Clearance Sale - Community District Library

Transcription

Clearance Sale - Community District Library
ICORUNNA
THE COUNTY SEAT PAPER OF SHIAWASSEE COUNTY.
COBTJNNA, MICH., THURSDAY, JANUARY 30,
ONE DOLLAK PES YEAS.
FIRST MALE CHILD
Clearance
Sale
now in progress, includes merchandise from every department
of the store.
The news from our Coat and
Suit Section is especially interesting:
We offer our entire stock of
Women's fine Broadcloth Coats,
50 to 52 in. long, lined throughout with guaranteed satin, "Marchioness*' ( loose fitting ) and
"Belmont" (form fitting) medcte
in navy, brown, tan, mode, wine,
champagne, green, pearl and
black, fes, $2», $30
and £35 garments,
now all„-_*^The £15.48 and $16.50 long
Broadcloth Coats,
reduced to : _~
The «12.00 Cheviot and Kersey long Coats, all now M 7 R
reduced to ^ .
- #0il 3
The £8.98 Kersey long M CA
Coats reduced t o _ f M N W
The $4.98 Cheviot
long Coats, reduced to
^SPOTVW
Al! other Coats, Jackets
and
Suits, also Misses* and Child*
ren's Coats, now marked at
CLOSING OUT PRICES.
&50
The thoughtful housewife is
taking advantage of every gloomy
day and long wintry evening
now to get her spring done.
When Spring has arrived she
will have accomplished w h a t
other women are still worrying
over.
Large purchases of wash goods,
ginghams, muslins, white goods,
laces, embroideries, and other
dress materials and trimmings,
enables to now supply all die
demands for goods of this character and our early buying enables us to offer these at lowest
prices.
With the aid of the
Ladies9
Home Journal
Patterns
the cutting and sewing will be
made a pleasure. Many of the
new patterns for spring are now
on sale.
The Quarterly
Styh(e Book
is now on sale. Price 5c if purchased in connecrion with a 15c
pattern. If the Style Book Is to
be sent by mail, add 8c extra
for postage.
OSBURN &
0 0850
SONS, *
THE FOURTH A N N U A L
VOLUME
XXIX, No. 5
HONOR COMMANDER
Crouse-Morrice.
A pretty borne wedding took place at
the residence of Leonard Crouse, in MorHappy Mid-Winter Wedding Cele- D. B. Van Buren Enjoys That Distinc- Of the Shiawaaaee County Gleanera* L. O. T. M. M . of Corunna Held Public rice. Jan. 22, wb«n hie daughter, Miss
Installation.
tion, Being Born There In 8 3 9 .
Picnic Association.
Myrtle, was united in marriage to Wsrd
brated Here Yesterday.
Morrice. Rev. A. J. MariSn, of this vilJsge, officiated. Owing to tbe recent
Tbe L 0 . T. M. M.» of Cornnns, held death of the bride's mother, the wedding
The fourtfc annual convention of tbe
Duane B. Van Buren, of the Detroit
About o n e hundred guests aerembled
at four o'clock, Wednesday afternoon, Besting* s o d Lighting Qo„ is visiting Shiawassee Couuty Gleaners' Picnic their public installation of oCScers at was very quiet, only relatives of the
at the residence of Mr. end Mr*. George his sisters, Mrs. N . B. Aiken s a d Mrs* Association was bald Saturday In tbe tbe opera bouse Wednesday evening, couple being present.
Mason to witness the marriage of Kise E. D . Vanderkarr, and other relatives circuit court house. Ten of tbe sixteen January 22. Invited guests were presTbe bride was cbarmlngly gowned in
Eve Marten* to Mr. Clatuta Martin, of la this vicinity. Mr. Van Buren was arbors of the county were represented, ent in a large number tbe bouse being white net over white silk and carried
the first male child born in Coraona and the delegates, officers,end a number filled with spectators. Deputy Grand white roses. _ The ceremony was .perMaple River.
The bride wore a beautiful g o w n of that important event occurring in 1839, of visitors bad a very pleasant and Comtysnder Gertrude Fellows, of Flint, formed under a bell of white roses and
white Paria lawn trimmed with Maltese when bis parents, Mr. and Mrs, E . J. profitable meeting. T h e Qleanere held conducted the lostaJiatlon service with smllax.
laee and was accompanied by Miss Har- Tan Buren, were residing la that city. before and afterxilnner sessions and at [great ability and the officers gave their
Mr. and Mrs. Morriee went to Detroit
riet Praia, of Corunna, who acted as He has lived there and in Owosso at noon enjoyed a fine spread at the Grand drill la a perfect manner. Songs and for a few days* stay end when they rebridesmaid. Mr. Ksrl Lewis, of Owee- times* b e t moat of the time elsewhere. Central hotel where ovary courtesy w a s Instrumental music and readings of an turn will reside at the home of the
so, also a cousin of Mr. Martin, officiated Together with bis BOB be conducts the extended. T b e following officers acd entertaining character were pleasant groom's parents, former Sheriff and
bailee** of the firm of the Eureka Beat, committees were chosen for the evening features of tbe entertalnmant. The se- Mrs. Geo. Morriee, of Beantagtoa townas best man.
cret ttat was an weft guarded was re- ship.
A s the strains of the wadding march, l o g and Plumbing C o ^ o f Battle Creek, year;
played ay Miss Rath Meson, w e r e heard, •m& more recently identified himself
Presidettt—Philander P . Btsnep, Hem* vealed, when t h e deputy great comThe many friends of both couples exmander in behalf of Bony Hive presnet- tend best wjhmes for a happy fntaxe.
the bridal party led by Bessie and with tbe Detroit concern.
Georgia K e s o s . little nieces of the bride, Mr. Van Burse la an ezeeUeot
First Vhse President—Frank A* | * d to Commander Jaofrba a asagaiftcent
a fruit dmk and baedkerchief.
wise acted as rina>beaw?ra, proceeded t o ante a n d * g o o d
Thompson, Caledonia.
njnaader waa completely surCharles Montgomery and
the parlor where Mr. Bower*, pastor of with * large degree of
Second V i e * Premdent-^Prnnk B .
prised
bat
responded
gracefully
and
Warner, of Qwosao, were married'
the Baptist church, awaited t h e n . T h e
Day, Bennington.
fefnlngly
to
the
tribute.
day in Lansing and have
impressive ring service was used.
" M y c h a d was burned terribly abant Seeretary^T^saurw-Mrs. Etta KUTbey will reside on North
After the ceremony a fear
the fee*, neek and rhseL I snprsed Dr. tiak, Burton.
Caa't
teAk
well,
eat
weB
o
r
feel
well
street.
luncheon w a s served. Many beautiful
the chOd sank m t o a restfal sleep." Marshal—C. J . Thomas, Bennington. with Impure blood feeding your body.
Mr, Montgomery to a baker employed
and valuable presents were given, the and
Mrs. Nancy M. S a e e o e , Hamburg, N . Y . Arrangement Committee--Edward U Keep the blood pure with Burdock
by
George BetL TUn tirlftr In s dsisfk
young couple.
Kline, Bennington; Frank S. Beeee, Blood Bitters, Bat simply* take exercise,
keep
clean
and
y
o
u
will
bare
long
ter of Mr. and Mrs, J. G. Warner. Both
Mr. and Mrs. Mertta left for a short
Bennington; Paul B. Cofflster, Taings- U f a
Notice t o floral Panrone*
•
young people have many friends who
trip and on ehelr return will reside for
burg.
wish them all happiness.
the present with Mr. Marrfa'a parents Postununfer Svctoth emtires t o eslt at- Program Oommittee—B. W . Mattoon,
Jordan-Eddbigton.
tention
t
o
the
practice
e
f
soese
patrons
at Maple Biver,
Caledonia; Mrs. Mary Sweetiand, Cale- The wedding of Mies Mary Jordan to
Byron Pioneer Oiea.
Mrs. D. M. JfartbaB, of Moekegoo, of rural delivery of pJaeiag loose eofns donia; Mrs. Alice Smith, Darand N 0 . S , Edward Btflagton took place WednesByron, Mien., Jan. 38,—Lewis
and Mrs. W. W. Croat,tif Saginaw, a in their boxes each time they desire to
day,
Jan.
22,
from
St.
Mary*s
efcoreb,
ring,
a prenafneot farsaer, died
sister of t h e bride, wore hers f a t the dispatch letters instead of supplying
Bev. ORafferty aastated by Fra. Hayes, morning, aged 83. He lived on thhj
themselves with postagefatadvance of
wedding.
of CoJdwater, and Soli Iran, of Gaines, farm, where he died, o\> years. He
their
seed*.
Mrs. Martio, w h o is a sister of Mr*.
asmitlng at soiama high ataaa. Tbe one of tba oldest member* of the Byron
M. E. Church Itente.
This practice imposes gafinw hardship
Geo. Masco, has lived ta Corunna far
ehareb
was beautifully decorated for Masonic lodge. He loaves a SOB, W. H,
We greatly sales la our •errtees
aw rural carriers to remwyi
etna y e a n . She has
tbaoeoaswe. The bride wore a brown labriBg, and two daughters, Mrs. Beiah
Of oar falOiful aoaa w h o are kept
eaina from b o s s * \^H defaya
in the office *of F o x ft
The fcrusm wore the Collins, of Gate**, and Mrs. G. Granger,
taw d ^ a ^
of their
this period end has beea most treated
ThebrioVsmatd
aysmsmew*.
of Argentine.
aod trustworthy la her dudes. She e s s
The
The atavni on Baaday did not prevent
made many friend* while here w h o are rtgnsats that petxoaa of r a n i delivery
r the grwatnj*a hretbar, Pred
of aar peoete Bftag ta tao cojntry
flnTfls»wBaB W ^ wBFwW^mw n^Mmp mm
rejoiced t o M o w she will still live near amrlefe ttnmmnrren u ^
Imad a
Mr, and Mn. Badlngten I n w a r d W . Bodingto^a,Conway..
