02-10-1898 - Village of Pinckney

Transcription

02-10-1898 - Village of Pinckney
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VOL. XVI.
PINOKNEY, LIVINGSTON CO., MICH., THURSDAY, FEB. 10. 1898.
MUSICAL ENTERTAINMENT.
THE CLARA SCHUMANN LADIES
ORCHESTRA ENTERTAINED A
CROWDED HOUSE.
This combination of musical artists,
seventeen in number, -from Boston,
gaye a concert at the opera house,
on Friday evening last. Tbe lecture
association has tbe grateful thanks of
the community for providing this en*
tertainment,
Notwithstanding the
representation of being second to no
musical organization of the kind proceeded the ladies, and our expectations pitched to the highest point, we
were anticipating no such musical
feast. The opera house, with a seating capacity of four hundred and
twenty, was crowded to its upmost capacity, with an audience of six hundred people, many of whom drove a
distance oMen to fifteen miles. Every
member of tbe orchestra is an artist
of the first class and each seemed ambitious to out do tbe others, if possible in rendering her part and pleasing
the audience, and in tbis each seemed
to be successful, for exclamations of
"That was the best of all" were heard
after each selection. While some of
the music was of tbe "heavy" kind,
nothing was tfiven that was not thoroughly relished and appreciated. The
program opened with the "Detroit
Journal March" after which the orchestra kindly respondended twice to
an encore* The trombone and violin
iolos by Oda Rudolph and Zita Mc
Donough. respectively, were masterpieces of musical art.
One of the most interesting numbers
was "In the Clock Store" by the entire orchestra. The ticking of the
various clocks was easily distinguished, after tbe clerk wound them up.
Tbe effort produced when the various
clocks be^an srriking the hours, was
grand. After a clock "ran down,"
the clerk wound it attain, when sweet
cathedral cuiim-s were heard far away.
Mane Deiafontainu, soprano, sang
"Saran Rose" ind an encore, and if
any one present ever henrd sweeter
singing, he had forgotten it.
Two
numbers on a harp were given wit
beautiful effect A selection in which
was heard a crying baby, followed by
a good spankirig, captured every one.
Another selection as an encore entitled "A Hot Time in the Old Town
Tonight" was excellent although not
new to the people in this vicinity.
The concert closed with the "Stars
and Stripes Forever." Every part
merited and received generous applause, including the magnificient
manner in which he controlled the
orchestra in the difficult parts.
The association realized $70 from
the sale of single tickets. If tbe orchestra should come this way again,
the mayor of our own city has instructions to hand over the keys and
give immediate possession.
Local Dispatches.
Our sleighing is a thing of the past.
Otis Brown of Chicago was in town
Tuesday.
Miss Carrie Green spent Sunday
with her sister in Hamburg.
Mrs. F. Bluett, of Detroit, is a guest
of her sister, Mrs. R. Erwin.
Mr. Jones, of New York state, is
visiting his cousin Miss Ethel Read.
Frank Parker goes on crutches now,
instead of splitting wood he split bis
foot open.
Miss Cora Wilson spent Saturday
and Sunday with her friend Miss
Anna Spear.
,No. ft
DRUGS
and
P A T E N T MEDICINES.
Tuve *5oVUV fattens,
? SPONGES, BRUSHBW £
atvd
P E R F U M E R
ifi
Y.
FINE LINE OF
There was no school in the upper
rooms last Thursday morning owing
G « I N fl, L # JV1 P S
to the cold atmosphere which prevailand
ed.
Several of young people from
Stockbridge took in the'entertain-1
ment at the opera house last Friday
evening.
G. W. Reason Sr. and family, an 1
Mrs. H. D. Grieve spent Sunday with
F. M. Grieve and family at Stockbridge.
Miss Grace Bowman has been at
Hamburg the past week caring for
her grandmother who is under the
W J I L L PAPER;
doctor's care.
The Latest Style
Miss Emma Haze, who has been visiting friends and relatives at this
and Pattern.
place for some time, returned to hrr
home at Ypsilanti tbe first of the week,
CK0CK6RY,
Next Monday is Valentine Day.
Hon. G. W. Teeple was in Mason
last week.
Will Monks of Stockbridge -was in
town over Sunday.
~~
/5uW txaS. Com?Ve\v £VTVI
F. L. Andrews is in Dansville on
business this week.
o^ SrocexUs
Geo. Green and Amos Winegar, of
Howell, were in town Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. J as. Fitch entertained
a few friends Wednesday afternoon.
W. E. Thompson and wife gave a
tea to a few of their friends Tuesday.
Gilbert Abel, of Fowlerville, visited
Mrs. Joel Doane accompanied by
relatives in this place the first of the Mrs. Cole and family, of Petoskey, are
week.
visiting their sister, Mrs. G. B. riinchT. K. Jeffreys and wife, of Lan- ey. They start for Washigton nr\t
*
sing, were guests of relatives here week.
PiNCKNEY, MICH.
over Sunday.
The Society of Church Workers will
Married, Jan. 31, at Mason, Miss hold their monthly tea wi*h \lr«,
Neva Bates, of this place, and W. E. Thos Read, Wednesday Fehrunry 16.
Tea from 5 till all are <erv> d; ail .ire
VanCamp, of Leslie,
.><:
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Hains, of • '.ordially invited,
Millington, were guests of his sister, —The Ladic:i Aid '-ociolv of lite >•'.—KrMrs. H. G. Briggs, the first of the church will meet with Mi> H (J
j Briggs Friday afternoon ai 2 oYu«-k.
week.
If any of our readers received a ! E v e ^ lad >' u l P ! U , " e r , b e o l ,1,,llVM '<
One of the finest lines of
supplement last week with DISPATCH I expected to be present,
and could not read it, please remem- | A donation will he held : t tin hone
oer that tbe work was not done at; of Mrs. A. A. Sto-ve, in Marion, A'M\.
this office. We tried to sort out good nesday evening Fe'.«. 16. for the t»eiuA cordial'
ones enough to go around but it was fit of Rev Eirl Pierce,
invitation is extended to all.
i
impossible.
Mr. C. Y. Abrahamson who will
lecture at tbe ('on^'l church, Feb. 22,
was an eye witness of one of the IOJ ,
Ever shown in Livingston county. The Celebrated GA.RLA.IfD,
rible massacres iu Constantinople, >R O U N D OAK, F O R E S T F A V O R I T E and CLEA,RMONT.
Thm
where three thousand people were
C L E A R U O X T Air-Tight, with ash-pan and shaker is the Bent of A i l
killedin one street.
Would be pleased to \*to
Last Wednesday after noon "vwhile
Dan Richards and wife were driving you c%H and W J W I L L convince you that we have got the proper
home from Steve Teeple's, their horse
All other hardware at right prioes als«.
dropped and before he could be re- line.
leased from tbe cutter, be was dead.
Respectfully Yours,
It was a horse which Mr. Richards
had raised from a colt and would
have been 27 years old in March and
has never been sicka«by in its life.
Lecture Feb. 22. by Rev. C. Y.
Abrahamson, of Smyrna, Turkey, at
the Cong'l church, Pinckney. Subject
"Social Life of the Turk Armenians,
as they were and as they are." While
delivering his lecture he will be attired in a beautiful turkish costume, and
will illustrate Oriental life with many
other articles from Turkey. Don't
fail to hear bim.
F. A. SIGLER
ALREADY
SELLING
Heating or
Cooking
.3
GENERAL - HARDWARE
AND
'D
FARM IMPLEMENTS.
A Finer line of Shelves and General Hardware cannot be found in
the County.
In Implements the Celebrated
TEEPLE >» CAD WELL.
WE ARE
Mc.G'ORM I G K
H E AD QUAE. T E R S
Binders and Mowers lead.
FOR
Business Pointers.
Osborne Implements
and Repairs, Oliver and
Gale Plows, Cultivators,
Harrows and Land Rollers, Buggies and Wagons
*^THAT
DEFY
WANTED.
5000 sheep pelts at once.
Fred Mackinder, Anderson, Mich.
Sealed bids will be received up to
and inclnding Feb. 28, 1898, for the
furnishing material and erection of a
School House in district No. 6, Unadilla, Mich. Co mm it ties have the
privilege of rejecting any and all bids..
Specfications will be found at 0. L
Smit he,fGregory, Mich.
t2w
Either Printed or not.
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JEMIOM Mtt4Mrr8«i.'ri >' ;"!>etl »B**lop«.
PINCKNEY, MICK.
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NOTICE.
COMPETITION.^ W
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•WITHIN OUB WALLS.
MICHIGAN
NEWS
ITEMS.
Sievert Olsen was fatally injured by
a falling tree at Bear Creek, near MusWERE MENTION OF MICHIGAN kegon.
Pontiuo's oouucil has forbidden the
MATTERS.
circulation of indecent literature and
pictures.
Mrs. Malcolm Furgeson, of Cass City,
Twelve Business Place* Destroyed by
died
from a dose of carbolic acid taken
Fire—Slaughter of Hears at Clare—
in mistake for medicine.
•A Deserted Wife Commit* Suicide—
Three Bay City fisherman were lined
An Aged Gay Deceiver Caught.
$10 each for shipping tish of a smaller
size than is allowed by law.
Whitecappers are ufter a Branch
Killed Four Beam !u Half an Hoar.
county
farmer who brutally horseWilliam Poat, who lives seven rrA'i
whipped a delicate little girl.
from Clare, has made a new bear-hum,
Tuscola coiiuty is having a coal miuing record. Ho was examining a hu; .
ing
boom, a four-foot vein having been
tree that had blown over with upturned
discovered
in Columbia township.
roots, when a good-sized bear came
out. Mr. Poat "plumed" him.
No
The little sou of E. L. Maddox, of
sooner had the echo of the shot died Grand Rrfpids, fell down stairs, and
away, before another bear came from died from concussion of the brain.
another side and a shot from the rifle
A pocketbook containing 8510 wus
soon silenced this one also. Mr. Poat found at the depot at Hartford by .las.
thought he would get his game to- Eagan and no owner has turned up.
gether and prepare to go home. As
Labor Commissioner Cox reports that
h e attempted to extricate the first bear, the next national convention of labor
another stuck his snout out. Mr. Poat commissioners will be held at Detroit,
grabbed his gun and with one shot laid June 14 to 16.
No. 3 dead at his feet. He again beTest coal shafts are to be put down
gan to pull one of the dead bears from on the "middle ground," an island in
the hole, when a gruff growl was Saginaw river which wus once covered
was heard and one of the largest she- with sawmills.
bears ever seen there came out for a
J. S. Stearns, of Ludington, has anfight. The next moment she was dead. nounced his candidacy for the nominaT h e whole butchery occupied less than tion of secretary of state on the Re$5 minutes and only four shots were publican ticket
fired.
During a raging blizzard the dwell
ing of Wm. Walton was burned to the
ground, at Sutton's Bay, with all their
Fin* Residence Burned at Flint.
A disastrous fire at Flint reduced to household effects.
The finest house in Dundee, the
ashes the home of Frank M. Howard,
just outside the city limits. The fire residence of J. F. Slayton, which cost
oaught in the upper story and when 96,000, burned to the ground while the
discovered by the family it had gained family were away.
such headway that it was almost useStephen Plews, of Ridge way, shot
less to attempt to quench the flames. himself in the foot while climbing over
T h e Flint fire department responded a fence with a gun in his hands, and
to a call, but there was no water to be died of his in juries. —
, -— * . •
had.
The thermometer was below
Chas. Hackley. of Kalamazoo, was
•«ero and the wind was sweeping a kicked in the stomach by a horse and
heavy gale from the northeast, blow- died of his injuries.
He leaves a
ing the fire and cinders toward the widow and three children.
dairy house and stock barns. Good
James Rinehart,a prominent farmer,
work upon the part of neighbors saved was hauling logs to the mill at Jasper,
those buildings The furniture of the Lenawee county, when his load tipped
lower rooms were partially saved, but over, crushing him to death.
the dwelling house was completely
Mitchell Bros.' snow plow uncovered
ruined. The building was erected by the frozen body of a man four miles
the late Judge Sumner Howard at an north of Lake City. He was identified
expense of 925,000.
as Andrew Anderson, a laborer.
Jos. Drewyor was loading logs at
Snow Prevented a Greater Conflagration. Upham & Mettlers' mill at Newport
The most disastrous fire in the his- and was fatally crushed between two
tory of the village of Brooklyn com- logs which rolled down upon him.
menced at 2:30 a. m. and eleven busiThe first grand jury in 10 years in
ness places on the west side of the Berrien county, has been impaneled to
public square were wiped out of exist- try numerous saloonkeepers and drugence. The fire started in the bakery gists for alleged violations of the liquor
and grocery of George C. Ebbert, and laws.
spread with great rapidity to the adThe 36th annual state convention of
Joining buildings, which burned like the Y. M. C. A. at Kalamazoo, Feb. 10
inder, a n d ^ was soon evident the en- to 13, is to be one of the most successtire row of buildings mus
T h e - - ,ful in the history~~of~the organisation
h e a t was so intense it cracked the glass in the state.
in all the store windows on the opOtto, the 5-year-old son of Louis
posite side of the square, and if the
Waak, of Clarenceville, is dead. He is
buildings had not all been covered
the fourth victim of the diseased pork
with snow there would not be a dozen
which was eaten by the family about
bwUVdings left in the village. There
a month ago.
was much excitement and many narRover Snow, a farmer near Battle
row escapes but no one seriously inCreek,
while preparing a windmill was
jured. The total loss is 925,000.
struck by the fan and thrown to the
ground,
45 feet, striking on his head.
A Guilty Conscience.
He
died
instantly.
Fifteen years ago Mike Krupchak,
Coloma is excited over the alleged
now of Bessemer, purchased a railway
discovery
of petroleum.
A Chicago
ticket from George Beetie, then ticket
man
L*.»rganizing
a
company
to invesagent at Embarras, Wis. In paying
for it he gave. Mr. Beetie a $5 gold piece tigate surface indications which have
for a penny. Kvupchak has received been found on Paw I'aw lake.
Peter and .Fred Vanderberg and
a letter from Beetie as follows: "A
l o n g time ago you gave me, by mis- Ford Dake, of Grand Haven, will leave
take, when buying a ticket, a $3 gold for the Copper river gold country in
piece for a penny. I feel that I did Alaska, together with eight Benton
wrong by takmg it. The Bible tells Harbor men. Each man puts up 8350.
us that we must return four for one
Laadan Winchester, of Byron town
wrongfully obtained. I therefore in- ship, Kent county, celebrated his 100th
close you an express order for $20." birthday, and among his descendants
Mr. Krupchak returned 815. saying: at the reunion were 24 great-grand" I am just as honest as you are."
children and one great-great-grandchild.
The Divorce Papers Were Unnecessary.
Rev. Isaac Matzinger, pastor of the
Under-Sberiff Shepherd served pa- German church at Elk Rapids, was
pers in a divorce suit on Ansel With- found dead in front of his church. He
e r s ! 1, aged 75, a well-to-do Franklin had been cleaning the walk of snow
township, Lenawee county farmer, at night when stricken with heart diwhile he was sick in bed. Mrs. With- sease.
erall recites that he was always accusCharles Howl and died at Copemish
ing her of stealing $1,500 deposited in during an operation, performed by Dr.
a.savings bank; that he had refused to King, of Manistee, to find a bullet.
eat with her because he feared poison: He had been shot in the stomach by
that he struck her with a beer bottle W. E. Hobson during a trivial quarrel.
and that he finally left her and broke Hobson was arrested.
all fhe windows in the house.
August Kollas, aged 23, of Romulus,
Several hours after the papers were tried to punch a rabbit out of a hole
served. Witherall died^and his wife with the stock end of his gun. The
was free.
weapon was discharged and his right
arm was so terribly lacerated that he
Aa Old Scoundrel Captured.
died from loss of blood.
Win. Sherman, tae old scoundrel who
Franklin B. Carson, of Woodruff,
makes a practice of marrying widows
•ltd deserting them after securing their ILL, was arrested at Boston by U. S.
property, has been captured at Pier- officers on an indictment warrant,
son, Montcalm county, and will be charging hkn with sending an obscene
prosecuted by Mrs. Mary Killam, of letter through the mail to Miss Blanche
Kalamazoo. Sherman is said to have Lurton, of Ann Arbor, Mich.
Washington authorities have decided
l e f t a dozen broken-hearted "wives'
that
the Bay City. custom house shall
i n Michigan and Indiana.
be kept open during the winter.
There will be no extra expense atPrat—red Death to Hard Work.
NeUk All nan, aged 19, and a de- tached, as the government acquires
serted wife, shot herself dead in the the service without additional cost.
Leslie Moffat and Felix Barsike, two
home of George Savage, at Grand RapIda* where she was employed as a do- of the four prisoners who escaped from
mestic. Her husband disappeared last the county jail at the "Soo" were cap*
August and the young wife was much tured while crossing on the ice to Mandepressed b / the fact that she was itoulin inland, by Deputy Sheriff Ancjtonpelled to support herself by ser- drew Arnott. They were ill clad and
had walked ISO miles.
vant's work,
W'iiiie Michael Ureenbur^-, a Uoi'imiu
farmer living rt»o mile north of Cornl,
was cutting a tree it broke in two and'
fell upou him. His sou Harmon hau
gone to the lie use with a load of \Y<HKI
and upon reUnning he found his fatlui
unconscious and he died in two
hours.
A Detroit & .Mackinaw railroad snowplow, loaded with men, ran into a ca
boose in the yards at North Bay City,
Brakes were applied, but the wheel*
slipped on the rails. Sylvester Loeflier,
Morris Elster, James Ruel and Ed ware
Cook, all of East Tawas, were badlj
crushed, lluel may die.
Daniel H. Conklin died at Coldwatei
from the effect*, of morphine, tukei;
with suicidal intent. After his wife
had retired he took the morphine aim
waited uutil he thought lie wus past
help before he informed her of his act.
Mr. Conklin was a veteran of the Firsl
Michigan Sharpshook-rs and was f>J
years of age.
There is a row in the Saginaw board
of trade because the powers that be invited Mayor May bury, of Detroit, to
speak at the annual $2-a-plate banquet
Feb. 12. Gov. Filigree's friends claim
that this is a direct snub and an insult
to the governor, and they declare that
they will not attend the banquet, but
may have the governor speak in the
Masonic temple lo a public audience,
with a free feed to follow.
• Frank Davenport, aged 50, and his
sister, aged 47, share one 20-foot square
room with their pigs and chickens ir
Cooper township, Kalamazoo county,
Filth abounds. Officers visited them
and ordered Davenport to keep the
sheep, horses and pigs somewhere else.
Davenport had feed, but the stock is
half starved. He pwns a 20-acre farm,
but raises nothing, and the poor authorities-areobliged t o help them. The directors of the Lansing & Dexter electric road have submitted a
proposition to the localities through
which the road will run. Lansing city
and township are asked for 830,000;
Delhi, 97,000; Alaiedon, 810,000; Mason,
825,000; Dansville and Ingham, 815,000;
White Oak, 810,000. The committee
appointed to consider the proposition
think that the company has made an
outrageous demand—897,000 bonus for
30 miles of road.
As a double-header freight was entering Midland, a singular accident
happened to the front engine. .The
tire on the rear left drive wheel broke
in two, one-half going through the
cab, knocking Fireman Phillips sense
less and breaking his foot.
The pipes
and trimmings on the left side of the
cab were wrecked. The other half of
the tire was thrown about 80 feet.
The engineer grabbed the fireman and
jumped, amid flying debris a nd escap
ing steam.
Assistant Secretary of the Navy
Roosevelt has written Adjt.-Gen. Irish
of Michigan's state troops that the depanminit^shesT^
of the service will permit, to embark
the Michigan Naval brigade and the
First Naval battalion of New York,
on board two regular cruisers of the
navy for a two weeks" regular drill
during the latter part of July. The
department cannot provide transportation or subsistence to New York. Gen.
Irish has referred the matter to Commander Wilkes, of the Naval brigade,
with instructions to indorse his recommendations thereon and return.
Daniel Lawrence Bralne, rear-admiral of the U. S. navy, retired, is dead,
aged 69.
Salt Lake City, Utah—The wholesale
and retail hardware house of George M.
Scott & Co., one of the largest and oldest hardware houaes in the intermountain country, has made an assignment.
Lawrence, Mass.—The 5,000 operatives at the Atlantic and Pacific cotton
mills have decided to accept the 10 per
cent reduction in wages.
Washington—The comptroller of th«
currency has declared dividends in favor of the creditors of insolvent national banks as follows: First National
Bank of Decorah, Iowa, 10 per cent;
Northwestern National Bank of Great
Falls, Mont, 5 per cent.
New York—The senate, by a vote of
25 to 9, adopted the assembly resolution
in favor of the general government taking such action to restore peace in Cuba as seemed wise.
