest.&#13;
Subscribe tor-XUapatch.&#13;
abad.coiitfh always ensures &amp; stood&#13;
night's rest. "It will soon care the&#13;
cough too," writes Mrs. 8. Hiraelbur&#13;
ger, "for three generations of our&#13;
family have used Dr. Rings New .Digcoveiy&#13;
fur Consumption and nevir&#13;
found it erjuiil 'or Coughs and Cold?.1'&#13;
It's an uni'v.ded lifes*v«r when n-^d&#13;
•&#13;
Tor d^prra?*' lnn-.r dwa-'fl''. fiiiamn&#13;
teed bottles 50c and $1 «t P. A. Sigler&#13;
drugstore. Trial bottles free.&#13;
A Street Parable.&#13;
A little girl stood at a window blowing&#13;
soap bubbles. Beneath stood a little&#13;
boy, aud as she blew bubbles toward&#13;
him he tried to catch them. They&#13;
broke and disappeared ou all sides,&#13;
but the two laughed and kept up the&#13;
game, she smiling down and he gazing&#13;
upward eagerly.&#13;
"Behold, a parable!1* said a man to&#13;
a woman. "The eternal relation of the&#13;
sexes! You blow beautiful bubbles&#13;
down to us from your height, and we&#13;
weary ourselves in trying vainly to&#13;
catch them. Poor little boy!"&#13;
The pair played and laughed in the&#13;
sunshine until the boy grew tired. He&#13;
called out "Goodby!" gaj'ly and ran&#13;
away to play with other boys and girls&#13;
in the street. Tbe girl looked after him&#13;
wistfully, a shadow on her face. She&#13;
did not care to blow bubbles auy more.&#13;
She leaned out to watch him, and as&#13;
she did so she tipped over the bowl&#13;
of soapy water. She looked very lonely.&#13;
"Behold, a parable!" said the woman&#13;
to the man. "He has- tired of the&#13;
game; not she. There Is no other little&#13;
boy to'blow bubbles to, and if there&#13;
were she has no pretty bubbles left to&#13;
blow.—Etenra 1 relation of~S(?xes! PWi^&#13;
little girl!"—New York Tribune.&#13;
In truth furnish much of their spice of&#13;
life, and even tbe little Italian girl*&#13;
know bow to stuff and cook them in a&#13;
dozen different ways tbat tempt the&#13;
palate.—Boston Transcript.&#13;
Coloring of Flower*.&#13;
A florist says tbat the law governing&#13;
the coloring of flowers makes a blue&#13;
rose impossible. According to this law&#13;
the three colors red, blue.and yellow&#13;
never all appear in the same species]&#13;
of flowers. Any two may exist, but&#13;
never tbe third. Thus we have tbe red&#13;
and yellow roses, but no blue; red and&#13;
blue verbenas, but no yellow; yellow&#13;
and blue In tbe various members of&#13;
the viola .family (as pansies, for instance),&#13;
but no red; red and yellow&#13;
gladioli, .but no blue, and so on/&#13;
R u b b e r P l a n t s .&#13;
Many plant growers become annoyed&#13;
because the older leaves at tbe base of&#13;
their rubber plants turn yellow and&#13;
fall off. Thl* Is a natural process. It&#13;
does not Indicate any defect In "the&#13;
plant. It Is simply the ripening of tbe&#13;
old foliage, wWcb cannot be retained&#13;
Indefinitely. Sometimes, bowever, the&#13;
loss of foliage results from tbe want of&#13;
root room, but in such cases tbe plants&#13;
refuse to grow.&#13;
F i r e A m o n g S a v a g e N a t i o n * .&#13;
According to Pliny tire was a long&#13;
time unknown to some of tbe ancient&#13;
Egyptian tribes, and when a celebrated&#13;
astronomer made them acquainted with&#13;
that element and how to produce it&#13;
they were, wild with delight. The Persians,&#13;
Phoenicians, Greeks and several&#13;
other nations acknowledge that their&#13;
ancestors wore once without the comforts&#13;
which tire bestows; the Chinese&#13;
confess the same of their progenitors.&#13;
Pompanion, Molq, Plutarch and other&#13;
ancient writers speak of nations which,&#13;
at the time when they wrote, knew not&#13;
tlje use of Are or bad just recently&#13;
learned It.&#13;
The inhabitants of the Marian&#13;
islands, which were discovered in 1551,&#13;
had no idea of fire or its uses. Their&#13;
astonishment knew no bounds when&#13;
they saw it applied to wood, most of&#13;
them taking it to be some kind of an&#13;
animal which the sailors had brought&#13;
with them and which must be fed on&#13;
wood.&#13;
Ail C h a r g e d b u t t h e Cork.&#13;
A good story is told of a digger who&#13;
had ridden into a Western Australian&#13;
town to consult a doctor. Having done&#13;
so, he went to have the prescription&#13;
made up.&#13;
"How much is this lot?" he asked&#13;
the chemist.&#13;
"Well, let me see," was the reply.&#13;
"There's seven and sixpence for tbe&#13;
medicine and a shilling for the bottle."&#13;
He hesitated, uncertain whether he&#13;
had charged for everything.&#13;
"Oh, hurry up. boss," said the impatient&#13;
miner; "put a price ou the cork&#13;
and let us know the worst."—London&#13;
Tit-Bits.&#13;
HI* Gift.&#13;
The following incident is reported&#13;
from one of the public schools iu the&#13;
poorer section of Boston:&#13;
"Say, teacher, here's a tuberose 1&#13;
brought you," said a smudge faced&#13;
youngster the other day.&#13;
And, beaming her thanks, she asked&#13;
him where he got It.&#13;
"Oh, say, dat was easy," he replied.&#13;
"I got it off n a dead lady."&#13;
B l a n k e t s .&#13;
To clean flannel blankets a good way&#13;
Is to put two tablespoonfuls of borax&#13;
be for retiring by anyone troubled with-j and a pint of soft soap Into cold water&#13;
R a i l r o a d T e l e g r a m s .&#13;
When a traveler In the grand duchy&#13;
of Baden, Germany, wants to'send a&#13;
telegram while be is in tbe train, be&#13;
writes the message on a postcard, with&#13;
tbe request that it be wired, puts on a&#13;
stamp and drops it Into tbe train letter&#13;
box. At the next station tbe box Is&#13;
cleared and tbe message sent out&#13;
M a t r i m o n y a n d E y e s .&#13;
An old man was rallied by bis friends,&#13;
on his marrying a young wife, on the&#13;
^inequality of their ages. He replied,&#13;
^Sbe^wTITbeirearnre ro-dosc my cyca^&#13;
"Well," replied a friend, "I've bad&#13;
two ofi them, and they opened my&#13;
eyes."—Exchange.&#13;
WILLIAM M'KINLEY&#13;
HIS L I F E A N D W O R K ,&#13;
BY&#13;
GEN. CHARLES H. GROSVENOR.&#13;
President's lite long Friend, Com -&#13;
rade in war Colleague in Congress.&#13;
Was near his side with ether great&#13;
men when his eyes were closed in&#13;
death. Followed the bier to the National&#13;
Capitol and to Canton. Tbe&#13;
General requires a share of the proceeds&#13;
of his book to be devoted to a&#13;
ilcKinley Monument Fund. Thus&#13;
every subscriber becomes a contributtj&#13;
this fund. Millions ot copies will&#13;
be sold. Everybody will buy it. Orders&#13;
lor the asking. Nobody will refuse.&#13;
Elegant Photogravure Portrait&#13;
of President McKinley's last picture&#13;
taken at the White House. You&#13;
can easily and quickly clear $1,000&#13;
taking orders. Order outfit quick.&#13;
Chance to prove success, secure yearly&#13;
contract and become manager. Send&#13;
12 2 cent stamps for elegant prospectus.&#13;
Taking 10 to 50 orders daily. 50-&#13;
000 copies will be sold in this vicinity.&#13;
Address,&#13;
THE CONTINENTAL ASSEMBLY,&#13;
Corcoran Bid* , Opp. U. S. Treasury,&#13;
Washington, D. C.&#13;
sufficient to cover the blanket3. When&#13;
the borax and sonp have dissolved, put&#13;
in tbe blankets and let tbem stand over&#13;
night. The next day rub them out,&#13;
rinse In two waters and hang them to&#13;
dry. Never wring them.&#13;
An Apt Oeanltloa.&#13;
"What is a Bohemian?" said the&#13;
young man who wants to^tudy human&#13;
nature.&#13;
"A Bohemian," answered tbe cold&#13;
flooded friend, "is a person who al&#13;
A.OEXTS WANTED.—To sell "McKinley's&#13;
Dying Words," the latest, greatest&#13;
and most pathetic copyrighted&#13;
song of the day. Over 15,000 were&#13;
sold in Chicago during first three days&#13;
ot publication. Regular 50 cent sheet&#13;
music size for 25 cants a copy words&#13;
by Howard Carleton Tripp, the celebrated&#13;
lecturer, editor and author.&#13;
Music by Charles E. Smith, the noted&#13;
band leader and musical composer. A&#13;
financial harvest made by energetic&#13;
canvassers. Send 25 conts for sample&#13;
copy and terms to agents ani retail&#13;
dealers. Address, The.Best Music Co.&#13;
Kingsley, Iowa. We have several&#13;
copies of tbe song at this office that&#13;
are for sale.&#13;
TO Cwra a Cold In OnelDay&#13;
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets.&#13;
All druggiite refund the money&#13;
ifit fails to core. E. W.-Gr©veV si Affrays&#13;
needs two or three extra lndprse-4 nature is on each box,, s 25c.&#13;
tnents on bis note when be wants to&#13;
borrow money."-Washington Star. . . t&gt; /&#13;
* , . •&#13;
toj-afflod the money-on-a 50 cent not-*&#13;
tie of Green's Warranted Syrnp of&#13;
Tar if l i f ailas ro ou re yoar congb or.&#13;
cold, i also guarantee a 25-cent bottle&#13;
to trove satisfactory or money refunded.&#13;
t23&#13;
WUiR.Dirrow,.&#13;
[ A FREE PATTERN,.&#13;
^ _| (sytrelabre row. nO tmtllsrc gAo uoa) sttos e*v eyrwyr s.a fe-&#13;
MS CALLS&#13;
MAGAZINE&#13;
A tAMES' flAGAZINf.&#13;
A n n } bMutifur eotoraS |&gt;Ut*«t Mm*&#13;
rarkiho&#13;
•crib* to-dkYi or, tend jc. fi&#13;
L*4y i|MU wutad. Studfo rfo rla'ttctraatu «. epy.&#13;
worlbk* f htoo-dohMy,h oirii, thmindt *&#13;
I Stylish, Reliable, Simple, Up4o&gt;&#13;
date* Economical and Absolutely&#13;
Perieot-FUting Paper Patterns.&#13;
M BAZAR* i PATTERNS&#13;
Al Seasu Alowe* art Perforations stow&#13;
tteiMtso Mdeewtas UIM. .&#13;
Only to and 15 ptnU Mch—nen* hlyfcw.&#13;
Aik fe* th«m. Sold In aeartjr evwy «*ty&#13;
and town, or by mail from&#13;
T H E M o C A L L C O . .&#13;
113-115-117 West 31stSt, MEW Y0BC&#13;
K &lt;S&amp;A&#13;
Ttaia signature ia on. every box 1 tbe genuine&#13;
Laxative Brpmo^QuiniHie Tablets&#13;
the remedy tbat cure* a eoM in one dsjr&#13;
t ^ t j ^ ^ W . F S . ' W » * ^ * K W V « . « * ^ » * S * » ^ « W * « M % | The&#13;
Griswold&#13;
! House&#13;
POSTAL * MORtV,&#13;
MOPrucTone.&#13;
1&#13;
DETROIT.&#13;
•&#13;
•triotly&#13;
flret*&#13;
claaa,&#13;
modern,&#13;
up-to-date&#13;
Hotel, located&#13;
In the heart of&#13;
the City&#13;
Rites, $2, $2.50, $3 per Day.&#13;
i ' i&lt;iwww^My 'MW. " i iw/wwv i i ' ww4&#13;
COMMISSIONER'S NOTICE.-Stale ot Mlchl&#13;
gan, County of Livingston, SS.— Probate Court&#13;
for Bald county. Estate of&#13;
ORI.A B. JACKBOX, D«ceaeed.&#13;
The undersigned having been appointed, by the&#13;
Judge of Probate of said county, commissioners&#13;
on claims ia the matter of said estate, and six&#13;
months from the 29th day of Oct. A D . 1901, having&#13;
been allowed by said Judge of Probate to. all&#13;
persons holding claims against said estate ia&#13;
which to present their clatocs to ns frr examination&#13;
and adjustment:&#13;
Notice is hereby given that we will meet oa&#13;
the thirtieth day of January A. D., 1008,&#13;
and on the first day of May, A. D.&#13;
1902, at tea o'clock a. m. of each day, at the&#13;
Finckney Exchange Bank In the village of&#13;
Pinckney in said county, to receive and examine&#13;
such claims.&#13;
Dated: Howell, Mich., Oct. 89, A. D. 1901.&#13;
t-48 U W, TBEPLB (Commissioner*&#13;
CHARLBS Low. i -on Claims.&#13;
Railroad Guide.&#13;
, ^ A.r.P STi-AMSHIP LINES*&#13;
Popular route for Ann Ailmr, Teledo&#13;
and points East, South, and for&#13;
Howell, Owo*so, Alma, Mt Pleasant&#13;
Cadillac, Manistee, Traversa City, and&#13;
points in North western ilicbipan.&#13;
W. H. BENNETT,&#13;
G. P.A.Toledo&#13;
pEBEJVlAfiQUETTB&#13;
SRsillro&amp;a., raw*. L. 1 9 3 1 .&#13;
Trains leave South Lyon aa follows:&#13;
For Detroit and Beat,&#13;
10:36 a. m., 3:04 p. m., 8:58 p. m.&#13;
For Grand Rapids, North and West,&#13;
9:45 a.m., 2:08 p . m . 6:20 p. Ja.&#13;
For Saginaw and Bay City,&#13;
10:30 a. raM 3:04 p. m., 8:58 p. m.&#13;
For Toledo and South, 10:36 a. m.&#13;
FRANK BIT, H. F. MOELLBIt,&#13;
Agent, Sooth Lroo. a. p. A., Detroit.&#13;
tfrund Trort Railway Syitem.&#13;
9-ftT m.&#13;
6:46 p. to.&#13;
£ 4:4Ap. m.&#13;
Jackafa, Ueti&#13;
iaterroedlaie&#13;
mail and «xp.&#13;
ro«.and|B 8) a. m .&#13;
eta$oDB|5:iftp. m.&#13;
Jacfc port t L*ao»| and&#13;
intermediate ttationa&#13;
mixed.&#13;
I&#13;
7:Ma.». f&#13;
The 9:16 a. m. and 6:4.1 p. m. trains have. through&#13;
coach betweea Jackaon and Detroit.&#13;
W. J.Blatk, *• Ptnakaey&#13;
1^1 WffV.,f^W^!i ^90^^1^^1^8^09^116 -^'' 'W' -59*» •'.• » ? • " * ' { ' ' . * , ^ * " , i . V ' r * .&#13;
IPJPPPP^ T&lt;T.. wrm sf^P! ipwjs^^f'^fw R9PHI&#13;
:l- . *: .:i"?.&#13;
* &gt; ' • / ' • • "&#13;
-i.&#13;
1-/ - ' /'- •*.: m&#13;
.•.;••••••;.»• • • " V -&#13;
• #&#13;
/ T ^ ..&gt;&gt;&#13;
- . « ' . - : • - • " , ; . » . &gt; . I P S * ^ * urn ••."", •WWn.JBI •'•.»&#13;
MS* mmm T • P * ;iwu'y, " • . " j i . »&#13;
NSSWM&#13;
- - , ^ - - ^ - . .&#13;