•apply e f stumps mniHiaat warn and la eiwsrhrwAktes«rs«Tri«esctChe
want to Detroit on their weddteg trip. Mary C. Jordan, A o t r t m . . . .*<••«a*
.
o a sr
Mr. Martin is also well and favorably advaaee of their aeada. U f a
Aasoag
the
asaay
haawtifal
gtfte
Oav X p ^ e r t h I>mgwe is taking o n
k e e w a In Corona*. He has beea em- desirable the* rural pasiene
Grace Craudetl, Gwuaeo
If
bride rasaiffad waa a eaaUy
ffiteacployed daring p a n of the last t w o years their mall boxes email notnchanls cap*
by 84- Mary's
Chas. P. Moartgomery, Owosso...... fit
as chemist at the best sugar factory in of weed o r tin i n wtnwb 1»
Mrs. EMtagtaw baring hsaa the BetafteO. Warrea, Owosso
18
(y meeUeg with Miss Amy Msaua
my apn^unj ^n^P^amnssnanVg w m I H
Owneeo, .____
organist hart every atone fit. Mary's Ward K. Merrioe, Banaington...... fit
Myrtle A. Crease. M o r r i e e . . . . . . . . . . S3
Cow. sfteer, n a * m e n * S M w , of
It is pteastag to see what a large ebareb was built.
uA «ta*r Skfaa, to t** dwfcgr
If a conga once gets into your system
I t dopanda upon the pill yon take
bar of regulars oar Swedey school
OettSttUT, BodMMUr. If. Y„ te b*
want the hast, get De- It arte oa every anaecie and fibre tt the
Om Far Wkth Kpasa, Okrraa, UH- D e W l t f s Little Early Risers are the is developing. There are bat a few who
Wltt'a Cartoltoed Wlteh Haaal Salve. body and makes you ache all over. It
iga. TWj « * UM lanjw* t - n w best piihj known for constipation and
jTcr law—ra ef le*a*» wtt4 *n< * P » t i * e <jrfit>»l sick headaoae. Bold o y C. M
fiineh for a «toraW
It to good for little aw bag cats, bails or astmehdly effects the intestines aad
tktM tatueworts. a*aj foe U h i « t w m cttamakes yon constipated, eo in order to
Oar fid ejemrterijr ooausHuaten aarviea braises, and hi saptBlsfly
u*.
got rid of a cold thoroughly aad
for
piles.
Bold
by
C.
M.
will begin with Love feast at nine
out delay you should not take an]
8tigar Beets a Winner.
The Circuit Court.
o'clock Sunday ssomlng. T h e
that will toad to constipate. 1
Frank China, field lepreeentative of
Oeart opeaed Monday with Judge previous to administering tba
Laxative Cough Syrup sets
the Oweeso Sugar Co., hands o* the fol- Setden S. Miner on the heaeh. The avast of the Lord's Sapper will give a" The first batch of IS faaca
bowels and thereby drives the eaM
of
the system. It contains no
lowing Hat showing some resolls o b t a i n calendar la a large o n e there being 56 short dbjoonraa o a Siaa Fetgtven.
given treatment at the M. A. G.
It
Is pleasant to take and Is MgMy
ed by farmers in the vicinity of Eerby. cases on the docket divided as follows: The answers to the Bible questions t o plant this weak and some peculiar ro»
recommended for children. Sold by C.
This would tend to show that farmers Criminal 6, Issues of fact M, Impar- be asked Sunday evening stay be found Rulta were saeertalned.
M. Peacock.
are making
at the present price lance 3, chancer? 23.
In Genesis 31-24. A suggested tohttfon •It takes about 36 hoars for a poet imJohn Gallagher v s . Cnarlea Taylor, ef the Labor Problem will be t h e subpaid for
m ereoaate to absorb all tba
Tatmi at a t , case dismissed defeodants recover
will
bald. In sense woods tbe
Aoea pari
Value
ject of remarks following the Bible e x tsaitment mixture does not pe&etrato
* . » •M fittftJO
QetHfeBrodatek.
John 8. Went vs. Kara Broptoy and
clear
ttoeogh, bat a port of beashwood
1.88 66
1JJ.48
Humility i n soeoasaful service is the
ten
matter
of
appeal
in
the
JoBa
Safer
waa
foaad
to be entirely eaaksd ttaongh
803.06
Bert ColWCU..... l£t
03
topic of the Epworth L o s g i * devotional.
were continued.
109. SI
James Dillon..... 1M 67
Mies AUce Cosaatodt is the leader of t h e and ttlzeegb.
People v s . Geo* B . Symea w a s nolle
Thar imoaat at ereoaate absorbed
fcS* 61
880.80
J. S. Qleaeon
bat the average ts about U1-»
9.C0 63
687.66
Peter Gilna
T
h
e
jury
in
the
case
of
A
.
L
.
Ceete
to tbe
R. H. E a w l e y . . . . 170 81
ma brofujcbt i n a verdict of guilty late yes- tm la tmttnij a u t e t m i y «•
W.M.Hiekmont>. &3S 66
•with laia, tkas aad tfe* other neipa, Oes from
358.83 terday afternoon. Mr. Ccato was charg- JWUP
grocer, far IS ecBta, • p*eka«e of "OCTB> nt tbe end of tba
taken
A.J. Monger..... 300 56
CTay'grepawttQB—Ltman, ChoecUte or On*>
167.68
ed
with
perjury
wherein
h
e
signed
a
a t e l pouBda,
B . t t e G * r r y . . . . . . 7^a 47
tard—for ataWitg plea tba* ate suic to bfifeoa. out bakmeed MM
L
356.78 liquor bond and qualified b y taking ft*
dccbUng BS weight.
Chan. Taphouse ..
66
633J1
usual
oath
that
b
e
was
worth
In
unenS.&3 71
Have Birthday Party.
Of depositors who keep
396.76 cumbered property the a w u a t of the
Enrertatranent f o r Bride B e e t .
Chat. Boaserdet.. 6J0 48
In
honor
of
the
87th
birthday
of
her
300.17 bond which if not true is perjury under
their funds wfth us, These
Tbe Cemae Ciubenterteinedln a very
W. E. Chaffee
2 97 60
aunt, Mrs. Steven Watson, Mrs. SherISO.Oi
toe
statute.
Mr.
Ceete
swore
on
tbe
people appreciate the accomw, J. D e a n . . . . . . . 175
man Rhodes, or this city, entertained pleasing manaer Friday evening at the
110.64
trial
that
it
was
not
tiue
but
in
mitigaS. & O. Jenkiusou 18 98 60
Msecabee haB for Miss Eva Marten.
modations we render; they
1148.75 tion testified that b« did not understand tbe following guests at dinner Friday: Dancing, cards and refreshments conP.RPearsaU
5.44 72
are benefited by our conven393 32 what be was swearing t o . He w s s re- Messrs. sad Mesdames frank H. Watson tributed to make tbe evening « deHgbt-|
V(. H. S p e e r s . . . . 3 98 54
and S. Z. Watson, Owosso; Eugene Watiences.
216 85 manded for sentence.
E. Q. Pardonette. 5.13 50
ful one. Miss Marten, who is a sister j
son
and
son,
Sbiawassee;
Prank
Peacock
25849
The element for the safety
Chas Vautberot.. 3.93 73
of Mrs. George Mason, and One of tbe |
and Mlsa Bessie Harper, of Corunna.
292
85
of your money is our first
Do you have backache occasionally,
[PaulBujea
8.41 63
Tbe dinner was an elaborate and en- most popular y o u n g ladies in this sec- ]
532.58 or "6Mtcbes'; in the side, and sometimes
consideration.
; Jas. Hopson, S r . . . 5.53 67
tioc, was married Wednesday afternoon j
375.61 I do you feel all tired out, without ambi- joyable function. In Mrs. Watson's (
iJohnLetfiogweil.. 3.96 46
at
4
o'clock
t
o
Cland
Martin,
a
promtj
Your connection with this
185.07 | tlon and without energy ? If BO, your honor S7 candles were lighted and burn- 0 6 T 0 U 0 f r f l i e r
• NeaJ Parkinson... 6 43 69
Mrs."Watson,whVllves
^
°
*
»
<>'Bennington
townj
I
kidneys
are
out
of
order.
Take
Beed
on
the
table
bank will be agreeable and
444.95 ; Witt's KidPey and Bladder Pills. Tbey
i Frank Geeck
5.24 74
Ship.
388.25 i promptly relieve backache; weak back, In a comfortable borne on Lombard aveprofitable.
| W.J. Kerbv
1.54 52
Information) Wanted.
81.61 i inflammation of tbe bladder and weak nue, opposite the park, is still strong
! L. S. Pardonette>. o.SO 56
aod In possession of ber faculties.
33019 i kidoeyfc. Sold by C. M. Peacock.
Wanted. The present or last known
! B . M. Smith
7.31 51
399.85
address of DUlus Morton (bis widow or
: J. F. Lingo
4.25 51
218.09
belrs.) This man is said to have been
OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS
| c . H.Crowe
5.50 60
354.50
living in Shiawassee County In 186a
! Charles Doan
4 09 55
W. P. Galifigher. - Pre*.
223.04
Any one wbo ever knew Morton or any
Robert Butcher... 9.25 65
John Driscoll, Vice Pre*.
607.98,
of his family, please address L. W. HubR. Walworth
£.87 69
268 24:
bell, Springfield, Missouri.