The mail steamer Channel Queen
was totally wrecked off the Island of
Guernsey, and it is reported that 44
lives were lost. The Channel Queen
ran between Plymouth, Eng., and the
Island of Jersey, and struck on the
rocks during a fog. The owners of
the vessel announce that there were 65
persons on board of her when she
struck. The boats were launched with
difficulty, one of them being swamped.
The board of general appraisers of
customs at New York has sustained the
decision of Attorney-General McKenna
as to section 22 of the Dingley bill, imposing a discriminating duty of 10 per
cent on goods imported in bond through
contiguous territory to the United
States. It has been held that this additional duty should not be imposed on
such goods. .The particular case decided by the board was appealed from
the collector of customs at Sault Ste.
Marie, Mich., who imposed the duty
on a case of German china entered at
New York and transported across Canada to the ^jkhigun port.
OOflDKNSKD NEWS.
IMPORTANT E V E N T S RELATED
IN A BRIEF MANNER.
The New England States Suffer Severely
from Winter Storms—The President
Addressed Matonal Manufacturers—
England Backing- Down In China.
Winter Storms Bring (Jrcat Havoc.
The blizzards which have raged
throughout the northern states, causing serious blockuding of railway traffic in Michigan and oilier states, were
particularly severe in eastern New
York and New England. Boston probably got the worst dose, as the storm
completely paralyzed all branches of
business and street car and tram railway trathe and for a time shui off the
city from communication by wire with
all places outside the limits of Boston.
The storm was the most severe Boston
had experienced in 2f> years and caused
the loss of several lives, besides causing hundreds of thousands of dollars
dumage to property. The snow clung
to the poles and wires aud, aided by a
wind blowing at the rate of 50 miles
an hour, prostrated all telephone and
telegraph lines about the city. More
than half the electric lights of the city
went out and in suburban towns the
fire alarm service was crippled. In
Newton broken wires started a fire in
the elegant residence of Chas. J. Travelli, the wealthy Pittsburg steel manufacturer, and it was desroyed, the
family escaping in their night clothes
without saving anything.
The loss
amounts to 8100,000.
The big three-masted schooner Chas.
T. Briggs, of Bath, Me., coal laden,
was dashed to pieces on the Nahant
coast, aud her crew of eight men perished.
The most violent storm known at
Gloucester. Mass., since 1851 swept the
shores of Cape Ann, causing heavy loss
of life and about 8200,000 damage.
More than a dozen vessels went ashore
and at lea:*t four more are lost, and
many others damaged.
The water
front of Gloucester harbor and along
ihe cape is dotted with wrecks and
wreckage, schooners, sloops and other
vessels having been driven ashore by
the fierce gale. Ten lives are known
to l>e lost and the damage to shipping
will exceed $200,000.
President McKinley Made a Speech.
The fact that President McKinley
was to be present and was to respond
to a toast drew a large crowd to the
banquet at the Waldorf-Astoria hotel,
New York, which was the closing
event of the big convention of the
National Association of Manufacturers.
The President first referred to the convention of the association at Cincinnati
in 1895 when he, as the governor of
Ohio, addressed them. He contrasted
that
time and- the
present, and reminded them that their thoughts were
full of gloom then and that their chief
aim was to stop their constant losses,
while today trade has regained much
of the loss and now their ambition is
to reach for more extensive fields. He
then spoke on the relation of the government to business, saying that national policies can encourage industry
and commerce, but the people must
project and carry them on. In speaking of the financial question the President said: "There is another duty
resting upon the national government
—'to coin money and to regulate the
value thereof.'
This duty requires
that our government shall regulate the
value of its money by the highest
standards of commercial honesty and
national honor.
The money of the
United States is and must forever be
unquestioned and unassailable."
President Dole Received at Washington
President Dole, of Hawaii, arrived
at Washington, and on behalf of the
government was welcomed to the national capital by Secretary Sherman
and Assistant Secretary Adee, who
greeted President and Mrs. Dole and
their party on their train. There was
a brief and informal exchange and
then the party filed out to the waiting
carriages. Mr. Sherman offered his
arm to Mrs. Dole and escorted her to
President McKinley's carriage and the
party proceeded to the Arlington hotel,
where the Hawaiian executive will be
the nation's g u e s t President McKinley's call on Mr. Dole was entirely
formal and did not last longer than 15
minutes Mr. Dole returned the visit
of President McKinley.
British Backing Down la China.
The London Daily Mail says it learns
from a source "hitherto accurate,"
that China is inclined to make the best
possible bargains with Russia, whose
diplomacy appears to have triumphed
at Pekin, England, having resolved
not to foroe a conflict by further opposing Russia's claims at Port Arthur
and in the Liao-Tuug
peninsula.
Japan, says the Daily Mail's authority,
"has been thrown into a state of consternation by the British backdown
and has adopted a more friendly attitude toward Russia."
10,000 BuseU'n Troops Bound for China
An Odessa correspondent says a volunteer fleet will convey" in the quickest time practicable over 10,000 Russ i a n s to the far east.
)
-. "fee?
DOINGS OF C O N G R E S S .
A Paragraphic Chroalcle of the Aote of
the Nation's Lawmakers.
The discussion on the Indian appropriation bill, which has passed the
House, covered a wide range of subjects from silver to the Cuban question.
Rep. llartman (Silver lie p.. Mont.)
found occasion to denounce the conduct
of the Republican party, lie declared
that the majority of the House were
mere puppets of Speaker Reed, and denounced the speaker as a tyrant. Mr.
De Armond (Dem., Mo.) criticised the
Cuban policy of the administration and
with tine sarcasm, ridiculed the ofllcial
explanation of the visit of the battleship
Maine to Havana. Mr. Dolliver (Rep.,
la.) replied eloquently to both. He
referred to the Cuban insurrection during the terms of President Grant and
said that after seven years of responsibility, anxieties und worry, in a mes«a«o to congress Grant vindicated the
policy of this administration and gave
the country warning that any intervention in the affairs of Cuba would
not only be unwise but injurious.
"For my part." said Mr. Dolliver, "I do
not aspire to a larger patriotism than
that which governed the ofllcial
career of U. 8. Grant." In reference
to the attack on Speaker Reed he said:
"There is no authority that constrains
the *Republican majority here except
the policy of the Republican party
and the administration of a Republican
President. It is true we have a leadership in this House and I for one have
often felt a sense of satisfaction that
we have a leadership of brains and
character that men may follow and
follow without loss of s^lf-respect."
Silver had an innings in the Senate.
The Teller resolution, the debate upon
which is considered as the preliminary
lining up for the presidential battle of
1900, was passed after the discussion
had continued for a week. It was a t
all times of an animated character and
often assumed a strongly acrimonious
phase. The resolution is a practical
reaffirmation of that of Stanley Matthews in 1878 and is its follows: "That
all the bonds of the United States, issued, or authorized to be issued under
said acts of congress hereinbefore recited, are payable, principal and interest, at the option oT~U>e government
of the United States, in silver dollars of the coinage of the United
States, containing 41 2¼ grains each
of standard silver; and that to restore to its coinage such silver coins
as a legal tender in payment of said
bonds, principal and interest, is not
in violation of the public faith nor in
derogation of the rights of the public
creditor." All efforts to amend the
resolution were voted down by good
majorities. The final vote was 47 to
32. Party lines were broken up on
both sides a number of Republicans
who supported McKinley and the St.
Louis platform in 1896 voted for the
resolution, because, as Mr. Wolcott
announced, they did not believe the
' icovmuou couiut+weu those w h o sup-ported it to the free and unlimited
coinage of silver.
The Teller resolution declaring bonds
of the United States payable in silver,
which had passed the Senate, was
buried under an adverse majority of
50 votes in the House, the Republicans
voting almost solidly against the proposition. The result was reached after
five hours of debate tinder a special order. The majority, under the leadership of Mr. Dingley, whp made a carefully prepared speech sounding the
keynote of the opposition, assumed the
position that the last clause of the resolution was in reality a disguised declaration for the free coinage of silver,
while the assaulting Democrats, under
the direction of Mr. Bailey, maintained
thi»t the defeat of the resolution would
be another step in the direction of the
establishment of the gold standard, to
which they alleged both the President
and Secretary Gage had irrevocably
committed the Republican party.
There were no sensational incidents
beyond the hissing of Mr. Rhea, of
Kentucky, when he said that as the
author of the "crime of *73." the hottest
place in hades would be reserved for
the present secretary of state. The
vote on the resolution was: Ayes, 132;
nays, 182.
At one day's session of the Senate
two general appropriation bills—that
for the army carrying $53,743,492 and
that for the legislative, judicial and
executive departments carrying $21,658,520—were passed.
John M. McLaurra has l>een sworn
in as Senator from South Carolina to
fill the unexpired term of the late Sen^
ator Earle, which ends March 4, 1903.
Senator Gallinger, chairman of the
pension committee of the Senate reported adversely the bill introduced by
Mr. Allen providing that all pensioners now receiving less "than $10 a month
receive that amount after the bill's
passage. Mr. Gallinger said that the
whole number of pensioners affected
by the proposed bill was 448,468 and
the total annual increase in pensions
would aggregate $16,286,000. The bill
was placed on the calendar.
Senator ' Petttgpew has introduced
the following resolution: "That it is
contrary to the interest, policy .and
tradition of the people of the United
States to acquire any territory so situated as to require a najry to protect
it." T h e resolution flrCtitr ©*er.
It
wastaisned at Hawaii^ *'• |r
There is Vtik of i.Ur^n^ ao>r<iecval
ice fuetorv ut N'tlcs.
v %•
sure, Miss Dorothy, dear, that you de- A BENEFACTRESS' K I N D A C T .
From the Evening A'euw, Dotratt,
tested him long enough before you
Mr*. John Tansey, of 130 Baker Street,
ever set eyes on Mr. Harris."
Detroit. Michigan, is one of those w e n t *
But Hood's Sarsaparilla Has Made
"But, Auntie—," Dorothy sobbed.
who always know just what to do la ell
Her Strong a n d Rugged.
"I'm sure the dear mistress was ths trouble arid sickness. Ons that la s mother
"My little girl hai always been very
last one in all the world to have know- to those in distress, To a reporter she said]
delicate, and haa bean using Hood'SQatsa"I am the mother of tsn ohlldrsn aj*4
ingly made you miserable about David Aave
raised eight of them. Bsvsral years
pariUa. She has taken several bottles of
Stevenson
or
any
other
gentleman
on
ago
we
had a serious time with my da a filter,
this medicine and is a rugged child now.
which began when she was about
earth,"
Barbara
answered,
positively.
We believe Hood's Sarsaparilla has done
years old. She did not have say serious
"But what did you want to tell me illness
what no other medicine could do." 8. 8.
but seemed to gradually waste away.
about Miss Carrington, dearie?"
Having never bad any consumption ia oar
GARB, 1316 Qrand Ave., Racine, Wis.
"Elsie always liked him," Dbrothy family, as we coma of good old Irish and
stock, we did not think it was that.
began, when the old servant Interrupt- Scotch
8 8 ASSOCIATION.
INTERNATIONAL
Our doctor called the disease by an odd
name which, as I afterward learned, meant
CHAPTER XI—(Continued.)
not very happy in their simple lodg- ed her.
Is the best—in fact the One True Blood Purifier,
lack of blood.
"Nay,
now,
Miss
Dorothy,
take
my
"Mr. Harris will walk with me," ings they were very peaceful, and once
"It IB impossible to describe ths feeling
H o o d ' s PlffS cure all liver Ills. 25 cents.
advice
and
don't
you
be
meddling
befaltered Dorothy, shrinking back.
Dick came and stayed at the hotel near
John and I had as we notlosd our daughter
Soap is first mentioned in the ninth
"By what right?" demanded David, for a couple of days, and then Dorothy tween David Stevenson and Miss Car- slowly passing away from us. We Anally
century. It was alluded to as in use In a bitter undertone.
rington.
They wouldn't either of found, however, a medicine that teamed te
was very happy indeed. .
in Germany for cleansing- clothes an
them
thank
you for it if they knew It,
"By the right of Miss Strode's wish,
During this time their banns were
excellent medicine.
and if you was to mention her name
A girl's idea of happiness is to dance sir," put in Dick, icily, "and in some published in one of the churches at even it would set Mr. David against
with otii! man and leave two or three measure by the right of having been Bournemouth and also In a London
other men walking- the ball floor in the last person to whom Miss Dlms- church, in the pariah of which Dick her forever. Never you trouble your
jealous rage.
dale spoke In this world, and in some engaged a room and put therein some head about him; he's no worse off than
measure by the right of having been of his belongings, so as to make him- he's always been—better, in fact for
BKTTKK T H A N A SILVKIt MINK.
one of the three persons who saw her self a standing in the place. But Dick he isas-icher now than before the(Hall
The editor estimates that the In- die."
was only at Bournemouth for those fell to him. I dare say he'll feei^Bad
crease in yields had by the American
It was all over in a minute or two, two days, and twice when David Stev- about you for a bit, but remember,
farmer by planting Salter's Potatoes and only those standing very near to enson was in Colchester on business he Miss Dorothy, that it's harder to lose
and new creations in Wheat, Oats, them heard a word at all. Dick took happened to meet him in the street, what you have than what you haven't
Corn, Rye, Grasses and Clovers the hold of Dorothy's hand and drew her not a little to his relief.
got and never had."
past year amounted in round numbers out of fthe room, and the rest of the
"Perhaps you are right, Barbara,"
And Mr. Marks meantime worked
to $50,000,000. The reason of this is company followed as they would— away, and, for a lawyer, really hurried said Dorothy, a little comforted.
Salzer's farm and vegetable seeds are David Stevenson among them, his things up in a wonderful way, so
"Ay, I am right there," said Barbara,
Most of the Time She Was Confined
to Bed.
bred up to big yields. Salzer is the head well up in the air, but his eyes that by the time Dorothy's twenty-first wisely.
largest grower of grasses, clovers and gleaming with anger, and his face as birthday came everything was settled,
Well, the next day Dick Aylmer help her, and from the first ws noticed e
farm seeds in the world; 100,000 bar- white as chalk.
came
up from Colchester with all the decided change for the better, and after
and he was ready to hand over to her
three months' treatment her health was ao
rels potatoes, ¢1.50 a barrel and up.
However, it was useless to show an- the money to which she was entitled deight of a long leave before him, and jjreatly improved you would not have reJ u i t Snail T h i s N o t i c e w i t h 10 r u n t * ger about such a matter, and the in- under her aunt's will.
Mr. Marks in t h e wildest and most joyous spirits, cognized her. She'gained in flesh rapidly
to John A. Salzer Seed Co., La Cro.-sse. cident passed by. And when the last therefore wrote to her, telling her that so that Dorothy was fairly infected by and roou was in perfect health. The mediUbed was Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for
Wis., and get their great catalogue and sad office was over, the lar*;e company he was ready to hand over to Barbara his gayety. That evening he took her cine
Pale People. 1 have always kept these pills
11 packages farm seeds, positively separated, only the lawyer from Col- the sum of one hundred pounds; to her, and Barbara to dine at Simpson's, and in the house ^ince and have recommended
worth $10, to get a start with, w.ii.f. chester returning to the Hall to muke Dorothy, a sum of thirteen hundred then to a theater to finish up the even- them to many people. I have told nvmy
mothers a)-out them and they have affected
the usual explanations and to read ;he and forty-five pounds, the sum left ing. And the morning following that, Home wonderful cure*.
Don'l Tobacco Spit and Smoke Your Life Away will to Dorothy.
"Every mother in this land should keep
over and above after all expenses had Dorothy, dressed in a quiet gray, gown,
To quit tobiicco easily iiud forever, be 111:1 y,
these
pills in the house, as they are good
with
her
silver
belt
around
her
waist,
"And are you going to remain here been paid. He asked her also when
netic, full of life, nrrvo una vlfjor, tuke N.o-Tufor
many
ajlrtieuts, particularly those
Bac, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men for the present?" he asked the girl she and Barbara would be able to got into a cab with the old servant arising from impoveni-bei or diseased
strong. All drugg-lfttb, 50c. or II. Cure gruurunmeet him and Mr. Stevenson, the and drove to the church where their hlood, and weakened nerve force."
teed.
Booklet and s:uuple free.
AddreuH kindly.
banns had been "cried," and there
Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York
"Oh, no, I am going away at once," executor of Miss Dimsdale's will.
mothers tell a boy to g e t
she answered.
Dorothy replied at once that she they met Dick, and the two were made upIndulgent
in
a
tone
which encourages him to
The saddest f a i l u r e s In life are those that
"But may I ask where?" he inquired. would be in London two days later, man and wife.
c o m e from not p u t t i n g forth the power and
itay in bed.
will to succeed.
It was a very quiet and solemn wed"Yes; we are going away, Barbara and if it suited them both would meet
and I, for a change—I must get away; them there—would he write to Mr. ding in the gloomy, empty church,
C A N A D I A N CREAMERIES.
N o - T o - B a o f o r F i f t y Cents.
with
its
dark,
frowning
galleries
and
it
is
dreadful
here.
I
hope
I
shall
nevMorley's
Hotel,
to
say
if
that
would
Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak
men strong, blood pure. Wc, II. All druggists. er come back again."
be convenient? And eventually they its long, echoing aisles, down which B u w Thoy Are Operated and H a d * t o
Pay t h e Farmer.
"You will feel differently after a did meet at Morley's Hotel, and Doro- their voices seemed to travel as into
We e n j o y o u r s e l v e s only In our work—in time," said the lawyer, kindly; he
A correthy and Barbara signed the necessary he ages of eternity.
our doing; and o u r best doing i s our best
s
p
0 n dent
knew how things were with David papers, heard the necessary explanaenjoyment.
And then when the short ceremony
of
a
Brown
Stevenson, though not what Dorothy's tions, and from that moment were ab- was over—and oh: what a lifetime of
City,
MichThe whites are waging- a war upon feelings towards him were.
solutely free of all connection with mischief a clergyman can do in twenigan, paper
the Negroes in Lonoke county, Ark,
The three were alone then, Dick Ayl- Graveleigh for ever, if they so wished. ty minutes—Dick kissed his wife and
w r i tea as
Five colored men have been killed and mer having purposely abstained from
follows:
"You will put that check into a then Dorothy kissed Barbara, and they
scores are preparing to leave the appearing at the house after their re" A n inproper bank," said Mr. Marks to all went in to sign the registers.
county.
JduBtry
turn from the churchyard; he was, in- Dorothy.
"You'll have your lines, Miss Dorowhich is proving very advantaBoth the senate and house commit
deed, at that very moment, sitting by
"Yes," Dorothy answered, "It will go thy," urged Barbara.
geous
to the settlers of North
tees of the Ohio legislature which are the fire in Barbara's little room at the
"No, they arg safe enough here," Alberta, Canada, and is truly a boon to
to the bank before three o'clock."
to investigate the bribery charge* back of the house.
"And remember, if at any time there Dorothy replied.
the farmers, is the establishment ot
against Senator Hanna are said to
"Yes, perhaps, after a time," she is any little matter that I can do for
"But I wouJAphave them, my dear," creameries by the Government at reguhave anti-Hanna
majorities. The answered feverishly. "But, Mr. Marks,
lar distances apart. The Government
you or any advice I can give you, you Barbara e n t r M W in a whisper.
hearings are open to the public.
I wanted to ask you a question—Mr. •ca'tt write to me as a friend, and I
furnishes
the entire plant, puts it In
"Yes, we wllr^have our lines," said
It is reported on apparently good Stevenson told me that I should have
and
operates
it without direct cost to
will always do my best for you," the Dick; he would agreed to have carried the farmer From the sale of the butauthority that the proposed consolida- about a thousand pounds?"
the church along if it would have ter the Government retains 5 cents per
old lawyer said.
tion of the New York Central and Lake
"About that, I should think; but we
"Thank you so much," cried Doro- given them pleasure, he was so happy pound, the balance going to the farmer.
Shore railroads paeans the retirement cannot tell exactly until Miss Dimsthy, pressing his hand affectionately. just then.
This is continued for three years, when
of Chauneey, M. Depew from the presidale's affairs are settled."
And
then
they
went
off
to
Dick's
the government tarns over the plant
The
old
man
blinked
his
eyes
a
litdency of the Central, us he is persona
"But
will
you
get
them
settled
at
and
business to the farmers, givhotel,
where
they
had
a
champagne
tle,_j>aJ^ejiMvej^jsJiojildj^^^
lion grata to J. Pierpont Morgan.
ing them a clear Title
of It,
once? I want to have everything set-- and then took himself rather noisily
Thus these creameries are put i n
tled," she said anxiously. "You see, I away, with a kindly hand-shake to
at a minimum cost to the farmer
cannot arrange anything for myself Barbara. Then it was David's turn to
and paid for in a way that he least
until I know just how I stand, and I say goodbye.
feels it. When we were there butter
should like to know just what I shall
"I wanted to tell you, Dorothy," he
was selling at 21 and 22 cents per
be able to do as soon as possible."
pound.