^ , ^ , . ) ^ - ^ . ,&#13;
V ^ ^ ^fibrt T)t. (wvw\ldW**o*&#13;
A&amp;W-*.&#13;
• ^ .&#13;
^ &gt; ( % ^ # ^ W W y w ^ ^ ^ y f W 4 M i ' 1 *&#13;
/&#13;
fc&gt;' [Reprint from T H E ST. LOCI* MBWCAX AND SUBGICAX Joua*-iL,&#13;
«epttmb*r, 1901.] : " ( r&amp;*&#13;
'*^:: v .-&#13;
Sl" .•*.• m*-&#13;
%&#13;
A NBW BBD SPRING ESPECIALLY ADAPTED TO&#13;
HOSPITAL AND SICK-ROOM PURPOSES.&#13;
. . , ' • ' • " »&#13;
. . ' ' • . ' •&#13;
• '••'• W "A. HABBBMAA8, M. O., (&#13;
' r ., \&#13;
Lector*? oa Anatomy, Marion Sims-Beaumont College of Medicine, .&#13;
St. Louis, Mo.&#13;
• Some time ago my attention was called to an entirely new&#13;
bed-spring devised on the simple principle that a piece of&#13;
wire when crimped and put on the stretch gives up a certain&#13;
amount of slack, retaining, however, a certain amount&#13;
of its orignal crim# when the tension has been * removed.&#13;
This amount of resiliency contained within the crimp of the&#13;
wire is utilized a\"spring," and by combining such strands&#13;
of crimped wire a bed spring is obtained which is simple,&#13;
smoothe and pliant, but possesses a wonderful amount of&#13;
resiliency and strength because of the test to which each&#13;
strand of wire has been subjected.&#13;
The accompaning cut shows tee arrangement of the strands&#13;
o£ crimped wire and the simplicity of the spring.&#13;
The arrangement of the crimps transversely gives each&#13;
strand of wire a certain amount of torsion spring, while the&#13;
resiliency contained in the longitudinal arrangement of the&#13;
strands gives the required longitudinal spring. A device&#13;
for retaining adjacent strands in situ prevents any excess of&#13;
torsion in the crimps, thereby insuring a smoothe surface to&#13;
the spring, where the body may rest supported wi thout irsepular&#13;
pressure upon any portion, inasmuch as the spring&#13;
conforms completely to the contour of the body. It is this&#13;
smoothe property of the spring surface, aided by the great&#13;
strength and resiliency of a spring deprived of all slack,&#13;
which I desire to emphasize. Any small thickness of cover,&#13;
the thickness of one or two ordinary comforts, is sufficient to&#13;
protect the skin from the contact of the wire, so that a mattress&#13;
is altogether superfluous.&#13;
Mattresses are altogether unhyigenic articles of sick-room&#13;
equipment. Sheets, blankets, quilts, etc., are being constantly&#13;
changed and cleansed; but the mattress must do service&#13;
for a prolonged period of time; and yet the mattress is frequently&#13;
soiled with the excretia of patients.&#13;
Since there is no need of the "unhygienic" mattress, the&#13;
body is clbseftbthe resilfent-Bpring, and here the real advantages&#13;
of the bed spring are realized. Only a slight effort&#13;
is required by the patient or nurse to effect a change of the&#13;
patient's position; since there is no sagging or forming of&#13;
pockets in which the patient lies helpless, but the resilient&#13;
vis A TERGO is ever ready to assist the patient to a shift of&#13;
position. The spring and not the mattress conforms to the&#13;
contour of the body, so that the body pressure is opposed by&#13;
by a resilient surface. This facilitates the many almost impreceptible&#13;
shiftings of position which the body undergoes&#13;
during sleep, so that there is no numb member to inform the&#13;
body on awaking that it was pocketed during the night&#13;
Prolonged confinement to bed invariably causes a pocketing&#13;
of the mattress and a consequent difficulty of changing the&#13;
position of the body. In time the prolonged pressure bearing&#13;
upon certain exposed parts, aided by the natural moisture&#13;
of the parts, produces a maceration of the tissues with pressure&#13;
necrosis. These so-called bed sores can be absolutely&#13;
avoided when the body position is frequently changed, as&#13;
can be readily done with the new bed spring.&#13;
No other bed spring possesses these features—smoothness&#13;
of surface and pliancy coupled with great resiliency and&#13;
strength. Woven wire springs contain too much slack, with&#13;
complete loss of resiliency and consequently soon become&#13;
little better than hammocks. Spiral springs are rough of&#13;
surface, with more resiliency than the woven wire springs;&#13;
the*y also sag in places subjected to prolonged pressure, because&#13;
of the imperfect resiliency contained in the individual&#13;
spirals.&#13;
In the new spring, known as the "Surprise Bed Spring,"&#13;
there is smoothness of surface with complete resiliency, thus&#13;
eliminating the objections offered to other bed springs.&#13;
Patients universally dread the bed in summer because of&#13;
the body heat which the bed clothes absorb and retain. A&#13;
comfortable mattress soon conforms to the body, and its&#13;
heat-retaining properties are soon felt. Fever patients&#13;
should be kept as cool as possible, and any device calculated&#13;
to favor elimination of heat should be, employed if practicable.&#13;
Hydrotherapeutic measures, so generally indicated under&#13;
the oircumstances, frequently wet the mattress,, rendering&#13;
them objectionable to the patient However, where one or&#13;
two quilts can be substituted for a mattress, as can be done&#13;
when the Surprise Bed Spring is utilized, no more hesitancy&#13;
need be had than if a sheet or blanket is wet W here evacuation&#13;
of bowels and bladder occurs spontaneously there is&#13;
no soiled mattress left in the bed as a possible carrier of infection.&#13;
JOB WORK&#13;
A&#13;
« f « * I&lt;I H 1,1 iiiy. i i i i ii *m*m • * * - &gt;.**Xm.,V99 "l»,'«P" x * - * *&#13;
Issued w h e n promised a t t h e&#13;
DISPATCH OFFICE,&#13;
/&#13;
In all oases where th» neoes^y c^maTiipulatirtg tbepsHent&#13;
may arise, as in typhoid fever* puerperal and anrgical cases,&#13;
et&lt;r., by tb^^tiliBation of the new spring we shall advance, a&#13;
great atep in the uiaiiagemeni of C^T&#13;
and praotdpftUy. " , -&#13;
A-practical advantage poesewed by this spring, and one&#13;
calculated to put it in general use, is the fact thai it may be&#13;
utilised for couches or cots as well as beds. Heretofore the&#13;
spring used for this purrxwe was a woven wire spring. Because&#13;
of the "sagging" qualities of this spring the intelligent&#13;
physician hesitates advocating the use of the cot in any serious&#13;
illness; and because the spiral spring is not adapted to&#13;
this use the bed has usually been employed. The strength&#13;
and resiliency of the Surprise Bed Spring, together with its&#13;
simplicity and ease of manipulation, make it an ideal spring&#13;
for a cot or couch. In an aggravated form of typhoid fever&#13;
in which I recently used such a couch, the comfort derived&#13;
by the patient when taken out of the hot bed was- especially&#13;
gratifying.&#13;
If a mattress is used in connection with this spriug its&#13;
advantages over other springs lie chiefly in its resiliency,&#13;
which prevents pocketing of the mattress, and in its greater&#13;
strength and durability. But the fact that an expensive matteress&#13;
can be dispensed with, and that the spring is less expensive&#13;
than any other spring on the market, places it within&#13;
the reach of the poorest household.&#13;
"This is spectacular, but is enpainless&#13;
and calls for no gerat&#13;
T w o Clrcns Feats.&#13;
"A great deal of unnecessary sympathy&#13;
Is wasted upon the circus man&#13;
who stands up proudly in spangled&#13;
tights and lets another circus man&#13;
bring down .a sledge hammer upon a&#13;
rock placed upon his head with force&#13;
enough to break it," says an old circus&#13;
man.&#13;
tirely&#13;
strength or endurance. Upon the cranium&#13;
of the strong man is put an iron&#13;
contrivance weighing about 150 pounds&#13;
and provided with cushions both above&#13;
and where it rests upon the bead. A&#13;
pretty good sized rock is used, and the&#13;
hammer is a heavy one, so you can see&#13;
that the blow that cracks the rock is&#13;
really a serious one. But most of the&#13;
force is taken up by the rock and the&#13;
rest by the Iron and cushions, while&#13;
the only sensation felt by the subject&#13;
is a gentle tap.&#13;
"No more difficult than this is the&#13;
act whereby the hero of the canvas&#13;
tent permits a rock to be broken upon&#13;
his chest with a blow from a sledge&#13;
hammer. So long as the subject's back&#13;
Is free and does not rest against any&#13;
solid object the tripk is perfectly simple.&#13;
A little illustration: Take a board&#13;
up and let It lie freely In your hand&#13;
and hit It smartly with a hammer. It&#13;
is difficult to hurt your hand, and the&#13;
thicker the board the less the sensa:&#13;
tion. But now put your hand on the&#13;
table and hit the board. Hurts, doesn't&#13;
it? Well, it's the same with the rock&#13;
on the chest."&#13;
The Mistake of the Polar Bear.&#13;
Ifordenskjold found vthat the whits&#13;
bears generally went through a long&#13;
performance of stalking his sailors,&#13;
clearly on the mistaken conclusion that&#13;
they were seals. As the men were&#13;
clothed partly in sealskin, it was a very&#13;
natural mistake. But the interest of&#13;
the story lies in the generalization&#13;
made by the bear. The bear said:&#13;
"There are two or three seals, one&#13;
standing up ou its flippers in a very&#13;
unusual way. I will therefore stalk&#13;
them unseen as long as I can and&#13;
when they see me pretend to be doing&#13;
something «lse."&#13;
So the men, with their guns and&#13;
lances, who wanted to shoot the bear&#13;
had" the pleasure of seeing him carefully&#13;
crawling behind rocks and ice hummocks,&#13;
making long detours this way&#13;
and that and every now and then&#13;
clambering up a rock and peeping cautiously&#13;
over to see if the seals had&#13;
gone. On the open snow the bear&#13;
would saunter off in another direction&#13;
and then, falling flat, .push himself&#13;
along on his belly, with his great front&#13;
paws covering his black muzzle, the&#13;
only thing not matching the snow&#13;
about him. Just as the bear thought&#13;
he had got his "seal" the latter tired&#13;
and shot him, a victim of false analogy.&#13;
—Spectator.&#13;
- * ^ -&#13;
..&amp;«.'&#13;
»•'.' • • . , i' i • " . ' " " *&#13;
We the Btt4er&gt;ijme3, do hertUf&#13;
«tfre* to refead the mowy on a 5#&#13;
ctjituottlaof Oowu^Eliiirif it &lt;Jon&#13;
not core aoj c*»gVwloV~whooping '&#13;
eeogb, or *U»roar tr|«Wf* fW« **•*&#13;
guarantee DoWB'U Elixir to cure eon&#13;
suroptkm, wfaea need afiwrdio^ to directions,&#13;
or money be#k. 4 fall data&#13;
on firoin« to bed and small doses during&#13;
the day will car* the m-wV s»»ere&#13;
cold, and stop the most d«tre«ai*f&#13;
c o u g h ' , . • : ; &gt; , : " - ' , ; ^&#13;
fr\ *.BUrlef,&#13;
W, B. Darrow,&#13;
She §tarti«9 Qitptth.&#13;
PUBUMf D BVBJIY THUB*lMYvaOBJtljre, Wft.&#13;
FRAMK L. ANDREWS &amp; CO.&#13;
.-. BOTTOM AKB PNOMirrOM. p « * . "* .'"-•&#13;
Subscription Price $1 to Adr*ne# ^&#13;
?atered at tbe Poeloflke *t Pioekaey, IfJtohitfM&#13;
B#Me9nd«claM matter.&#13;
Advertising rate* made known on application.&#13;
Bualneai Carda, $4.00 per/aar.&#13;
l&gt;eath and marriage aoticea published free;&#13;
Announcement* of entertainment* may be paid&#13;
(or, If deaired. by pr 'eentine the office with tick,&#13;
t^ofadmiaaiptf. In caw ticket* we not broo«b»&#13;
to the office, regular rate* will be charged, ^^&#13;
Ail matter in local notice column wtll be cnara.&#13;
ed at 5 cents per line or fraction thereof, for sank&#13;
insertion, where no time i*«peelned, all n o ^ e&#13;
will be inserted, until ordered discontinued, a n !&#13;
wiil be charged for accordingly. £sF"AU onancee&#13;
of advertisements MUttT reach this office aieaVfc&#13;
as TimsBAY morning to insare an insertion the&#13;
•ameweek. •"&#13;
JOS P&amp;S.VT7JVG/&#13;
in all its branches, a.*pecialty. We bareall kinds&#13;
and the latest styles of Type, etc., which enables&#13;
nsto execute all kinds of work, *och as Book*.&#13;
Pamplete, Posters, Programmes, BUI Heads, Not*&#13;
Heads, Statement*, Carda, Auction Bill*, etc., in&#13;
superior styles, upon tbe shortest notice. Prices as&#13;
Q-* a* good work can bo done. -*•&#13;
•J.L BI£&gt;W PATABLT FIB9T OS CVBgr HOSTS.&#13;
Hon- Oar Ancestors Quarreled.&#13;
A study of mediaeval rural life is apt&#13;
to give the impression that the principal&#13;
part of the life of the people was&#13;
spent in quarreling or in the commission&#13;
or prosecution of offenses. Our&#13;
ancestors certainly were a very litigious&#13;
and a very disorderly people.&#13;
The records teem with instances of men&#13;
and women drawing knives against one&#13;