4w2
T. M. Euler, 2d Vice Pres.
R. C.Bailey
5.75 66
380.17
W. A. Rosenkrans, Cashier
—For Sale: Two double b*rrel, breech
E MUST again remind
E. T. Sidney, Ass't Cashier
Catarrh Cannot Be Cured.
loading:, 19-gauge hammer shot guns, in
our subscribers who are
A. A. Harper
excellent condition. . Also two double
with LOCAL APPLICATIONS, a« tbey
cannot reach tbe seat of tbe disease,
barrel, banmeriess, 12-gauge guns, one
in arrears that their act'atarrb 1B a blood or constitutional disused a little, tbe other never used.
counts MUST be attended to.
ease, end in order to core it you must
Guns may be seen &t the Journal office.
take internal remedies. Hall's Catarrh
Pour per cent. Interest Paid
While many to whom we have
F. L. Jobnaoo, Corunnn.
!
Cure is tafcp" internally, and act* direct- St
sent statements have remitted,
ly on the blood and mucous surfaces.
on Deposits
It Is very important and In fact it is
Hairs Catarrh Cure is notaqufck medithere
are
also
many
who
pay
2 ! absolutely necessary to health that we
cine. I t was'prescribed by oue of the
no attention whatever to the 2 ] give rertef to the stomach promptly a t
best physicians In this coucLy for years
first signs of trouble—which are
aod Is a regular prescription. It Is
matter. It is not our desire to make anyone any unnecessary 9 the
belching of gas, nausea, sour stomach,
composed of tbe best tonics known,
trouble or injure anyone's feelings, but we must have our back • beadaebs, irritability and nervousness.
combined with the best blood purifiers,
are warnings that tbe stomach
acting directly on tbe mucous sorfame.
subscriptions, and we have entered upon a systematic collecting J These
has besc eaistreeted; it is doing t o o
Tbe perfect combination of the two incampaign. Many accounts will soon be turned over to a local
much work and it Is demanding help
gredients, is woat produces sucb won>
from you. Take something onoa la a
derful rasolts In curiog Catarrh. Send
attorney with instructing to commence proceedings to collect
while; especially after meals; «omethiog
for tewtisaonlals free.
the amounts due. Those who are two years or more in arrears
like KODOL For D y s p n e a u d IndiF. J. CHENEY A CO., Props., Toledo, O.
gestion* It will enable your stomach t o
Sold by Druggists, price 7 5 c
TSib Ao. Cfcaagcs Vcetly.
will do us a great favor by giving the matter prompt attention.
do its work properly. Sold by C. M.
Take HalTs Family Pilla for constipation.
*«*<
MARTENS-MARTIN
OUR SEMIANNUAL
1908.
Join the
JUST A R E M I N D E R !
THE OLD
CORUNNA STATE
• •eeBANKeeee
I
Womea as Well as Men
Are Dfade Miserable by
Kidney Trouble.
TWO KILLED WHILE LOGGING.
^1 ^ --?" *
i
Millersbur*.—Wilfred Sabourtn, 39
}:\:.:*$Zr
years old, was instantly killed here by
being caught under a falling skid way
of logs. He leaves a widow and two
children.
*im*w****+i+*t********^*^W^***^*+*********i*********++
Onaway.—Fred Meredith, 24 years
FRUIT PICKING SAO.
old, died here from Injuries received
ON CUSTER BATTLEFIELD.
while logging. He was struck on the
Make Some This Winter Against Next A cross of white, 'mid clustered head- head by a skid-pole. His skull was
Season's Need.
stones—a hill that swetp* unto the crushed.
Hew They May Be Kept from Damag.
Jtig the Trees.
fti^tart^ «a a * * « * j w k ^ vatfe*
W b B B W B I , M U U B t e K W I X M As
• • • • * • ! 1«—<T» MTTIMT m
*kte l i a . to J» N>
Where these pests are bad ft in sot
safe
to take chances on anything else
i-*4.|ttlM>«i»wt»Biii,i
«a.trfl*H
than a good wooden protector around
each and every small tree, but in
places where rabbits are not plentiful
the trees can bo saved without this
expense.
Although my place Is pretty wen
covered with trees I use no protectors
and have not lost a single tree. About
time of the year, depending on.
Paid-op sobscribers are en- this
the reason, I trim a few trees In diftitled to our ctobbtor. rates. ferent parts of the orchards, which
keeps the rabbits supplied with what
they desire of this sort of food until
the first snow storm, at which time another day's pruning Is done and later
on they are fed again In the same way.
As stated previously, a rabbit will not
turn his head to gnaw a tree if he can
get the same favorite food from
branches lying before him In a horisontai position. !t Is generally one or
•srksfsasi nun hiliTilfjpwsrts
a tew rabbits that first get into the
S f T ^ W t e . l T ^ p e e i * ! • « * • • • fas
haMt of barking trees and others learn
tsisBt for act work a»4 aeverremtti
' rcatta* H.
BTywa wfll .raft* » <mwt»g Jest tUc best
ft from them. IT when the first barked
m «•*» sad seiaS It to oar Art Director
trees are noticed a piece of apple with
he win gSTB yew a letter of frteedlr
a little strychnine on It is placed near
these trees yen will and Mr. Rabbit
stretched oat stiff near there the next
morning. This medicine works quickr e to phetlmi or not it will pa* yoa lb
••HIrats j o w latent, Tbere is atnoly oo rabbits, killing them almost iniWMraoeVargefortkUacrTtco. ninS*
stantly
upon eating the bait
itatrnn earn Targe aaiartoa,, aad to*
—-niT^r mm '•—* -- -•- "*•« -» - — - " - *
5#
Any One Can DRAW
FREE ADVICE
work to fascinating. We t*aco Book,
sttcmstoe aa4 OoojnwrcUl Dlaktratlag,
Quito—IDS. Footer Prawtog, Book
Q»s»g Destgnlng aa4 raskkm Prawlng
oaoeoasfollj to/ correspondence. Write
y a w eosiplete nam* and add rata plainly
aw your drawing, enclose stamp to pay
p dstag* if you wtab your drawing retoned, and addreoi
THE ART DIRECTOR, Correspondence
Institute of America, Scran ton, Pa.
We also leach H t u x t r a t l n * , A d v * r t***"g. P r o o f r e a d i n g , <foarn*llatn,
S t o a o g r a p b y , S h o w Card Writing-,
BookkoeptTig, Klectrl^al
EaK\ue*Timgt Baaln*** Correttpoudenco a n d
BtogUah B r a n c h e s .
If interested in any of the above profeosiOB*, write for oui larjre illustrated
book, "Struggle* Wtth the World." It ia
FBJUE. State which course interests
yon, a c d receive one of our Employment
Contracts, best proposition ever otTerexl.
6M^S»0IDEIGE iSSIITCTE OFUERlGi
BOX 765, SCRANTON, PA.
This Ghost Drops Hairpins.
Clayton, N. J.—Clayton has a
*>;host" scare, and Mayor Nichols Is
try ins to clear up the mystery. Frequently of late a room in the town
hall has shown evidences of visitors;
I he electric lights have been turned on
and the glass In front of the switchboard has been broken. A parasol, a
tew hairpins, a glove and a lace col»
lar give evidence that the ghostly visitor is a woman.
The mystery fs how anyone can enter the hall and get away again. The
place is watched; the locks on doors
and windows are never disturbed, and
the only keys are In the hands of the
public property committee, who disclaim all knowledge of the nocturnal
visits.
Smokeless
Powder
Shells
"LEADER" and "REPEATER"
The superiority of Winchester
S m o k e l e s s Powder Shells is
undisputed. Among intelligent
shooters they stand first in pop*
ularity, records and s h o o t i n g
qualities. Always use them
for field or Tra|> ^booting*
Ask Your D — l f For Thorn,
*#*•*•
< . « • <
•ps^wojtew'w
<
'On-
«
*
«
«
<
«
ViihKi
<
«
S fffj 0l-<* >***-
<
«
*
5 0 per Cent
can be saved on any make of machine* Practically
ne«r machines at from $15 to $50. See us before
paying-manufacturer's price. Old machines bought
Johnson's Typewriter Exchange,
JOURNAL BUILDING, CORUNNA.
«
< * « ' < « <
stream
Where, on that ti-agic day in Junetinx*,
on£ caught the tepees' snowllkt
gleam.
The
plains are brown, and from the
hillside they stretch in gentle waves
afar;
The silence of sweet Peace broods o'er
them—there Is no horrid hint ot
war.
No
hint aa-'c marble slabs far scattered—some on the ridge, some In
the vale—
Th*t tell of men by death o'ert&ken, swept down In one unsparing
gale.
N o sound to break the prairie quiet
—but suddenly there seems to float
A song that breathes of benediction—the
mesvdowlark's pure, liquid note.
—Denver Republican.
THE ORIGINAL
OPEN MURDER TRIAL.
Miltersburg and Onaway Men Are Vic- Jury Secured In Case of Defendant, M.
tims ef Accidents.
D. Iloivheuee.
Kidney treubje preys upon the mind, **•
* ambition; beauty, vigor
and cheerfulness soon
disappear when the kidneys are out of order
'or diseased.
Kidney trouble has
become so prevalent
that it is not uncommon
for a child to be born
' afflicted with weak kidA bag supported by shoulder straps
neys, if the child urinis
v o n in picking fruit It is much
ates too often, if the
handier than a
vine scalds the flesh or it, when the child
b a s k e t sad it
reaches an age when it should be able to
control the passage, it is yet afflicted with
leaves both hands
had wetting, depend upon it, the cause of
free. It also is
the difficulty is kidney trouble, and the first
easy on the. fruit,
Map should be tewards the treatment of
especially apples,
these important organs. This unpleasant
as they are let
trouble is due to a diseased condition of the
out easily and
kidneys and bUdde*- and not to a habit as
carefully from the
most people suppose.
bottom. To make
Women as well as men are made mis*
arable with kidney and bladder trouble.
the bag use a
and both need the same great remedy.
grain sack cut
Tb* mfld and the immediate effect of
right length so as
SwnewA>Rootf* soon realized. U is sold
not to be too long
hy druggists, is fiftyor too abort The
cent and one dollar
front side,of the
sixes. Yon may have ai
bag at the bottom
sample bottle by mall
tree, abo pamphlet tellttmat
is
cut away and
tog all about it. «~>>«<w*g many of the
the opening corthousands of testimonial letters received
_
ered by drawing
from sufferers cured. In writing Dr. Kilmer
fc Cot. Bmghamton. -N. Y., be sure and the other side around for a lap and
nwMtoo IMS paper.
buttoaed as shown. Make suspender*
to
cross over the shoulders and fasten,
Don't make any mistake, but rememhs* tbe name. Swamp-Root, Dr. Kilmer's the suspenders together with a strap.