Cheese factories were being essaid, huskily, "that I bought the old
"Very well, we will hurry everything cobs, as you wished, and they will
tablished. too, along the railroad ana
on as much as possible," said Mr. have an easy berth in my stables as
much of the freight loaded on the cars
on our return trip consisted of butter
Marks to David; "Miss Dimsdale's af- long as they live. And I wanted to tell
and cheese, as it was in the best seafairs were in perfect order."
you, too, that I meant every word of
son for milk. The produce found a
"Oh! yes, It will be easy enough," what I said to you the day after Miss
ready market in the mining and lumsaid David; then as the lawyer was Dimsdale died: If ever you want me
bering towns and districts beyond the
gathering his papers together, he said you have only to say a single word
Rockies, through the British Columbia
in an undertone to her: "You are very and I shall come."
country, where it was, we were told,
anxious to shake the dust of Gravedifficult
to supply the demand."
"You are very good, David," said
leigh off your feet, Dorothy."
The
Klondike
is another field now
she, with trembling lips.
open to the Western Canadian farmer
The great tears welled into her
"I don't know what you are going V
for all produce of the farm, and the
eye*, and for a me meat she could not
do or what your plans are," he went
officials in the Department '& the Inon, "but I hope you will be happy, and
terior, Ottawa, Canada, art kept busy
sending out literature describing this
that God will bless you, wherever you
great agricultural country. The agents
are and whatever you do;" and then
of
the Government throughout the
he bent,down and kissed her little,
United States are also supplied with
slender hands, and, without looking at
literature, which they distribute free.
KISSED HIS WIFE,
her again, rushed out of the room.
lunch in a private room, and Dick
Make your new year new—not he.
drank
to his bride's health and Doro- oid vear with a new name.
CHAPTER XII.
OOR Dorothy fell thy drank to his, and Barbara drank
A l l K i n d s o f Beads.
sobbing into Bar- to them both, and then insisted that
The
attention
of our readers Is callthe
wine
had
got
into
her
head.
bara's arms. "Oh!
ed
to
the
advertisement
of the John
And after that they parted for a
Barbara, it is all
s o d r e a d f u l ; it short time, Dorothy and Barbara going A. Salzer Seed Co., which appears elseIs all so dreadful; off t o Morley's to fetch their Luggage where in this issue. Those who expect
it brings it all and pay their bill, and meeting Dick to make any seed purchases win make
back again." she again with his belongings at Victoria i a mistake not to write this concern.
wailed.
Station, where they parted in earnest They are thoroughly reliable, and art
"Nay, nay, my from Barbara, who was going to spend the largest seed growers in America.
" •
' • "
»v dearie, think of the two months with various friends It is advisable to make seed purchases
Only Personally Conducted Touri*t Excursion*
without further delay, as the see son i s
what's going to and relations in or around London.
to P O R T L A N D , ORE., run
be tomorrow," Barbara murmured,
Via GREAT ROCK ISLAND ROUTE
"And Barbara, this will keep you go- rapidly advancing. The John A Sall e a v o C H l C / t C O Thursdays
tenderly. "Don't grieve like this, my ing till we get back," said Dick, slip- zer Seed Co. will send their interesting
Good connections for T A C O M A and S E A T T L E
catalogue for 5 cents in stamps to dedearie; don't, now."
ping twenty pounds into her hand.
RUSHBD OUT OF THB ROOM,
Wrrte for Rates and Klondike Polder.
fray the postage.
They have made
J n o . S e b a s t i a n , G . P . A M C H l C A C O . •peak.
"But I can't help grieving a little,
"I don't think you give me
"But, Mr. Harris," cried Barbara, numerous offers this year, w > k h demuch encouragement to do anything Barbara," Dorothy cried, impatiently. feeling that there were four notes, serve consideration.
else.
David," she said, reproachfully. "You forget what they have been all "it's too much; I shan't need it."
DIPHTHERE'. *jnjflf • iOHMIS S s r t S X
with A r a t t r e i K ' * IMpatberla am* Qwlnay "I am very anxious to go away, be- my life to me until just now. And
"Take it while you can get it, BarThe man who Is always looking for
D r a n . Soil by mall for Uc In stamps. Address
The " 1 CVB.E V" C:. Ltd.. Butler.'P*.
cause it is dreadful living in this houBe Auntie wanted me to marry David bara,** he laughed; "I dare say we shall mud generally finds i t
MIZPAH CANCEK without Auntie—dreadful; and I am almoBt to the last, and though I be desperately hard up by the time we
Do Toe Daste* To-Nlghtr
CANCERS! TUMORS! KKMEPY:
._.. Perfect very unhappy, David, and I don't couldn't do that, he has been very get back again;", and then the train
Cure M roar borne! Never lo»t a ilnjrl* cuel Write
Shake
into your Shoes Allen's FootCor circular*. MIZPAH MEDICINE CO.. Monaer, N. Y. think it is very kind of you to be s o - kind and generous to me, and I hate began to move, and he pushed her
Ease,
a
powder
for the f e e t It makes
so—" but there the sobs choked her not to be friends with him, after all. hand back. "Good-bye, you have the
tight or New Shoes feel Easy. Cures
CURE YOtftSELF! and she stopped. "I never thought And then I meant to tell him a little address: Mrs. Harris will write every Coras, Bunions, Chilblains and SweatJ D M Big • for anoatars!
you would be unkind to me," she said about Elsie Oarrington, and then each week;" and then the train had slipped ing F e e t At all Druggists and Shoe
•wosargee, tatUmmatioaa,
irritation* or ulcerations
under her breath.
time I've seen him I have felt so away beyond speaking distance.
Stores, 25c Sample sent FREE. Ad
of t u u e o n a aaeaibranea,
.
. Palnloee. and not attris*
dress,
Allen S. Olmsted, LeRov, a*. Y
miserable
and
so
guilty,
Barbara,
that
*Tm
a
brute,"
he
answered.
"There,
"Poor
old
Barbara!"
she
cried.
LTHCEamGHSMOItOa, «»nt or poisonous.
A s V S s f l l a v a^BVBBB^BSsflssaaaB
don't cry, Dorothy. You shall have I could have cried of shame. Yes, in-, Dick caught hold of her hand. "My
The nickel plating does s o t give any
deed, I could."
everything as you want it."
darling, I have got you t i l to myself power to the engine.
' or sent i s plala wrapper,
The result of all this was that, two
"Well, but. my dearie, it's over now, at last," be murmured passionately.
LasvsTs r a a a U / Modi
days
later,
Dorothy
and
Barbara
went
and David Stevenson would not have
Oircalar saasoa r*MU
They were soon away from London
Moves
the bowels each day. In order
oft to Bournemouth, accompanied by been satisfied to have you friends with and off to Dover, for Dick had foreign
to
be
healthy
this i s neoe&sarv. Acta
L o m e Doone in a big basket, and there him. Men never are when they want leave, and they had agreed to spend
geotly
on
the
liver and kidney & Core
they remained, quietly and gradually love.
And. after all, it wasn't your the next two months by the sunny sick headache. Price 25 and 50c
recovering from the treat . shock of fault that you never liked David; I shores of the Mediterranean.
M I H Bamsdeles death. If t h e / were never could abide him myself, and I's*
Theiw is n o God-given right tot t h e
(To be Continued.)
right to do right
Always Delicate
vUGHT OUT op
r*^^
Hood's Sarsaparilla
Best Route to Klondike
1
>
& * • • > • :
•.v*^#«*"i-i»
<r
O n e of
ifrom a WOUIIIII'H S t a n d p o i n t . " I organize and c o m b i n e HO t h a t they it in a true, innnlv way.
jgitUHJUff
fgt§$&U*l*
I T h e fanner was too apt to look may have their say a b o u t polities. t h e h a r d e s t t h i n g s for a t e a c h e r is
_
._.__.
' o n l y at the prosy side of life; for T h e o p p o r t u n i t y h a s conio to lake to take an u n d i s c i p l i n e d child a n d
| ot'rer laboring all day in t h e b u r n - a d v a n t a g e of y o u r power and you discipline him in the school. Ocf. L ANDREWS,
EDITOR.
l i n g sun they can see no beauty in m u s t n o t u n d e r v a l u e y o u r selves casionally some m o t h e r s t h i n k
t h e i r child does n o t need disciits setting or its rising.
I m a g i n e ] advance bo progressive.
THURSDAY, FKH. 10, ISiiS.
a farmers wife w a t c h i n•gn t h e sun \ I n t h e discussion of this paper p l i n e b u t some time he will have
rise while t h e men folks are wait-' \ \ \ K. Sexton said sow in season, to obey as all have to b a r k e n to
ing for breakfast or engaged in ' r e a p in season, s e l l ' a s soon as t h e tin* laws of t h e state o r get into
Farmer's Institute.
t h e study of chemistry while s h e t . r o p is ready for m a r k e t .
liny t r o u b l e . O u r state schools a n d
A Largo Attciidnure and A l'rolltuhta is m a k i n g bread.
T h e farmers when you can buy t h e cheapest. o u r p e n i t e n t i a r y ' s are tilled today
Mooting
wife is as eager to economize in ' H u n well your work, work well with u n d i s c i p l i n e d children g r o w n
to m a n h o o d . Mrs. Mayo related
T h e wind-up of t h e one day money matters as t h e farmer b u t y o u r plan.
R. R. S m i t h t h o u g h t tin* farmer a story of a y o u n g m a n t h a t was
S t a t e F a n n e r s I n s t i t u t e was held d o e s she economize in r e g a r d to
at Howell, T h u r s d a y a n d F r i d a y , h e r healtn. " T h e Mistakes and occupied a r o p o n s b l e position in | s e n t e n c e d to bo hung, who in be-
Railroad
Guide,
MriuiU Trunk Hallway System.
Arnvitl a n d l h ' p a r l u r o of Cruliis at I'iuulviiey
In K«i»t J i m u H , 1MU7.
WKHTIIOIINJ).
I.v.
AH.
JUOWMOU ami InteiiuMitj Si a. f.i.-M a in t"'- 11 I1 I 0
*•
"
"
+1 15 \> m tr.W> H IB
KASTJIOJ'NU
Pontine Detroit- <J<i. IUJIHIB
a n d liitiTinuilinteStH f , Y H | i n i f'.i !4 u n
l'nutiuc: Lciuix i.vt.uit uiid
lutcniuiiliaitj s t a . t ' •'">'• » ' " t4 45 1» (U
MIcL. Alv I.IIIH Hiv. (raiiiH
l » a w 1'onuui: IU fii.oo a m t:^vl> ]> m
f<ir Itonii-n f.eiHi\ unil int. Hia.
• D. d M. DIVISION L K A V i : I ' O N T I A C
w ICH:I;DUNI)
We, as a class, are not l m l t ' o f h i r i ( W U lilV < s , l u 1 ' * w , w
l.v.
+"0Ja m
. T •
• i t
u n g o v e r n a b l e a n d u n r e s t r a i n e d at Sii^inuw (ill I!III>II1H iiml Oil llnvcii
r
opened
a
t
!
Oil KU|»U1B I.<I IIIIMHI C h i c a g o
>po
r e p r e s e n t e d in o u r L e g i s l a t u r e ;
^
SajjlnawOil liapi 1= Milw:iukH«
t.VH? \> ta
sta.
*'J.'M \) m
10:30 T h u r s d a y m o r n i n g , with •'.
i ,
i
i ,- e
i I home, a n d at school my p a r e n t s Chicago and liiicriui'ilial«
i: \ h i ' i t n i i N i i
D e t r o i t I'.'ast and Cunmla
*ti.(J7 ii in
B. Tazziman, president of t h e I n but, we do not ask tor favors, only i
'
,
i
Dotniit J^HHt uini Canadti
flo,.V!u in
• .•
| .. .
. . , { said 1 need n o t obey unless 1 Detroit a n d Soutli
tJ.fi7 p in
u
s t i t u t e in the chair.
\*.-as j» is
it do
n i world. 1 refused to obeyJ a n.d so I Detroit ICiwt a n d C a n a i i a
t e
J u ask
v l l e (tl o r i in
ulaws
0our
justice.
\\
t
h
a
Detroit S u b u r b a n
halls
•, ,
{T.Ui H ill
T h e addiess of welcome by A.
fl.Ufi u m
! • • • * and a • b e*t t e r effect
i
' wished
d on hews
e n t e rIi n gam t hae
have g o nto
e ona n until
of .legislation,
Leil\ c Di'trnit vi H W iinisoi
D. Thompson of Howell was
not d i s c r i m i n a t e a g a i n s t us. L a w - '
"
KASIllol'M)
m i g h t be had if we h a d a mixing c o n d e m n e d c r i m i n a l .
Buffalo--New York A liuMun
*T.15 a in
given in a few and MU).\i> words
T o r o n t o Montreul X\w Y o r k
*1'-. noon
Do not send the child o u t from Loudon Kxpri'bs
e x t e n d i n g the h a n d of fellowship i " L o w lying clay soil is not good U p i n these m a t t e r s . Mr. S m i t h ' s
fti.W p a
New York A Knst
*11 tt )i in
a n d the freedom of the city. T h e | for peaches. H u m trees affected-idea was for f a r m e r s to p u s h to t h e h o m e and t h e n never give Huffiilo
7,4."i a in t a i l n IIIIH slnnpintf cars Doi roil to New
Y o r k u i n l Huston
noon i lin !i;H p u ' n r
conductor, .1. N; S t e a r n s of K a l a - ; by thick knot can be saved if c u t t h e front a n d f o r m u l a t e a plat- t h e m a t h o u g h t . E d u c a t i o n is a ear to i l a m i i t o u — S k - oIv'.O)
p i n n c a r to utTaio an I New
York
11.'i.') t r a i n lias aleepiuj; L\U to NHW Y o r k
mazeo ivspmulcd urging the farm- ' o u t before it t u r n s black.
No form t h a t would benefit each a n d - m u l t o t ) l i n o l i r h a m l s t o w o r k
fDaily I'vecp; S u n d a y .
*l»aily.
o
u
t
our
life's
responsibilities.
i
)
o
W
.
J
.
lii.Ai'K,
Agent,
Pinckm'.v
SlWh.
er to ask all t h e questions they fruit will*do well on wet soil.
I t every one.
\V.
!•:.
DAVIS
E.
H.
U
i
n
u
i
r
s
desired.as the institute was t h e i r s is not g o o d . t o plant potatoes in a
Mrs. R. I t S m i t h , in her short not spoil a m e c h a n i c by m a k i n g a
1.. I', A T. . U ' " " '
A. 0 . 1 ' , .t I A m .
Montreal. Que.
I'liic :.^o. 111.
f
a
n
n
e
r
of
h
i
m
;
s
t
u
d
y
t
h
e
disposia n d all they could get .was for >>TTTng orchard for when they are a m ] spicy speech, said t h e remedy
UKN KLETCUEU, 1'rav. i ' a s a . A^f., O r ' n o r Mii-h.
t h e i r benefit.
-Mr. S t e a r n s then d u g ) in t h e fall it starts a late day r i g h t widi themselves, for all tion a n d t e n d i a n c e s of t h e child
a n d t r a i n him in s u c h a way as to
JLEDO
p.
gave his excellent talk on " S t a r t - growth on t h e trees which will t h e i r o p p r e s s i o n >/
i n g Right in O r c h a r d i n g . " Those w i n t e r k i l l .
F o r gray or black
Mr. S t e a r n s was called to the meet t h e world's responsibilities
AND
who are interested iu fruit culture lice on peach, p l u m or c h e r r y floor, but said he had n o t h i n g to in a t r u e manly way. Teach t h e m
to
be
willing
to
die
for
t
h
e
i
r
:HIGAN
could learn m a n y .valuable points trees give t h e m kerosene omul- S ay a l o n g t h i s line as he- was no
c
o
u
n
t
r
i
e
s
good,
a
n
d
above
all,
to
on this Mibject and only a few sion.
F o r leaf b l i g h t on p e a r politician, not h a v i n g voted fLOl
:
\r
live for it, t h a t is, to live u p to
>iriiv^T
\
can be mentioned here.
The trees give a bordeaux solution,
several years, and gave his reason
t
h
e
truest
ideal
of
m
a
n
h
o
o
d
a
n
d
'reason why he said he was a fruit
F o r a raspberry rust, dig t h e m why.
l i e had a b r o t h e r who was
womanhood.
Mrs. Mayo's talk
crank was because his health out.
a rabid republican, and t h i s b r o t h would not .permit him to indulge
S p r a y i n g with b o r d e a u x mix- er would come to h i m a n d tell him was well received a n d a short disin heavier farming b u t since die hire will prevent p l u m blight. if lie voted any t h i n g but a r e p n b - C'n^-'oTi was l i s t e n e d to from F .
h a d had fruit on
t h e - table F o r a scab on pear a n d curl leaf l i c , m t k . k ( 1 , t ,,^ c o n i l t ' r y w o u l ( j ^ 0 \V. Munson, Miss II. N o r t o n a n d
(TOO. .Barnes.
F o l l o w i n g this a
nearly every day in the year he spray with bordeaux mixture.
• to t h e bow-wows.
H e also had^a
h a s not had to employ a physician. : S p r a y for fungus g r o w t h b e f o r e ' b l . o t h e i . i n _ l a w w h o w a s ft ( l v m o . tice recitation by Mrs. F r a n k LanH i s hobby was m a r k e t fruit grow- the trees lc iivo out.
^ , s i n g e n t i t l e d the '-'Gypsie F l o w e r
c r f t ^ | m ( 1 ]w w m i M C(mm
am]
G i r l " was listened K>, aftei," which
ing, so he gave some of t h e mis\ 0 V e r s p r a y while t h e trees h i m i M H . v o t e ( I a n y t h i n g b u t a
Prof. B. A. H i n s d a l e of A u n Artakes, and what he had learned a r »Mii blossom but j u s t after the democrat ticket the c o u n t r y would ,
"" " "< Yi'"' 7 , 7 - , T , " \ "
from tin m. Fruit trees and cut;- blossom d r o p s while, the fruit is , 0 to the bow-wows, and he con^
"
""
^ *° *
f
'
«
>
i
>
f
i
n
u
i
*
.
!
o
'
i
|
>
,
r
.
i n g - must not be planted on low still in an upright p o r t i o n , a n d v\m]lH[
) (l( , l u i I U f i ^ l t i ( w n t
to
<*lay ground u n h s s the land is p l u m s should be spr<°.\ed often; alone as t h e c o u n t r y was sure to
'he I h H ' H i ; ! i- w e 1 ' ! S^'? tn vow.
t h o r o u g h l y untlerilrained; and not j a r r i n g t h e trei' does no good,
go to the bow-wows a n d he ..did
/
on light sandy :-oi| unless a c l a y .
Thin out pears one-half,
not"
wi.-h
*
o
help
t
h
e
m
.
..jr_ -...,¾
subsoil underneath.. Do not see 1 T w i g blight should be cut o u t
IILC Coining Woman.
vci<-c--.i
Mrs. Smith t h o u g h t he o u g h t
_
Y; '•• .vi._
how many acres of fruit you can
Cultivate up to the time of harto have had i n t e r e s t e n o u g h in W i i n y u e > t'» | I , I , : i h w h i l e iu*i" l m > F e p l i ,i j I • i, ; ^ 1 i j | ' .\ ll Ii
. V
i n r ^ e but have les^ acres with t h e yostiug the fruit, ami always after n | s ( . o u
l u - u d t t i l i d i t h e l ^ i b x i l s tull
;i> t h e "K d " a n d | i " i n • • — I v i . - . l , — s 1 1 • . i
•VTTTTy to vote.
1
l
l
i
h
v
c
'
l
,
(
)
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i
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.
.
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r
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,
.
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e]>]
t
'
.
l
l
l
i
^
i
.
i
i
WOlMilU
w
I
l
O
1(H)1<S
same amount of fertilizer. I n dry a ]ij^lit rain,
The discussion began t o b o r d e r
1
1
j
aflei 1'ium.. >>'ul 'm'.i ;'l times get run ' ^ ' I t l h o . \; =• n i - ' • - . T : ;o o -e (')' \ -n d
weather
cultivate
very
often.
Graft and p r u n e pears before t n o ( . ] o s r ! y onto poliri^sjjo^t he inlinwii in health. I'licy A ill l>e trouhl- points in \ " •: , 1 ' v i i ' i ' i i M , e h i i , , . .
D o n ' t plant any c u t t i n g s or plants they are in blossom
!
IV\\i
s t i t u t e adjourned u n t i l t h e even- n l w i t h i n - s .)!' ; i | i p e t i t e , l i e a d u c b ^ s ,
j u s t because of a' D i g n a m e , look,
H e r b e r t M Wells gave some
i n g session.