another, of breaking Into houses, of&#13;
prosecuting one another for slander.&#13;
Then we have such entries as these:&#13;
"It is ordained by common consent&#13;
that all the women of the village must&#13;
refrain their tongues from all slandering."&#13;
"Thomas, son of Robert Smith,&#13;
is fined 12 pence because his wife Agnes&#13;
beat Emma, the wife of Kobert,&#13;
the tailor, and Robert, the tailor, sixpence&#13;
because his wife Emma swore at&#13;
Agnes, the wife of Thomas." "It is enjoined&#13;
upon all the tenants of the village&#13;
that none of theto attack any others&#13;
in word or deed, with clubs or arrows&#13;
or knives under penalty of paying&#13;
40 shillings."&#13;
Such entries, frequently occurring, in&#13;
addition to tbe innumerable instances&#13;
of Individual attack, slander, petty&#13;
theft and other immorality seem to&#13;
show a community of far from perfect&#13;
virtue.—Linpinoort's.&#13;
No Superstition.&#13;
"Would you start on a journey on&#13;
Friday?"&#13;
"No. indeed."&#13;
"Why are people so superstitious?"&#13;
"But this has notbing to do with superstition.&#13;
I get paid on Saturday."&#13;
A small iron pot holding about a&#13;
quart, which Is still preserved, was&#13;
cast at the Lynn foundry in 1645. It&#13;
was the first iron article made from&#13;
native ore in America.&#13;
50 YEARS'&#13;
EXPERIENCE&#13;
TriADE rV^.RKS&#13;
DESIGNS&#13;
COPYRIGHTS AC.&#13;
Anyone sending a sketch and description may&#13;
riutckly ascertain our opiuiou free whether an&#13;
invention Is probably patentable. Communications&#13;
ptrtctly confidential. Handbook on Patents&#13;
sent free. Oldest aeeney fpr securing patents.&#13;
Patents taken tltrouch iiunn &amp; Co. receire&#13;
tptdal notice, wit boat charge, in the Scientific Jftwicaii* A "handsomely illustrated weekly,&#13;
tmlation of any scientific Journal.&#13;
year; four months, IL Sold 1&#13;
Ijinrest ctr-&#13;
Terms.fSa&#13;
brail newsdealers.&#13;
Branch Office, 8ft P BU Washington, Dw C.&#13;
ALL CASES OF&#13;
DEAFNESS OR HARD HEARING&#13;
ARE NOW CURABLE&#13;
by our new invention. Only those born deaf are incurable. HEAD NOISES CEASE IMMEDIATELY. r. A. WKRtftAN, OP BALTIMORE, SAYS:&#13;
BALTIMORE, Md\, March 30, toei.&#13;
Gentlemen: — Being entirety cured of deafness, thanks to your treatment, I will now give you&#13;
a full historv of mv case, to be used at your discretion.&#13;
About five years ago my right ear began to sing, and this kept on getting worse, until I lost&#13;
my hearing in this ear entirely.&#13;
I underwenta treatment for catarrh, for three months, without any success, consulted a num.&#13;
ber of physicians, among others, the most eminent ear specialist of this city, who told me that&#13;
onlv an operation could help me, and even that only temporarily, that the head noises would&#13;
then cease, but the hearing in the affected ear would be lost forever.&#13;
I then saw vour advertisement accidentally in a Kcw York paper, *n&amp; ordered your treatment.&#13;
After I had used it onlv a few days according to your directions, the noises ceased, and&#13;
to-dav, after rive weeks, my hearing in the diseased ear has been entirely restored. I thank yoa&#13;
heartily and beg to remain Very truly yours.&#13;
, P. A. W8RMAN, 730 S. Broadway. Baltimore, Md.&#13;
- Our treatment does not interfere urith your wrnal occup&lt;iUon*&#13;
•"SSfSJ?* YOU CAR CURE YOURSELF AT HOME "%"iTta,rt&#13;
MTEMUTMUt AUftM. CUNIC, 596 U UUE AVE, CHICftM, ILL&#13;
1 ' ^&#13;
THE VILLAGE DIRECTORY.&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICERS.&#13;
PB58IDSNT . _ ^ . C. L,Sigler-&#13;
THUBTEM ft. Baker. R. H. Erwin,&#13;
If. 6, Jackson, Geo. Reason Jr.&#13;
Cbas. Lave, Maiaohy Roc&amp;e.&#13;
CLBHK M ..MM M „ E . B. Browa&#13;
TBBAsgasK.. ^. ^,.. j . A. Cadwell&#13;
Assesses ^..Jas. A.Oreeae&#13;
STRBBTCouxissioNBa.... J. Parker&#13;
HBAXTHUrricBa ..Dr.B. r\Slicler&#13;
ATTOBNBY „. ....... . . . „ _ ..^^, yf, A . Qarr&#13;
MiBSBALL, MM..„ .&gt;MM .s. Brogan&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHUROH.&#13;
Rev. H. W . Hicks, pastor. Services every&#13;
Sunday morning at I0:3o, and every Sunday&#13;
evening at 7:00 o'clock. Prayer meetingThars-&#13;
day evenings, Suuday ecliool at close of mornlng&#13;
service. CHAS. UBMRY Supt.&#13;
COMiKEGATIONAL CHUKCH.&#13;
Kev. U. W. Klce pastor. Service every&#13;
Sunday morning at 10:30 and every Sunday&#13;
evening at 7:0C o'clock. Prayer meetingThora&#13;
day evenings. Saaday school at close of morn&#13;
tngservice. Mra. Tiios. KeaI, dupt,, Mocoo&#13;
Teep!eSec.&#13;
U T . M U i r S 'JATUOUC C H U R C H .&#13;
O Kev. SI. J. Commerford, Pastor. Services&#13;
every Sunday. Low mass at 7:80 o'clock&#13;
high masBwith sermon at 9:30 a. ni. Catechism&#13;
at 3:00 p in., vespers ana benediction at 7 :S0 p. m&#13;
SOCIETIES;&#13;
The A&#13;
third Sin*Uy tutu* «Y&#13;
II. Society of mid pUco, -nidts «»verr&#13;
*tutiH *r; &gt;t^t"mr ilUl,&#13;
John Tuotney aui M. X. Kelly, Cjiutr 0&gt;l &gt;g«ias&#13;
^PWORTH LEAGUE. MeeU every Sunday&#13;
iiieveninK at 6:00 ocloch in the « . B. Qnurcb. A&#13;
cordial invitation is extended to everyone, especially&#13;
young people. F. Ii. Andrews, Pre*.&#13;
0.H RHTIAS&#13;
ia&#13;
-VissL. Cin; ijoritar^, \lis\ Har.ie C»r;&gt;&#13;
E^OUVVJlt S ) J [ B r r - ~ C «&#13;
ialggss 6ev\yet Y Su idayr rtveain* nt t&gt;: J). Pres&gt;. 1 &gt; 1&#13;
i L. M.&#13;
r|&gt;HK W. C. T. U. meets the first Friday of eaei&#13;
1 month at 2:30 p. m. at the home of Dr. il. t&#13;
Sigler. Everyone interested in temperance&#13;
coadially invited. Mrs. '^al Siller, Pres; &gt;fr»&#13;
Etta Purfee, Secretary.&#13;
I" »he C.T. A. and a. »oue»y of this place, n»*«&#13;
thew Hall&#13;
every third Satnraay evening in the Pr. ^ i t -&#13;
John Donohue, President,&#13;
KNIGHTS OF MACCABEES.&#13;
Meet every Friday evening on or before full&#13;
of the moon at their hall in the Swarthout bldg.&#13;
Visiting brothers are cordialIvinvited.&#13;
Cass. U&amp;XPBSXL, Sir knight Commands!&#13;
Livingston Lodge, No. 79, ? &amp; A. M. Kegilar&#13;
Communication Tuesday evening, on or before&#13;
the full of the moon. Kirk Van Winkle, W. Sf&#13;
ORDER OF EASTERN STAR meets each month&#13;
the Friday&#13;
&amp;A.M. meeting,&#13;
evening following the regular F.&#13;
MBS. MABT RBAD, W'. M.&#13;
ORDER OF MODBRN WOODMEN tteet the&#13;
first Thursday evening of each Month in the&#13;
AtHCcabee ball. C. L. Grimes V. C.&#13;
LADIES OF THE MACCABEES. Meat every la&#13;
and 3rd Saturday of eachmonttt at 2:30 p m. a&#13;
K.o. T. M. hall. Visiting sisters cordially ia&#13;
vited. JULIA SIOLBB, Lady Com. 1 KNIGHTS 07 THB LOTAL GUABO&#13;
meet every second Wednesday&#13;
evening of every month in the KJo.&#13;
T. M. Uail at 7:90o'clock. All visiting&#13;
Guards welcome.&#13;
F. L. Andrews P. M..&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
~ J. W7 MONKS*&#13;
DOCTOR OF DENTAL SURGERY&#13;
P'NCKNEV, MICH. ~*&#13;
orr-icc ovts SKSLEB'S DROO STOM.&#13;
H. F. SI0LER M. D- C, L. StOUR M« O&#13;
DRS. SIGLER &amp; SIGLER,&#13;
Pbjsidaaa and Surgeons. A^l calls praasptl&#13;
attended to day. or night. Office on Mala air&#13;
Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
VE&#13;
Graduate of&#13;
tkeV(&#13;
Will promptly aUanV&#13;
mestioaled anisaal at a&#13;
Horses taath avjal—AjFtss).&#13;
tlMQION'&#13;
:m&#13;
:P&#13;
1&#13;
orriCCat /MLU PliCKNO&#13;
t A-.- ,* . ?&#13;
&amp; * • • • « » .&#13;
• ' ' ' * » • •&#13;
* * » , • A*;,&#13;
/&#13;
. ' • • • * • &gt; .&#13;
. . * ' * • ; ;&#13;
.•;fv&#13;
fc'&#13;
! &gt; • • - ' •&#13;
X&#13;
Sv&#13;
^ -&#13;
ST&#13;
?.'-; J , -&#13;
\Si*L~&#13;
PINCKSEY,-/-¾* &gt; MICHIGAN.&#13;
The- nun of sugar beet* to tha Bay&#13;
City tactorle* thl* year Is uuprecedented&#13;
And farmers are complaining&#13;
bitterly of the lack of cars to more&#13;
their cropa to the factories.&#13;
Sixty employes of the Battle Creek&#13;
board of'.public works are on strike.&#13;
demanding twenty cents an how for&#13;
an eight-hour daj&gt; and time aud a&#13;
kQ.lt for ail wiwk over eight hour*.&#13;
At the Paw Paw carnival, Prof. Calloway,&#13;
a balloonist, tried to make an&#13;
ascension. His balloon exploited "when&#13;
up 100 feet. Calloway fell and wa*&#13;
hurt considerably, although not seriously.&#13;
Edward Day. spiritualist, has created&#13;
a sensation In Omaha. Neb., by&#13;
forcibly rescuing his wife, Rosa, from&#13;
her Jewish parents* who took posses*&#13;
si on of her just after the marriage cer.&#13;
&lt;emony.&#13;
The liquor taxes of Copemlsh pay&#13;
the expenses of the town, -and cKizens&#13;
do not pay a cent. There are no pavements,&#13;
no water v works, no electric'&#13;
lights, no taxes, no trouble; all is&#13;
lovely.&#13;
The special charter under which the&#13;
Michigan Central railroad main line&#13;
in this state has operated since its organization&#13;
will stand repealed, under&#13;
a law passed by the last legislature,&#13;
from Dec 31 next.&#13;
Mrs. Rebecca Webb and son Charles,&#13;
aged 22, were found suffering from&#13;
poisoning In §outh B^nd, lnd. Charles&#13;
is dead. Cora Webb, a daughter, and&#13;
Grant Webb, a son, are being held under&#13;
surveillance on suspicion.&#13;
I^onldas D. Dibble, who built the&#13;
Peninsular railway from Lansing to&#13;
Chicago, Is dead at Battle Creek. The&#13;
road Is now the Grand Trunk Western,&#13;
and Dibble was its president from&#13;
1SC5 to 1S73. He was 77 years old.&#13;
Apples—even cider apples—are so&#13;
high this fall In some parts of the&#13;
state that the farmers who have any&#13;
are letting their cornhuskers go until&#13;
later. in order to secure tb? apples&#13;
before the cldermnklng season is over.&#13;
The Emmanuel Missionary College,&#13;
under the direction of the Advent&#13;
church, has opened the -old county&#13;
building at Berrien Springs. The college&#13;
has an attendance of 300 students,&#13;
and all available rooms in town are&#13;
rented.&#13;
Frank Fay. a noted gambler, who&#13;
A Romactic M$rriag«&#13;
Carolina.&#13;
SEN. NICHOLS WELCOME HOME.&#13;
JftttrWlMiaaa V«oM Not Vt—O-Tme*.&#13;
ftmeieaand Happening Aft On* tft*&#13;
Stat* , *&#13;
• • - . . » ' ' .•&#13;
' TIi* Be«eftwoo4 T i » # e d y .&#13;
Later details from the scone of the&#13;
Beech wood tragedy show that It was&#13;
the most revolting In the history of&#13;
the upper peninsula. Instead of four&#13;
as reported Sunday night there were&#13;
ftve victims as follows:&#13;
AXDKEW ISR.\ELS0X. who committed&#13;
the crime,&#13;
MRS. ANDREW ISRAELSOX, Ws&#13;
wife.&#13;
ANDREW LINDSTROM, his fatherin-&#13;
law.&#13;
MRS. AMANDA LINDSTROM, his&#13;
mother-in-law.&#13;
MINNIE LINDSTROM, his sisterin-&#13;
law.&#13;
It appears that Llndstrom was shot&#13;
and killed first by the maniac, who&#13;
then turned his ride on the three&#13;
women, as screaming, they ran from&#13;
the house! The aged mother-in-law&#13;
was killed at the doorsteps, the sisterin-&#13;
law a few feet away in the garden,&#13;
and the wife ten feet distant from the&#13;
spot where her sister fell. One shot&#13;
only was necessary to kill each of the,&#13;
maniac's victims. With the family&#13;
wiped out. the murderer dragged the&#13;
body of the inotlier-in-law Into the&#13;
house, which he set on fire. Then&#13;
walking out to the yard, Israelson put&#13;
a bullet through his head and fell dead&#13;
at the side of his wife. The house&#13;
was entirely consumed* as were the&#13;
two bodies la It.&#13;
m »"*!&#13;
**m&#13;
W I N M B la P**tt«0 Jail. - J&#13;
-r Henry Wiseman, the convict who *&#13;
week a«o confessed tp fearing murderr&#13;
ed Mrs. Christopher Hue* At Royal&#13;
&lt;*V wagrejessed twm t&amp;viAt* yet*&#13;
on Friday morata*.&#13;
AXntftWiseHun and receipted for tb*&#13;
"money Warden Chsmberistn turned to&#13;
Sheriff Brewster tad » # •&#13;
" *Wjk tm&amp;j." : .'*/.&#13;
The aaeritY stepped up to Wiseman&#13;
and said somethln« in a low tone.&#13;
The latter replied "All right" and&#13;
Brewster clapped the handcuff* 4&gt;n bis&#13;
wrists, Wiseman tremWed perceptibly&#13;
duriu* this operation. H* *«a taken&#13;
atouce to Pontine and todge/I in Jail.&#13;
f * mm* •as s&#13;
Abrahajn Spies, clerk of Croaton&#13;
township, whoabot and killed his wife&#13;
In Newaygo and then shot himself, is&#13;
40 years of age. His wife was a few&#13;
years his juujpr. Th* couple.bad not&#13;
lived happily together, and liad separated&#13;
a number of times. Mrs. Spies&#13;
left her husband several months ago&#13;
for the lost time. The husband cauteto&#13;
Newaygo to try and Induce his wife&#13;
to return to him. When she refused&#13;
to do so, he drew a revolver and shot&#13;
her dead. Then he turned the weapon&#13;