Svassp-Rootand the address, Bfogbsmtesu N. Y., on every bottle.
FEED THE RABBIT*.
mnS
*W*1
=¾^^
=»«?'..-•
• * • < *
Paw Paw.—A jury was secured in
a murder rase thai is attracting unudual interest here, and the trial begun. The defendant is aged M. D.
Morehouse, and be Is charged with
shooting to death at South Haven
November 21 Wflne Fralick, the twoyear-old eon of Morehouse's adopted
daughter. Tbe mother of the child
(had left him in the old man's care
j while- she went on a visit to Grand
WORTH «200,000; ASKS FOR JOB. | Rapids, the defendant and the baby
spending the night alone as they had
Wealthy Man Applies for Work as"a frequently done' before. About two
a. m. Morehouse notified a neighbor
Street Car Conductor.
that the baby had been shot and the
Kalamazoo.—A. S. Armstrong of child was found lying unconscious
Mexico, Mo., who is worth $200,00.0. with a ballet wound through its h*ad.
has written to his old friend, Assistant The baby survived until elfht o'clock
Superintendent Garrett of the Kala- that evening. A loaded pistol with
mazoo street railway lines, asking tor one of the cartridges discharged lay
a job as a street car conductor. He outside the house not far from the
gives no reason- for hi3 request beyond door. Mrs. Fralick had separated
saying he has sold out his business to jfrom her husband and her foster
father had shown great affection for
his brother.
the baby.
BLUE SUNDAY FOR JACKSON.
UXATIVE 600GH SYKW
la
For*8C«wb*
cspatbog
CoUt Jrow tk» «r*_,_
tem by patfe navfeuthe
bowtlt. A cartas*
nUM fer tnsep « r l
NasriyattfltEar
eoufh caret mr*
constt p i t t a s ,
•specially
containingKnoeoVs
Hooey * Tmi nor**
tbe bawds, contaUe
noOpWem.
KENNEDY'S m m
HuKEY^TAR
W B f A l U P AT TttK LAftOKAtOBY O f
K. O. DeWiTT A CO.. OHlOAQO. U. « , K
Sold toy C. M. PEACOCK
Ask for the 1908 Ktxlol Almanac
and 200 Year Calendar.
STEVENS
THREE SONS GO SAME WAY.
Slot Machines Go, Clubs Go Dry and
Theaters Close Doors.
i Reed City Woman Loses Boys Through
i „
Heart Disease.
GEORGE CROGHAN, HERO.
Jackson.—The police commission
Brave Soldier of War of 1812 Honored gave notice that all slot machines ! Reed City.—John Tracy, son of Mrs.
must be removed from cigar, drug ' Tracy, an old resident of this eity,
by Kentucky Town.
and other stores, and section 5912 of ' while working in the woods, near NewOnly a few names escape oblivion, Howell's statutes, which generally berry, dropped dead. His remains
but August 2, 1813, Insured tasting
NEWAYGO. COURTHOUSE, VORTEX OF STRIFE
fame for Ma}. George Croghan, Ninetythree years later, on August; 2, 1W«,
the remains of this youthful hero were
reinterred on the site of his great victory.
Daring the War of 1812 Croghan. a
handsome, spirited Kentnckian, was
sent by Gen. Harrison to take command of a poor little stockade, Tmt
Stephenson, at Lower Sandusky, now
Fremont, O. The place was important
only because it guarded the approach
to Harrison's headquarters and stores,
up the Sandusky river.
On the morning of August 1 Gen.
Proctor, the British commander, with
500 regulars, veteran troops who had
served under Wellington on the Peninsula, sailed up the river in gunboats
of Commodore Barclay's fleet and
landed cannon and howitzers, with
which they begad to bombard the fort
Meanwhile TeCumseb, with 700 Indians, swarmed through the woods and
began the attack from the opposite
side. To one of a less sanguine temperament or of less courage than the
young commander, the situation must
have seemed hopeless. But Croghan
Newaygo,—Tito cry of «ow*ty seat The question has eoase up i s courtnot only showed confidence himself,
removal ana raised a clamor tftat, house history fullj six ttsnea. and this
hut inspired it in those under hint.
never
entirely ceasing,., slumber* at may not be tbe last. Until the permaCroghan had ISO men and one small
nent tocfctlon of ffca oosmty neat Is setcannon, which he moved about from fitful intervals. It comes from White tled Newaygo can hardly hope for a
place to place to induce the belief Cloud, Fremont making no preten- new courthouse; neither is she rare
that he had several guns. Late in sions in the last effort. White Cloud of having the historic structure imthe afternoon of the 2d the enemy offered a resolution to the supervisors proved and strengthened. Naturally,
to the effect that the proposition that this village, the center of population,
the county seat go to that village be the center of tatnaying dtisens,
again submitted to popular vote. In hacked by old courthouse associations
order to carry this motion it is nee and re enforced by natural icenery of
esary to obtain a two-thirds vote of the town, feels that the courthouse
the board, and it was lost by one vote. should stay here:
IN C A M P OR F I E L D - A T l
MOUNTAIN OH SttOftK
I*
Tam t* tiwtyt t dess*
to »f»y torn* rtideg
MOOT VEaJWtJiniT B? EGfcVTBl A n
Amusu-ruaM:^
Off UM: WU&fttlftt, OTIHt;
HFLE TELESCOPEs; ETC.
A a f c y w xtaolcr, * » d fa**** « a
STEVENS, irbmtat mo* s s U b y
tinure, w eM» dfree*.
v«. atsrvBNs
ARSIS
* toot.
to.
P . O. B o x 4087
NAFEW
T H;B
prohibits all Sunday entertainments hxve been brought here for burial.
MICH IOANJ
and work except of necessity and This is the third time within six years Only National Bank in* jibe County
charity, will be strictly enforced.
that Mrs. Tracy has been called to
0*TTCI:*«:
mourn
under
like
circumstances—
P r e * M « t , . . Li'Wtt tor/ora
Auto Crashes Into Church.
Muskegon.—Racing madly through
the s t r e e t s of the fashionable district
of t h e city in an effort t o get Edwin
Hriggs, would-be suicide, to a physician, a huge touring car containing
the patient and t h r e e otl.ers crashed
Into t h e S t Jeans B a p t i s t church and
all w e r e thrown to t h e hard pavement.
City of T e n t s Is Planned.
South Haven.—This city i s t o have
a tent city next summer, if the plans
The Indians Began the Attack on the now being laid before the board of
trade are carried out. The plan is to
Opposite Side,
have a tract of land large enough to
made a united assault So valiantly accommodate., 1,600 tents furnished by
and effectively was It repulsed that the city, while water and lights for
the whole British and Indian force the streets will also be donated.
made precipitate retreat into Canada.
"It will not bo the least of Gen.'
Shoes Worth $500 Stolen.
Proctor's mortifications," wrote HarriPort Huron.—What is regarded as
son, "to know that he has been baffled one of the biggest thefts from a railby a youth who has just passed his road in Michigan in years was suc21st year. He is, however, » hero cessfully committed when it was disworthy of his gallant uncle. Gen. covered that shoes to the value of $500
George Rogers Clark."
had been taken from a consignment
Croghan himself wrote jest before of 91,100 shipped to Brophy Brothers
the battle: "Tbe eneiny are not far of this city.
distant I expect an attack. I, will
Trial Halted by .Dearth.
defend this post to the last extremity.
,1 have just sent away the women and , Charlotte.—The Tinne'y case was
children with the sick of the garrison halted by announcement of t^e death
tthat I may be able to act without of George Burgess, father-in-law of
incumbrance. Be satisfied I shall Prosecuting Attorney Peters.
I hope/do my duty. The example set
me by my revolutionary kindred is
Prota* Baby's Death.
before me. Let me die rather than
Flint—Sheriff Zimmerman and Corprove unworthy of their name.**
oner McKenna are making an InvesThe battle of Fort Stephenson was tigation as the death of a new-born
the first really brilliant effort of the infant whose body was found buried
war of 1812. Gen, Sherman said it tea shoe box. Appearances are said
was "the necessary precursor to Per- to indicate that death was due to exry's victory on the lake aad Harrison's posure and neglect
triumphant victory at the Thames,
which assured our immediate ancesEstablish New Rout*
tors the master* of the great west,
Washington.—Additional rural servand from that day to this the west ice, rente No. 2, will be established at
has been the bulwark of the nation/' Cedar, Leelanau county, on April 1.
For his exploit, Croghan was brevet- The length of the route is 2? miles
ted HeuteLant-cnlonel by the president and families served 102.
of the United States, and congress
awaided him a gold medal.
Appoint Rural Carrier..
Some months ago, says the Youth's
Washington.—Michigan rural cari Companion, the grave of Col. Croghan riers appointed: Twining, Leland J.
was found in a neglected family bury- Reid regular. Archibald Wilson, substiing grcur,d in Kentucky. The. re- tute; Dorr, Willis E. Douglas, regular,
mains were taken to Fremont, and Clarence L. Douglass, substitute;
on the 93d anniversary of the battle Fnritport, George W. Busing, regular,
were reinterred ov the site of the Arthur Larson, substitute.
former victory.