^leej)les>ne>s, t'aiijting or. dizzy .-pells..
m o r e to quality a n d size t h a n ^ d
points on - " T h e F a r m e r ' s
50 YEAriS
T h e house was c r o w d e d T h u r s - Tae most woiiuVrlui remedy l(»r the.-e
othenvise. D o not be too anxious? G a r d e n . "
H e t h o u g h t tin two
NCE
day ev« ning to 'hear M r s . M a r y women is •Mectrn: bitteis. Thousand.to raise a big crop, p r u n e and got important, features of a garden
Mayoof P a t i l e Creek give a lecture ul sari'erer,- irouj hone bjek and weik
a better crop.
P e a c h e s if thor- ( h e a l t h and s o m e t h i n g g.»od '.o
on " T h e Mother i n H e r Relation kidneys r'^e up and call it blessed, ll
oughly pruned will be as good at r a t ) was e n o u - h to cause every-'
i- a medicine t >r woxeii. t'eaiale cointo t h e P u b l i c School.'' The^place
t h e end of VI years as at any l u >dv to hav«> a garden.
Helen a
pidinti-; -a.ud r.^rveus troubles of ;iil
o t h e r time. T e a c h e s a n d plums good jjlace for a g a r d e n , which w h e r e a rnuthc-'- is bc.«,t known is kinds.are *=oon i;elie\ed by the DM- of
TRADE MARKS
in
the
h
o
m
e
;
tiie
isext
is
in
the
DESIGNS
electric
rittc-rs.
Indicate ^vono-i!
s h o u l d have a • t h o r o u g h ipruning should be a moist, sandy loam,
COPYRIGHT* A C
Anyone pending a nkeioh and description may
in the t(>p, which sliould be done plant a good g a r d e n and have' a school, a place w h e r e a m o t h e r Shoul<i keep tins remedy on hand 1 • quickly
iiacertaln our opinion free w n e t b e r a n
Invention 'i« probably p a t e n t a b l e . CommUinlras
h
o
u
l
d
visit
oi'tener.
A
child
build
up
the
system.
Only
50c
per
as early
a.s
March.
Fruit good garden.
tinns strictlv confldentlai. Handbook on P a t e n t s
I t \* one of t h e
F e b . IJ and L
T h e first session
H i n d e r a n c e s o f a F a r m Life may
be s t e p p i n g s t o n e s to a h i g h e i
life."
T h e afternoon session o p e n e d
at 1:140 by music by Miss (rill.
T h e question box c o n d u c t e d by
J . N. S t e a r n s , was t h e n openeil
of which we h e r e give the a n s w e r s :
p u i>lic.
! ARBOI'f
1 1 -..
^
•
'
"
'
•
•
*
_
L
i
~
_
- - - - -
should
be
thinned
to not greatest helps to t h e f a n n e r s wife. s h o u l d not be s e n t to school too bottl« l-v r\ A. Sitdei
less than
G in. a p a r t ;
q u a l - P l o w for garden as soon as possi- y o u n g nor shouhl it be k e p t at
S T W O I . i i V AND ACTTTJ
ity v."ill pay more t h a n q u a u i t y .
ble in t h e s p r i n g , plant a large h o m e a n d be t a u g h t at h o n n ' for miXTEu-'X.
geatlerae .
U d i o s ' • trnvel for r t i p o » - ^
L a t e r he k l e , -HUMlibed h o n e e n Micli'gaa, M o a t U j
My principal profit has lain in variety and k e e p it well cultivate fear of evil influence.
fW.OOaacUxppn' ••>. l\r
"•' stoudy. RefereMU
t h e fact t h a t my fruit h a s been e d . H e also gave some of the will have to e n t e r t h e world a n d
t h e school will h e l p h i m to meet **«<»-**"•»*" •*-;'• . "'' *"" vt ' l «^ » •
p r e p a r e d right for m a r k e t which m e a n s to r i d ' t h e g a r d e n .of some
w a s worked u p a good demand for oi- i t s p ( , ^ .^ p o ( a t o l n i <, s o n •
m y fruit.
I always g r a d e t h e t o m a t o vines m u s t be picked;
A YKAK F01J.
f r u i t and d e m a n d a price accord- c a b b a g e worm can only be de1D i
o yst roved b y insect p o w d e r s c a t t e r
H . E. Reed led in t h e discussion ' e d on t h e worm; flee beetle, scatter
s a i d he h a d learned t h a t t h o r o u g h ' ashes over t h e m .
T h e s u b s c r i p t i o n p r i c e of D e m o r
cultivation, s p r a y i n g a n d t h i n u - i
]Mr .Beckwith t h e n led iu t h e
est's is r e d u c e d to $1.00 a year.
i n g had helped him to succeed. ; discussion of this p a p e r ; t h o u g h t
T h e question was asked "how t o ' everyone o u g h t to have a garden
p r u n e . " Mr. S t e a r n s said when \ b u t . d o n ' t have it too far from tlie
first setting o u t trees, thin the house. D o n ' t bed it b u t have a
D e m o r e a t ' a F a m i l y tVlaffiixine i-. n t o r s f l i i i i i K
r o o t ; peach trees should have their level cultivation.
T o m a t o e s , he
tn
b i o n . < k t i f f a z i l i e , a l t h o u p b it ^1VI>H lh<: very ' Ma lioute iinil
t o p s all cut off the second y e a r ; said, should be t r a n s p l a n t e d when
o r : gn fafliions ciicli raoath; tills in only one of'it,-< m n y
ilv;ii>le fe;iiuri '.
It lia« soinHliiiig l o r eaeh mcmlicr ot tlir a m -.y, for ever>
p r u n e t h e trees so t h e b r u n c h e s t h e stalk is a b o u t t h e size; of a |
dci> r t r h e n t pi-Uhe household, and Ha varied c o n t e n t s HIT of the h i ^ h e d
a r e very low.
d e a d pencil, spread t h e roots each!
:;r.i e, m a k i n g it, pre e m i n e n t l y , T i l e i ' u a i i I y i r l u t ^ u K i n e o ' t i n .V r i d .
It furniftlieH tho best, t h o u g h t s of tlie raoht i n t e r e s t i n g urcl
Jirs. F . W. M u n s o n of Marion way lengthwise in a small t r e n c h , j
t progressive w r i t e r s of t h e day. and is abreast of t h e tinn-H in
t h e n read an i n t e r e s t i n g paper"on in time, hill t h e m u p as you;
ov • ythiDR— Art, L i t e r a t u r e , Science, Society Affairs, Kictinn, H o u s e
hold MatUTB, Sport*, e t c . — a gln^le a n n i b e r frequently oontainini;
fully
" T h e H i n d e r a n c e s of F a r m Life would potatoes, set t h e m 5 or C>[
200 t o »*) fine ensmviiu-a, m i i k i n e it t h e MOST COM 1'LKTK AND MOS
, , i
,
— feet apart.
Melon a n d s q u a s h •
PKOFUriELY I L L U S T l l A T i i l ) ol t h e t i H K A T
HOM'ULIKK.
I have tfiven Chamberlains Cou-di vines when at t h e l e n g t h of 4;
l > o t n o r e « t ' M It a i r t i x i n e Fachion l ) r | > a r t i n t n t in in •>;•••
way far ahead of t h a t c o n t a i n e d in any.other pulilicatiou.
Snbserib
Ramedy a fair test and consider it one feet should be n i p p e d back.
|
ern are entiled each m o n t h to p a t t e r n * of the l a t e n t f a s h i o n s in w o m a n *
of the very • b^M, reined i«j! for croup]
^Miss
Steadmau
then
en-j
a t t i r e a t n * c o a t t o t l i e i u o t n e r t h a n t h i t neoesnary for pontage an
that I have ever found. One dose has I t e r t a i n e d t h e a u d i e n c e with a fine
wrapping.
always been sufficient, althou*b 1 nes j s e l e < , t i ( m 0 f i n s t r u m e n t a l music,
it freely. Any cold mv chiMren eon-1 . T h e F a r m e r a n d H i s O p p o r tract yields very ^ f 1 ^
^
' ^ ' | t u u i t i , s ' ' was t h e n p r e s e n t e d to
c*ne. I can conscientiously recom
t h e i n s t i t u t e in a well p r e p a r e d than a year'a Mbaortptlon to D e m o r e a t ' a M t a f f o s i a e c a n b e qp*>M><
&T aubscriblnf A ^
it for croup and colds in child
i
ONUEy««o»afBtthe»»faziNaatth«redaoad
prloej and will also reoflive tha handaome a&>oent
eo. E. Wolff, Clerk of the Cir- p a p e r by L. 8. Broiul» y of M a r - Xmaa N u m p t r with lta tetntiful panel piotare aapplemeat,'
B e m i 1 8 1 M by m o n e y order, raffia.
ion.
H
e
t
h
o
u
g
h
t
t
h
e
f
a
r
m
e
r
has
t e n d letter Ir ctaeok t o t h e
at-Caurl, Fern an pin*, Fia. Sold by
DijMOREST P U B U 8 H ING CO., 110 Filth Ave., New York City
come to the time w h e n t h e y most
# - A . Sitrkr, Druggist.
DEMORESTS
FAMILY
MAGAZINE.
No BetterChr istmasGift
sent l'rt>e. e i lent -teency for securjiiip'mtent*.'
P a t e n t s tnkon tbroUBfh M u n n & Co. receive
special n•;.'.'. '. v.^Oiout c n a r g e , in t h e
Scientific American.
A lianIIHPI'H l>• il:\--itrated weekly. T-arceat circulation of iiiiy scietitjfic Journal. Term*. IS a
ve:ir: four mnnUis, fL feoldbyall newsdeulera.
MUNN & Co."'B">»*-> New York
Braucb Office, 62& F SU Waahiagton, D. C.
"Saved My Life"
A VETERAN'S 9TORY.
"Several years ago, while in Fort
Snelling, Minn., I caught a s e v e n
cold, attended with & terrible cough,
t h a t allowed me no rest day or
night. The -doctors after exhausting their remedies, pronounced my
case hopeless, say.
ing they could d o n *
more for me. At
this time a bottle of
AYER'S
C h erry Pectoral waft
^ sent to me by a
friend who urged
me to take it, which
I did, and soon after,I was greatly
relieved, and in a short time wa»
completely cured. I have never had
much of a cough since that time*
and I firmly believe Ayer's Cherry
Pectoral saved my life.**—W. H .
WA&D, 8 Quimby Av., Lowell,!
AYEfTS
Cherry Pectoral
SighMt Awarda at W«dTt IWr.
watt mis mm
/
s
awTr*"" 1 '
•r
iiT>j
(
'*v)K
?•$?
&M
\ > .
< : •
••#r\
From Extreme Nenousnpss.
H e said his p u r p o s e was n o t to
m a k e on o n s l a u g h t n o r t o e u l o g i z e t h e m . T h e v a l u e of t h e r u r a l
school w a s t h a t it b r o u g h t t h e
pupil into a closer relation to
n a t u r e a n d it a l s o h a d a w h o l e some advantage.
T
tWT
n o OHO r e m e d y c a n c o n t a i n tlv
t li'nu• nr •; noci'ss.iry t o r i i r e a l l d i s e n s ea, i s u f a c t w e l l l . t i o w n t o e v e r y r m u .
D r . Mile^' Sustan
of r e s t o r a t i v e ]lci,: ainss
c o n s i s t s of s e v e n d i s t i n c t i v e l y
dliZcv^iic
p r e p a r a t i o n s , e a c h for i t s o w n p u r p o s e .
Mrs. L. <\ l i n i r n l o y , 37 H e n r y K., S(, C ; i t \ e r i n e s , On r i / i i o , w r i t e s : ' T o r y e ; : ' s I .suif o r o d f r o m . .-.treuie iiervousru'.-s a n d .inii! y l n g c o n s t i])!cti,)ii,(le»V( lopl n,: In to pulpil -LT:O':
a n d \ve;i ].:;.'.-s of The h e a r t . I v, :i,- :.\\.-' 1 ;•;
s l e e p , S M I T T " , ! n : i e l i f m n i lit :..!::• \'i , p : I r. ; '
m y I<-'"1 til<\t', j>.111>11:LI io.'i a:i'i a CHI-:; r,- .
f e e l l n / o t we;'',.;:,'^s a n d prostrat !<ui. J !
usiii;^ J)r. MT s' N i - r v i n o , H e a r t Vvc< • ...
N e r v e a./id L i v e r VA'..\ a n d HJ A n t l - I ;.:•
P l i l a t o r e l i e v o s u d d o u n^ri/xy^ajs of |)i.ia
a n d heivl;!e]]< . I s o o n l e l t m n e U impi-ov »-u
a n d t h e pairiri a n d a c h e s a n d w o a r i n c - . i left
mo.
1 1 h:: n touic P r . M i l e s ' K < ' ' o r a t i v c
T o n i c ar;J a m jioiv r e s t o r e d t o m y f o r m e r
good health."
Dr. M i l e s ' R e m e d i e s I
a r e s o l d b y :i'A d r u y pj:;ts u i i o o r ;i p o s i t i v e _ _ _
p u a r a n i i -\ iir*>t b o t t l e E a B r * I T ! ? I ' S i A * ^
h e u e i i t s o" P M I - - y r e funded.
]»ook on d i s - w^m,
e a s c s o f tJie h i - : f t a n d W " " H e a l t h
n e r v e s f ••<-<>. A c c e s s ,
DK. M I L E S I L D I C A L C O . , K l k h a r t , I i j d .
L
< PATTERNS
'.
/
t
i
*
\
,
•
I
'
" T H E STYLISH P A T T E R N . " Aftistic* Fashionable. Original. PerfectFitting. Prices l O a n a 1 5 c e n t s .
None higher. Noqfrietter at any price.
Some reliable merchant sells them
nearly every city or town. Ask for
them, or they can be had by mail from
us in either N e w York or Chicago.
Stamps taken* Latest Fashion Sheet
sent upon receipt of one cent to pay
postage.
c
I M -CALLS
j MAGAZINE MAR
T h e evening sessiou closed with
a song b y Miss J u l i a Ball.
O n a c c o u n t of b e i n i j c r o w d e d
with extra work, we are c o m p e l l ed to c o n c l u d e t h e i n s t i t u t e r e p o r t
next week.
*
Interesting Items.
It no a- looks as though Mason and
Stockbridyre would be left o u t in the
(,'oM, <o t'nr as *lin Lansing and Dex'er
road is i;on"vned
The company demands $25,000 from the cotintv seat
and M.i>on people are- not inclined
•hat way.
As* to Stock bridge, t h e
\J -IDK Jotirn.il .says: "The company
w h i- <o < iiild the elech-ic railroad
MS CALL
< - . BAZAR*
The country school should have
m o r e m o n t h s of s c h o o l ; t e a c h e r s
h i r e d (if g o o d o n e s ) for n o t l e s s
time than one year.
He thought,
as the r u r a l schools were s o m e w h a t small, t h e p l a n t h a t is c a r r i e d
o u t in s o m e O h i o c o u n t i e s a g o o d
one, which was a school b u i l d i n g
in t h e c e n t e r of t h e c o u n t y a n d
o m n i b u s e s h i r e d to c a r r y t h e
children
to a n d
from
school.
S o m e of t h e e v i l s of s m a l l s c h o o l s
was, a t e a c h e r c o u l d n o t d o a s
well, t h e s c h o o l c o u l d n o t b e
graded or
classified so
there
w o u l d b e a l a c k of e n t h u s i a s m a n d
interest, w h i c h c o u l d be b e n e f i t e d
if s m a l l s c h o o l s s h o u l d b e e n l a r g ed by u n i t i n g different d i s t r i c t s .
T h i s talk was w a r m l y discussed in
favor of r u r a l s c h o o l s .
j
I
J
1
I
"
I
l-'oin Lan>inw lo Ann Arbor has se..Mivd a fraucbi.v from the t o w n s h i p
o i l , . , , , and m.iy w
rftockbridge
the '' l»v "Jtocj»'Mi."i\ on a'-connt of the
lvfiiMil of the towtisoin boMrd to y r a n t
ni) ; iyv 1 j r and
1 t'i a i j c i i i s e Ii . 'cNNrith
;1( ; ihciv
: 1 <'i._'i)t b' >use nrt 1
.
' '
I' ; - ' .'.:ii<- ! ! i^<^ t in ;
;li I -i-i. t.u- road
•.if! )>••> h a v e t
it -r
to'>ln'id^e
I
i r;
village of
1; 1110
; t o •• \ b l i i i _ ;
i'i,M)L
m i l e s,
Freeof Charge to Sufferers.
umbrellas when the Bun begins to shine
always are. T h a t girl just lmhind her,
Cut this out and take it to your
who has already taken time to fold her drutfuist and y;et a sample bottle tree
umbrella neatly, even though it is of Dr. Kind's New Discovery for Consoaking wet, te going to be an old maid. sumption, Coughs and Colds.
They
She l i narrow-minded, too. The next du not a>k you to buy before t r y i n g .
one has bound t h e folds down, but it This will show you the Kieat merits of
looka uneven and bulgy. That wom- tliU truly wonderful remedy, and
an's children will always look dowdy, show you what can be accomplished
but she will nurse them successfully by the regular size bottle-,. This is no
through innumerable attacks of croup experiment, and would be disastrous
and rash, and no family in town will to the proprietors, did they not know
have better things to eat. That Bhort , t j ) a t i t w o u i l i i n v a r j a b l y cure.
Many
woman, with her umbrella flopping thlt of the best physicians are now usintf it
way and that, will alwaye be poor, in their practice with tfreat results
because she will give away everything and are relying on it in most severe
as soon as she gets it. tier's isn't al- cuses. I t is g u a r a n t e e d . Trial bottles
together a commendable generosity, ei- tree at F. A. S i l l e r a druK store.
ther, for it is caused more by lack of Regular size 50 cents and $ 1 .
power to say 'no' than by an inherent
desire to help her fellow-creaturee.
That dark woman with the tip of her
S u b s c r i b e for t h e D i s p a t c h .
umbrella trailing downward and backdard at an angle of 45 degrees is malicious. I wouldn't trust her out of my i
sight. She'd say something mean
about me t h e first chance sbe got. The !
A( t on a im prtodple—
riigulaio (he live?, ettmtch
one who carries her umbrella swung )
u d bowofe through
tk*
carelessly over her shoulder is a hap- j
nenm to. k i u n r P n i «
tpttdUv cure bilionWMt,
py-go-lucky individual, who will al- i
torpid lifer u d coosnpir
ways have a good time, not because she '
Hon. SmaUeiW mlWert,
•uertt
5pdOM^30ote>
earns it, but because. the world owes
Slam
la.
0^. mtSXS
it to her, and she Is going to have h e r
Sold by F, A. Siglep.
rights."
mn %mmtw
NOTICE,
W e . the undersigned, do hereby
a^ree to refund the money on t w o
25-cent bottles of Baxter's M a n d r a k e
Uitters, if it fails to cure c o n s t i p a t i o n
billiousness, sick headache or any of
tbe diseases for which it is r e c o m m e n d ed. Also will refund the money on a
50 cent bottle of l)own> Elixir, if it
does not cure any cough, cold, c r o u p ,
whooping cough, or throat or l u n g
difficulty. We al>o g u a r a n t e e on« 2 5
cent bottle of either of the above to
prove satisfactory or money refunded.
r\ A. HioLia.
Do You Want (i(»Id?
Everyone de>ire.<) to keep informed
on Yukon, the Klondyke a n d Alaakan
gold fields. Send 10c for l a r g e Compendium of va-t information and big.
color m a p to Hamilton P u b . Co., Indianapolis, Ind.
r-
s-.w--
"UT SHINES
• H. lp9J&*^
T h e C a a q e s of Corns a n d B n n l o n s .
I
TIJE RI•:\VEST
^^
The feet a r e surely pliant members ' i ^ h i ' ^ t H C l « n ( J |
^ t 5 p t c h .
When they can endure the variformed
I ' l ' U L I S i l E D K V K B Y T H C H S D A Y I ' J K . I I N G BY
shoes that from time to time compel
L. A N D R E W S
them into new habits with each new F R A N K
pair put on; yet they rarely rebel or.
Editor
and
IHroprielor.
give real trouble unless barbarously
Subscription Jrice $1 in Advance
neglected. Corns and
bunions are
more often the result of wearing old tJLiter^a ;u ttie f-ostoflice at i'mckney, Michigan,
tic -iJcoaa-claBB matter.
shoes than in the wrong selection of
AJvertiria- i v i e s made koowa on application.
new ones. A constant change of footRu. InCc'd Carl^. ^i.Od per y e a r .
gear inures the foci to variety, and
Drum uiiu uiari'itt^-; uuticea puuiiebed true.