on himself, with probably fatal result.&#13;
&amp; St4k*$.&#13;
m*fm• 0-'&#13;
mnm$• M»4|K&#13;
' • jtyUft/m&amp;l*:a»w « * MitfMa *how ^&#13;
formerly made Lapeer his headquar-, accompanied by her father. He added&#13;
tei"S, was shot down in a Missouri&#13;
town and will be brought home for&#13;
burial. Deceased married Miss Phoebe&#13;
Swain, of LUIM, a t which place the&#13;
remains will be'TJurTeiT&#13;
Peter Sampson was found uncohscious&#13;
Wednesday morning in the public&#13;
highway near Naomi, 12 miles from&#13;
Benton Harbor. He had a bad wound&#13;
in the head. Physicians give some hope&#13;
of his recovery. Sampson is unable to&#13;
account for his condition.&#13;
George Robinson (white), of Church-&#13;
Ill, is '21 years old. Wednesday he was&#13;
married to Miss Lottie Henderson, his&#13;
"coal-black lady." Miss Henderson&#13;
acknowledges to 40 summers, but is&#13;
the possessor of property valued at&#13;
$30,000. The groom is a laborer.&#13;
A Cornnnn Romance.&#13;
The people of Corunna were treated&#13;
to a surprise Saturday when the news&#13;
got out that Miss Lela Parker, daughter&#13;
of Mr. and Mrs, Newman A. Par-&#13;
Ler. uud Walter Bush, sou of Probate&#13;
jT;dge Bush, had been secretly 'married&#13;
for several weeks and were residing&#13;
In Detroit. The disclosure was&#13;
news to the parents of both parties.&#13;
Mr. Bush, when seen In Detroit, admitted&#13;
that his father had been kept&#13;
in ignorance of the marriage. He sa'd&#13;
that the bride had remained at the&#13;
home of her parents up till about a&#13;
week ago, when they came to Detroit,&#13;
that he has a good position aud will&#13;
take up a permanent residence in the&#13;
City of the Straits. Bush is only lt&gt;&#13;
years old. Hb£ brjdejs_a handsome&#13;
brunette and an accomplished musician.&#13;
She. Is about 27 years old, and&#13;
0 G c a e i e e J a i l « n 4 Taxciu&#13;
At the session of the Genesee county&#13;
board of supervisors the committee&#13;
appointed to report on the question of&#13;
a new jail recommended that the old&#13;
jail be replaced by a' modern structure.&#13;
As they had been unable to get&#13;
figures on the cost they asked until&#13;
the January term to report in full.&#13;
The committee on estimates reported&#13;
that $131,704 85 would be necessary&#13;
to pay the state tax of $71,704 85 and&#13;
run the county for the year.&#13;
Stole a WRSua Load.&#13;
Eugene Ottaway, of Clayton, found&#13;
that thieves on Thursday had broken&#13;
iuto his barn and driven away with&#13;
34 bushels of beans, which were sold&#13;
at Gaines. The suspected parties were&#13;
arrested Friday and brought to Jail.&#13;
Saturday morning they waived examination&#13;
and, will plead guilty in the&#13;
Circuit Court.. They are Paul Byrne,&#13;
of Clayton, and Leo Spayth, John&#13;
Pritch aud Calvin Raffner, of Maple&#13;
Grove.&#13;
O v e r t h e F a l l s a n d Oat.&#13;
F. M. Russel. the manager of Mrs.&#13;
Anna Edsou Taylor, has been released&#13;
from the bonds of $3,000 in which he&#13;
was held hy the authorities at Niagara&#13;
Falls, pending the outcome of the Injuries&#13;
sustained by Mrs. Taylor in her&#13;
,barrel trip oyer the falls. She has so&#13;
far recovered that no danger of any&#13;
serious results remains, and within a&#13;
few days she will be e/loying the&#13;
financial returns she sought, by being&#13;
exhibited at various places.&#13;
M I N O R M I C H I C A N M A T T E R S .&#13;
lfer parents are well connected,&#13;
works in a printing offlce. H.e&#13;
A F a t T r e a s u r y .&#13;
Mr. Roberts, treasurer of the United&#13;
States, says the treasury was never&#13;
stronger than It is now. The net ordinary&#13;
revenues for the year were&#13;
*5i(7,«W.337, an Increase of $20,444,4So&#13;
over those of 1900, which were the&#13;
next highest recorded. The Increase&#13;
came from each of the heads of resource,&#13;
but chiefly from internal revenue.&#13;
On the side of the expenditures&#13;
$509,0ti7 has been exceeded only four&#13;
times, in 18(3. 18rt4, 18(55 and 1800. The&#13;
surplus of $77,717,084 was slightly under&#13;
$2,000,000 less than in 1000. Inclusive&#13;
of the transactions affecting&#13;
the public debt, the aggregate receipts&#13;
were $1,140,489,306. and the aggregate&#13;
disbursements $1,077,003,052.&#13;
X e w i i n Brief.&#13;
W i n H e M o r d e r e d f&#13;
There seems to be considerable mystery&#13;
surrounding the death of Louis&#13;
N. Von Guenten. the old German from&#13;
Chatham, who was found lying on the&#13;
sidewalk In Detroit early last Sun&#13;
day morning with his neck broken.&#13;
It was at first supposed that the old&#13;
man fell against a telegraph pole at&#13;
the corner and broke his neck, but&#13;
eye-witnesses who saw him fall say&#13;
he did not strike the telegraph pole at&#13;
all, but fell in a heap before he&#13;
reached the pole. The fact that Frank&#13;
Baumgartner. the saloonkeeper, who&#13;
has been Von'Guenten's fast friend&#13;
for more than a quarter of a centurv,&#13;
aud who was tile last one of his acquaintances&#13;
to see him alive, savs that&#13;
Von Guenten had considerable* more&#13;
money on his person than was found&#13;
by Coroner Hoffmann, leads to the&#13;
suspicion that the aged German might&#13;
have been held up and robl&gt;ed. To&#13;
strengthen this theory, his railroad&#13;
ticket from Detroit to Chatham is&#13;
missing. He is known to have had&#13;
this in his pocket an hour before he&#13;
was found unconscious.&#13;
The president appoints Thursday,&#13;
November 28, a day of thanksgiving.&#13;
The Colombian insurgents are suffering&#13;
from an epidemic of smallpox in&#13;
their camps.&#13;
The bubonic plague has reappeared ! o f the recent developments that have&#13;
in Glasgow. Four servants fn a hotel; m ade him so conspicuous in the state&#13;
have it. There has been one death, j The assembly was made up of lead-&#13;
Mme. Wu, wife of the Chinese min- I n S citizens generally, irrespective of&#13;
Ister, is just back trom China, accom- Pa r t y; a n ( I the senator was risiblv afpanied&#13;
by her daughter, Miss Wn Su fected and apparently appreciated the&#13;
W e l c o m e d H o m e .&#13;
Senator George E. Nichols, of Ionia,&#13;
came home Saturday night from&#13;
Grand Rapids, and on stepping from&#13;
the train was surrounded by a large&#13;
delegation of his home friends, who&#13;
extended to him a warm token of&#13;
their esteem, showing that the people&#13;
of Ionia have faith In him in spite&#13;
Ching.&#13;
Florence Buck, preacher, formerly&#13;
of Michigan, on Sunday reopened the&#13;
Unitarian church to Kenosha, Wis.,&#13;
closed for 20 years.&#13;
Mrs. Louise Nostz, 60 years old, of&#13;
Astoria, L. I., killed herself and her&#13;
grandson, Willie CoUettl, 6 years old,&#13;
some time Wednesday night&#13;
Frosting on the wedding cake mildly&#13;
poisoned 110 guests at the wedding&#13;
in Bath, N. Y., of Nellie Thomas, of&#13;
Wyandotte, Mich., and Clarence Carr,&#13;
of Bath.&#13;
M. Fangeron, who confessed to murdering&#13;
Herman Jung, whom he accused&#13;
of plotting to kill Joe Chamberlain,&#13;
has been sentenced to death in&#13;
England.&#13;
Dave Jennings, shoemaker, 72, of&#13;
Montreal, claims to have fallen heir to&#13;
an.English estate valued at $135,000.-&#13;
000, which has been waiting for him&#13;
for 200 years.&#13;
The Czechs' declaration of war on&#13;
the cabinet has caused fresh confusion&#13;
in the domestic situation in Austrii.&#13;
The nationality feud is still the most&#13;
prominent factor in the state.&#13;
expression of confidence.&#13;
Tfce F a l l e n D i s c h a r g e * .&#13;
Despite the verdict of the Saginaw&#13;
coroners jury in the caae of Frank E.&#13;
Fuller whose death the jurors aaid&#13;
was due to arsenical poisoning, "administered&#13;
by some person or persons&#13;
unknown," there will not be a n y ^ s e -&#13;
cution for murder, unless further evidence&#13;
turns up. Mrs. Xora E. Fuller&#13;
widow of the dead man and his&#13;
brother, Asa, who were held pending&#13;
XT Wl^mmU 9 t 0 0 4 M «&lt;*.&#13;
Henry \Visemaji, the accused mnrf&#13;
«e r f i f M ? ' H D M ' f a c e d Ms charge&#13;
In Justice Snowden'a court Saturday&#13;
morning and refused to plead. He&#13;
J ; f » f r °f net. guilty entered&#13;
inatton, with no bail. The charge was&#13;
murder and not manslaughter as the&#13;
™£**f &lt;7lffl,nal b «d *5&lt;L 1&#13;
2 ^ d . I ° ° 1*55f f 0 f tb« «tt1e court&#13;
ifSlaSctSi ^^eSr^lD, iul, fZb uget't ma»nWy *w oefr e tuhne- able to do to on accoont of the enwh.&#13;
Mnrlette has a driving club.&#13;
Mesick will soon become a regularly&#13;
incorporated village.&#13;
A plan Is on foot to erect a new&#13;
county court house at Pontlac.&#13;
The St. Joseph river south of Lconidas.&#13;
is to be damned by a stock company&#13;
Munlsiiig "flre water" has reduced&#13;
the tribe of "Indiantowu" to a small&#13;
remnant.&#13;
_A Cold water woman has been fined&#13;
$5 because her chickens annoyed&#13;
neighbors.&#13;
The run on the private bank of Lee&#13;
Bros. &amp; Co., at Buchanan, has entire&#13;
ly subsided.&#13;
A co-operative canning company has&#13;
been organized In Pontine with a capital&#13;
stock of $25,000.&#13;
Engineers are surveying a new route&#13;
for the electric line which Is to connect&#13;
Detroit and Lansing.&#13;
Saginaw is agitated over the question&#13;
of Frank E. Fuller's death. Did&#13;
he suicide or was he poisoned?&#13;
The Michigan fish commission has&#13;
selected sites for the new hatcheries&#13;
utar Grayling and Drayton Plains.&#13;
Eight cases of diphtheria have&#13;
broken out in Maririette within the last&#13;
Tew days, and two have proved fatal.&#13;
A Bay City fire, SaturdayC destroyed&#13;
about $10,000 worth of hoops belonging&#13;
to the Standard Hoop Co. The&#13;
loss is covered by insurance.&#13;
Marie Butler, of Grand Rapids/ colored,&#13;
aged 75 years, was burned to&#13;
death Wednesday night by fire originating&#13;
from an overturned lamp.&#13;
During the first nine months of the&#13;
year ending Sept 30,. Michigan railroad&#13;
earnings show an increase of $2 -&#13;
041,054.22, or 7 per cent over 1900.&#13;
One Avery must pay another Avery&#13;
»2,000, according to an Adrian jury, for&#13;
alienating the second Avery's wife's&#13;
affections. The two men are not related.&#13;
Arthur, the 7-year-old son of Mrs.&#13;
Mary E. Root of Hartford, was run&#13;
ovef and (his head crushed by a wagon&#13;
loaded with stone on which he was&#13;
riding.&#13;
The. funeral of James M. Scarrett,&#13;
editor of the Hudson Post, was held&#13;
Tuesday. Nearly all of the people of&#13;
the city turned out to do honor to his&#13;
memory*&#13;
George Brandow, who shot and&#13;
killed John Furti near Cross Village&#13;
Saturday night, was exonerated. It&#13;
was shown that Brandow acted in&#13;
self-defense.&#13;
Mrs. Anna Edson Taylor, the Bay&#13;
City woman who went over Niagara&#13;
in a barrel and lives, Is being deluged&#13;
with invitations to commit matrimony&#13;
or go on the stage.&#13;
The balance in the state treasury on&#13;
Wednesday fell below the $3,000,000&#13;
mark on account of the payment of&#13;
the state institution appropriations&#13;
which are now due.&#13;
E d w a r d , Stok«* .&lt;te. &lt;Mfn«» " -&#13;
Cm Saturday JEdward R Stokes dted&#13;
at the home of his sister in New York,&#13;
His career was niost remarkab&gt;&#13;
From a poor boy he became the pre*&#13;
Ident of an ojl refining compajiy: H»»&#13;
owned ni one-time the finest barroom&#13;
In the. world. In 1*74 he snot Jftw&#13;
Fiski Jay Gould's former partner, to&#13;
n mixup •at the Grand Central hotel,&#13;
over Josle M^istfeld, who was last&#13;
heard of as the traveling companion&#13;
of a Russian archduke^For his cihne&#13;
he lay two years in prison, awaiting&#13;
trial and retrial. He was ..sentenced&#13;
to be hanged, but after a third trial&#13;
went to Sing Slug prison for&#13;
A I I A B I * f&lt;wr Mhrrter. ;&#13;
The nurse, Miss Towan. who A*&#13;
charged with the murder of Mrs. A- P*&#13;
iVatft,- of Bourne,r^ias*., and is su*&gt;&#13;
- . ¾ ^ of the Davis family, that evidencej&#13;
ha* beeU fjpwd, d a cJalmedU wfctelr- %&#13;
wIR prove that Miss Toppon owed the/&#13;
Da vtafamlty foe boardl and lodging at •&#13;
thiftr Catnmm-bojmv and forrjnooey&#13;
aha is alleged to hive iberjtwed twm&#13;
'-t)ieui»'-''-' - ' / • ' - « • * • . - ' • : ' • - ; ' ' • ^ v&#13;
- It Is said that Miss Toppau could not&#13;
rc^Ay this money, and the state officer*&#13;
^otuk she/ may have deddtd upon «tb*&gt;&#13;
deaths of the family a s - # means ot&#13;
wining .out the debt ^ v j ^&#13;