Falls from Dizzy Height
Fremont is unique in possessing her
Bay City.—Falling 30 feet from a
old fort in its original area, with its
original armament and with the body water t&uk, Joseph Halborau, 12 years
of Its defender, and her citizens cher- old, fractured his skull, broke his
ish the honor of living wftere of old backbone and dislocating his hip. Physicians say the boy sannot recover.
time a great act was greatn lone
three s o n s having died at that place.
John w a s 37 years of apre and weighed
2TS poundu. T h e casket w a s so large
that the hearse
of the
undertaker
could not be utilized to carry the remains.
Vic* Pres..
. . K. P. LELAND
8 e r . VSoe Pre*. .. f;hO. liI:C;t>K9
C»Hhicr, . . . . . J . D . EELAND
i w ' t C * a h i « , , J. L. V A X A L S T I N B
DlKECTOItt:
Lutber I-oucks, Mark D. G e « \ Frank C. G*ls
Geo. Brooka, Norman P. I>I*xi<5, Cassia*
8. B<*<1, Elmrr y. Atipsbuir. John
T. Button. J. D. Lelaurt, Beatty
W. Calkm*, C. K)for<! Sherman.
A remeral Babklsg- and Foreign Kxchangs
burineMtranaactwd.
Collections will receive
proaipt atidraraful attention at mod«r»t« rate*,
Contact* a SaTlops Departiarct to wfcicfe
special attention la given. Your patronage fa
•oUctted.
Alleged Embezzler Arrested.
Marshall.—Sheriff Graham was notified of the arrest at Denver of Fred
Warren, alias N. F. Warren, alias F. II.
Howard, who Is wanted by the police
here on a charge of embezzling $1,500
involved in some life insurance pre- 4 per cent Interest on Time Deposits.
miums and policies. The prisoner is
:>.t ' i
said to have worked at the insurance
business in Boston, Chicago, S t Louis
and in Grand Rapids.
Moving Picture Show Burned.
Dowagiac.—An audience of about
150, mostly women and children, was
thrown into a panic the other night
by a fire in a moving picture theater.
No one was seriously Injured, but the
two-story frame building was destroyed.
Crushed Beneath Engine.
Cadillac.—Arthur Ganshorn, an Ann
Arbor railroad freight engineer, lost
his life in the yards in this city. All
day he had been bothered by a hot
box on one of his lead drivers and
was in the act of remedying i t
Sckiu^ Jftwalatv
wuattwt of aayrtamtaa » • £ £
More Cash or No Church.
Battle Creek.—A rather unexpected
announcement was made by the First
Methodist church, through Rev. W. H.
Phelps. It was to the effect that UIK
less 93,500 in cash was on hand
February 3, the new $7,500 church on :
Monument square would not proceed.
Jninmtu*
»SSCi*WlW
1 Book Biudiiig. i
Glazier Plant to Open.
Chelsea.—The plant of the Glazier
Stove company was reopened on application of the principal creditors
Judge Kinae, at Ann Arbor, ordertd
the works started.
We are in a position
to take yonr order
for any kind of book
binding. Have the
magazines, s h e e t
musk, etc., bound
in handsorrus books
at very entail cewt,
Saginaw Lid Stays On.
Sagwaw.—Prosecutor Miles Purcell
made his warning that the "lid" would
be kept on in spite of the dropping of
Police Commissioner Treanor, by personally swearing out two warrants
against Saloonkeeper Charles Tennestor. charging him with violation or the
liquor laws.
^
>
j»
Dowagiac Merchant Fails.
Dowagiac-Ben Oppenheims general store went into the haudj of H
B. Gage, receiver.
Liabilities are
•SSS»SS»-fH
about $25,000.
^-
THE * * J»
jComnna Journal.
smew
FIRE INSURANCE
AHfi
WATCH
WttOWG
WAY.
NEW WEDDING VEIL
Ths Story of * U^Haneed Woman
an* Her Thmspieee,
LATEST
REAL ESTATE
Place your ar- insurance tm«uBe*» witfi Arthur C. Yuung yho
represents the bt*stof Companies.
These companies pay their Uwaes
promptly and aatisfactorily.
£ bnve an eleven room, two
story*, frame .tl welling arranged
•foTtsrc-fataily's with barn m the
City of Flint, pleasantly situated
opposite Brown Hall Building,
at 1012 W . Court S t , which
must be disponed ot at once.
L o t is 66 by 140 f t
REAL ESTATE HANDLED.
MONEY TO LOAN.
Arthur C Young
M1CBTGAK,
OOECWNA,
smncoNntot,
t WOUND
DCCISIOM.TAND
sxAftunCSS
*••**•*• to BTEVKW moummmusAsam.
Ask?yonr Be&to~jtor'Btevcxii a
Shotsmw^-Fistols.tlnsiBt o a o u r
honored make." I t y o u c a n n o t obtain,
vr© ship direct, 'express w t w M . upon
receipt o f C a s s i a * - * - - r
* KrmjitoMtT'fjnaltn'kmaw rsfcietthsSlaVnBBl
UkefewM Cfctalaav
fersx*e«s$fat
»•*•**••»—"-I
— " yfEJ~"—
Mtfc* O * *
for*
J . STEVENS ARMS A TOOL C © . ^
Pi. Q,B*X 4 * 0 7 * < "
«LS.A,
Printinp; done by (be
kmrna! is always acat
"Women doht deserve to own
watches," recently remarked * jeweler. "They don't know how to take
care of them. A woman bought a
watch from my Arm recently and I
gave her strict instructions to wind
it every £4 hours and always at the
same hour as nearly as possible. Two
days later she came back with it and
said it had stopped. Well, I found It
had run down. I told her, bnt the
Insisted she had wound It Two or
three days later she came back with
the same complaint, and again t tried
to impress her with the necessity for
winulng i t Again she insisted she
had done so and went away miffed.
The third time she came i asked her
to show me how she had wound it.
Then I made a peculiar discovery. The
w< lan was left-handed, and in attempting to wind the watch she had"
been winding it the wrong way. I've
had peculiar experiences with cuatimers, but that beats alLM
Seaver on Elk River.
"The impression that the bearer Is
almost extinct in this country la a
mistake," said George H. Howor, of
Vancouver, B. C, "On the Elk river,
a tributary of the Fraser. In my own
province, there are this season thousands of these little animals, whose
far to so Yaiwbie, btuMtag their winter quarters. Tbe Elk river baa always been a favorite spot for the
bearer, but this year tbe influx has
bees so marked that even the most
experienced trapper
cannot
tell
whence they easte. There are sew a
torge number of Wtppers em the rtver
engaged i s catchlnc them as fast as
possibto. Meet of the sifts* are •kipped
to Sen Francisco, wfatts some go to
Montreal and Toronto. Prom these
cities they will go to others te all
oarts of this counjry and Europe."
A brows of $1,3109 baa been raised
Cor Hamilton Bros., who lost their conning factory in Coral by lire last fall
and they are getting material on the
ground preparatory to building a new
factory at a cost of about 915,000.
[ "The state committee probably wfU
not be called to fix the state convention date until March," said Chairman
I Winshlp, of the Democratic state corojmittee.
"My correspondence with
members of the state committee *»d
Democrats generally Indicates that
the party is in flrst-chwa shape for
the campaign before i t I think a lata
convention will be favored."
Heir to Big Estate.
Fort Huron—To receive notice suddenly that one is an heir to part of an
estate valued at $20,000,060/ would be
somewhat of a shock to most people,
but James Putnam, 82 years old, tiring
in this city, received the news calmly,
net eves expressing surprise.
NOTICE,OF'''LETTING OF
SMITH AND EXTENSION DRAIN
CONTRACT
FASHION CHANGE
BRIDAL COSTUME.
?N
"Coronet" Idea Has Proved Very
Popular—Arrangement That Adda
Height to the Wearer—Better
Than Old Style.
One of the ifttest t&shion changes <s
seen in the arrangement of the wedding veil to mate it s distinctly becoming feature of the bridal costume.
Heretofore veils have been worn in
rather a set style simply because it
was the way they had been adjusted
for years. But tbe new coronet veil
is proving a great success with almost
every type of bride. The idea of the
arrangement Is to give height to the
wearer. The soft upstanding puffs of
tulle add two or three inches to the
bride's stature, and they also impart
an added amonnt of dignity to her
orange-crowned head.
Ttille Is used for these veils as it is
much softer than ts.ee and much more
becoming than heavier meshes, unless
.the lace happens to be ivory tinted
with age. Besides, tulle is far more
easily draped than heavy lace. First
the veil is pot en over the head in the
usual way, then the front ends are
caught In a series of upstanding pun's
that encircle the front of the head.
Tliese axe confined to the hair by a
small wreath of orange blossoms worn
like a coronet The traditional flowers do net dominate the head dress,
fct& form a delicate finish aa they lie
feelf shrouded in puffa of tulle.
The coronet veil mrrangemr>nt is becoming from ail pohtts of view, a thing
Coronet Wedding Veil.
that could net he said of the oSd-fsshfoned way of wearing the veil tt is
queenly from the direct front, it is effective from the back and when seen
In profile It imparts a distinct chartu
to the white robed wgwrs of the bride.
There is this Important point for the
prospective bride to bear in mind
when she is deciding upon her bridal
costume. She will be looked at from
an entirely different point of view
than when she dresses for an ordinary
social function. Her part In the wedding picture will be one viewed in
perspective, and her costume should
be Arranged accordingly. A few inches
added to her height will be all the better, and the lines of her gown should
be the long, dignified ones which
characterlsad courtly dames of olden
times.