AJIUU Juixiu.TiU 'H e n t e i - u i n i n e n t e tuny u« paid
even those who
<-i.:inne th^mselvas
fur, ii tiis-irf.;. >j\ i'i-»>s..'Ltin^ Hie ui..ce vvitk tickwholly to the re;tdy-r,ade article need e:* ut tn iiiire:i.ti. -j u rase tickets art not brought
suffer no ill e n V i s h they will keep j : o u >••' ', £"<-_,i.:i—r .uTt.- ^ l i i U-) tuir^pil,
A! 1 ma"!*-; ;:i jooai :L< ..:ii;e cuiiimu will \).> cli^rii
their shoe supp'iy a:; arefii^v replenished as is the rest of rh* wardrobe. ^ ^ : ¾ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^
It is one of the nvst fallacious of , ^1.^ 1,: -^<--<- • '-^o nat-r-d iiocoiiua^d, »M
practices t o attempt to economize by ^ , , ^ ,
^ • ^ ' ^ ^ r ^ i u i ^ l ^ L
wearing old shoes about the house, un- *- ' ^ ^ - i IMTU.X,. ;.,, 1Uh.;r^ <m iun»ru»u tue
less they possess all
their buttons, ! s *"' v **«»••
J Q/i tJ?t!.\'l
f.\ G /
have straight heels and SOIPS. and are 1; u. l.e :)1...1¾ :I..-L, u -p. i-iait} . >\ u UUTe all llUdti
daily brushed and aired, as a^'e their Jn. 1 ibei.iterri siyleei j . 1 ,. p, , etc., waicii tfnaDK- =
•-.V.ti.-i;; .^1 ^mas 0 ; '.k.^iii, SUOLI tto liuoko,
newer fellows. Only in this way may U.5i;.>
. a-j,j, ,.-1-, tv.-icrs, iij^ruiiiiu. r, bin il-adb, .Not'1
j the ankles be continually .braced into ' I ' . ' . . ' - . - " • • L a M . U l ' . - a l o , < LlJ i . - , . k „ . - l l i j l l J J l i l . - . , « . - i u . , ' i i i
; • / " ; • ! . , , : t . . , ,-. i j ^ . i
. r j •>:.•;! ;..-si i i u i .':f.
I'l^'.-J*
l s ^ i g h > n e s s and the toes alb.v.-ed to A £> ^ 1 . 0 ' 1 W i l l ii C d . l !•: •»•> i ' .
.,1,:
11 I
' m o V e g e n t l y !n a n a , m o s t 8trii':qht di"
•.u '.
rection. When the foot is thrown out
.*.*..
•••
of balance by worn-dowrn heels, the
j toes, attempting to re'ain a level po1 ii L
V * i_ jut :i U L
L/ A. A II
., t
' sition, perform prehensile f<ats. which
I r e ? r > m b l e the actl-n of the forebears
VILLA or.
some scientists have a.cCT:l>e1 to us.
fie
• M o v e o v e r ( t I i e cn-ubined h^at and
.a
' m o i s t u r e of the normal foor hardens
«9
e
• the leather of the co"tinroi:?ly. worn
; fliop into permanent crease?, which in
i turn render the foot extrrr.t'My sensi-
...
u- • • I 'Wfc>—•
(
1. .\ : . 0 . u r i .
n i
;;:.xn\ TAN,
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andA
to. I ox hLU&nJ •
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>':vh,-?.s it
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put u;> in
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r.ia*' '..,- »<. • L A ^ . L 3 '
LiE5 A N D
. 1. R^iuires
.
J.
P.
. r it.
Oboe Polish
f
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5--,^
'%&%*®m
I
Brightest ladies' m ^ a z i n e published.
<\\ : lie r o a d — L - > l i o
jOcal
anje
Invaluable for the home. Fashions of
j tivp, a n d a g t r n g ^ M n r a-gai^4—^g.-hyrrf/ L- . 1 I
J.V'T
!» the day, Home Literature, Household.!
,,,,
.,
, . Tr
,XT
, .environment enlarges the j c ' n t s and
• Hints, Fancy Work, Current Topics,
'. .rr
TT
t Ficticu, all for only 50 cents a year, In- I
llie i p . s i l a u t i Y o u n g W o m e n s jcausefi. l o c a l d i B t r e s s . 1 I a r p a r - s BaJ cluding
eluding d true pattern, yo«rown selec- "• O h r i s t i a t ) A s s o c i a t i o n
d i s c u s s e d ( Bar.
tion any time* Send two 2-cec.t stamps
for sample copy. Address
• tiie s u b j e c t " T h e m a n I w o u l d n o t
A (l good Housekeeper*
use it.
r*
M
marry" the other evening, about
R e m o v e s aU d u s t a n d dirt f r o m c a r - M
:
T H E McCALL C O M P A N Y ,
X
STORYETTES.
p e t s and R u ^ s .
. • Jj
i ...l.-r'
It
\ (42-146 West Uth Street,. New York, k (JO m e m b e r s b e i n g p r e s e n t ,
R e m o v e s all g r e a s e s p o t s , fruit s t a i n s m
lUOCL.and coal s o o t .
M
A gentleman talking to a friend
been more to t h e
I
189 Fifth Avenue, Chicago.
I would h a v e
R e s t o r e s c o l o r s and r a i s e s t h e n a p .
K|
about the antiquity of his
family,
T h e w o r k is s i m p l e a n d c a n be p e r - M
r
A formed by a n y person.
A
p o i n t a n d p o s s i b l y p r o d u c t i v e of which he carried up to Xoah, was told
01
YA
W a r r a n t e d t o be free ¢ 0
BuchjMib- W
3 s t a n c e s as A l k a l i , A c i d , B e n x i n e , R e s i n A
i. h "
a ^rent d e a l m o r e g o o d t o s o m e that he was a mere mushroom.' '"Ah
J
| ana A m m o n i a , w h i c h are injurioua t o K
>
i!::y
1..,
,;
:
.
.
:
.
r
n
i
a
;
.
of thorn ' t . l e a s t if t h e y h a d d i s - | s a i d h e - ' * h o w s o - P r a - V ? " "Why,- re- c - 1 : . : 1 , .1'. . ::• • .
W. c a r p e t s a n d fabrics.
W
The
r
A
Otif ran cleun.H J?.5' yard.9 of carpet.
A
T 4 ,r,
A
- I , , plied the other, "w,he;i I was in Wales, A - , \ . . : . ^ ^ , .->•..
i l i _ r>el . iL- ' .
i . ,! . l
cussed
l h ( , m a n t h « 7 w o u l d a - p e d i g r e e of. a p a r . i c u l a r f a m i l y W M
n o j i' 1
S
W e a l s o manufacture t h e
A
••i"v ni the w.av'of co-;!"or;%l>!e
^- > V-.-.\n the pi-'&r.klin
i'd,: l < A'. m a r r y "
r
a
t
h
e
r
t
h
a
n
'
'
T
h
e
m
a
n
^i'.
I A 1 O > -.' \ .
shown
to
me;
it
filled
about
five
large
1
: .-'ir>.'f •; '•••.'.«!? a.re 5 i : !-> «..o ''. a
4 ELECTRIC WALL TAPER
4
O
,io. >.l. ,1. ' .,
AS:O~
t h e y w o u l d n o t m a r r y ' 1 f o r in a l l skii:s of parchment and near the mid- n\ni\
ti:-.:.: > u : i . .
ae -L-i
.0 0 ^ 1 >Cti ,
-:-..<' • . . : a -- •
-,- v u • f
4
AXD PRESCO CLEANER 4
1]'. L."i l U u ^ . W 11. •' - , • • '
. .I..
^ .it'J li.eaa
" i ^ . 1 • i.t.- I " : ,(•;:«: f "
"r::.
p r o b a b i l i t y t h e m a n t h e y w o u l d dle of it was a note margin, "About this i l t 0 M> )1 t i l . , \ I'^I.K ,
m
B e s t in the m a r k e t .
m
P . Ui.
: u>D
, time the wnrld was created.* "
n o t m a r r y w o u l d h a v e n o d e s i r e i 0 n the occasion of the wedding of
i "THE ELECTRICn
J
^0^.
i^Tlii;
to m a r r y them.
B u t t h e n t h e y j the late duchess of Teck to her handjj
Bicycle Chain Lubricant J
some
but
impecunious
husband,
her
K
s p e a k s for itself.
K
X ' -\v l . e p l i e v . , ' ;i,f- in,.k^ ; d i d not g i v e t h a t a t h o u g h t ,
per
tle A
;
b
r
o
t
h
e
r
,
t
h
e
d
u
k
e
o
f
C
a
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b
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e
,
g
a
v
e
i
f
P
*-'•
-1
"
''i-t\
ot
t,.i*
;>la>.v,
tueet6
^
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e
r
,
'
^
W
h
y
n
o
t
b
a
y
the
b
e
s
t
w
h
e
n
It
c
o
s
t
s
#
in ( ' v . u t id a ii v u i i r d'-C!
T
h
n
i
v
is
a
n
o
l
d
f
a
b
l
e
of
h
a
p
s
.
v
o
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t
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,
h
o
K
i
f
^
f
+
v,
4«
wi
1
t^iru
Sun
>.
.^
:
J
'
K
r.
Mutttwv
Uail.
I
A
n
o
m
o
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e
t
h
a
n
t
h
e
c
h
e
a
p
w
o
r
t
h
l
e
s
s
stuff
A
flfftH,inoi«
4*
N.
- - l !lM
ni'M! 'I'!.
m-ic
\ e n t to his unfortunate habit of think- |
I fA now on the market ?
K
i I o l m M«.-^inr-SSlc\>um.y.*»«.iegat<..
r
] t h e fox a n d t h e g r a p e s t h a t m a y ing aloud. When the duke of Xeck sol- :
0 1 -• ti' I' your inks'anb
1\
j f
w
S e n d for c i r c u l a r s .
Jl
j b e p e c u l i a r l y a p p l i c a b l e i n t h i s p m n l v n i p r i r e d hirrmplf w i t h "'ill h i s : P i , 1 , , k u t > > v - '• s - t \ K. M.-din-e li,i,l ,-vory X
worldly goods to endow the bride, the ; K*v. I ' . S . .)>.:,.•., ,-,-^.
Mir i:. .; »nm-.i. s^- . f
V
T H E ELECTR1C CLEANSER CO.,
case.
:A ^ l K .
.zreu
m
e
s
u
i
e
m
,
f
^
p
w
o
K
i
U
L
h
Meets
cverv
.**ii
unday
j
duke of Cambridge marred the solem- ( I ^ P W O K T H " U \ , ~ ^ "\ZS,."..Z'r7'2\^ZZ
I^
Canton, Ohio. '
"
|j
K r U'iS Ccmplcxion.
nity of the occasion by exclaiming , -^• u-iyns m <:.-^ L»,-i,,ck in tin- M. I-;. r"tiUrc h. A
itiuB
• • •
-•
- quite audibly: "Well, by Jove! And . . . , 1^- , 1 - :, ! ^' • -^- ' l -ijtt-'njik'.
^ ^ , ^..Mi^
- • ^• If' •^unie
i\ n.'.f, I're*.
j
CARRYING T H E UMBRELLA.
Wales gave him his shirts!"
'li/'iiid(lioa\.
A
Vour
Conclusive Opinions F o r m e d
by
A tourist, stopping a; a small coun- J atu:rno.)u at ;;:w o'ci^k. a; .v. 1-: t-UilrL-u. All A n I d e a l F a m i l y M e d i c i n e • . ; •
£*y
yuini tnd
^ \ 0
try
hotel in -Ks£i;-;::d,
Kr.£;;~::d, seeing the ! C l , r d i a l l > ' i n v i ^ K
Fanhion
of
Doing:
it*
|
\^£*
r.rlemn* toun J p r o w - \ v ^ >
.clitU v.m^fc.., <«j> t Tiutondeat.
r 'iv.a <.ia ttic ru,7^i-,i suit*.- 0 1' ^-. ,^^.
Two men who sat near the window of hostler expert and tr..-table, inquired
fie W HITK Mot NT.•'. N?-. ' y^
a hotel in a great city a few days ago j how long he h a d lived there and what ; ' T ^ C . - . T A. ;mriB. so<iei- <»f*;hie nUoe" m*et
'Contains neither ve^t-kibie i-.ur nuiK.iai\
PURE, HARMLESS. REL1ABI
whiled away the time, by watching the ; countryman he was. "I'se Yorkshire," j A »»v»>r>- toirc. saturaay ev^uiu^1 in ttie W.Mat
p d i O t l . UAEES THK SKIN dllDOTU AND
iaU
L>om>h
Jfc
cvr.Aii. Ei.i-i-iove»T»n, FrccKle9,
women go by and commenting on their j said the fellow, "and ha' lived sixteen ^ ' . i ! " ! !
'
' - ' ™°^?M.
Simlnwn. CurciS*ltRheoni,y
umbrellas.
years
here."
"I
wondes^'ureplted
t
h
e
I7"NKT[ITS
OK
M
A
I
C
;
Kczenm—all akin disease.
v«ui&s e n or before fall
PRIC*. S5 C B S T S ,
The storm had abated ahout an hour gentleman, "that in ^> Jlapg 41 j » r i o 4 [^lle^m\t'ih^
ul
liall in the'SwkrthQu't\»l«jc.
m
A Box.
before, and the sun had peered through , so clever a fellow as you seem tf> b€ Vieitic"jff»rotliejr.-. are Ck>rsiallv l u i - i t i d .
^^
CuatuCaxinsuiiL, Sir k c U h i Oommander
H rift, in the clouds, but, for all that, ! have r.ut come to he master of- t h ^ h 0 .1.
5>
the first pedestrian went stalking past J tel itself,
'Aye," answered the $oa&- 1 r ivin^ton u^e, No.re, y A A. -M., K^-.'«r
r
i c t o r ' s V n r k c h i t v - r . m * VTT- LJ ' «|unnuuoation Tuesday evening, on or I w to re
^MES w . FOSTER CO., BAT> ,..
with her umbrella still held aloft.
i ler. "but maiis,ter
s 1 in Kbmit. too. A tlu . .jp^ l i u i imK>n
v.. M.
u b- ^i„t
•H *N ' H i v a
"That
women,"
said
one
of
the
men,
s^ocnuQ o,d, w '"00 a a i S O d 'M ST
M K K OV V..\* IT.IL.V Sl'AK luoetseach month
•-;,. i \u I ^-jtij JO jT>iisi|qiul uo fii--"> RJi
:.: .-(i ^ . 1 "is as patient as Job
8 B
"&'•<' 1 -ruiny t'» ,'inn^ following the reirahirl'.
, , ,
,
, , n
« ? " ! "Her marriage must have been a t e r
I ' ii"ii,ws Mi]j in IU,X^H p o o a r 04 ».
t
A
»Ks.
MAUV U E A U , W. M.
#H- '•' "eunj:
; ui•' :tMiu--ui.:.>d ju^iua'o[diaa 0^:2 ire,:
j d e n t absent-mindedly
poring o r e r
,,
,
Wow
tQ
The
f
O l ' ( ' ; ; l ' M.\i CABKlvS.
Miri n « n
book lore, but a housekeeper, who te !
J
t h p y ^.^., ?;iend a cent
ghe
a m i . l n i SMitiirilay of «uch m,uit!» at u::ju
1 :iw K . O . ':. M. hall. Visiting listers
: so taken ip with thoughts of what she j ^ y
] ,^,-. v-01,.-- _ T > t r o i t N>T . S . <
lavned,
. 1 ; u . \ SJULER, lj»ilv Com.
L
i is going t o get for shipper t h a t she \
'
9IJ
9
3
j doesn't know it has stopped raining. ' "~
T T NIGHTS ov iiiK LOYAL i,l".VKI> (
B u c k l t n * Arnica Sulvr.
' V me. i every seconii WfUuesaay
'
What
is
more,
she
is
thoroughly
unselj
1
i
*s<no:> p*™ SHOPKK> «n»M ti
fish. Peoale who forget to lower t h e i r
t'veniUi; of every nioutli in t ;,e K. O.
'l'lie
best
>,ilve
in
tbe
world
K>r
Cuts,
*«finjQ sno{jnfu( j » i | ) o J O uin>ao -,-J
1
•
T. M. Hull ar 7:.^ o'clock. .\li v s i t i n g
<»iuu\ls w«<le<iiue.
«uinuoo 'soNnT pu» i v o a w i ^ i ; ^x
Bruises. S-.i>w, Ulcers, Salt Uiieum,
1-, 1.. ANUKK.WS, Ca)>r. Lien.
j A few months apo, Mr. Myron Every Fever Sm\ >. Tetter, Chapped H i n d s .
A O n u l a e System Tontr and Blood Partftsr.
I of WootMoek. Midi., was badly . af Chilblains, t \ i r n s and all 5Skin ErupA mire eure for Stomach. Liver, Kidneys ami Biooa
BUSINESS CARDS
cJi^e;ui*«. Ii\^|»>(i«<ft.»U-ltorner»<>u>i lle»o»clie, Xalaiia,
llict.ed with rbeumatisin.
His ri^rbt tion*, and positively en re*. Pile., or no j . F.SIGLER M. D.
ciolistand i v \ , 1-, Kiieuwfttmn. Neural^-i*orth«>bMartsr
O^.^QLER M D
H
noinack,T liihou*iu.-«« Sorofal*. (.'on^iratJoB. 8 s »
lejr- was swollen the full Icnatb cans- pay r e q u i r e d . It
•
•wnoaopws
1 :.euiti7l tc» I-M. Kuinev and liver c -m plat at, ralpMsDKS. S I o L E K i l^ULER,
1S guaranteed to ,-ive,
f:on or- the h.'nrt Er\-!*jp»--l»a, and all acla aSeastaSB
iiii? liim tfieat suffering. He was ad- perfect satisfaction onuonev rei'unded i Phy81»-lrt - ; ' aui1 ••""KnuiH. .01 oaiia promptly iinsiaa
from Impure Hlood.
Three Month**
Treatment,
Prie*
**.—.
,ght
: e on M
vi>ed to t r y Cliamberlain's P a i n Halm. P r i c e 25 cents per box.
*
j$ ^ ^ ^ ^
'
- ° ''
^«^t
. itv AND A c n
F. AB.TONICSITTCSS.
Tl.e first bottle of it helped him con•<> travai for
For Sale by V. A. SIULKR.
Aa Incompaimate remedy for sals
*vvuNten and in»l}ro>rat«* ti» eo»»S
siderably and t h e
second
bottle
uiU euricbw tbe bTood. Sold by
D^R. A. B, GREEN:
POMi. MI iteady
effected a cure. T h e 25 and 50 cent
I
st.r.i.;i«l esvalof*.
S u b s c r i b e for the D i s p a t c h .
JJKVfJST-^iH'ry Tbursday and Friday.
F. A R
C O T J & I B O A X f <Q**w*
sizes are for sale l*y F , A. 8igler.
*. v,c,
ELECTRIC CLEANSES »
S
I
sst^oiel in Detroit
1
P
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1
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T ' i
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ls
t
1
:•*
v t l
& Cuiratave Herbs
k
0
r«ispsH J KI iw°a ^ ^ ¾
m mi m m mi
Office over sigler's l>ru«,j>ti>re.
^
'j
^Zit
lli\m liiiii if
^
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•
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ftlf laKl HrtlTMt
tih^&*^*-.~~>.<u^.^**
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5535
••
TALMAGE'S SERMON.
•ginrlinei! Hi&Htth*
• • • •
FRANK
L.
PINCKNEY,
•
ANDKEWB,
-
-
Publisher.
"MEN AND WOMEN NEEDED,"
LAST S U N D A Y ' S SUBJECT,
MICHIGAN.
Greater New York oontains many
'wonders, but not one of them la more
remarkable, certainly none is more
amusing, than the snobbishness which
is displayed by the leaders of "society."
"
*
"Who Kuoweth Whether
T h o u Art
Coiue t o t h e Klufftloiu f o r Nuoli m
Tlmu a i T a l i " — E i t h e r , C h a p t e r IV.
Vera* 14.
,^e
STHER the beautiful was the wife of
A h a s u e r u s the
abominable.
The
* Moral beauty cannot co-exist with
tlmo
had
come
for
radical defects of principle. The charher
to
present
a
acter that is unable to resist temptpetition to her ination,' or vnviUIng to stick faithfully
famous
husband in
to duty, is uo more truly beautiful,
behalf
of
the Jew•whatever be its generous impulses or
ish natlon.to which
amiable traits, than a figure which
she
had once becannot support its own weight. Parts
longed.
She was
of it may be admirable; but, as a
the
work,
whole, a unity, it cannot be rightly afraid to undertake
lest
she
should
lose
her
own
called a beautiful character, for it
life;
but
her
cousin,
Mordecai,
who
lacks the foundation.
had brought her up, encouraged her
Rev. Edith Booker is delivering a with the suggestion that probably she
lecture through Kansas on "What Is a had been raised up of God for that peMan?" A man, dear Edith, is a ten- culiar mission. "Who knoweth whethder, shrinking creature, whose wide I er thou art come to the kingdom for
fawn eyes look out into the great whirl j such a time as this?"
about him with startled inquiry—an I Esther had her God-appointed work.