, Another ctdlhT hjiade byjit least two&#13;
of tho men -who have' hod* to do with1&#13;
*iii** •YyppauHi nwest Is *t»at sua i#&#13;
meutatyypranged, and that Iter hkaja/f&#13;
la to euuiw d*ath;by pois^T&#13;
, P*pn*rlY*nl* Forej|r rirea«~ - "-'•&#13;
The western slope of tfc*» Allegheny.&#13;
rapufttaJhi, through Fayette county.&#13;
ar$ Ahlaae £roi« the Yough river lajjo&#13;
West Virginia and- .mountaineers are&#13;
fleeing from their doomed'homes with&#13;
then* families. Careless-liters started&#13;
a dosen fires during the^aat week&#13;
and the brush is as dry Jas tinker:&#13;
Streams that were never known to go&#13;
dry are without water and only a&gt;&#13;
drenching tato will stopMhe swiftly&#13;
sproadlug destruction. .' ••&#13;
The fire has been spreading, for a&#13;
1S#1&#13;
four&#13;
years. Coming out at the expiration weekVftd" the"glare at'rtm°(k\n'be&#13;
of blsjer/m, lie...nfint west retrieving. ,-»^,4 f o r raij€g&gt; his broken fortune In California in&#13;
twer years of lninlng operations. He&#13;
with Mat key, the millionaire, organized&#13;
the United Lines Telegraph Co.,&#13;
connected with the Bennett-Maekey&#13;
lines; bought the Michigan Postal&#13;
lines, and was In many large-financial&#13;
transactions. - --&#13;
T h e Paa-Am. Cloaed.&#13;
The Pan-American exposition ended&#13;
at 12 o'clock Saturday night The&#13;
financial loss will be in the neighborhood&#13;
of $3,000,000, and ths loss will foil&#13;
upon holders of the common stock,&#13;
the holders of second mortgage bonds&#13;
and the contractors who erected the&#13;
buildings. Two hundred and ten&#13;
thousand shares of common stock&#13;
were sold at $10 a share. The stock&#13;
was subscribed for by tile citizens of&#13;
Buffalo and the Niagara frontier in&#13;
small lots of from -one share to one&#13;
hundred, so that the loss will not be&#13;
severely felt by anyone. The total&#13;
number of admissions for the six&#13;
mouths was close to 8,000,000.&#13;
P o n r H u n d r e d D i s c h a r g e d .&#13;
Four hundred employes of the Illinois&#13;
Central railroad working in the&#13;
chops at Bnras|de. near Chicago, have&#13;
been laid off. The cause of the dis^&#13;
charge of so many men is not stated&#13;
by the company officials. A large percentage&#13;
of the discharged are-milon&#13;
men and some of thc^_atlribu4^tfcelr&#13;
mscharge to the agrtation last April&#13;
when the machinists of the entire system&#13;
made a demand for a nine-hour&#13;
workjd'ny, threatening a-strise. The&#13;
demnnd was withdrawn when the&#13;
company subsequently ahubunced n&#13;
general increase of 10 per cent in&#13;
wages of all its employes.&#13;
The destntctlou has&#13;
been enormous to crops, fences, barns,&#13;
stock and dweUiugs, with many narrow&#13;
escapes-from cremation in homesthat&#13;
were surrounded by the names.&#13;
fltrtnjreat J f c a m r e a XOYT,&#13;
Dispatches from Catbalogan, Samar,&#13;
sajrtbnt sfi'Tngent and energetic measures&#13;
are being taken to suppress the&#13;
insurrection In that island. Gen.&#13;
Smith has notified all the Wsidentes&#13;
and headmen of the Fuetto* tbat-Jn&#13;
order to avoid trouble, they must surrender&#13;
all arms and turn over the persons&#13;
implicated in the Bnlanglgn massacre&#13;
before November «, threatening&#13;
that otherwise the presWentes will be&#13;
sent to the island of .Guam, the villages&#13;
destroyed and the property confiscated.&#13;
Marines under Mnj. Littleton W. H;&#13;
Waller have been stationed at Balanglga&#13;
and Basey and ten1 gunboats are&#13;
vigilantly patrollng the Samar coast.&#13;
Most otthe towns In the southern part&#13;
of the Island have been destroyed.&#13;
W a n t s to Be a State.&#13;
The visit to the United States of the&#13;
delegation of the Porto Riean business&#13;
men who spent some time in Detroit&#13;
and Chicago has a far greater Significance&#13;
than- bas appeared heretofore.&#13;
Instead of coming to inspect the commercial&#13;
methods of tfols country, the&#13;
visitors liave come to pave the way&#13;
for the admission of their Island first&#13;
Jis-au-orgaBized territory,-Htetr a's-a^&#13;
state. The authority for this statement&#13;
is Federico Degetau, fhe present&#13;
commissioner from that Island to the&#13;
United States.&#13;
Kinnr E d w a r d ' s H e a l t h .&#13;
Reynolds Weekly newspaper is the&#13;
first British paper to assert that King&#13;
Edward is suffering from cancer of the&#13;
throat, tt declares that s'uco his&#13;
majesty's accession, three operations&#13;
have been performed for the removal&#13;
of papilloma on the left vocal chord&#13;
and that one was removed from the&#13;
right vocal chord. "Assistance was&#13;
hast'ly summoned," says this Journal,&#13;
"as his majesty was breathing with&#13;
difficulty and an Immediate operation&#13;
was performed. But it was regarded&#13;
as only a temporary relief, the injured&#13;
epithelium now having become a cancerous&#13;
growth, and serious developments&#13;
are expected."&#13;
Defied E x c o m m u n i c a t i o n .&#13;
As an excommunicated priest, divested&#13;
of every right to claim membership&#13;
in the Roman Catholic church.&#13;
Fr. Jeremiah J. Crowley, defied the&#13;
order of the "highest tribunal of the&#13;
Catholic church In Chicago Sunday,&#13;
and attended mass at St. Peter's&#13;
church and the Holy Name cathedral.&#13;
Several ushers who saw him enter,&#13;
'hurried to the sacristy and informed&#13;
Fr. Francis .7. Barry, the chancellor&#13;
of the diocese, that Fr. Crowley was&#13;
in the congregation. Instead of at&#13;
tempting TO exclude the excommuni&#13;
catcd priest, Fr. Barry said simply.&#13;
"Close your eyes on him," and the&#13;
services proceeded.&#13;
F o r A n q a l v e LanjraaK*.&#13;
"To be confined oue year in such&#13;
place as the secretary of the navy may&#13;
direct; to do extra police duty during&#13;
that time; to lose all pay except $2 a&#13;
month for prison expenses, and the&#13;
further sura of $20 to be paid him at&#13;
the expiration of this confinement, and&#13;
to be dishonorably discharged from&#13;
the service of the United Stntes,H is&#13;
the sentence imposed* by court-martial&#13;
upon John W. Stoll, a thlrd-clllss&#13;
olectrtctan on the receiving shi*. Columbia,&#13;
lying at the New York navy&#13;
yard, for foul abuse of the late President&#13;
McKtnley.&#13;
Oeaeral Al»er Not to Apologise.&#13;
-(Jen. Alger will send no apology or&#13;
explanation to Richard Harding Davis&#13;
for the paragraph In his war book'at&#13;
which the newspaper correspondent&#13;
has seen fit to take offense. "There Is&#13;
no occasion for my doing either," said&#13;
be. "Xo reference was made-to Mr.&#13;
Davis; neither was any intended. The&#13;
«ame is true of Caspar Whitney. I&#13;
had neither of them In mind. On the&#13;
contrary, I had high regard for the&#13;
ability and courage of both these gentlemen.&#13;
I cannot understand how Mi\&#13;
Davis could apply my reference to him&#13;
His account of the battle wn» not such&#13;
Ms I criticised." -&#13;
AXUSEWKNT* IS DKTROIT.&#13;
. WUCK VNOUO BOV. 9.&#13;
AVEMUE T H * A T B » — Vaudeville—Prtoes: afternoon,&#13;
ia IS, &amp; tt; evening, 10,3D, *oc; ressrv. Wo.&#13;
WHmiKYGBAWi&gt;-"Lost in toe Desert."-Mat.&#13;
luc 15c, and « c ; evening*, loo. OJo and *to.&#13;
LVCKUM THBATSa—"Artaona."—Sot. Mot. 35p;&#13;
evening 14, 2\ 60 and 75c.&#13;
DKTBOIT OPSBA—"San Toy,"—Evenings at 8.&#13;
Saturday Mattinee at £.&#13;
T H E M A R K E T S .&#13;
Detroit.—Cattle—Uood to choice butcher&#13;
steers. |46C»&amp;4.90; light to good. J3.75o4.4^;.&#13;
lisht to good butch«r Q t t e s and heifers,&#13;
$3.»&lt;64.60; mixed butcheiwand fatTcows,&#13;
^10^:-:.70: canners and common to lair&#13;
butchers, SUO^2.60; bulls, lljfiit to good&#13;
butchers and sausage, $2.*U*fS.4d; h g h t&#13;
feeders and atockers,' |3®J.75; light, tnin&#13;
heifers, I2.25Q2.75. Sheep—Best iambs, %i&lt;u&gt;&#13;
4.25; light to good and good mixed lots,&#13;
$3.&amp;@8.y0; fair tp good mixed and butcher&#13;
sheep, $^.25^5.2^ culls and &lt;H&gt;mmao* 11.50&#13;
ffrj.20. Ho?s—Light to good butchers $5.55&#13;
^5 (SO; bulk at 15.60; pigs and light Yorkera,&#13;
$5.43#5.60; stags ,one-third oif; roughs,&#13;
$«.(Xy&amp;4.S0.&#13;
OhkEgo.—Cattle—'Jood to prime steers,&#13;
f6#6.25; poor to medium, $3.80^^5:90: stockera&#13;
and rceders, $2^4.25; cows, $1.2i^4.50;&#13;
hellers. $2.25®5; cann*«rs. $1.23&lt;??*2.25; bulls,&#13;
$2fc4.50; calves, I3^i&gt;.25; Texas-fed steers,&#13;
$3fM.10; western steers. $3.6i&gt;tu&gt;.ir). H o g s -&#13;
Mixed aud butchers, $5.75@6.15: -ood to&#13;
choice heavy. $5.85@6.20; rough heavy. $3.50&#13;
^fi.75; light. $5.60^5.96; bulk of sales, $5.80&#13;
-tfE.95.&#13;
Cincinnati.—Cattle—Steers, choice to extra.&#13;
$5.15^/5.60 nominal: fair to good. $4.40&#13;
c/S: oxen. $1.75(ft4.10; butcher rteers. choice.&#13;
$430®4.75&gt; fair to gcod, $3^4.15; heifers,&#13;
good to choice, $3.25(33.75; common to fair,&#13;
$2.25@3; oows. food- to choice, $3.10@3.ff&gt;;&#13;
fair to medium. ?2.S&gt;$3; canners, $1.25^&#13;
L25r common rough steers, poor cows and&#13;
scalawags $1^.GO;, stodcers and feeders,&#13;
$SS4. Hogs—Selected iieavy .shippers. 16.15;&#13;
gpod to choice packers and butchers. $5.75&#13;
p,«5; mixed peckers. $5.40^5.70: stags and&#13;
heavy fat.sows. $3.60^6.60; light shippers,&#13;
I5.40&lt;&amp;5.70; pigs. 110 lbs. and less. $4£&amp;S5.&#13;
Sheep—Extra. $2.75; good to choice. $2.15^)&#13;
2.65: common to fair. $192: lain be. extra,&#13;
$4.15^4.95: good to choice, $3.25^4.10; common&#13;
to fair. $2^3.&#13;
Buffalo.—Cattle—Market steady and unchanged:&#13;
calves best; f7*W.60: common.&#13;
$3.5067. Hogs—Heavy. $606.16; mixed. $6&#13;
^6.10; pigs. $5.50?$.«D; roaifhs. $&amp;.B6tSS,60;&#13;
stags. $4.75115. 3heeo and lambs—Market&#13;
firm; lambs. $4.,50^4.711; common to fair.&#13;
$4*M35; sheep, $S@3\85; common to fair, $2&#13;
Pittsburg. — Cattle •*• Choice. fS.TMNR&#13;
prime. |S.40®5.»: iftoiitt,'JR&amp;fS; fair. $3.60@&#13;
4.3b: heifers. t&amp;UJto extra. $2.K6vfM: fat&#13;
cows. $1.*0«N; bulhi and steis. $2ff4: common&#13;
cows to trewh^eW&amp;Kk. Hoa*-Pr1nifl&#13;
beftvy. $«.16«*»: feW mfdiwn* tt.05^&#13;
6.10: llaHt m*d»urotij$5j6^3: heffvv^Yor)fnigs.&#13;
$B40tfr»60: «g$«.j8«ft*«.W. ^ e e p - r&#13;
S»if)»ly Us-ht: stert4y piWl rin*han«ed: »••*&#13;
wethers. $3.50^3.401 good. $3.15^3.¾: mixed,&#13;
».5«ift8: cnlls An» common. *1®2: tesrllwrs,&#13;
f^TOfra^w: sidnjr, lamha, «$3#i65;&#13;
veAl calves «6*8«.JRT; -T* • '&#13;
Detroit-Wheat—JTo. I white. 74H©:-Nb.'&#13;
2 re*. 7a&lt;W.c: DfC^nfherP?*^; May. IV&amp;o&#13;
par bu. Gorn—Mixed rr«d«8. «0c: yplloW&#13;
flo.. *&gt;Uc per h«.&gt; »Wt*^No. 4 whiter&#13;
Cintiniwtl,—Whe^WNo. 3 sprlic Wheat,&#13;
low com Wv Ko. Smtn, 8^4^38^: No72&#13;
-vhtt- 40XfM4Hc; No. 3 white, &lt;OXM0I^V&#13;
No, t rye. K^c. :'&#13;
d r a i n . Rte.&#13;
New York.-Wheat-iNo. 2 red. SOHc f. o.&#13;
b. afloat; No,-4 r(ado&lt;77Mc tltfraWsr; tfo. I&#13;
Northern Duluth. T7%6 f. o..h. afloat; No.&#13;
1 hard Duluth. S£%c r-o. b. afloat Corn-&#13;
No. 2, 68Hc elevator and fH% t. o. b. afloat*&#13;
Oats-No. % 4fff42Vie; No. 3. 41%c:%No. 3&#13;
white. 4HW4««i NO. S wWte. 43VM$44c;&#13;
track mixed Western, 46tyflH3ttc; . tracx&#13;
white. 4S%QC7«.&#13;
%fck&#13;
i •• ' -..&#13;
# ...&#13;
-,&gt;rV:&#13;
^5355 S95SXBS9B&#13;
5 ^ =&#13;
==r tfaa&#13;
^«M«awmi* s=s*^^=*w«5WttS»sa' i-i&#13;
«*e* &gt;.»»*»«*»&#13;
&gt; . « •&#13;
__L___2'&#13;
lll«jllllljl»JS3 nsss&#13;
, iilN | H l 4 |&#13;
,¾ *v.&#13;
•.. * ; • .&#13;
.*,-/&#13;
ft &gt;&#13;
:.*.r?&#13;
*#*.&#13;
&amp;'V:&#13;
K f ?'&#13;
a assBPwac&#13;
IfO^l* t » a d w t i l f t ^ u p o a h i * arm.&#13;
H»iir^»«in«iiif in &gt; . . « , . . . , n , * ^ ; . . , . , . Hi » B-^B11S¾ 1 '•".»••&#13;
We.are cultured to the Ujnli it* JPt« ft-&#13;
. / moqs Western lead, s \&#13;
. Christianity ttpott u» has a -cinch.&#13;
And refinement in our actions, always&#13;
• plays a winning haiwi— ^ &gt;&#13;
. • W« are getUn* the** dead certain,-inch-&#13;
•3f .&gt;••&lt; by inch. -V'v .-': - ••-•' ' , '&#13;
- ^ A*_aa &lt;&gt;rnwnen.t the pjatpl is completely&#13;
•""'""'' r "• out' ol date, "'•'.-'. &gt; .&#13;
Very jra^y.do we have a sbutenfegt,. ' *&#13;
»*'*&amp;+ uu^e&amp;iMhe proeaaaloa a»d %•-&#13;
iae*iv^o hold our gaH—&#13;
r^. j^t -no vtooa^r tf t h » wild Jand woolly&#13;
- &lt;"!Wa are short of &lt;5espera&lt;5oee, scarcely&#13;
x ' ever see a tough&#13;
•&gt; r With a yearning erase Jftpr ahoottng tip&#13;
:V.r^&gt;'.:•./• the town.. * •••'' . : -&#13;
r^'Ajul the tenderfoot from Jersey when ha.&#13;
. - - , * ' tries to run a blurT &gt;' * "&#13;
;v ^Underfoea A rather hasty calling down.&#13;