Notice U Hereby Given, That I, John BectSaid jab will be let by sections. The section
NEW IDEAS IN EMBROiOERifcS.
w*U, County Drain Commissioner of the Coun- at tbe outlet of the said Drain will be let first,
ty of Sb'^iras&ee and State of Michigan, will, and the remaining sections in their order up
on the Ilth day of February, A. D 1906, at the stream, in accordance with the diagram now
Township Hall In the Township of New Haven, on flie with tae other pap«ra pertaining to said Silver, Gold and Sleek Threads Used
In said County of Shiawassee at ten o'clock In Drain, in the office of the County Drain Cam*
for Emb«fllehmem.
the forenoon of that day, proceed to receive mlssioner of tae said County of Shiawassee, to
bid* tor tbe cleaning- out and extending of a which reference may be had by all parties incertain Drain known and designated a s "Smith terested, and bids will be made and received
Lovely embroideries are carried out
and Sxtenalon Drain," located and established accordingly. Contracts will be made with the
in the Towuship of N e w Haven, in said County lowest reap Jnalble bidder giving adequate oe- in floss silk, alone or combined with
of Shiawassee, and described a s follow*, to- curity /or the performance of the work, to a silver, gold or buck threads or with
wlt: •
s u n then and there to b e Axed by me, reasrrCommencing in t h e Osner Drain a t a point l o g t o myseU tbe right to reject **y and all bogles and beads, or both vervst and
1240 chains south and 18 link* e a s t of tbe bids. The date for tbe completion of ouch con* mc*issellne.
corner to sect one 11, IS, 11 and 14, T ft X, R 1JB, tract, and the terms of payment there/or, shall
The embroidery is seen on the most
County of Shiawassee and s t a t e of Michigan. and will be announced a t the time afad place
From thence west o n the w t t o f s 3 f o i n w 3 4 of letting.
luxuriant
of the evening wraps and
of sec 13 (Francis A- Brown or J. W. BitteX!
Xotiee Is Fnrther Hereby Given, That a t t a e gowns and exquisite silver, gold and
owner), IB links to the west line of Mid section time
place of said letttuz, or a t such other
a t a point 1S.00 c h a i n s south of the c o m e r t e time and
and place thereafter t o which X, tbe jet fringes adorn many of the imporsections It, IS, 18 and 14.
County Drain Commissioner aforesaic, may tant frocks.
Length of drain on said land is 18 link*.
adjourn the same, the scsessments for benefits
Thence west on t h e e ft of n e % of aec 14 and
Gold and old silver tissue and net axe
tbe lands comprised within tbe "Santa
(Fredrick Habshausem owner), IS links, thence and Extrusion
Drain Special Assessment Dis- employed as the foundation for both
s 50° w 8.0* cbalns. thence s 75° w 1&.72 chain*, trict," and tbe apportionments
thereof will be
thence sfiO*w LS8 c h a i n s , thence a 68» w 1.81
by me and will be subject t o reriew mousseUne and beautiful overdresses
e l n i n e to the wee* l!ne of said land at a point announced
lor one day, from nine o'clock in the forenoon of tunics of lace and
embroidered
14 link*north of the north % line.
until Are o'clock in tbe afternoon.
Length of drain on said land is Sl.Sochains.
filet
net
that
are
now
being
lavishly
Tbe following is * description of tbe several
Theuee s 56° w on the e ft of n w a of n e ii
displayed
in
the
shops.
of sec 14 (Pearl B. Pearsall owner). 29 links to tract* or parcels of land constituting tbe Spec*
the south line of the attire described land a t a iai Assessment District of said Drain, ft*: Tbe
Heavily sequined black evenlas
point lb links west of the somheast corner oi Towuahip of Mew Haven and the following
described lauds h> said Township: v ! 4 o ( v ^ gowns are again very fashionable, also
said description.
o i J i e X and n e Vi of n w % of sec 14; e % of a those of net and lace, relieved with
Length of drain on said land is 30 links.
Thence a 58° w o n tbe e K of s w 5i of n e !4 of e H. of sec. U ; n w \ of s e % of sec 14; » % of e
and chenille,
see 14), J a m e s B . Small owner), £jti& chain*, Mot w t f o f u e M of sec 14; n *£ of e ^ of w H application of velvet
thence s 88¼ 4 w ZJ30 chain to the west line of of n e % of sec 14; s w i, o! n w H of rfc 14; s H either ir> self tones or In contrasting
the above described land a t a point 4.36 chains of a w <4sec 14; n e ^ of a w \4 of «cc 14; D w %
south of tbe northwest corner of saia descrip- of » w %, of SJC J4; s % of s e »* of n e H *ud n e solors with the design outlined in jet.
of s e i i 6 f sec 15: n ^ of s ^ o f s e H of sec
tion.
Embroidered Irish, chantilly and
^ ; n w % of is e 't of sec 15: s e % of w '* of e w
Length of drain 7onn said land in 11.33 chain*.
point
de Venise lace are also successTneot* A iwf4" ^ ° the s e ?* of n w % and l± oi sec 15; w ( 4 o i e ( i ( ; f i i w i» of sec IS; e H
w Vi of w Hi »f n e % ol se<-. 14 (HermanJ HaU- of e. *4 of * w % nf >ec 15; » »i of * w }% oi s e M fully Introduced on many of the black
hansen owner), 42 links, thence * bfr v. 4M of see 15; a 5½ o> s e >4 o: s e •* of se 15: 9 e H> a
e b a i n , thence 1 ^ 1 J..V5 chains, thence s 6&c w of a e V of s e % ot sec 16; e »i of s e >i of s e «* evening gowns.
Z.00 chains, thence n 87° w 6,5] chains, thence s of sec SI; e 20 a of * »• <% of n e H oi Sec 21; e %
50* w 8) links, theuve e 4Vis w 2 4<? chains, of n H of s e hi of sec 2t: s e \J of n * % of sec
Some New Neck Ornaments.
thence S 8&* v.' i2.2~i t-hain* to the v e s t iiot- of 21; e :» a of n (4 ,f n e ^ of t#<- -i\; w % of n w
the above described land at a point i.72 i-hains X ot sec 22; w y, of e Vt of n w hi of stc 25; e Vt
Among the really useful trinkets
north of th« southwest corner of tsaid di»crtp- of e ft fit n W \ at sec 2:.'; n ^ of n * f^ of sec 82; may be counted the flexible metal supa i, of s ;i of n e \ of w c 2S; a w fi{ of e !4 of s
tio»q.
e »* of sec 22; n w 30 a ol s w M Of t» e X oJ »ec port* for collars. The newest of these
Lenj^th Of drain on raid land in StJti chafes.
Thence 8 89° w on the s w 'j of n w ^ of txc 23; n w H of s e X of sec 33; e % ol s w * of sec
14 (Geo. M. Linzej - owner), 8 7¾ oaains, taence Zi\ w ft of a w H «f sec 2Z: w l O » o ( s ',4 of n w are shown set with diamonds or sap• 8BH» w 2J8 chains, thence s W ' i ' w 8.17 ii except n 31 a sec 23; w 10 a of a % of s H of a phires. In this form they make a dec h a i n s to the west line of said section at a w M of sec 33; w 5 » o ( n 31 a of n w ?»of *re3S;
satisfactory substitute for
point 4.27 chains north of the west quarter post w 13 a of w ft of e ft of n w 14 of sec 27; w ft of cidedly
n w H of «ec 2T; e ft of e ft of n e M of sec 28.
to said auction.
other materials. There is nothing
Length of drain on said land i« 19-33 chains.
Now, Therefore, All unknown and non-resiTbence * 88¾° «• on the * e !i| of n e \i of sec dent persons, trrvners and persons Interested more becoming to a woman than a
15 (Sylvester J. and Marjraret Young owner^>( JD the above described lands, and you, Reuben simple ribbon or band of black velvet
V links to terminuR. tcritilnatiEn is tbe YD\I&RS Pennanaker, supervisor, and Charles F. HerT>raiQ at a point *£! ehaiKs north and 27 links man, highway commissioner of the Township around the throat, and these ribbons
w e s t of the quarter post to section* 14 au \s.
of New Haven, and you, Herman Halzhausen. •*re now decorated with jewels, spanT^cnfrth of drj.iti on r;ai«l land I* 27 links.
J*»ines Small, Pearl Pearsail, Oeor/e Ltaaey,
Total length of drain ar.xl eiteawon i» 8s.l8 K. FiUpatrick, r^rank Corrinte, Fred HlcM- gles and tiny beads. Seed pearls on
chains.
mot, Daniel Voung, '.H&i., Sylvester Young, velvet are lovely and for older women
SPECIFICAXIOXS.
John Buckley. Thomas Buckley, Juhu Butcher, steel beads and paste on black are
Center fitAke* are set every 8 rods on the J. Shoutz, Fredrick Shouta, V.'. H. Rottsr, most appropriate.
extension and at every an^le. Station stakes James R. Lijzey, Will Williatfcs, C. CoulOin,
and Rrade hrir>s are s«-t ever^ $ rods ou ibe left David Prstt, L. Ortun, T. Goodwill K»t,, H. Wbank troiiifr up Ktream. The average depth of Suiith, tx. Barnett, O. Bowhay, James Eiley,
Making a Sib for Baby.
safd drain and extetision (shall \*e i.M feet. John Kern, Samnei Conklin, Fred Halahauaen
Of
all
the things that handkerchiefs
Tbe width of tbe top shall he i2.4*1 feet or less, are hereby notified that at the time and place
to he tfeNTinined by the depth, width of toot ".'u.ciwiii, or at such o'.her time and place are made into there is nothing pretthereafter to whicli
s.iid bearing- may be ad'
torn and slope or ban lis at e a c h g m d e hub.