Innocent, trusting dove, nestling upon ; You and I have ours. It is my busithe neck of a hard world—a sweet field , ness to tell you what style o{ men and
flower, lifting up its face for the sun- women you ought to be rn order that
ahtne of your womanly affection. That i you meet the demand of the age In
Is what a man is, Edith. You your- j which God has cast your lot. So this
self are the sturdy oak. Don't forget , discourse will not deal wkh the technicalities, but only with the practicathat.
bilities. When two armies have rushed
into,
battle, the officers of either army
Rational protests against legislative !
do
not
want a philosophical discussion
Invasions of personal liberty are never
untimely. The disposition to run to about the chemical properties of huthe legislature for 'a law to cure evils j man Wood or the nature of gunpowder;
that are not to be cured in that way Is : they want some one to man the batAnd
a growing thing. In a vast majority 1 teries and take out the guns.
now,
when
all
the
forces
of
light
and
of instances a law to cure an evil afdarkness,
of
heaven
and
hell,
have
fecting private persons causes graver
faults than it is intended,to cure. It plunged into the fight, it is no time
is nonsense to say officials will never to give ourselves to the definitions and
take wrong advantage of unwarranted formulas and technicalities and conauthority placed In their hands. Hu- ventionalities of religion. What we
man nature has not changed in all want is practical, earnest, concentratthe centuries and men are as ready to ed, enthusiastic and triumphant hi
In the first place, lnju?4er to nieet
abuse or usurp authority now as, at
the special demand ,or this age,/ you
any time in this world's history.
need to be an unmistakable, aggressive
Christian.
Of half-aAd^aJfChfistians
The Manchester Guardian, which
has the reputation of bein^g one of the we do not want any moreT^The church
best Informed of English journals, of,Jesus Christ will be better without
gives the world to understand that them. They are the chief obstacle to
John Bull is still doing business at the church's advancement. I am
the same old stand, and proposes to speaking of another kind of Christian.
protect his patents and copyrights, with All the appliances for your becoming
his accustomed intelligence and vigor. an earnest Christian are at your hand,
All he demands now is that, If China and there is a straight path for you
Is hanged, drawn and quartered, he into the broad daylight of God's forshall have a slice for every slice taken giveness. You may this moment he
by every other power. For example, the bondmen of the • world, and the
Germany grabs, then Eigland grabs as next moment you may be princes of
much; Russian takes something, then tbe.Lord God Almighty. You rememFngland takes a portion: France ab- ber what excitement there was in this
sorbs a province, then England appro- country, years ago, when the Prince of
priates one equally as large and pow- Wales came here—how the people
rushed out by hundreds of thousands
erful.
to see him. Why? Because they exGood and healthy girls are almost pected that some day he would sit upalways cheerful.. No novelist would on the throne of England. But what
consider his youthful heroine complete was all that honor compared with the
if a "ringing laugh" were omitted from honor to which God calls you—to be
the list of her charms; and in real life sons and daughters of the Lord Althe girls who do not laugh now and mighty; yea, to be queens and kings
then are seldom trusted or liked by unto God. "They shall reign with him
their companions. Even beauty will forever and forever."
not save them. A belle who fails to
I was once amid the wonderful, beunderstand the jest of her admirers witching cactus growths of North Carand smiles in amiable bewilderment olina. I never was more bewildered
while other people are laughing is soon with the beauty of flowers, and yet
left with no consolation save to won- when I would take up one of these
der what anybody can see in her rival cactuseB and pull the leaves apart the
—a girl with "tip-tilted" nose perhaps, beauty was all gone. You could hardand a large mouth and freckles, but ly tell that it had ever been a flower.
the happy possessor of a pair of merry And there are a great many Christian
eyes and a cheerful mind. The gift of people in this day just pulling apart
gayety is indeed of great value; but their Christian experiences to see what
i t must be gayety which originates in there is in them, and there is nothing
a kind and cheery heart, not that left in them.
which is born of mere excitement or
This style of self-examination is a
gratified vanity.
damage instead of an advantage to
their Christian character. I remember
The dogs in the United States kill when I was a boy I used to have a
nearly 2 per cent of the sheep of the small piece In the garden that I called
country every year. They killed more my own, and I planted corn there, and
than 600,000 sheep in the year ending every few days I would pull it up to
June 1, 1890, when the last statistics in see how fast It was growing. Now,
regard to the flocks were gathered. there are a great many Christian peoThe damage done by them is greater ple in this day whose self-examination
than that from any other cause except merely amounts to the pulling up of
unexpected storms, in which whole that which they only yesterday or the
flocks of sheep are killed, and disease. day before planted. Oh, my friends,
In six states more damage was done If you want to have a stalwart Christo the flocks of sheep by dogs'than tian character, plant It right out of
by anything else. In Florida 9,833 doors in the great field of Christian
•heep were killed by dogs, and only usefulness, and though storms may
4,750 by the weather and disease. The come upon it, and though the hot sun
number killed by dogs was about 9 of trial may try to consume it, it will
per cent of the total aumber of sheep thrive until it becomes a great tree,
in the state. The Florida sheep are in which the fowls of heaven may have
not exposed to such changes in tem- their habitation. I have no patience
pecsvtuve as those on the farms in Ne- with these flower-pot Christians. They
vada, where 128,860 died of cold and keep themselves under shelter, and
disease. Only 7,372 sheep were killed all tteir Christian experience in a
by dogs in Nevada in the census year. small, exclusive circle, when they
The enormous number of deaths from ought to plant it In the great garden
changes In the weather was due t* of the Lord, so that the whole atmosunprecedented storms, which caught phere could be aromatic with their
the breeders unprepared and almost Christian usefulness. What we want
halved their flocks. In South Caro- in the church ot God is more strength
lina, Georgia, Alabama, Louisiana, and of piety. The century plant if wonArkansas dogs do more damage to the derfully suggestive and wonderfully
sheep than anything else, and more beautiful, but I never look at it withthan weather conditions and disease out thinking of its parsimony. It lets
combined. In Massachusetts. Rhode whole generations go by before it puts
Island and Connecticut the number of forth one blossom; so I have really
deaths in the flocks due to dogs is al- more admiration when I see the dewy
most the same aa that due to disease tears fa the blue eyes of the violets,
and the weather. The record is al- for they come every spring. My Chrismost a t bad in all other states whew tian friends, time is going by so rapand sheep are
idly that we can not afford to be Idle.
Thli
Agaltt. if you want to be qualified to 1 am nothing but a Methodist!"
meet the duties which this age de- did not disturb him. He went on per
mands of you, you must, on one hand, forming his Christian duty until h«
avoid reckless iconoclasm, and, on the had formed all his troops Into a Bible
other hand, not stick too much to class, and the whole encampment waB
thlngBvbecause they are old. The air shaken with the presence of God. So
IB full of new plans, new projects, new Havelock went Into the heathen temtheories of government, new theologies, ple in India while the EngliBh army
and I am amazed to see how so many was there and put a candle into the
Christians want only novelty in order hand of each of the heathen gods thai
to recommend a thing to their confi- stood around in the heathen temple,
dence; and so they vacillate and swing and. by the light of those candles held
to and fro, and they arc useless and up by the idols Gen. Havelock preachthey are unhappy. New plans—secu- ed righteousness, temperance, and
lar, ethical, philosophical, religious, Judgment to come. And who will isay
cis-Atlantlc,
trans-Atlantic — long on earth or in heaven that Havelock
enough to make a line reaching from had not the right to preach? In the
the German universities to Great Salt minister's house where I prepared for
Lake City. Ah, ray brother, do not college there worked a man by tin.
take hold of a thing merely because it name of Peter Croy. He could neither
is new! Try It by the realities of the read ^dr^write, but he was a man ol
Judgment Day.
But, on the other God. Often theologians would stop in
hand, do not adhere to anything mere- the house—grave theologians—and at
ly because It is old. There is not a family prayer Peter Croy would be
single enterprise of the church or the called upon to lead; and all those wise
world but has sometime been scoffed men sat around, wonder-struck at his
at. There was a time when men de- religious efficiency. When he prayed
rided even Bible societies, and when a he reached up and seemed to take hold
few young men met In Massachusetts of the very throne of the Almighty,
and organized the first missionary so- and he talked with God until the very
ciety ever organized In this country, heavens were bowed down into the
Oh, if I were dying I
there went laughter and ridicule all sitting-room.
around the Christian church.
They would rather have plain Peter Croy
said the undertaking was preposterous. kneel by my bedside and commend my
And so also the work of Jesus Christ immortal spirit to God than the greatwas assailed. People cried out, "Who est archbishop arrayed in costly canonGo preach this Uot-pel.
You
ever heard of such theories of ethica icals.
and government? Who ever noticed say you are not licensed. In the name
such a style of preaching as Jesus of the Lord Almighty, 1 license you.
has?" Ezekiel had talked of myste- Go preach this Gospel, preach it in the
rious wings and wheels. Here came a Sabbath schools, in the prayer-meetman from Capernaum and Gennessaret ings, in the highways, in the hedges.
and He drew His Illustrations from the Woe be unto you if yon preach it not!
I prepare this sermon because I
lakes, from the sand, from the mountain, from the lilies, from the corn- want to encourage all Christian workstalks.
How the Pharisees scoffed! ers in every possible department.
How Herod derided! And this Jesus Hosts of the living God, march on!
they plucked by the beard and they march on! His spirit will bless you.
His
spat in His face, and they called Him His shield will defend you.
"this fellow!"
All the great enter- sword will strike for you. March
prises in and out of the church have on! march on! The despotisms will
at times been scoffed at, and there have fall, and paganism will burn Its Idols,
been a great multitude who have and Mahometanism will give up its
thought that the chariot of God's false prophet, and the great walls of
truth wptfld fall to pieces if it once got superstition will come down In thunthe ola rut. And so there are der and wreck at the long loud blast
March on!
those who have no patience with any- of the Gospel trumpet.
thing like improvement in church march on! The besiegement will soon
architecture, or with anything like be ended. Only a few more steps on
good, hearty, earnest church Binglng, the long way; only a few more Bturdy
and they deride any form of religious blows; only a few more battle cries,
discussion which goes down walking then God will put the laurels upon
among everyday men, rather than that your brow, and from the living foundawhich makes an excursion of rhetor- tion of heaven will bathe off the sweat
ical stilts. Oh, that the church of God and the heat and the dust of the conwould wake up to an adaptability of
work! We must admit the simple fact , tlict. March on! march on! For you
that the churches of Jesus Christ in the time for work will soon be passed,
this day do not reach the great masses. and amid the outfiashings o£ the judgThere are fifty thousand people in Ed- ment throne and the trumpeting of
inburgh v/ho never hear the Gospel. resurrection angels and the upheaving
There are one million people in Lon- of a world of graves, and the hosanna
don who never hear the Gospel. The and the groaning of the saved and the
great majority of the inhabitants of lost, we shall be rewarded for our
-this capital coare~noT"under t h e l m 7 " faithfulness or punished tor our Htupldmediate ministrations of Christ's truth, ity. Blessed be the Lord God of Israel
and the Church of God in this day, in- from everlasting to evorlasting, and let
stead of being a place full of living the whole earth be filled with his
epistles, known and read of all men, glory. Amen and amen.
is more like a dead-letter postoffice.
"But," say the people, "the world is
going to be.converted; you must be patient; the kingdoms of this world are
to become the kingdoms of Christ."
NeVer, unless the church of Jesus
Christ puts on more speed and energy.
Instead of the church converting the
world, the world is converting the
church. Here is a great fortress.
How shall it be taken?
An army
comes and sits around about it, cuts
off the supplies, and says: "Now we
will just wait until from exhaustion
and starvation they will have to give
up." Weeks and months, and perhaps
a year pass along, anfck-nnally the fortress surrenders through that starvation and exhaustion.VBytft, my friends,
ftie fortresses of sin are never to be
taken in that way. If they are taken
for God it will be by storm; you will
have to bring up the greaC siege guns
of the Gospel to the very wall and
wheel the flying artilleryjjnw line, and
when the armed infantry of heaven
shall confront the battlements you will
have to give the quick command:
"Forward! Charger
Ah, my friends, there is work for you
to do and for me to do in order to this
grand accomplishment. I have a pulpit. I preach in it. Your pulpit is the
bank. Your pulpit is the store. Your
pulpit is the editorial chair. Your pulpit is the anvil. Your pulpit is the
house of scaffolding. You pulpit is the
mechanics' shop. I may stand in my
place and, through cowardice or
through self-seeking, may keep back
the word I ought to utter; while you,
with sleeve rolled up and brow besweated with toil, may utter the word
that will jar the foundataions of
heaven with the shout of a great victory. Oh, that we might' all feel that
the Lord Almighty is putting upon us
the hands of ordination! I tell you,
every one, go forth and preach this
Gospel. You have as much right to
preach as I have or any man living.
Hedley Vicars was a wicked man in
the English army. The grace of God
came to him. He became an earnest
and eminent Christian. They scoffed
at him and said: "You are a hypocrite,
you are as bad as ever you were."
Still he kept his faith In Christ, and
after a while, finding that they could
not turn him aside by calling him a
hypocrite, they said t o b'm: "Oh, you
COOLNESS IN THE PULPIT.
Probably
Saved H CoHjcrfgatioin froao
P a n i c and I.) I Hunter.
Already vastly popular with his congregation, Rev. Arthur Wellwood of
Brooklyn, raised himself still higher
in general estimation on a recent
Sunday, when his coolness in the presence of danger probably averted a
wild stampede from the Church of the
Incarnation. Although there were indications of impending disaster, the
people, acting upon his advice, filed
out of the church in an orderly manner to find a fire engine pouring water
into the cellar through a front window. Shortly after 11 .o'clock smoke
began to pour up through the registers.
The assistant pastor, Rev. Arthur Wellwood, went down to the cellar to see if the furnace was smoking.
He was alarmed to find the cellar full
of smoke, so dense that he could not
go inside. He ran out and turned in
an alarm. Then he walked rapidly up
the aisle, and after whispering to the
officiating clergyman, said aloud: "The
furnace seems to be smoking worse
than usual. I think the congregation
had better retire to allow us to open
the windows." The people, assured by
his calmness, retired In good order, but
became somewhat alarmed when they
saw the engines and firemen in the
street.
It Applied to Both.
Mr. Justice Maule once went on circuit with Judge Coler;idge in a part of
the country where the high sheriff was
a shy and modest man and very much
alarmed at having to entertain his
cynical lordship. Coming home in his
coach with the two judges, he thought
it his duty to make conversation for
them.
He observed that he hoped
there would be better weather, as the
moon had changed.
"And are you
such a fool, Mr. JoneB, as to imagine
that the moon has any effect on the
weather?" said Maule. "Really, Brother Maule," said Coleridge, who was
politeness Itself, "you are very hard
upon our friend.
For my part, I
think the moon has a considerable effect upon it."
"Then." said Maule,
"you are as great a fool as Jones is."
After which conversation in the sheriff's carriage languished.—Rochester
Democrat and Recorder.
ARE YOU T O LIVE IN
ALASKA?
Home R«u.ulrein«uta T h a t Will He r o u n d
ludUpcuaable.
The universal article of diet in that
country, depended upon and indispensable, is bread or biscuit. And to make
the bread and biscuit, either in the
camp or upon the trail, yenst cannot be
used—it must be baking powder; and
the^ powder •manufactured by the processes of the Royal Baiting Powder
Company, miners unci prospectors have
learned, is the only one which wMU
stand In that peculiar climate of eold
and dampness and raise the hvvjfii and
bi'«uit satisfactorily.
These facts are very important for
every one proposing to go to Alaska
and the Yukon country to know, for
should he be persuaded by some outfitter to take one of the cheap brands
of baking powder, it will cost just as
much to transport It, and then when
he opens it for use, after all his labor
in packing It over the long and difficult
route, he will find a solid caked,mass
or a lot of spoiled powder, with no
strength and useless. Such a mistake
might lead to the most serious results.
Alaska is no place in which to experiment in food, or try to economize with
your stomuch.
For "use In such a
climate, and u n d e r the trying and
fatiguing conditions of life and labor
in that country, everything must be
the best and most useful, mid above
all It is imperative that all food supplies shall have perfect keeping qualities. It Is absurd to convey over s'ich
difficult and expensive routes an article that will deteriorate in transit, or
that will be found when required for
use to have lost a great part o; its
value.
There is no better guide to follow in
these matters than the advice of those
who have gone through similar experience. Mr. McQuesten, who is called
"the father of Alaska," after an experience of years upon the trail, in the
camp, and in the use of every kind of
supply, say3: "We find in Alaska that
the Importance of a proper kind of
baking powder cannot be overestimated.
A miner with a can of bad
baking powder is almost helpless In
Alaska. We have tried all sorts, and
have been obliged to settle down to use
nothing but the Royal. It is stronger
and carries further at first, but above
all things, it is the only powder that
will endure the severe climatic changes
of the arctic region."
It is for the same reasons that the
United States government in Its relief
expeditions, and Peary, the famous
arctic traveler, have carried the Royal
Baking Powder exclusively.
The Royal Baking Powder will not
cake nor lose its strength either on
board ship or in damp climates, and is
the most highly concentrated and efficient of leavening agents. Hence it 1»
Indispensable to every Alaskan outfitr
Ifcr can be ttftd" ol ffiy :04 the trading
cbmpAnJ.ejL in ' Alaska, but should the
ntfn^r procure his supplies before leaving* he should r&IS*1 evefy attempt of
the outfitter to palm off upon him any
of the other brands of baking powder, for they will spoil and prove the
cause of great disappointment and
trouble.
PEDDLERS IN MEXICO.
Why an Old W o m a n Wouldn't Sell A l l
H e r H o n e y a t One T i m e .
"While traveling, in Mexico a few
years ago I had a funny experience
with a Mexican vender which goes to
show what little business ability the
lower classes have," said E. F. Guignon of St. Louis. "I was en route to
look at some mines away up In the
mountains. At the station where we
left the train to take the stage I saw
an old woman selling some honey. She
did not have more than ten pounds of
It altogether and as it looked so good
I wanted to buy it all to tak- along with
us. I asked our Interpreter to buy it
Much to my surprise the old woman
would sell him but two boxes, claiming that if she sold it all to him she
would have nothing to sell to other
people, neither would she have anything else to do during the remainder
of the d a y r
PADS IN fLOWERS.
Florists' shops abroad are mjich different
from the
ones
in
this
country.
In
Londonfor
example, funeral freaths and emblems are displayed in the windows,
with their prices attached. Some are
attractive, others very hideous. Lichen
1». fashionable there tor crosses and
wreaths, and from this grisly-gray
background calla lilies and white rose*
peer.
Set njeces, the "gates ajar," .broken
columns and floral pillows, are: always
painful, tor, in the first place, the natural grace said beatily oi the flowers is
destroyed, and in the next there is no
excuse tor the emblems. Flowers for
the dead should be scattered, i n careless handtuls—then only are they comforters, with their graceful beauty unimpaired. The modern custom of adding to a death notice the words,
"Friends will please omit nowera,"may
be traced to the reluctance of the survivor* to be confronted with those
ghastly set pleats which have raged solong.
r
m w w f t m w w*4wwf fm i
'***
Ayer's
is the name to remember when buying Sarsaparilla. Dr.
Ayer's Sarsaparilla has been curing people right along for
nearly 50 years. That is why it is acknowledged to be the
sovereign Sarsaparilla. It is the original and the standard.
The record of the remedy is without a rival,—a record that
is written in the blood of thousands, purified by its power.
" I nursed/i lady who was suffering from blood poisoning and moat
have contracted the disease from her; for I had four large sores, or ulcers,
break out on my person. I doctored for a long time, both by external
application and with various blood medicines; but in spite of all that I
could do, the lores would n o t heal. A t last I purchased six bottles of
Ayer's Sarsaparilla, thinking I would give it a thorough trial. Before the
six bottles had been taken, the ulcers were healed, the skin sound and
natural, and my health better than it bad been for years. I have been
well ever since. I had rather have one bottle of Dr. J. C. Ayer's Saras, pailla than three of any other kind."—Mrs. A. P. TAYLOB, Englevale, N . D a k ,
Get Ayer's Sarsaparilla.
«TfTTTTTTTtTTTTTTTTTTTTTTfTTTTT.T
T h e e m p h a t i c part of nut
w h a t w e do, n o t w h a t w e say.
life
is
All About Alaska,
\
Persons desiring* l a t e s t and m o s t complete i n f o r m a t i o n a b o u t the A l a s k a n
g o l d fields can g e t m a p s a n d o t h e r matter by s e n d i n g four c e n t s in s t a m p s to
W. M. L o w r i e , General A g e n t Great
N o r t h e r n R a i l w a y , 220 S o u t h Clark S t . ,
Chicago. 111., or free b y calling a t his
office. The G r e a t N o r t h e r n is t h e s h o r t
l i n e to S e a t t l e a n d Portland; v e s t l b u l e d
trains; tourist s l e e p e r s ; m e a l s In dini n g cars a la carte; c o n n e c t s w i t h a l l
Alaska steamers.