We are drinking better liquor titan we&#13;
:*•" . did in days of yore,&#13;
And we go. about more: fashionably&#13;
dressed!! -&#13;
The advance wave of progress quenched&#13;
our burning thirst for g o r e -&#13;
It no lojnger la the wild and woolly&#13;
•%.•; .. Vyest. ' .&#13;
Not a Christian-«an.auicng us wears hla&#13;
, breechea In his boota,&#13;
And the old wool ahlft la but a memory&#13;
now.&#13;
Ard we look with disapproval on the tenderfoot&#13;
galoots&#13;
_Wha are sporting big sombreros" on the_„&#13;
brow.&#13;
We are seen at church on Sunday ere the&#13;
trout begin to bite&#13;
WHh a holy name alight in every&#13;
breast.&#13;
And we're always In. our couches at the&#13;
, . stroke of 12 at night-&#13;
It no longer U the wild and woolly&#13;
West.&#13;
u&#13;
~Xhd our-Tadlea, heaven bless 'em, are so&#13;
modest, nice and sweet.&#13;
You would think them truant angels&#13;
from the skies:&#13;
Never see them dash astraddle on their.&#13;
bronchos/ through the street,&#13;
—Making hosiery- displays~tor atarinff&#13;
eyes.&#13;
Not a slangy word or sentence ever rip-&#13;
. plea from their lips,&#13;
For a high old time they never go in&#13;
quest;&#13;
Not a gun is ever peeping from the&#13;
pocket on their h i p s -&#13;
It no longer is the wild and woolly&#13;
West.&#13;
Oh, you bet your filthy lucre, we'r* refined&#13;
to beat tfhe band.&#13;
We have culture to distribute to the&#13;
birds.&#13;
And the brand of fresh morality we always&#13;
keep on hand&#13;
Couldn't be described In common rhvmy&#13;
words.&#13;
We in' every moral attribute are strictly&#13;
recherche,&#13;
And that same's no pipey visionary jest,&#13;
And we love the rugged country into&#13;
which we've come to s t a y -&#13;
It no. longer is the wild and woolly&#13;
West.&#13;
a s&#13;
#&#13;
# 1ft&#13;
*&#13;
#&#13;
#&#13;
#&#13;
* a *&#13;
#&#13;
#&#13;
#&#13;
#&#13;
#&#13;
#&#13;
e&lt;JI%&#13;
www&#13;
#&#13;
•^?e&#13;
Tv.o Worlds an™rChildren.&#13;
BY ETHEL M. COLSON.&#13;
(Copyright, 1901, by Daily 8tory Pub. Co.)&#13;
The trolley car which had been dashing&#13;
along toward Chicago stopped suddenly,&#13;
held upon a suburban street&#13;
corner by the inevitable coal wagon&#13;
with a tendency to break down. Franklin&#13;
Atherton gazed Idly at the earnest&#13;
group of Salvation Army workers on&#13;
th6 other side of the street. Suddenly&#13;
in a momentary cessation of the ponderous&#13;
drum-beats * clear, sweet, feminine&#13;
voice faltered out softly:&#13;
"Ah! I h%ve sighed to rest me&#13;
Deep in the quiet grave/'&#13;
The rest of the words were surprising&#13;
Salvation Army adaptations of the&#13;
most characteristic type. But Frank-&#13;
Hn-Atherton never heard them. With&#13;
a bound he had reached the side of the&#13;
singer—the girl whom he would have&#13;
asked to become his wife long ago&#13;
but that he feared to face poverty with&#13;
her. He had not seen her for nearly&#13;
two years.&#13;
"Margaret! How came you with&#13;
these people?"&#13;
The girl looked at him gravely.&#13;
"When your world—the world which&#13;
w a s mine also until my father died&#13;
t n d left me penniless—found no time&#13;
or space or attention for me I turned&#13;
to the world in which men and women&#13;
work instead of play. N o t knowing&#13;
They saved my life—and soul. Now I&#13;
am trying-to save others."&#13;
The gong of the trolley clanged out&#13;
at the moment. It seemed like a summons&#13;
to "another world.&#13;
left bJm-auddenur, and h* sank &lt;te&gt;w* ^ _ ^ . .... . .&#13;
upon t h e ;enrbgtoa*. sobbing, ^ j * . W W , ; " " \ t f p w r e t p o a w n t f&#13;
cfrM, «w«&gt;t voice , a i » ; « w w ' , * ^ ^ o k w « s * B « r "&#13;
M a d w a s laid upon h i s arm,&#13;
li'k n o use, Margaret. Dq you suppose&#13;
I'U be cad e n o u g h to let you help&#13;
toe, aftar the treatment y ^ have received&#13;
At n&gt;y hand? . God blesa you—&#13;
good-by." v -&#13;
The girl mod* no immediate « n t v e r&#13;
—la words.&#13;
.. Turning, she beclcened to the bluecoated&#13;
co-worker w h o Jv*d followed&#13;
her from the lighter street '&#13;
'*Thls i s a very dear friend of mine,&#13;
"lieutenant Caldwell," s h e told him.&#13;
with a voice which shook a little from&#13;
varied emotions, hut with eyes which&#13;
shone and sparkled, "and he i s in&#13;
trouble* i n need of assistance, I know&#13;
! can trust you t o do all that you«can&#13;
for him, for my sake as well as for the&#13;
sake of—the m a n who Is going t o he&#13;
my husband some day."&#13;
"Margaret!M&#13;
The man w a s humbled a s neither&#13;
poverty, slights, hunger, cold, dor raggedness&#13;
had been potent t o humble&#13;
-~hinv. But there was n o bitterness lathe&#13;
humility with which he kissed her&#13;
fingers, there l a the darkened street&#13;
"Margaret, you are an angel, and I&#13;
will be worthy of yon y e t I swear i t&#13;
I will be your husband some day—if&#13;
the good Lord and yourself will allow&#13;
it—but I'll be a man first, by God!"&#13;
And the quiet stars, looking down&#13;
impressively o n the flagellated drum&#13;
and the throbbing hearts of-the men&#13;
and women around It, saw and knew,&#13;
38? it IfoMa.&#13;
* W h i t la t h e matter, m y - brHh«ftj W * moath i a t h e states o f the middle&#13;
W a s t eaa w e dote^aeljr yosyr / { West h a s h e e a very favorable to t h e&#13;
80ft, hurrying footsteps followed Marl «**»**«* J * ; W « # ^«*»* * 5 4 » ° * *&#13;
into t h e said^wy/'dsrkeiii^aldestreet «4he*l»«#/iHHPtJettlarlf c o m , wbicfc&#13;
&amp;itok-to\3dm&amp;'W%itowftib-** « ^ y tooaUtlee J g ffvlas * l a « e r&#13;
which: h a s areraUed largely during t h e e i » . x f coco&gt; a n d choco^aie to t h »&#13;
somehow, that a new soul had&#13;
born.&#13;
been&#13;
EGYPT AS A WINTER RESORT.&#13;
"Bow came you with these p e o p l e r&#13;
h o w to worfc 1 isea't hungry. When I&#13;
was) homeless and seeking death because&#13;
no other oourse seemed open t h e&#13;
S a t n t i o a Army wothers found me.&#13;
"What i s the matter, my brother?"&#13;
"Margaret!" The words seemed&#13;
drawn from him. "Leave this life, for&#13;
God's sake! Come with me."&#13;
"As your wife, Franklin?"&#13;
The flicker of doubt and uncertainty&#13;
in his eyes was s o short-lived that few&#13;
would have seen i t But the girl&#13;
turned away a s though she had suffered&#13;
a blow.&#13;
"No—dear," s h e answered. "Not&#13;
ndw. You are not strong enough to&#13;
take me just y e t But," she called&#13;
after him as h e sprang aboard t h e&#13;
trolley* "we may meet again, some,&#13;
time. When we do, perhaps-—"&#13;
But he w a s gone.&#13;
Three years later K a n k l i n Atherton&#13;
h a d a l s o disappeared from the world&#13;
which had once known' him. Excessive&#13;
jiasto ta-'be richV the gambling&#13;
f e v e r - j ^ uaducky ajecuiation, these&#13;
were Use successive etejaj by which h e&#13;
h a * reached starvation and despair:&#13;
For a man of h i s temperament all&#13;
things seemed ended. He was heading&#13;
for the *iver when there smote upon&#13;
his jadeu ear the sound of afisgellated&#13;
drum, the clear note of a silver trump&#13;
e t Then, a s h e listened distinctively:&#13;
"Ah! I have sighed t o rest me&#13;
. Deep in the quiet grave."&#13;
It w a s n o dream, It was not the'&#13;
result of a fevered imagination. T h e&#13;
voiee, was unmistakable, the intoaatton&#13;
quitg beyond queettoa. His,manhood&#13;
Africa More Interesting to British Tourists&#13;
Than Southern Europe.&#13;
Every indication i3 forthcoming that&#13;
the approaching seasDn in Cairo&#13;
and on the Ni'e will ba a prosperous&#13;
one, and visitors will prcb_ibly exceed&#13;
the record of last y=ar, when so many&#13;
English people deserted the Riviera&#13;
for Egypt. A'l the hotels promisa to&#13;
be full, and tha newer h:a7th resort3&#13;
will not lack for patrcnage. There now&#13;
include Helouan, withia half an hour's&#13;
1 ail way ride of Cairo, which has sulphur&#13;
baths, recommended for rheumatism,&#13;
and several fl st-class hotels and&#13;
pension?, whi'e furnished villas may&#13;
be hired. Assouan, which i s described&#13;
as the driest accessible health resort in&#13;
the world, has two large hotels and an&#13;
English church, a n ! i s g.xwing in&#13;
popularity year by year, riva'tcg Luxor,&#13;
so well known I D invalids and&#13;
others who dare not face an English&#13;
winter. At LuxQr, also, hotel extensions&#13;
have t?ken place, and no modern&#13;
improvements are wanting. Assousan&#13;
is the £tartitg po'nt for the further&#13;
voyage to Wady-Holfa. Sportsmen insearch&#13;
of big game are making up parties&#13;
for shooting buffa!o, giraffe, rhinocarous,&#13;
hlprotamu3' and elaphant in&#13;
the district lying b?tween Khartoum&#13;
and Fashoda. The rsgu'alions are&#13;
new somewhat more string:nt, owing&#13;
'o the Incresse in the number of guns&#13;
Dahabrahs. steam and sailing, and&#13;
modernized—fcr the type of craft goes&#13;
back to the days of the Pharoahs—&#13;
provide the mo-t luxurkus and necessarily&#13;
ccstly mean3 cf conveyance, and&#13;
the fl?et avaiable i s always in keen&#13;
demand for families making application&#13;
a locg time in advanc2.—London&#13;
Teicgrcph.&#13;
yield t h s a w a s expected. Much of&#13;
the crop was cut before frost oaught it.&#13;
and the universal tastimoay i a that a&#13;
larger amount bag been shocked a n d&#13;
saved for feed than ever before.&#13;
T h a dryness ol t h e soil h a s preveated&#13;
the completion of fall seeding a n d&#13;
proved unfavorable t o germination&#13;
and growth of early sowings, particul&#13;
a r l y , i n Missouri, where little more&#13;
than half t h e usual wheat acreage h a s&#13;
been pot l a . Hessian fly add chinch&#13;
bugs are a n additional cause o f delay&#13;
to Illinois, Ohio and Michigan farm*&#13;
era. I n the state last named t h a area&#13;
sown to wheat this fall la 20 to 40 per&#13;
cent less than average.&#13;
Correspondents continue to report&#13;
light crops o f potatoes i n Ohio and&#13;
central and southern Illinois. Irish&#13;
potatoes in Kentucky are very poor&#13;
and In Missouri the late crop i s practically&#13;
a failure. I n northern Illinois,&#13;
Wisconsin, central and southern Michigan&#13;
and South Dakota, though t h e&#13;
crop will be considerably below a full&#13;
average, yields are much better than&#13;
were expected, a s tubers have made&#13;
good growth during t h e past t w o&#13;
months. Northern Michigan h a s a&#13;
good crop, t h e yield averaging 1X3&#13;
bushels to the aero.&#13;
There H a s been some improvement&#13;
in the pastures of northern Illinois.&#13;
Kentucky, northern and western Missouri&#13;
and some portions of Ohio.&#13;
generally good and In t h e state last&#13;
named the range west of the Missouri&#13;
is pronounced t h e best i n years. A s&#13;
haying is still m progress In that&#13;
state, live stock are likely to have a n&#13;
abundance of feed for t h e winter.&#13;
Pastures i n southwestern Ohio and&#13;
central and southern Illinois are short&#13;
and poor.&#13;
Concerning tobacco, Kentucky correspondents&#13;
report a splendid crop i n&#13;
the dark tobacco districts of western&#13;
counties, all of which has been housed&#13;
and i s curing well. The Burley tobacco&#13;
of the blue grass district is nearly a&#13;
full crop, but some of it was cut too&#13;
green and o n that account is curing&#13;
badly. Ohio tobacco was housed i n&#13;
good condition, but a s i n Kentucky&#13;
some of i t w a s cut prematurely to&#13;
save it from threatened frost.&#13;
The South Dakota flax crop i s light&#13;
to fair, with a considerable percentage&#13;
of damaged seed.&#13;
The Illinois crop of broom corn has&#13;
been harvested and reports concerning&#13;
it are favorable.&#13;
Relative t o apples, Missouri reports&#13;
indicate that great improvement h a s&#13;
been made and that the principal apple-&#13;
growing counties will harvest a&#13;
good crop; i n Kentucky apple trees&#13;
are .yielding very lightly and in some&#13;
counties there i s no crop; i n only a&#13;
few counties i n Ohio will there be a&#13;
fair crop of winter fruit; Illinois reports&#13;
continue unfavorable, as fruit i s&#13;
still falling; t h e crop of eastern and&#13;
middle Kansas is reported good.&#13;
L**g««* l a tlui W«xUL -&#13;
Waiter Baker * € a , Ltd.. borchea*&#13;
tar, Mags., are t h e largest manufactarworld.&#13;
T h e y received &gt; gold medal&#13;
from the a*a*4c expoaltkn of last*year^&#13;
t a i l year -they h a v e received three&#13;
gold medals from t h e Paa-Americaa&#13;
exposition a t Buffalo., Their goods are&#13;
the standard for parity, and excetienee.&#13;