,
The handThe width of the bottom shall be 3 feet the journed, I shail p. ^>ceed to receive bids for the tier than the baby bibs.
construction of said "Wt^lth and Extension
entire length.
kerchief
is
folded
d*a£onally
in half,
The slope of the banks shall be one foot each Drain," in the manuer hereinbefore stated;
and,
also,
that
at
such
time
of
letting
fro*;
not
quite
through
the
middle,
as one
to each foot rise.
nine o'clock in the forenoon uctU Ave o'cleck
The dimensions of said original drain shall in the afternoon, t h e assessment for tiesifStJ corner should hang a little aborn the
t be the same a* formerly established.
and lands comprised within the Smith and S»- other when done. Then cat out and
The dlseawiAUA of said drain ana extension tensloa Drain Special Assessment District
shape the neck, finishing it either with
•lutU be in accordance with the profile and will be subject to review.
grade table herewith returned and made a part
JL?d Ton aad Bach of You, owaers and per- a plain French seam or with a dainty
« f the surrey reeeed*.
sons interested ID the aforesaid lauds, are edge of fine lace, if the bAby's monoTbe riffht of way shall include a strip of land hereby cited 10 i> ppear a t the time and pm*e
St f««t wide, 16 feet oa each side of the above of such letting a s aforesaid, and be beard wltb gram is worked on one corner the
described route watch is the center line of said respect to such snecisl -*»essiuents and your hlb will be so much prettier. Half of
drain.
lntor"at> in relation ihereto, if you so desire.
one of the oil silk dress shields is
Sw»»ei«d and leveled April 11,1907, by order
JOHN SOUTWaXL,
of Jvan BowtweH. Court? Drain Cesamlssloaer
County Drain Commlsatoa of tbe
basted underneath the bib to make
«f gaiawaasee C o w t y , Michigan.
County of SktswaMtsa. It wa'^a-proof,
_
• W. JoalLi, P-3r»*yoi-.
Dated, C p n n a a , a U e b . , January S \ A.1V svJB
KlTTHiWWA
PIT.
MO-KA
A Good Way to Store Potatoes Awsy
from Frosts. .
If there is net suttetent cellar room
to store potatoes they will keep perfectly in shallow pits about tea inches
deep where there is good drainage.
Make the pits about three feet wide
and as long as is necessary. Fill with
potatoes and then heap the tubers up
so that they make a cone-shaped pile
like the gable roof of a house.
Cover them with litter such as
straw or hay to the depth of a foot,
then throw on some of the earth that
was thrown out when digging the pit.
Put on enough to hide the straw.
Then put on more litter and repeat
the earth covering also.
Before beginning to cover arrange
foi <tu opening at one end by making a
c).eep frame as for a window, explains
Coleman'a Rural World. This Is for
convenience in getting the potatoes
while the weather Is still cola. This
may have an inner shutter opening
outward and an outside door, the
space between being filled with straw.
It also must have more outside litter
over the door if In a climate where the
weather gets very cold.
It is also well to dig a trench Just
outside the completed pit considerably
deeper than the pit ltsetf, so that it
may serve at a Orals,
ttg whtcunrtsiff
is prootof i t * quafity.
Premium Gifts
not necessary to soil Mo>K* Coffee.
When yon buy Mo-Ka yon pay only ' « '
Coffee M s All Coffee
20
SW**
A s k y e a r dealer far MO-IU* t h e bsja-frtda
Coffee a? * poywbr price.
AT****""
POUND*!
ft. Cartas*
WillEldridge
JLC.Quayle
F. Burnett
Subscribe for the Journal
Mae's Isjflneftes*
Tike amount of value of a man's influence for good or evil anon the world
will generally depend upon the character of Ms indirect and unconscious hv
flnence.—T. Starr King;
w*iw
T
OF THE
U «0 a of w itO a of n f» a of w US a «t soettos i 1t
aU that part sontb oSblghway of t b o w C O a o
T a e a c * * S " w o n m « e « Q f i v K c f n t R w l J O e o f n l S O a o f w S t f a o f ' v e e 1: w % of a
fTbimasOooSweft 1 » ) , i t llaka, theuee n&%* 4 0 a o f s S e a o f w n v e q f see l ; ail t e a t
w 1*S» t S s l a s . thoace s t*' w 1M chains, of highway of tbe e «0 a of n ISO a eoataM
tbeace s g ^ w S s U a k s to tbe n*% line of the on n Use of section 1,1.11 eb* w of a w jf » A t
above eaaortbed land a t a point 7JS ch«!ut of said see Ui»e tbeace westerly along aaaf ***
t said d e s e r t Une«L«7cba thence Jfc** parallel wTtk m H a s
of said see 4 8 s e e k s to e 34" Uae of seat sac,
• t T H ' w o n t t s t w H o f s w M of see thence e along said H. Wae baft eh* tbeae* 1 1 ?
—
n (Henry W. Smith owner) # links, thence s e parallel with e Uae of said see dSSff c a s t a
IK* w t . l e b a t a s , tbeace s SSft* e SS links t o place of beginning s e e l ; e p t ot w ftotu w l i
tbe e a s t ntte of tbe above described land a t a s e e % ; w 3 t » o f u w M * e c S ; n X e f w K o f * w
point » . H obalna suntst ot tbe oorthaaat eoneer M e x c l a In a w cor sae Z; e H of a * 34 aaeSLOofaaMaoi
tttfseKof
sec8;eKoiswKBnd*ttef*w
• » » • e * e ta« «_K of * w * of see tt H oi s i d sec * ; « % of a ft of t e M see • ; • *
a s t . ) , m u n k a , t a « a e « & i%» * o f s e f r l fesecS; w p t o f e f t o f s w M BOB St
-^71 eaabm, tbcaee a Sbm* w W u » a * t o t a * A piece of land twttmdsd m i t i j laaA
Of tbw above described land a t a p o b i t Frollck n by M une w by land of Wat* stty
a by see line sec t ; commencing a t al roa
s c e o r o f * e e S r a a n i B « B M 0 r o d a w SO saws a
anal aaiirtsUoa.
t j a a g t k o f ataia o a t o * abovo a«a»iB- MS rods e t o begtaalitg sec S; cesamemebsg Sf
rod* w *4* • • ear «l ace S rcaniag a «0 % fia* ,w
mSk»rhstap
r m s S M a a s M - w e a S a a w M o f s w M of m
S S r o ^ s tosw« Un**S»r*a* to IMpiiHiir **e
MtmipM±m&+mwamfrtauaka.
taonc*
%: Ap4e«*of l a a A b o a a w a t a a s b y bsad of h.
r • iM cmataa, tbeace west 4.6* e b s l a
* ™ » » " 4 * W »?** of^J. CassppaU ft
•^1»»»
W &M caala* t o tae
thliaoof ay fchrbway aaSeoatmeaeiagSifwdii S M r a t g a
J
aS * point i f f eaafiaa
•ftfew m a d taenee e S n m i W n a i w $ rods a » r o * *
jtarr f i i w fiwolaMU)
to begtanimr ase's tO aad U ; unaimabiisa a v a
Total leawtb of drain o a tbe abovo
e eoraer of are sf m n a t e e • 4f roas to center of
USB to Sf.Sl e a a i a s .
highway t a e t u e w abjag osntoe of aigamay k t
T S a i c i a m ' w o a t b o w H o f a w i r f e f o s s g rods tbeace a oarallsi to * lie* oi sec durw^s t o
(Joba nttm m mmt% U l l n k s , tbeace west along a l i n s o f a t e t b e u D i e l a r o a s to Iwrglnalag ate
thoamttb bovoer off tb* bigbway 1JB anafaa, t S i H a l a a e c o r o f t c b t e f c K a r e « H e * *
\ AM esmbss, t a s m w s •?»;* w 30 a more or less, said ft a te be Ml red* a aad *
south S I e a a i a s t o teraU- *T ** ~r1r T snfl T TTT Itr rnaiaitaniss IT r a t s *
* t a point V.eS ebalaa
of tb* eefner of highway taeaes * s reds j J*
i o f t a * aortbi
red* w SI rods a W reus to begtaalsw eat 11; w
l a o f * s * o f a l 7 a o f * a » a o f a * S eas * » ; *
MO IS, thesee sonth 40 rods to center of hjgaa f S a a a t a n tb* abor* deaoripttoa li a t o f w p 4 e f * b t a o f * 1 « > o f a * U g*e 10; *
taeaee wast along center of ata%wa* to
ptofwptof neHsofUsAweyeeeM;4ataf
taestfw north parallel to e ttao of ate, 4
^
w a t of u e M ear 10; w p t o f a 17 a of « Ton of c
BmUMCSI « 0 . 1 .
rotb to tbe nortb Hue of ace, t a e a e s snot *
ft of a « 14 see » ; n at of * ft of a « % of sea U ;
roas t o place of beginning (Andrew striba
la tb* Main S r a l a a t s t a . 1 9 1 a B t o f w H o f n « M * a c U ; a l 4 a e f * » a f a w
owaer) IAS? chains to tbe south llao of the
aUsillSUaka; said point beteg situatod iB,ol W e t c II; cemmeaclag 40 rods from ceatsr Of
above ataerlbsl land at a point St llaka w
chain* wont u*4 m links sonth of tbe oortbiroat •Jgbway w » stake at tb* a • oomer of a f a n
of tae soutbeast eoraer of said doscrlpsioe
*f a a e t t o a A : from tbeoce s 4 * w oa tb* of land osareyed by deoS, date Sftb day af
i p t i o a M eoraer
L s a g t b o f ar^la 0 0 tae above doaeriptto*
a k o f a o K o f * K S { Oaf o t n OonkUa owner), A n r t l , i a r 4 , 6 i l v * A . £ e « t t a y A g * U A , B a e k o n
lasTebalna,
» J ) i A « i a s , t b * a e * s S v e 4M ebalno, tbeae* e ft of a • J4" to ran • SO rod* along tb* w Uae «rf
Tbeace s SK* w 0 » t t o t s U o w f a g flasertboi •oatb BJS ebaias, tbeace east « W ctaabts, said land formerly owned by Laura Taylor*
la&d: H a i o n e e u r o f s e p t of e M o f n I K
taoa os* BffH* «1» Uasw to tb« soatb Uac of tb* tbeace w SO rods along lead formerly owned
cootaiuisg 3s a, more or teas, said ft a to bo JS abovs deseribod land a t a point ISStl e b a i a s by Cornelius F . Knight, tbeace m a a i o g a SO
rods north and south by f rod* east and. woo
west of tbe souiboast comer of said deserip- rods o a e Une of lead formerly owned by C
II tihiai
imiiiiJTTf) l n l i n i n f b f sontb
Haughtoa, tbeace running e 00 rods to Siaes of
line of tbe above described land a t a nefatt «
Lengtbof drain oa tbe abor* desertatio* i* begiDning on e ft ot n e H containing 10 scree
links west of it* aoutbeast confer of said de- €tM
and the • e pt of e ft ot n e n being all of said
caalna
scription.