"I am an old soldier of t h e Rebellion.
A y e a r a g o I w a s in bed all w i n t e r w i t h
chronic rheumatism.
Three d o c t o r s
f a i l e d t o give me relief. T w o b o t t l e s
of Burdock Blood Bitters p u t m e o n
m y feet.
I t is worth its w e i g h t i n
g o l d . " W. B. Kdapp, Litchfield, H i l l s d a l e Co., Mich.
Small-pox is n o t a n y more c o n t a g i o u s than a good example.
Try to make at least one person happy
every day and then in ten years you may
have made 3,66a persons happy, or "brighten
a small town by your contribution to the
tund of general employment
"An ounce of prevention is b e t t e r
t h a n a pound of cure." Dr. Wood's
N o r w a y Pine S y r u p p r e v e n t s c o n s u m p tion b y curing_cold8 t _and a l l s i m i l a r
l u n g troubles.
AN O P E N L E T T E R T O M O T H E R 8 ,
Wo
ure asserting in the courts our right to the
I t is n o t w h a t w e do b u t w h a t w e exclusive,
use of the word "'CASTORIA," and
love t h a t decides out fat*;.
• P1T< l i E K ' S C A S T O R I A . ' a s o u r T i a d e M a r U .
I. Dr. Samuel Pitcher, of Hyannis, MassachuEczema of t h e scalp, or Scald H e a d , setts, was the originator of "PITCHER'S CASe v e n in its most severe form is n e v e r - TORIA," the same that has borne and does now
failinjfly cured by Doan's O i n t m e n t , bear the fac-simlle signature of CHAS. H.
the s u r e s t specific for all i t c h i n e s s of FLETCHER on every wrapper. This is the
t h e skin.
original "PITCHER'S CASTORIA" which has
been used in the homes of the mothers of
Some of the m o s t d e a d l y s e r p e n t s America for over thirty years. Look carefully
hajve the b r i g h t e s t - s k i n s .
at the wrapper and see that It is "the kind you
have always bought," and h a s the signature of
Even catarrh, t h a t dread b r e e d e r of CHAS. H. F L E T C H E R on the Wrapper. N o
c o n s u m p t i o n , s u c c u m b s to t h e h e a l i n g one has authority from m e to use my name
influence of Thomas' E c l e c t r i c Oil.
except The Centaur Company of which Chas.
The devil c a t c h e s e v e r y fish t h a t H. Fletcher Is President.
March 6, 1867. S A M U E L PITCHER. H. D.
bites a t his bait.
1 If rich men would remember that shrouds
have no pockets, they would, while living.
share their wealth for the good of others,
and so know the highest pleasure wealth
can give.
Go to your grocer to-day
and get a 15c. package of
Grain-0
It takes the place of coffee at i the cost.
Made from pure grains it
is nourishing and healthful.
Insist that toar frooer girt* roa GRAIN-O.
Aooept no imitation.
BLANCO'S SCHEME.FAILED.
a
Could Not Bribe Gomes to Desert the
Cuban Cause—Gomes' Bitter Latter.
Capt.-Gen. B l a n c o left H a v a n a for
t h e purpose of t r y i n g t o m e e t t h e
Cuban i n s u r g e n t cominaoder-iu-chief,
Gomez, to s e e if he could n o t arrange
t e r m s of peace. Gomez had written to
h i m he w o u l d t i v a t for independence
w i t h h i m , und L l a n c o tried to ^ e t him
t o a^ree to a u t o n o m y e v e n at the exp e n s e of still l a r g e r concessions. He
offered to p a y Gomez a h a n d s o m e sum
t o l e a v e t h e i s l a n d and offered him u
s a f e c o n d u c t t o a n y port to w h i c h he
s h o u l d desire t o g o .
Gomez' a n s w e r w a s characteristic
a n d forcible. He said he w a s a s t o u n d e d
t h a t B l a n c o s h o u l d make such a dish o n e s t und d i s g r a c e f u l proposal t o one
w h o had s p e n t 13 y e a r s fighting for
Cuban i n d e p e n d e n c e and w h o for 30
y e a r s had c h e r i s h e d t h a t ideal a s the
g r e a t e s t of h i s life. Gomez reminded
B l a n c o of t h e base assassination of his
s o n , F r a n c i s c o Gomez, a t the time
M a c e o w a s k i l l e d a t P u n t a Brava,
w h i l e u n d e r a flag of truce. " D o y o u
t h i n k I can forgive that? Have y o u
eAer b e e n a f a t h e r ? " B e s i d e s t h e s e considerations, w h i c h
o u g h t t o h a v e c h e c k e d y o u in y o u r
s h a m e f u l project, t h e r e is another, t h a t
i s no l e s s clear. I a m not in a position,
Gen. Blanco, w h i c h requires t h a t I
s h o u l d be l o o k i n g for a s t e a m e r t o t a k e
m e from the island. You had b e t t e r
l o o k for a s t e a m e r yourself, for of t h e
t w o y o u n e e d it t h e most. Up t o the
p r e s e n t day I a m on the w i n n e r ' s side."
This rebuff led B l a n c o t o l e a v e Juc a r o for Munzanillo on his w a y Jo Havana.
I t is said t h a t he will m a k e ano t h e r a t t e m p t to induce Gen. J e s u s
R a b i , in c o m m a n d of t h e i n s u r g e n t s in
S a n t i a g o de Cuba, t o surrender. Should
h e return t o H a v a n a w i t h o u t h a v i n g
i n d u c e d the p r i n c i p a l insurgent_chiefs
t o surrender, a u t o n o m y , i t is believed,
w o u l d be considered a failure a t Madrid, a conclusion t h a t w o u l d s e r i o u s l y
affect t h e s t a b i l i t y of the g o v e r n m e n t
a t H a v a n a , and a t t h e h o m e capital.
D i s p a t c h e s from Manzanillo confirm
t h e reports t h a t t h e i n s u r g e n t s have
b u r n e d n e a r l y all t h e canefields of t h e
p l a n t a t i o n s a l o n g the coast.
They
n a v e also b u r n e d a large area on the
p l a n t a t i o n of A z o p a d a at M a t a o z a s and
p r a c t i c a l l y d e s t r o y e d t h e t o w n of
Tapaste.
A Mother and Daughter Butchered.
T h e dead a n d frozen bodies of Mrs.
F a n n y R a t h b u r n a n d h e r 12-year-old
d a u g h t e r Mary w e r e found a t their
l o n e l y h o m e -west of B u r l i n g t o n , l a .
T h e w o m a n ' s h e a d h a d been split open
w i t h an ax.
T h e body of the c h i l d
w a s found in a bedroom pff the k i t c h e n
w i t h h e r t h r o a t c u t from e a r t o ear.
E v i d e n c e s of a horrible s t r u g g l e for
life were p r e s e n t on all sides.
EviAtnily
th f f y m i n g g ' r 1 ^ n f l b^on—brut a l l y a s s a u l t e d by the murderer, alt h o u g h h e r torn c l o t h i n g indicated
t h a t she had f o u g h t d e s p e r a t e l y for
h e r honor. H a v i n g accomplished the
d e e d , the villain cut her throat.
Seve r a l arrests
w e r e made and Abe
S t o r m e r , a suspect, finally confessed
t h e horrible crimes. His o n l y motive
w a s to a s s a u l t the child.
BEWAEE OF MORPHINE,
Mrs. Plnkhaxn Aaka Women to Seek Permanent
Cures and Not Mere Temporary Belief
From Pain.
Special forma o f suffering l e a d m a n y * [
w o m a n t o acquire t h e m o r p h i n e habit.)
One of t h e s e f o r m s of s u f f e r i n g i s a dull,)
p e r s i s t e n t pain in t h e s i d e , accompanied b y I
h e a t a n d t h r o b b i n g . T h e r e i s disinclinarl
t i o n t o w o r k , b e c a u s e w o r k o n l y increaaee]
t h e pain.
T h i s is o n l y o n e s y m p t o m of a c h a i n of
troubles; she has others she c a n n o t bear
t o confide t o h e r physicianr~for'fear of.
a n e x a m i n a t i o n , t h e terror of a l l sensitive,"
modest women, t
The physician, meantime, k n o w s her condition, b u t
c a n n o t c o m b a t h e r s h r i n k i n g terror. H e y i e l d s t o
h e r s u p p l i c a t i o n for s o m e t h i n g t o r e l i e v e t h e p a i n .
He gives her a few morphine tablets, with very
g r a v e c a u t i o n a s t o their use. F o o l i s h w o m a n ! S h e
thinks morphine will help her right a l o n g ; she becomes its slave !
A wise a n d a g e n e r o u s p h y s i c i a n h a d s u c h a c a s e ;
h e t o l d h i s p a t i e n t h e c o u l d d o n o t h i n g for h e r , a s
s h e w a s t o o n e r v o u s t o u n d e r g o a n e x a m i n a t i o n . I n despair, s h e w e n t t o v i s i t
a friend. S h e s a i d t o h e r , " D o n ' t g i v e y o u r s e l f u p ; j u s t g o , t o t h e n e a r e s t
druggist's a n d b u y a b o t t l e of Mrs. L y d i a E- P i n k h a m ' s V e g e t a b l e Compound.
I t w i l l build y o u u p . Y o u w i l l b e g i n t o feel b e t t e r w i t h t h e first b o t t l e . " S h e
did so, a n d a f t e r t h e fifth b o t t l e h e r h e a l t h w a s re-established. H e r e i s h e r o w n
letter about i t :
" I was very miserable; w a s so weak that I could hardly
g e t around t h e b o u s e , c o u l d n o t do a n y w o r k w i t h o u t feel*
i n g tired o u t . M y m o n t h l y p e r i o d s h a d stopped a n d I w a s
s o tired a n d n e r v o u s a l l of t h e time. I w a s t r o u b l e d v e r y
much w i t h falling of the w o m b and bearing-down pains.
A friend advised m e t o t a k e L y d i a E. P i n k h a m ' s V e g e t a b l e C o m p o u n d ; I h a v e t a k e n five b o t t l e s , a n d t h i n k i t i s
t h e b s s t m e d i c i n e I e v e r used. N o w I c a n w o r k , a n d f e e l
l i k e myself. I u s e d t o be t r o u b l e d g r e a t l y w i t h
m y h e a d , b u t I h a v e h a d n o b a d h e a d a c h e s or palpit a t i o n of t h e h e a r t , w o m b t r o u b l e or b e a r i n g - d o w n
pains, s i n c e I c o m m e n c e d t o t a k e Mrs. P i n k h a m ' s
medicine. I g l a d l y r e c o m m e n d t h e V e g e t a b l e Comp o u n d t o e v e r y s u f f e r i n g w o m a n . . T h e u s e of o n e
b o t t l e w i l l p r o v e w h a t i t c a n d o , M — M B S . L U C Y P K a a t « T r D e r b y Center, Vt.
If y o u wish to k e e p y o u r friend y o u
m u s t l a u g h a t h i s joke*, but y o u are
not b o u n d t o h e a r his stories t w i c e .
CALIFORNIA
DOYOU
EXCURSIONS.
Via the Chicago, Milwaukee A St. Paul
Railway to Los Angeles and Other
Points In Southern California.
These popular every Saturday California e x c u r s i o n s for both first and second-class p a s s e n g e r s are "personally
conducted" by intelligent, c o m p e t e n t
and courteous "couriers," who w i l l attend to the w a n t s of all passengers en
route. This Is an entirely new feature
of tourist car service and will be greatly appreciated by families or parties of
friends traveling together, or by ladies
traveling alone.
The Midland Route Tourist Cars are
upholstered s l e e p i n g cars and are s u p plied with all the accessories necessary
to make the journey comfortable and
pleasant, and the sleeping berth rate Is
but 86 (for tWft pprftonw) tmm Phinagn
to California.
Ask the nearest ticket agent for a
tourist car "folder," giving complete
information about the Midland Route,
or address "Eastern Manager Midland
Route," Nc. 95 A d a m s street, Chicago,
111., or Geo. H. Heafford, General P a s senger Agent, 410 Old Colony Building,
Chicago.
•
BALSAM
it Cures Cole's, Coughs. Sore Throat, Croup. Influenza. Whooping Cough, Bronchitis snd Asthma,
A certain
euro for Consumption ia first stages,
ans1 a sure relief in advanced itage*. Use at once.
TM WHI see the excellent effect after taking the
tret dose. Sold by dealers overywnere. largo
bottles 25cents and 60 cents.
There Is more Catarrh In this section
of the country than all other diseases
put together, and until the last few years
was supposed to be incurable. For a great
many years doctors pronoiincea it a locaT
disease, and prescribed local remedies, and
by consantiy tailing to cure with local
treatment, pronounced it incurable. Science has proven catarrh to be a constitutional disease and therefore requires constitutional
treatment
Hall's Catarrh
Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney &
Co.. Toledo, Ohio, is the only constitutional cure on the market. It is taken
internallv in doses from ^0 drops to a
teaspoonful.
It acts directly on the
blood and mucous surfaces of the system. They offer one hundred dollars for
The best w a y to be t h a n k f u l is t o s o
atny case It fails to cure. Send for circulars, and testimonials. Address
live
and a c t t h a t a l l our a c t i o n s s h o w
Six Lures Lost In a Hotel Fire.
F. J. CHENEY & CO..
forth our g r a t i t u d e .
T h e Alvord house, a fonr-story brick
Toledo, O
Sold by druggists, 75c
s t r u c t u r e , t h e l a r g e s t hotel in GloversIt Keeps t h e Feet Warm and D r j .
Hall's Family Pills are the best
sold on long time and e a s y p a y m e n t s , a little
v i l l e , N. Y., burned and six lives w e r e
each year. Come and s e e us or write. THaT
And is the o n l y cure for Chilblains, TRUMAN
MOSS S T A T E BANK, Sanila*
] Earth has nothing more tender than a wo- l o s t . T h e dead are: Eienry D a y , of Frostbites, Damp, S w e a t i n g F e e t , Corns Center, Mich., or
j man's heart when it is the abode of piety.
Gloversville: B e l l b o y Rupert; E. C. and Bunions, Ask for A l l e n ' s FootTHE TRUMAN MOSS ESTATE,
K i m b a l l , wife and d a u g h t e r , of Indian- Ease, a p o w d e r to be s h a k e n i n t o the
B e a u t y is B l o o d D e e p .
Croswefl, Sanilac Co- Mfclu
At all D r u g g i s t s and Shoe
apolis. Benj. F. Strickland, c o n t r a c t o r shoes.
Clean blood means a clean skin. No a n d builder, w h o resided at the Alvord Stores, 25c. Sample sent F R E E . AdTRIAL
beauty without i t Cascarets, Candy CatharBOTTLE
dress, A l l e n S. Olmsted, LeRoy, N. Y
h
o
t
e
l
is
also
missing.
SENT
tic cleans your blood and keeps it clean, by
stirring up the lazy liver and driving all imT h e fire s t a r t e d a t 7 a. m. a n d au
__
_ _ ^.
_AFREE_
I t is bad form t o contide financial ; •
purities from the body. Begin today to h o u r l a t e r the s t r u c t u r e w a s a m a s s of
DR.
am
D R . TAJT
TAKT BKOS.,
RROS.. i4 Elra
F.lm St.,
St.. Rochester,
Rochektc N. T.
banish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads,
prosperity to y o u r family doctor.
I t , n D H D C V NEW DISCOVERY; r*~i
and that sickly bilious complexion by taking ruins. , T h e building and c o n t e n t s , affects his bills.
i | / | % V l
w
I quk-krelitfnn.i cure* worrt
Cascarets—beauty for ten cents All drug- w h i c h w e r e w o r t h a b o u t $100,000, burncases. Send for book of testimonials and l O d a y * '
gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 23c, 50c. ed w i t h a l m o s t incredible rapidity. At
t r e a t m e n t F r e e . a*. H.a.eJuutK'bSOSa. u i u u , wa>
Coughing Leads to Consumption.
t h i s season t h e business is u n u s u a l l y
Kemp's liulsam w i l l stop the c o u g h
ENSIONS, PATENTS, CUUM&
The man who trusts men will make fewer l a r g e add it is understood that n e a r l y
)
mistakes than he who distrusts them.
at once. Go 10 y o u r d r u g g i s t to-diay
e v e r y room ill t h e building was occu- and fret a sample bottle free. Sold in ,
»y«.ia m t wmrjb erijiMhcst.ina-ciaJ»m,»t(jr uaoa>
Klondike via Portland, Tacoma or Seat- pied. Several persons were badly in- 25 and 50 c e n t bottles. Go at o n c e ; de- |
tle. Only personally conducted excursions j u r e d by j u m p i n g f r o m the w i n d o w s .
Full illustrated descriptive fmmflays are dang-erous,
t
>rratton literature lr««. Poetage.lOe.
to Portland leave Chicago Thursdays.
Write JNO. SEBASTIAN, Q. P. A., Chicago.
STATS raa&s ackKAt, T»IU>MM»
Success which m a k e s a man h u m b l e !
We
Sheriff J o h n Clune, of C h e b o y g a n ,
AIITUflDC~
'root your stories, poems and
Immodest words admit of no defense: for a r r e s t e d Landlord B a k e r a n d h i s bar* is success of t h e finest perfection.
A U j n U f l O book MSS.; best prices: inclose
want of decency Is want of «»ense.
stamp. Authorsand WritersUnion.Cbicago.IU
t e n d e r , Chas. Wilson, of t h e h o t e l a t
To Cure Constipation Forever,
WATSOX K. C H t u i , Patent
Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 10c or 25c
W o l v e r i n e , for s e l l i n g liquor i l l e g a l l y .
TO CUpE A COLD IK ONE DAT.
Lawyer. Mi V St.. Wuklactea)
U C. C. C. fall to cure, drugfflstts refund money.
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All
*. C rUgaert references,
Druggists refund toe money if It fails to cure. 8&c
THE MARKETS.
Vlllainv when detected never gives up.
i a t b e S o a t h . Cheap. Easy Ter
but botdl7 adds impudence to imposture.
Free Cat. W . H . C r a w f o r d A C o *
Compliments are only Intended to delude
CeleatMr*, i u i i i l k , Teas.'
LIVE STOCK.
fools; the wise they nauseate.
Now York Cattle Sheep Lambs H o g s
Smoke S l e d g e . Cigarettes, 20 for 5 cts.
Best grades.. t o 0J®5 25 U 73 96 SJ $4 40
ifear*
aicted
Mr*. W l r s l o w ' s s o o t t i i n f » j r a p
415
Lower grades 3 uO®4 4»
eyes, w,th
use | TJnapuB^ Eyf Wtttr.
4 45
For children teethlnic.dofteiiB the {ruma.reduoas inflamIf London streets were put end to end they
Cfa tcag-o—
maUoa«aUftj'S pain, cure* wind colic. 16 oeuta * bottle
would reach to S t Petersburg.
j W. N. U. — D E T R O I T — N O . 6 — 1 8 9 8
3 8>
Best grades... 5 00®5 35
465
5 90
4 50
370
Lower
grades.
SO0Q4
7¾
3
00
The morning of opportunity passes; the
Detroit—
day of accountability never.
00
3 90
Best grades... 4 2>^>4 50
3 00
50
375
2 »0®4 00
Lower
grades.
Educate Your Bowel* With Casearete.
• cured promptly of
Buffalo—
Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever. Best
4 «5
4 10
g r a d e s . . . 4 00®4 40
5 85
Hte. HKS. If C. C. C. fall, druggists refund monev.
4U0
Lower grades..-' 5U&3 85
3 M
4 76
Cleveland
—
New York varnlshers get 13 for eight
4 50
395
Best g r a d e s . . . 4 00 a4 25
5 0)
hours' work.
3 00
375
Lower grades. 2 60*3 9J
4 09
Cincinnati—
Coe's CMurb
4 «9
5 «5
385
Is the oldest aad beat. It will tweak ap a ooJd oateaar Best g r a d e s . . . 4 50&4 75
4 35
3 0J
370
Lower grades .2 5J®4 &>
i loan anything else. It i» always reliable. Tttrtt.
PUUbure;—
Wisdom is to the mind what health is to Best g r a d e s . . . 4 7 ^ 4 9J
6 00
4 10
4 80
3 d0
4e0
the body.
4 0*
Lower grades.. 3 00fl>4 50
CHEAP FARMS
Do You Want
a Home?
100,000 ACRES 2 ¾ ¾
ASTHMA!