She* by His «leal»es JUvat. *&#13;
Ross Sheridan, * a well k a o w n and&#13;
highly connected young man of Independence,&#13;
M a , . I n a fit of Jealous rage&#13;
shot and mortaUr wounded "Writ"&#13;
Berkey of Geuda Springs, Kan., h i *&#13;
rival i n t h e affections of Mrs. Clara&#13;
Williams, a t the Independence Electric&#13;
d e p o t Mrs. Williams and Berkey&#13;
were waiting for a car, when Sheridan&#13;
stepped up, and, without warning,&#13;
opened fire of Berkey. Mrs. Williams&#13;
Is a divorced woman. Sheridan Is the&#13;
son of Mrs. H. L. Sfesrldnn, who i s a&#13;
newspaper writer.&#13;
New York dispatch: Counsel for Roland&#13;
B. Molineux h a s served notice of&#13;
a motion t o quash the Indictment&#13;
against Molineux. The motion; will&#13;
come up before Judge McMahoa In&#13;
part No. 1 of the eourt of general sessions&#13;
next Wednesday. The papers&#13;
urge the dismissal o f the Molineux indictment&#13;
o n the ground of illegal and&#13;
Insufficient evidence. In the event of&#13;
a denial of the motion to quash the&#13;
indictment there i s an alternative motion&#13;
for a n Inspection of the minutes&#13;
oz the grand jury that indicted the defendant&#13;
"Straws Show Which Way the Wind&#13;
Blows'*&#13;
and the constantly increasing demand&#13;
for and steady growth i n popularity&#13;
of S t Jacob's Oil among all classes of&#13;
people i n every part of t h e civilised&#13;
world, show conclusively what remedy&#13;
the people use for their Rheumatism&#13;
and bodily aches and pains. Facts&#13;
speak louder than words, and the fact&#13;
remains undisputed that the sale of S t&#13;
Jacob's Oil is greater than all other&#13;
remedies for outward application combined.&#13;
It acts like magic, cures where&#13;
everything else fails, conquers pain.&#13;
Forepaugh Circus Train Wrecked.&#13;
The Forepaugh &amp; Sells' circus train,&#13;
which left New Orleans Monday night,&#13;
was wrecked one mllo this side of&#13;
Baton Rouge nt noon Tuesday. Four&#13;
cars loaded with animal cages were&#13;
badly wrecked, but none of the cages&#13;
were torn open and none of the animals&#13;
allowed to escape. A car load&#13;
of elephant3 w a s turned loose, but&#13;
after they had wandered about the&#13;
country a short time, were driven into&#13;
Baton Rouge and corralled. Three&#13;
zrien were badly hurt.&#13;
WUUnff to Oblige.&#13;
An Englishman at a dinner once told&#13;
a tale of a tiger he had shot which&#13;
measured twenty-four feet from snout&#13;
to tail-tip. Everyone was astonished,&#13;
but no one ventured to insinuate a&#13;
doubt of the truth of the story." Presently&#13;
a Scotsman told his tale. He had&#13;
once caught a fish which ho said he&#13;
was unable to null in alone, managing&#13;
only to land it at last with the aid of&#13;
six friends. "It was a skate, and it&#13;
covered two acres." Silence followed&#13;
this recital, during which the offended&#13;
Englishman left the table. The host&#13;
followed. After returning he said t o&#13;
the Scotsman: "Sir, you have insulted&#13;
my friend. You must apologise.- "1&#13;
dlnna insoolt him," said the Scot.&#13;
"Yes you did, with your two-acre fish&#13;
story. You must apologise," "Well,&#13;
said the offender, Blowly, with the air&#13;
of one making a great concession, "tell&#13;
him if h e will take ten feet off that&#13;
tiger I will gee what I can do with the&#13;
fish."—London Tit-Bits.&#13;
History of the Skunk.&#13;
The skunk first appjtrs m itstory in&#13;
the year 1036, when h e was described&#13;
in Theodat's History of Canada. He&#13;
had been a long time e n earth before&#13;
species of fcssll skunks. The skunks&#13;
of t h e genius Chines range over t h e&#13;
greater* part of North America and a s&#13;
far couth a s Moii 0. Ctv er skunks are&#13;
found in Central and South America.&#13;
—New York Sun.&#13;
A man's success in life depends a s&#13;
much upon knowing what h e does n o t&#13;
know aa upon knowing what he does&#13;
know. • - '&#13;
Neatness lu Dottar Packages.&#13;
The careful packing of butter has a&#13;
good deal to do with the fostering of&#13;
the butter trade whether that trade&#13;
be with a few private families or with&#13;
large commission houses. This matter&#13;
has been frequently referred t o in&#13;
these columns, and without doubt&#13;
some improvement i s being made. The&#13;
commission men report that the manner&#13;
in which butter is put up helps or&#13;
hinders them in making sales. A&#13;
creamery that h a s a reputation of&#13;
neatness in packing finds itself&#13;
sought not only by the commission&#13;
men, but by large grocers that want&#13;
an article that looks w e l l This mat*&#13;
ter of looks i s especially important i n&#13;
butter that goes to the homes of t h e&#13;
wealthy. They will form opinions on&#13;
the looks of things. Two packages of&#13;
butter may be similar in quality, but&#13;
if one is put up i n better style than&#13;
the other the buyers are prejudiced&#13;
in favor of that package, and t h e&#13;
eaters, if they have seen the package,&#13;
will actually imagine that the butter&#13;
Is of better flavor. This helps sales.&#13;
Chase of Suspected Robber.&#13;
An attempted arrest, a pistol fight&#13;
- o n the streets between a suspect and&#13;
several officers, a dssperato flight by&#13;
the fugitive, first i n an ice wagon,&#13;
then in a buggy and next on a horse,&#13;
all of which he pressed into service&#13;
by the display of revolvers, the wounding&#13;
of the suspect and his escape into&#13;
tho woods, caused commotion Sunday&#13;
in Nashville, Tenn. It U reported&#13;
that the fugitive i s George Parker,&#13;
alias "Dutch" Cassidy, alias George&#13;
Cassidy, alias InserfielJ, ased 35 years,&#13;
a notorious western criminal.&#13;
Exports t o China are beginning t o&#13;
resume their normal proportions. The&#13;
July figures of t h e Treasury Bureau&#13;
of Statistics show the total exports to&#13;
China from t h e United States aa $2,-&#13;
•£2,475, against $1,349,697 i n Jury.&#13;
1900. In t h e 7 months ending with&#13;
July, 1901, t h e total exports to China&#13;
are $9,703,787, against $9,100.1*2 In t h e&#13;
corresponding 7 months of t h e preceding&#13;
fiscal year. . Taking t h e ex*&#13;
ports to the British and Russian possessions&#13;
i n China also, t h e total for&#13;
the 7 months Is $10,090,816, a s against&#13;
$9,294,930 In t h e corresponding period&#13;
of last year. Our exports to China In&#13;
July, 1901, are larger than i n any pre*&#13;
ceding July, a fact which seems t o In*&#13;
dicate that t h e commercial relations&#13;
witn China are not likely to permanently&#13;
suffer a s a result of the events&#13;
of t h e past year.&#13;
A t t h e present rate of growth, l a&#13;
fact, Illinois will overtake Canada l a&#13;
population in 1902,&#13;
THE CHAMPION WING SHOT.&#13;
Capt. Bogarrius Has a Dangerous Experience&#13;
but Comes Out Unhurt.&#13;
Ferris Wheel Park, Chicago, Nov.&#13;
4th.—Capt A. H. Bogardus, the champion&#13;
wing shot of t h e world, has spent&#13;
the summer here. Hi3 shooting school&#13;
has been one of t h e features of the&#13;
Park during the season. He has given&#13;
many exhibitions and his skill with&#13;
the rifle i s superb.&#13;
The Captain tells of a very close&#13;
call he once had when liv ng a t Elkt&#13;
a r t 111. Ha had b?en a suff-rer from&#13;
Kidney disease for several years and&#13;
i t rapidly developed into Bright's Disease.&#13;
All h i s friends told him that&#13;
this was incurable and that h e would&#13;
never get better.&#13;
To say that he w a s alarmed Is t o&#13;
put It very mildly. This plucky man&#13;
had faced many dangers and It mads&#13;
him sick a t heart t o think that a t&#13;
last he was to be conquered by such&#13;
a cruel foe.&#13;
At last b e heard o f a medicine that&#13;
had cured many such cases-^Dodd's&#13;
Kidney Pills. H e used them and was&#13;
completely restored t o good health.&#13;
He says: "1 attribute my present&#13;
good health to Dodd's Kidney Pills&#13;
and t o nothing else."&#13;
W e are a l w a y s complaining that out&#13;
days are f e w , . a n d noting a s though&#13;
there would be no end of them.—Seneca.&#13;
Ladles Caa Wear Shoes*&#13;
One slxe smaller after using Allen's Foo%»&#13;
Ease* a powder. I t makes t i g h t or n e w&#13;
shoes easy. Cures swollen, hot, sweating,&#13;
aehingfeet, ingrowing naila&gt;eorna&#13;
and bunions. AH druggists and shoe&#13;
stores 95c 'Prial package FREE by malL&#13;
Address Allen S. Olmsted, LeBoy, N . Y ,&#13;
We have to guess what the future and&#13;
the merchant who never advertises aae ts&gt;&#13;
store.&#13;
f&gt;OX*T TAKE A X T CHANCE*,&#13;
ngtttJEtteaobing Blue does the bee* work. AH&#13;
^ • ^ a ^ ^ a ^pja^w^Bwessj aweas * eashg ^a^ssjss ^••^s^sssy e^eBBjar^s^sjaa^sw^BssBs , ^&#13;
.fi*.&#13;
" • • ' : » *&#13;
m &gt; - • »• L J.. _&#13;
• • v ^ . - . . - . ' " - : • &lt; • ; • * • • &gt;&#13;
- ^ . - - ."'•-•'.''•'ftii.-j&#13;
• - ' •'• •£'•' v7?'4:&#13;
''' ' ••'-' '-•' '-. 'iVii&#13;
• . : • • • : . . - W . . • ' . • • &gt; • • : ! •&#13;
' • • • t v : ' I - / J ;&#13;
' . v . - : • • • » ' *•••*&#13;
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: • : - : ^ • : ' • • ! • • % • .&#13;
^:*&amp;:&#13;
/ • : • / # #&#13;
-¾&#13;
•m&#13;
Jk&#13;
M~&#13;
w 1K-.&#13;
%•&#13;
&gt;4t.&#13;
^••i&#13;
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m&#13;
'••-A'AJs&#13;
•i-Ti&#13;
*-ov&#13;
'»i&#13;
:^ VV#«*i&#13;
".cr :&gt;V&#13;
= .V&#13;
MJL. : ^ -&#13;
ty- *• •&#13;
*V'&#13;
•'.V&#13;
1 : ^ . • • . . • • ; ; "&#13;
I' ' • ' ' , ' J •' :.&#13;
'i • \ * V . i&#13;
£i' 1 •' ' - •&#13;
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r-»&#13;
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PAR8HALLVILLEW&#13;
«1U Wliite and wife of Whitmore&#13;
Lake made a abort visit here&#13;
tbe past week.&#13;
Mr*, Carrie Col* of Owoeao is&#13;
bere this week helping to care lor&#13;
her brother M. G, Andrews who&#13;
has been sick for some time.&#13;
Sylvester Rodman and wife and&#13;
daughter of Tawas are visiting&#13;
among Mrs. Rodman'* brothers&#13;
and sister*, the White family.&#13;
PETTYSVILLE.&#13;
S. G. Teeple was in So. Lyon&#13;
Friday last.&#13;
J. W. Placeway was in Ann&#13;
Arbor one day last week.&#13;
Buel Cooiwav visited friends in&#13;
Webster Saturday and Sunday.&#13;
Lon Flintoff moved to the Schuler&#13;
house at Lakeland, Monday.&#13;
Bert Hooker of Detroit is spend-&#13;
^Dgafewdayei with hisparents.&#13;
Burr King of Mai ion visited&#13;
relatives near here a few days the&#13;
past week.&#13;
Geue Wines, wife and Ward&#13;
Blades of Ann Arbor, visited at&#13;
Geo, Blades over Sunday.&#13;
The Pettysville store will be a&#13;
thing of the past after this week&#13;
as Mr. Hooker has decided to go&#13;
out of the business.&#13;
Art Flintoff left for the north&#13;
woods Monday where he expects&#13;
to spend a few days hunting.&#13;
Bernard Oommiskey will nin the&#13;
blacksmith shop during the proprietors&#13;
absence.&#13;
NORTH LAKE.&#13;
iDiaude M«k63rr A»« Afbof*&#13;
spent Sunday with his cousin,&#13;
Mrs. Bert Hicks.&#13;
Mrs. Melvin Burgess, of Hartland,&#13;
visited at* the home of her&#13;
father, Wm. H. Place way.&#13;
Miss Nettie Hall has been&#13;
spending her vacation with friends&#13;
in Lansing and Williamston,&#13;
Dr. Brown, of Stockbridge, was&#13;
called to this place the first of the.&#13;
week to attend Chas. Brown who&#13;
is ill.&#13;
m** ffWF»&gt; IMW • *••• i . . ; • . .&#13;
1 ,«- "*.'&#13;
R. C. Glenn spent Saturday in&#13;
Detroit.&#13;
Geo. Hudson has returned home&#13;
from Hartland.&#13;
Henry Kane has finished work&#13;
at Robert Glenn's.&#13;
Mrs. Isabelle Watts of Adrian&#13;
is visiting friends here.&#13;
Geo. Bent Dn and wife of Dexter&#13;
Sundayed at Geo. Webbs.&#13;
Mr. Gildart, son of the editor of&#13;
the Stockbridge Sun filled the pulpit&#13;
here Sunday.&#13;
D. L. Waters and wife with J.&#13;
A. Goodell and wife of Stanton&#13;
apent the past week *i h the Noah&#13;
families. _&#13;
IOSCO&#13;
Mrs. E. E. Phillips is suffering&#13;
with sciatic rheumatism.&#13;
Isaac aud Geo. Wright of Handy&#13;
called on Wm. Sharp Sunday.&#13;
Henry Sharp and wife of Jacksou&#13;
Co. were home over Sunday.&#13;
Wm. Sharp is still very low&#13;
with rheumatism and heart trouble.&#13;
Kate Ross of Marlon visited&#13;
Mrs. L. C. Gardner apart of last&#13;
week. v&#13;
R. C. and Grant Smith started&#13;
Monday on a hunting trip in the&#13;
Upper Peninsula.&#13;
The scarlet fever patients in the&#13;
Mapes district are improving and&#13;
school opened Monday.&#13;
A. W. Messenger has a Durham&#13;
cow that gave birth to a fine pair&#13;