F
For maps, pamphlets, railway rates,
etc., and full i n f o r m a t i o n c o n c e r n i n g
this country, enjoying exceptionally
pleasant climate and continuous good
crops, a p p l y t o
M. V. MclNNES, No. 1 Merrill BIk., Derroit,
JAMES GRIEVE, Reed City. Mich., or
D. L CAVEN, Bad Axe, Mich.
X * N Gfi,
r
FARM
,
SEEDS
later*! siaei a n Wemitei U rraieM.
F by*rowiii««SOt>u»hiU S*Uera oora; £ • « « * * • 1
I B»T^""». Iowa, bt frawint IM bath. a*l«* • • * *
130,0» H I M i w n n , feeoo* will a?nd on trial
1 0 DOLLAR* WORTH FORJOc.
, 11 pkft of rate turn Medi, Mot *•* ••"* T # £ h «
1
clodlM oar menaetli Seed Caiatof**, MllUf *» J
•bo«t the M»C*1 PC*- »/ *•* " t t . X T S '
new m m l e s * com aoaoaM. "rtoainea,
ttaa a%atea- of tame, all awUea yew upaa
l
Mtaipt of bat Ma. ••**•*KJ**i«
r
wort* ttO. »•flata •«•«• W*** J*1**
S**4 P f t a n atfl JO a but
Hi aMa. earlloK -rafMabl*
Please \ S n w _
_ ^ ^ | f l S ^ O * * * J a c. I
• n d this ^
B
a
M
e
*
^
alone, 6 c
•d». ajoac
^HSISsJHBJBP^
l-fc
ItliPi
Tmrltt Car *•• w. r.
faowrsldM tt CAUFOMU.
Leave CHICAGO, Yta Soenlo Route, TKTrasDara
Via Southern Route, T U M D A T S .
M M O M i L f eonevoTae
For Information and folders, write
woho aHH>—tUru O. p. A., Chlo—p.
Vfcta Atsweritg Adveitiseaeits ftisrfty
Mention this Taper.
FLORIDA
PATENTS
FARMS
NO MISTAKE
NEURALGIA • jfflfta
ORAIK. ETC.
Wheat,
Corn.
Oats,
No 2 red No £ mix N o 2 white
New York 11 08 ¢1 W rtiMSt
9» ¢29
The oetter part of valor Is discretion.
Chicago
1 084)1 08
28$38K
25 Q25
"Detroit
97¾
9.
"
\
»
29^29
£6 . 26*
WHAT'S YOUB FUTURR? Send full blrtli data
97© 97* 29^29
2> Q25*
and (I two cent stamp* for life sketch to EL.ION, Toledo
Astrologer. 242 Morgan St.. Chicago.
Cincinnati
97¾ 97
29$-£K
2» <&X
Cleveland
93<J 96* 2 » * »
25 @25
Great Britain has l.wo.OOJ unionists.
Plttebarjr ' 99¾ 9J
3I&3)
26 ¢¢26½
Baffala
9*3 99
31&U
26 ©26*
S t a r T o b a c c o is the leading brand of
•Detroit—Hav, No. 1 timothy, a*00 per ton.
the world, becausa it i» tha beat.
Potatoes. 60c per bu. Live Poultry, tarkeya,
K>c per lb; chickens, 6tfc; ducks, 7c Egg*
strictly fresh, 17c per do*. Butter, dairy,
Our ral iroads om r • tcr.oo i men.
1 14c per lb; creamerv, 21c
My doctor said I would die, but Piso's Cure
for Consumption cured me.—Amos Kelner,
Cherry Valley, Ills., Nov. 8 <, 1883.
**
V: ^
CANDY
CATHARTIC
CATHARTIC
^
CURE CONSTIPATION
THELlvJ;
ALL
DRUGGISTS
JJ
A sleighload of y o u n g people as Main Street and Dexter Street in time for which tbe herein are granted said Arbitrators, and the four so apsaid village of Pinckney, Mich.
which are thirty years, said first parly pointed may appoint a fitth,
Should
a t t e n d e d t h e d a n c e at H u d s o n last
Sec. 2. The construction ot all or hereby agrees to extend such rights so both parties.negiuct or refuse to make
F r i d a y night.
any part of the track on a private far as they may be authorized to do suoh appointment wiihin a year after
J . W. Placeway accompanied by ritflit of way adjacent and substan- under the laws of this state upon such the expiration of the thirty (30) years
and
his brother, W. H., visited t h e tially parallel to the corresponding renaonable terms and conditions as granted by this agreement
pa
it
of
the
highway
herein
mentioned
j
would
be
fairand
just
between
the
authority
then
either
party
may
at.
stock fain of H . S. Day, of Y p s i lanti, the first of t h e week, a n d as hliall be considered as a fulfillment by patties hereto, and for such purpose any time thereafter upon written
F r e d F i s h and Dell S w a r t h b u t
the company of the terms required ot each of said parties shall submit to a notice of such intention appoint suoh
result they p u r c h a s e d five h e a d of
it, the same as if the track had been board of Arbitrators of ti>e member, Arbitrators upen failure of the other
B u n d a y e d in P i n c k n e y .
fine H o l s t e i n cattle.
laid on the highway. All tracks shall two of them shall be appointed by the party to do so within (30) days after
M a r k S w a r t h o u t , of Pinckney,
Geo. W e i g h t a n d wife, of I o s c o , be laid so as to least iuterfere with first party and two by the railway being notified to make such appointwas in town last S a t u r d a y .
visited relatives n e a r h e r e t h e first public travel such as wagons and company, and the four so appointed menT^^
other vehicles, and may be placed in shall appoint a fitth and the decisions
It isiBqreby declared that the routes
M r s . W e g n e r h a s been on Iho of t h e week.
of
the
majority
of
said
board
shall
be
any
portion
otjsuch
highway.
Highhereby fixeas&fcal! be permanent street
eiok list a few days b u t is better.
A social will be hold next F r i - way and lot drainage shall no where final and binding upon the parties railway lines and the right to conH a r r y J a e k o b s , of Plainfield, day n i g h t at t h e home of J a m e s be obstructed.
said board of arbitrators shall have struct, maintain and operate the same
was a welcome visitor at school Boylau, for the benefit of t h e N.
Sec. 3. Said railroad shall be com- power to make such changes in said is duly vested in the gran tern and its
Tuesday.
H a m b u r g church.
pleted and in operation on or before rates ot tare for the carriage of pas- successors and assigns duly qualified
the first day ot October 1899, or in de- sengers, character ot cars and service, under the law to own, construct and
R e v . H . B. E l l i s was in StockT h e scholars of t h e Cordley disfrequency of trains, and safety of pas- operate street railways for the peroid
b r i d g e and M u n i t h t h i s week on have received an invitation t o at- fault thereof all the grants and rights sengers and such other rules and reg- of thirty years from the date hereof
herein conferred upon said railway
business.
tend a V a l e n t i n e social a t t h e company, second party herein, shall ulations as tbey shall deem best, pro- and then upon such terms and condiU . A. G a t e s a n d wife started S p r o u t school house next F r i d a y be forfeited, cease and terminate and vided however, that the said rat s of tions as is authorized by the law* of
fare and rules and regulations fixed the state to make such agreement
shall revert to said first party.
M o n d a y for a few days visit in evening.
by said Hoard of Arbitrators when
Se.c. 4. The rates of fare of said appointed as above provided shall con- between said parties by said Board of
A n n Arbor.
Arbitrators who shall each fifeeen
Mr. Ward L. Smith of Frederick- railroad within the village of PinckMrs. M c l n t e e e n t e r t a i n e d two town, Mo., was troubled with chronic ney shall not exceed five cents for tinue in force tor a further peroid of years thereafter revise or readjust
of h e r d a u g h t e r s and g r a n d c h i l - diarrhoea for over thirty years. He each passenger. All children under fifteen (15) years when such addition- such conditions, rules and regulations
al peroid of time shall be granted to as would be proper and just between
d r e n on Monday.
had become fully satisfied that it was six years of age when accompanied said Hail way Company for the operaGeo. Clinton was called to J a c k - only a question of a short time until by parents or guardians shall ride tion of its road each fifteen (15) years said parties, their successors or assigns
free.
thereafter and upon such terms as and in accordance with the foiegoing
son T h u r s d a y last by t h e serious he would have to give him up,
He
provisions.
Sec. 5. The said Railway Company
illness of a sister whose condition had been treated by soma of the best its successors or assigns shall have the said parties hereto or their successors
Sec. 11. Said
grantee hereby
or assigns shall agree upon, so far as
is still very serious.
physicians in Europe and America right so far as the same can be graft- the same shall not be in conflict with promises and agrees so far as consistAirs A n n a Moore a n d d a u g h t e r , but got no permanent relief. One ed by said Village Council to haul and the laws of. this state that may then ent with its rules, regulations and
management and whenever it may be
Agnes, was in Howell S a t u r d a y day be picked up a newspaper and transport upon its tracks and lines be in force.
and
in
connection
with
its
passenger
Provided however, that the rates of required, providing it is deemed neca u d u n t i l Monday, on business chained to read an advertisement of
cars, or separately, cars for the car- fare shall not be so reduced by said essary by said grantee to do so, to
a n d visiting relatives.
Chamberlains Colic. Cholera and Diar- nage of light freight, express parcels,
Board of Arbitrators that the annual construct a spur or side track for the
Several of o u r y o u n g people rhoea Remedy. He got a bottle of it, United States mail, farm produce and net earnings of the company shall fall accommodation of its patrons along;
S u n d a y e d in L y n d o n .
Noticable the first dose helped him and its con- all articles of commerce and trade below a sum sufficient to pay the then the line ot its said railway. The oblisuch as may now lawfully be convey- legal rate of interest of this State on gation in this >eotion to construct, such
b y t h e i r absence from G r e g o r y tinued use cured him.
ed along the highways of the townspur or side track in so tar as the
W P P E o y _ Placeway_,
Adelbert
—
—Sold by F. A. Siller .._. ships iu thisstate and t o c h a r g e such the investment made by said second necessity or advisability or expense is
party.
_
._ _
Brearley and Bird Gregory.
reasonable rates for the trans portaThat after the expiration of thirty con earned"is d i r eretionar v w-t th said
T h e r e is to b e a g a t h e r i n g of
turn and carriage of such freight and (30) years as aforesaid at any one of grantee.
Additional
Local.
other goods as may be agreed upon
y o u n g friends a t t h e residence of
Sec. 12. Tb9 (mmtees shall caused
A party ot! young people from this with the shippers thereof, provided the renewing periods almve fix"d. that
T h o m a s H o w l e t t , F r i d a y night,
place enjoyed a, delightful slei^hride however, that such rates.shall be uni- is to say, after the expiration of thirty to lie filed a written fu-eepUn-.e of this
BO we a r e told, a n d foruuate is the
j by moonlight ti> Gregory lu>t Satur- form as between the parties and no years or fifteen (15) years thereafter grant-within thirty (liO) days after the
person who gets an invitation.
j dny'evening, and took in the lyceum pr fereftces either directly or indirect- if either party refuse or neglect upon execution of this agreement by said
written notice or request from the first party which is executed in d u T h e r e was q u i t e a g a t h e r i n g of ! at that place.
ly UiaH be granted to any person.
others to appoint Arbitrators within plicate form.
Sec. 6. The motive power to be six months from the time of receiving
relatives a n d friends at t h e resi- ! Commencing next Sunday evening
Adopted I*-b. 8, 1898.
dence of A n d r e w J a c k s o n , Mon- ! at the Corg'l church, hVv. C. S. Jones used in the operation of the street such notice, then the oth< r party may
CLAUDE SIOLKR, Prest.
of four ( railways "hereby authorized shall be proceed to appoint the fust four of
>
day night, and all w h o know t h e will deliver 1 be first of ii enes
Koy
H. TEKPLE, Clerk.
host
and hostess know a good sei mom, v l i c b vill !<•> of special electricity applied by the overhead
interest to men. Tln-e M-rmons will trolly system, or such other safe and
t i m e was had.
he concluded evttv two veeks with improved metod of application as may
A b o u t forty G r e g o r i a n s took
tl«e following !->il j n Is: Fel 13. '-The be deemed best by the grantees
Detroit la a Republican citjr. Michigan la
a d v a n t a g e of t h e e x c e l l m t sleigh- Man as Se>n by iJ iniM-lt: Feb. 27, herein named, and substituted at any
The Only
a atron* Republican State. The Journal is
i n g to h e a r t h e Clara S h n m a n n "The .Man as Sicn by th< one who time for said overhead trolley wire
not an organ, but a tearless, independent
Republican
newspaper
Ladie6 O r c h e s t r a , at P i n c k n e y Knows Hun l 1 ' 1 ^:" Mai- 13, 'The sytem; said grantees having the right
Metropolitan
F r i d a y night, a n d all w e i e well Man as Ser-n b\ t! ;e World ' Mar. 27. to make yuch change from one system
X have noticed a continued Improvement
In to* Detroit Journal.
to
the
other
whenever
in
its
judgeI
V
(
i
r
d
All
are
"The VHTI as ^V.i
j)le«K-d with t h e c n t e r t a i r n u nt.
HON. JAMES MCMILLAN,
Republican
U. S. Senator for Michigan.
ment it shall be best for the operation
invited.
O u r L y c e u m seems to a t t r a c t
of said road.
I read the Detroit Journal daily and
glllh crowds every S a t u r d a y n i g h t
Newspaper
in
consider it Michigan's leading evening newsPARSHALLVILLE.
Sec. 7. Tbe track of said railway
paper.
HON. J. C. BURROWS,
t h a i s t a n d i n g l'° ( m « P* a .premU.
S. Senator for Michigan.
may
be
constructed
of
such
style
of
M i s s ' G r a c e -Waktuian is visitDetroit and
ium;
Poopl
every ing friends in Holly;
The Republican party can well be con•mm or steel rails on -ties a a shall in
aratulated upgp having so able an expon*
the. opinion of said grantees be t h e
place within n dozen miles of h e r e
«nt of it* p;?rlnciplei;
S a m . Tom ion, of IhiF.place, and must serviceable; provided h o w e v e r
_
HON. D. M. PERRT,
Michigan.
and Bre so well pleased t h a t they
Mifrs Lois Corhey, of L y n d o n , said tracks shall be laid so that the
CfaftlR&M Rep, state Central Com.
come again.
were married at the home cf t h e upper surface of the rail shall be. not
Mrs. Samuel P l a c e w a y left h e r e
Advertlsere
Butfirstof all a ncwipapcr in the
to exceed one inch above the level or
T u e s d a y for N e w O r l e a n s to vi^it •• bride F e b . 2.
Get
more
as near as po^He with the surface of
broadest and best sense
h e r daughter, Mrs. H e n r y Wood.
Than
the
grade
of
the
street,
and
so
as
to
KAILKOAD ORDINANCE.
Mrs. Placeway will stay in CinciMere circulation
interfere as little as possible with the
An Agent In every Town. You can hate ft
n a t t i Tuesday n i g h t 60 as to go
In
public
travel
on
such
streets,
that
the
All fordinance a u t h o r i z i n g the
by mail. $1.36 for three mootha. Send for
t h r o u g h t h e C u m b e r l a n d m o n t a i n s L a n s i n g , Dexter <fe Ann A r b o r space between the rails shall be filled
Toe Journal.
•ample coplea.
by daylight.
Mr. Placeway ac- Railway C o m p a n y to construct up level with said rails so far as praccompanied his wife as far as J a c k - and maintain a street railway in ticable. Said grantees along the line
of its said railway shall provide propson.
the village of P i n c k n e y a n d de- er culverts where needed and a proper
T h e question at t h e L y c e u m j fining the powers, p r i v i l e g e s a n d
.'street crossing at intersecting streets
last Saturday evening, "Resolved 1 restrictions of t h e said Railway j and shall be perraited to operate its
t h a t labor saving machinery is a Company.
1 cars at a rate of sperd not exceeding
d e t r i m e n t to t h e people," was dis
Headlights
Sec. 1. Tbe Village of Pinckney I twelwe miles per hour.
cussed in a very able manner, a n d ordains that authority and consent ! shall he displayed on said cars while
was decided in favor of the nega- are berehy granted unto the Lai^wig, i the same are in operation between the
tive.
T h e question for debate Dexter k Ann Arbor Railway Com- | hours of sunset irr* the evening and
next Saturday is, "Resolved t h a t pany its successors and as>igns IO con- I sunrise in the morning.
t h e L e g i s l a t u r e should m a k e a p - struct, own, maintain and operate a j »Sec 8. The said grantees shall emp r o p r i a t i o n for t h e F a r m e r ' s I n - street railway in and out of said vil- ploy careful, sober and prudent agents
s t i t u t e s . " An*., K i r k V a n W i n k l e , lage of Pinckney. subject tu'th terms [ moterrnen and conductorsto trke
and conditions and regulations herein j charge of their cars when the same
Neg., F r a n k Coleman.
an>r set forth unon the streets known are on the tracks, and it shall be the
du'y of such agents, conductors, drivN. T. McClear and W . H
ers
and moterrnen, whenever any
M a r s h r e t u r n e d from t h e i r t r i p
such one or more or more of such
as p a r t of t h e l u m b e r m a n ' s ex.•^irents are in charge of the cars being
cursion, after an abence of four
operatee, to keep vigilent watch for
days,
T h e y r e p o r t snow t h r e e ft.
all trains, carriages and persons on
deep and several blockades.
It
foot and to s f op such car or cars when
was impossible to get t h r o u g h to
ever there is danger of a collision
Manistee, t h e i r i n t e n d e d destinawith any vehicle or person upon its
Scott's Emislsioo has been the track.
tion, and got no further t h a n
H o w a r d City. T h e y then eDjoyed standard remedy for nearly a
Sec. 9. The cars of the Company
a t r i p to G r a n d R a p i d s a n d royal quarter of a century. Physicians shall be modern, safe and comfortably
e n t e r t a i n m e n t in t h e " f u r n i t u r e readily admit that they obtain re- heated and shall at all times be entitlOF THE
city." T h e y also visited Saginaw, sults from H/^hat they cannot get ed to the right of way on the track,
from
any
other
flesh-forming
food
and any vehicle or person on the
L a n s i n g a n d r e t u r n e d via Howell.
There
are
many
other
preparaT h e r e were 366 excursionists.
track of said railwav shall turn out
tions on the matset that pretend when any car comes up so as to leave
PETTEYSVILLfc,
to do what
the track unobstructed, and the driver
of any vehicle willfully refusing or
• Mrs, Will Benham is very sick
omitting to do so shall be liable to a
at this writing.
fine, upon conviction thereof, of not to
It is expected that work at the
exceed five ($500) dollars before anv Those of you who have not bought at
Ben net ice house will be finished
court of competent jurisdiction.
today.
does, but they fail to perform i t Sec. 10. At the expiration of the Bed Mark Prices all the Sheetings,
OUR GREGORY COLUMN.
General Debility
and Loss of Flesh
WEEK
GRKAT
RED MARK SALE
SCOTT'S
EMULSION
P. W. Coniway and wife enter- The pure Norwegian Cod-liver Oil
tained company, from Webster, made Into a delightful cream, skillSunday.
fully blended with the Hypophosof lime and Soda, which
ass
are such valuable tonics,
~Z^*&ZZZM£Z.
Did yon say you were not feeling
ffi^«5ffifa°l£
well and tbat your stomach was out
of order? Well then, try a bottle of
watting tendency, and the
Dr. Cad wells Syrup Pepsin and you
patient almost imJrncdUteare sure of relief.
Oonstipatioa and
ly commences to p«t on
flesh and gata a strength
indigestion cured.
Hick headache,
which surprises them.
cared.
Greatest boon to mankind
Table Linens, Towels, Counterpanes that
you will need for months to come have
Right In IU
That's where Dr. Uadwell's Syrup just a few days more to do it in.
Pepsin is.
The greatest remedy for
*• «»•»«* that, was.™ put together I T b ^ wh ,° » ^ t to buy Bl«ck Dres8 Goods, Black Silks
Abeolntelj vBat.ble with the excep. 8 n d Novelty Dre88 Stuffs at the fied Mark will find ad- Pepsin.
- •
tioo of- the
Are yon consti- vantage in the early days of this week.
pated? Then try Ryrup Pepsin. Have Those who want Bed Mark prices on Notions, Small wares
you indigestion or sick headache? Toilet Goods, and the like, notmucn time left.
Bed Mark id
Then xise Syrnp Pepsin. Spend 10c. notorious the state oyer for the Dry Goods bargains it stands for.
for trial bottle and you will, be
Yoart^RespeettQlly,
Be sureyen «st SCOTTS Emulsion. *See that the
and is being appreciated by thousands «e»
convinced. Large size 50c. t a d $1.00.
and fish SM m the wrapper.
10c. will get you a trial size bottle.
A true family remedy. At
*oc. and Si.«o, all druggists.
SCOTT ft tOWNfi,
Large sites 50c. and $1.00. Of
'~~
W . B. Darrow*.
W. B. Darroir.
^ L. H. FIELD.