of twin calves the past week.&#13;
AylmerRisdon who has been&#13;
packing apples near South Lyon&#13;
the past three weeks is home&#13;
J • "&#13;
W..A- •';'&#13;
-4 ••&lt;&#13;
t&gt;6T PUTNAM.&#13;
Miss Grace Lake spent last&#13;
week with her brother in Marion.&#13;
V &amp; Brown, of Stockbridge,&#13;
called on his brother one day last&#13;
week.&#13;
J W. Sweeney and wife, of&#13;
Chilsoo, were guests ,o! relatives&#13;
fa** Tuesday.&#13;
I . • • • • " • ' • ' " • '&#13;
was&#13;
ANDERSON.&#13;
M. W. Bullock of Howell,&#13;
in this place Monday.&#13;
Geo. Wright, of Howell, called&#13;
on friends here Sunday.&#13;
Frank Hoff, ot Lansing, spent&#13;
Sunday with Anderson friends.&#13;
L. Whited and wife spent the&#13;
first of the week at I. J. Abbott's.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Placeway&#13;
spent a few days in Howell last&#13;
week.&#13;
Roy ElBWorth and Silas Welman,&#13;
of Marion, spent Sunday&#13;
with D. B. Smith.&#13;
Chas. Hoff is moving to Lansing&#13;
this week. L. Roy is moving&#13;
onto Mr. H's farm.&#13;
Mrs. Mary Bradley, of Commerce,&#13;
spent a few days last week&#13;
with her father, Mr. Wylie.&#13;
Mrs. Dora Hunt, Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
A. Pierce, of Williamston, attended&#13;
the funeral of their brother,&#13;
Will Daley, Sunday.&#13;
UNADILLA.&#13;
A. C. Watson was in Ann Arbor&#13;
last Thursday.&#13;
Will Stowe of Chelsea, spent&#13;
Sunday under the parental roof.&#13;
Robt. Bond was in Detroit on&#13;
business several days last week.&#13;
Miss Anna Stevenson spent&#13;
Sunday with her aunt, Mrs. Janet&#13;
Webb.&#13;
J. D. Colton aud wife, of Chelsea,&#13;
visited at A. C. Watson's&#13;
Tuesday.&#13;
Ernest Hutson and wife, of&#13;
Parker's Corners, visited. John&#13;
Marshall and wife Sunday.&#13;
Chas. Hudson and wife, of&#13;
Grand Ledge, were guests of his&#13;
parents at this place last week.&#13;
Jenuie Watson was called to&#13;
Durand last week by the illness&#13;
of her brother-in-law, O. H. Obert.&#13;
Scott Scripture and wife started&#13;
for Luther, Lake county, Tuesday,&#13;
where they will spend the winter.&#13;
Misses' Mabel Hartsuff and&#13;
Blanche Glenn, of w*st Unadilla,&#13;
spent Sunday at Z. A. HartsufFs.&#13;
Miss Erma Pyper returned&#13;
home last Thursday after a two&#13;
weeks visit with relatives in Howell&#13;
and Webberville.&#13;
The Unadilla Farmer's Club&#13;
will meet at the home of Wm.&#13;
Smith and wife on Saturday Nov.&#13;
16. Program next week.&#13;
Mrs. Annabelle Mapes of Plainfield&#13;
entertained Mesdames Mima&#13;
Watson, Kittie Budd, Silas Hemming&#13;
way and Lottie Farrel last&#13;
Friday.&#13;
Messrs Wm. Smith, Wm. Pyper,&#13;
Lester Williams with their&#13;
wives, and Mrs. Janet Webb and&#13;
Mrs. Hattie Stowe attended the&#13;
WCTC convention at Howell last&#13;
week.&#13;
Additloil Local.&#13;
F. L Andrews was in Detroit on&#13;
business, Wednesday.&#13;
Mi88 Ethel Graham spent Sunday&#13;
with Mi38 Alice Barton.&#13;
Several hunters with dogs from Detroit&#13;
were in this vicinity the past&#13;
week. ^&#13;
The water i&gt; liijrli. enough at tbe&#13;
mill so the farmer* can • et their feed&#13;
[ground.&#13;
wood haulers buy.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. B. B. Finch attended&#13;
the wedding of a niece at Waterloo&#13;
this week, •'*&#13;
J. L. Boche hu parehased the Alex.&#13;
Mclntyre property in the eastern part&#13;
of tbe village, r&#13;
The Rev. and MravC. S, Jones and&#13;
sons of Clelaea were guest* of H. W.&#13;
Crofoot Tuesday and Wednesday.&#13;
D»\ Orrin-N. Moon died at hie home&#13;
in Howell, last Saturday, the leraains&#13;
were taken to the Detroit crematory&#13;
' Tbe annual business meeting of tbe&#13;
Gong'l church and society will me»t&#13;
at tbe cbnrch Saturday, Nov- 9. at 2&#13;
p. m.&#13;
Arrangements aie being made (or a&#13;
grsnd party to he given by tbe F. &amp;&#13;
A. M. at opera boose here Tbankegiv*&#13;
ing. Watch for cards and an noncetnfots.&#13;
The morning train east now goes&#13;
at 9:29 and tbe morning train west&#13;
9.57. Our readers better make note&#13;
of this or paste tbe item np where&#13;
they cm see it until they get used to&#13;
tbe change.&#13;
Last week in tbe published list of&#13;
tbe names of tbe business men who&#13;
contributed to the church fair, the&#13;
following ones were unintentionally&#13;
omitted:—Eugene Campbell, Floyd&#13;
Reason and G. A. Sigiea, and a great&#13;
many of our farmer friends whose&#13;
names are too numerous to mention.&#13;
We thank all for their kindness and&#13;
support. Tbe total receipts ot tbe&#13;
fair are $17145.&#13;
As we go to press, at the Circuit&#13;
Court in session at Howell, the case of&#13;
the People vs. James Ryan and John&#13;
Denehy Jr., murder is in progress.&#13;
Some of the other cases that will come&#13;
before the Court are, Chas. Crowe, embezzlement;&#13;
Geo-. F. Hinchev, assault&#13;
with the intent to commit the crime&#13;
of murder; Ornn N. Moon, murder;&#13;
John Walker the Portland Cement&#13;
Co. and 0. W. Sexton; School District&#13;
No. 1, fract. of Putnam and Marion&#13;
vs. I.J. Abbott, bill for injunction.&#13;
Thare are also 12 divorce cases.&#13;
Changes and Excursions Yta&#13;
Grand Trunk Railway System.&#13;
General change of time effective&#13;
Nov. 3d, 1901, for particulars&#13;
apply to any agent of tbe company.&#13;
Thanksgiving Day, Nov. 28th, 1901&#13;
One and one-third fare for the&#13;
round trip, between all points.&#13;
Tickets good going November 27&#13;
and 28th, limited to return to and&#13;
including November 29th.&#13;
HOW BUMURS WMCKiB t MKtm*&#13;
frm a Ptotfnpk Taim bf JtoJf. C, HHTH th$ Hut&#13;
L. P. Peet of Parker's Corner*. Livingston county, was tbe victim of the&#13;
cracksman Thursdd, night, Oct. 24. Tbe burglars blew open the safe in&#13;
Peet'bs store, wrecking the building in tbe manner depicted in the above picture.&#13;
'Jbe d(t&gt;r ol lb* &gt;afe was blown through tne opening in the building.&#13;
The burglars didn't get into the money chest, and ad to console themselves&#13;
with a tew dollar* in pennies —Detroit-Journal.&#13;
Internalional Lire Stock Exposition&#13;
at Chicago at Union Stock Yards.&#13;
Single fare for the round trip&#13;
(plus $2.00) good going December&#13;
2, 3, and 4th and good to return&#13;
up to midnight of December&#13;
8,51901. For particulars see advertising&#13;
bills or apply to any&#13;
agent of Grand Trunk Bail way&#13;
and connections.&#13;
Advertising&#13;
Space&#13;
For&#13;
Sale.&#13;
Write&#13;
For&#13;
Prices&#13;
And&#13;
Particulars&#13;
Ffnckney Dispatch,&#13;
f Flrtoltney, Mich.&#13;
f f*f P'f W? Wf # J#VqtV4iWff?#?&#13;
Pound PoolUhneaa.&#13;
One of the commonest forms of pound&#13;
foolishness is countenanced by many&#13;
high authorities. This is.the purchase&#13;
of certain household provisions In large&#13;
quantities. Few writers on domestic&#13;
topics fall to lay Btress upon the economy&#13;
of buying groceries in bulk. That&#13;
sugar and flour, potatoes and apples&#13;
should be bought by the half or whole&#13;
barrel, cereals by the case, butter by&#13;
the tub and other things in like proportion&#13;
Is one of the early precepts in the&#13;
"Young Housekeeper's Complete Guide&#13;
to Domestic Economy."&#13;
The ignorant young things buy the&#13;
provision^first and the experience afterward.&#13;
The flour grows musty, the&#13;
cereals develop weevils, the potatoes&#13;
and apples rot long before they can be&#13;
eaten, and the cook exercises a lavishness&#13;
in the use of the butter and sugar&#13;
she would never show were they bought&#13;
In such limited amounts that the housekeeper&#13;
could hold close watch over&#13;
them. Even after these events the&#13;
young mistress feels as if she were absolutely&#13;
reckless and no manager at all&#13;
when she so far departs from household&#13;
law as to buy food In small quantities.—&#13;
Independent.&#13;
Pointers.&#13;
L o n e l i n e i * and H e a l t h .&#13;
A medical journal has of late been&#13;
discoursing on the Indigestion of loneliness.&#13;
,Hy this title is meant to be Indicated&#13;
the disorders of digestion which&#13;
are believed to follow the practice of&#13;
taking one's meals in solitary state.&#13;
The topic is by no means an uninteresting&#13;
one. Thousands of men and women&#13;
living alone are compelled to take&#13;
their meals for the most part without&#13;
company. Week in and week out they&#13;
feed themselves without a soul to talk&#13;
to, and the medical journal devotes its&#13;
energies to showing that the practice&#13;
is not one that is likely to be conducive&#13;
to (Wgestion, to proper bodily nourishment&#13;
or to health. The solitary man&#13;
soon tiros of merely eating, and, if .he is&#13;
not of a literary turn of mind, his tendency&#13;
Is to hurry through his meals to&#13;
escape from his loneliness Into the society&#13;
of his fellow men. Herein, it is&#13;
held, lies a danger to health.&#13;
Discovery of Coal la Wale*.&#13;
During the reign of Henry VIII.&#13;
many attempts were made to discover&#13;
coal in north Wales, and a Shrewsbury&#13;
man, named Richard Gardner, was the&#13;
only person who succeeded. The old&#13;
records read: "He attemptyd and put&#13;
Into proofe to fynde out coles about the&#13;
town (Shrewsbury) in sooudry placys,&#13;
and in one place especiall callyd Kmatine&#13;
Hny&lt;\ hard by the nayrt towno. he&#13;
found by his great dyllgence and troball&#13;
great store of see cole, the which Is&#13;
lyke to come much coinmodltie bothc&#13;
to the riche and poore, that he Is not&#13;
only worthy of commendacon and&#13;
mayntenance, but also to be had In remembrance&#13;
for «vcr."—Cardiff Western&#13;
Mall.&#13;
WANTED: A man or boy to d«&#13;
chores at the Sanford House. Day&#13;
can tfo to school. Call or address,&#13;
SANFORD HOUSE, Pinokney.&#13;
House to rent, apply to&#13;
FLOYD JACKSON.&#13;
LOST&#13;
On Sunday night, Oct, 20 an oral&#13;
gold pin, cameo set. Finder please&#13;
leave at this office.&#13;
CAUTION.&#13;
Fiease do not shoot or chase with&#13;
a doer my deer and her fawn now estray&#13;
in tbe woods on tbe north side of&#13;
Portage Lake. I expect to get her&#13;
back in tbe Park soon as the lake&#13;
freezes. tf&#13;
T . BlRKETT.&#13;
FORSALE.&#13;
A few thoroughbred Golden Wyandotte&#13;
cockrels, also some two-year-oil&#13;
Rice pop corn. Inquire of&#13;
H. G. BRIGGS, Pinckney.&#13;
b j&#13;
WANTED:&#13;
A married man to work on farm&#13;
the year. Enquire of&#13;
C. V. VANWINWJL&#13;
• i' •••• in i — • • • • i h — ^ — ^&#13;
T*ttcnt.&#13;
House belonging .to&#13;
STELLA GBAHAM.&#13;
These cool days remind us that winter&#13;
is approaching and our wood supply&#13;
is low. Any of our many subscribers&#13;
who wish to help us out along&#13;
this line we would be pleased to have&#13;
tbenVdo so immediately.&#13;
Anyone in need of a well pump will&#13;
do well to call on us. Desiring to&#13;
pot in a force pump we have a good&#13;
second band pump in good running&#13;
order. It was working well in a 58&#13;
foot veil when changed for the force;&#13;
The pump may be seen -at Teeple k&#13;
Cadwell*.&#13;
The R m a i a a Cltuate.&#13;
The Russians count upon their climate&#13;
as one means of defense, as it&#13;
was when Napoleon invaded Russia.&#13;
Their troops are accordingly traine&lt;$£a&#13;
winter maneuvers, including loading&#13;
a battery, with its war transport and&#13;
material complete, upon sleighs, moving&#13;
it for some distance over a difficult,&#13;
snow covered country and" bringing It&#13;
Into action again.&#13;
A Cartons E a t l a * Cwatom.&#13;
The Dyaks divide in pairs when the&#13;
hour arrives for taking food, the father&#13;
and mother at one platter, two sisters&#13;
at one and still two brothers at another.&#13;
When the family Is not'equally&#13;
dlvldojl iis in f&lt;'xr-n brother and sister&#13;
may jiai-iii;.r!,?!H,r. luit ih\* must al«&#13;
ways be the youugotu and oldest of the&#13;
family,-&#13;
STEW A irrs&#13;
ROOFING&#13;
AND&#13;
ROTO IATIRIALS&#13;
(or wkl'm MEW MflFS M I nulrtai&#13;
jyuafis »f m MMt. in* M m&#13;
urkit. SWMI for C I M H N .&#13;
W. H. S T E W A R T ,&#13;
108 JOHN ST.. N. Y ,&#13;
/&#13;
::&gt;.&#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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            <name>Title</name>
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch November 07, 1901</text>
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                <text>Newspaper archives</text>
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                <text>1901-11-07</text>
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