T h e n c e s a » H * • o n t b e s K o f s M o f a e K of e ft of n e Vi * of'road and e pt of a piece of
L*agth of drain an the Above description 2JM
see Si (David Pratt aad wife owners), 10.« lead formerly sold to Fredrick Hopeea oa s e e
W e i t l lot* et»:d to Solomon a. Puffer a a d
Thence s * V « of t b * following described c a s t a s t o t a * *a*t and wcat q s a r u r Una a t a James SUno aad a parcel of land adjoining:
(and: commencing 40 rods from tb* center of point I t S s e a a b a t wast of tb* east qaarter post lands formerly owned by Jaejes SUno oa tbe
highway to a stake a t tb* n e c o m e r of a piece to said aBctlsa,
Lengtb of drain on tb* above description 1* west, said Land rarjibig I* roia couth from
o f l a a d conveyed by dead, date Sftb April, lbM.
center of tbe road on said Kino's weetliav aad
to Ouvor A. Boot by a g g i e X. Buck, on • ft of
Thenco-s ST w on tb* e% af s * % of sec Si 71 feet west from aforesaid Uae sec 19: * H of s
a * 3 i , t o r c n a a 1 rods along tbe west lias of 0oku
Bateber owner), 11JS caalna. thcac* e * 4 * f t B l O ; s 8 t * o f e X o f B w ! i see 11; w K
laaft formerly owned by Laura Taylor, Ibeoco westt.41
of w ft ot n * U, s of highway e t c l ) ; n p t o f w
w £9 rod* along land formerly owned by Come- terminus.eaaias, t h e s e s south i&M cbains to OOftof w M o i o w M s x e l o t A O f f w side sec l i ;
ttos F , Knight, tbeae* running north 89 rods o n
Terminating a t a point SftSt chain* west a a e sXOaof w S O a o f w H o f n a - ^ a n d s l t a o f a
e tin* of land formerly owned by Caaties SX0O
cbalna nortb of tb* southeast corner o T 4 0 » of w O O a o f w i i o f u w J i *xc village lota
Baugtatoa, t h e s e * running e SB »ods t o alae* of sec 21.
see 11: conmientnag a t a w corner o / W . 8 .
h f g l s w t n g o a * > t o f n o K , containing » a o r a y
B^exK'slead riduUnge 1ftrods, t a e n e e n t o s e
Lengtb
of
the
drain
o
a
tbe
abov*
oeacriDiitoa
and ta* s * p t of e ft ot n s fc, being a l l of said
eoraer of A. K r t b * land w 14 rods t o beginnfac
US4.44cbabM.
^
e ^ o f n e J i e o f road and e of a piece of land
Total leagtb of JfainJJkala m I mUesaad seo 11; n w S> a of s * H a e e l l ; e ^ e f a w ] |
formerly sold t o Frearajk Hopsen o n s e c r*, ax* 17.10
see I I ; w *• of s w H **c U ; n w H of a w Si s e e
ebalns.
_
t Iota sold t o Solomon ft. Puffer and J a m e s
1 4 ; a e i 4 o f n w M e e t 14; n w i t a of * w 34 of
T
o
t
a
l
l
«
a
g
U
i
o
f
f
i
m
t
c
k
M
b
.
l
l
s
«
S
»
eaalna.
sUno, and a pare*! of l a t d adjoining land* for»
n w X s e c H ; w w a o f sttof s w j i feeM;ae
btetix* l*ngib of drain a a d branch J* 9 mils* « o f n * 3 < # e c l R ; e t f o f e H o / w J i o f f a e J i
s e r i y owned by James Slino on tbe west, s a i a
land mania*-12 rod* osutb from ta* oeater of
e e c » ; * H o f w ftot w ft of = e ) i o f t e c » ; i «
tb* road u n s a i d SUno'swest U n e , a a d 71 fee*
SPSdFICATXOtrs.
34 of a e 34 and n * g o * s o K a t e It; a w 14 of s
w«*t from said Une (Herbert Underwood owner),
Station stake* a a d grade bubs are set every e H s e c l & ; n M o f s H o f s e J i sec » ; s e f i e f
MM chains to tbe e a s t and west quarter l i s * 2 chains a t one aide of tbe center Une, except w fcof s w 34 *f a c e t t ; w ft of e K o f * « « s x
at a point 3E link* w e s t of tbe e a s t quarter post froia stake 0 to stake 1, which is 1.10 links.
» ; e ft oft ftot s w J i see w ; s K of s w J t o f
Vt said section.
The average depth of Main Drain shall be * e 3 4 s e c l & ; s ^ o f s e U o * s e H s e e w ; s * s «
l e n g t h of drain on t b * above description la
&ofseJ4ofse]4 secl«;e3kofs«34of*ei4
S&Jficbalns.
Tbe average depttt of &Tu*ch No. 1 shall, be s * c * l ; e S 0 a o f s w « of a e J i s e c * l ; e S o f a
Tbeae****,• w o n t h e 9 ½ of s e j f of ace 10 3.4» feet. Vhe slope of banks shall be 1 foot ',4 of s t- U »cc 21; s e )4 of n e 3* -*c SI; * M a of
TOfx* A. Knight owner), 40 chains, t o tbe frOQ'h each to each foot rise. Tbe top width of said n i i o f a e i i s e c 2 1 ; w 54 of n w 54 see tt; w ft
line o ; said section, at a point tt Units west of drain and branch shall be *X70 feet or less to ate ftot AW ii»t*9t,*ftoto
ftot
n w 34 of
the corner to sections 10.11,14 and IS.
be determined by the deptk, width of bottom sec » ; n fc of n e 14 of sec 2fc;sHof « H «f a *
Lengtb of drain on tb* above description ta and slope of banks at each grade hub.
»4./*c24; n w j ot eft ot s e 14 s e c W j n w J O a
40.00 chains.
The width of tbe bottom snail be a s follows, of s w J t o f s c » 4 sec S3; n w )4 of s e X see ttr
Thence s lft* w on the n e Ji of the n e K of to-wit:
e J * o f s w ?4secSS;w ft ots w 34 s e e s ? ; w l u a
nee 14 (Charles K. Bennett owner), «0.05 chains
Main Drain.—From stake 0 to stake 123 plus of n ft ot a w 34 e s c 31 a see S3; w M a of a % of
to tbe south line of the above described land a* 11» MnksJa distance of 230.30 chains 5 feet, from s S o f n w * 4 e c c 3 3 : w 5 » o f n 3 1 a of n w 34
a point St links west of the southeast c o m e r of stake 1 » plus 119 links to stake 1«2 plus .134 sec 23; w U ot w ft ot e ft of n w 34 see r7; w ft
links, a distance Of 08.1»chains 4 feet, and from o f 0 w 3 4 8 e c £ r ; e ^ o f e 3 4 of a e 34 see *&,
said description.
Length of drain on tbe above description i s stake 1 « p l u s 134 links to termlaus, a distance
Now, therefore, All unknown aad non-resiof &166 chains 3 feet.
iOXA chains. Thsnce s 1 ¾ w on the s e H of n e ** of sec IS
Branch So. 1.-From stake 0 to stake 17, a dent persons, owners and persons interested at
{Daniel Young.owner), ia.79 ebaias, theuee distau.-e of 34.00 chains 4 feet, and from stake the above described lands, and you Reabea
west along the nortb border of the highway 17 to terminus, a distance of 42.56 chains 3 feet. Fennabaker, supervisor, sad Chad F. Her4.11 chains, thecce s 10* w » links t o tbe east
The dimensions of said drain and branch man, highway commissioner, of tbe Township
and west quarter line at a point 4.47 chains shall be in accordance with :he-profile and of New Haven, and you J. D. Augustine, a%
west of tbe east quarter post to said section.
grade table herewith returned and made a AuimsUtie, J. A. Augustine, Jacob a a d AIMS
Hanson, Kphriam Pennabaker, Fred and AugLength of drain on the above description is part of the survey records.
is 34.12 chains.
The right of way to include a strip of land 1J usta, Jenkins, Leron Shoup heirs, Caanew
Thence s 10° w on the n e H of s e % of sec 15 feet deep and 80 feet wide, 40 feet on each side Richardson, K. Brophy. Wm, Augustine, Gaaa.
(Daniel Young-owner), 23 links, whence i t i ' w of the above described route, which is the cen- WiHisms Wm. B y heirs, N. L. Hoasoa, Jo*.
Frolick, Chas. Cole, James Sleno, A- Oick3 06 chains, thence B £ ' W &S7 chains, thence t ter Une of said drain.
more, Mrs. A. Kriba, Andrew Kribs, Calvw
&.';* w 4.7« chains,
thence s 56¾° w &SS chain*
Surveyed June 23 and S4,1905, by order of
0
Hanghton, Haughton heirs, Heten Bloomflei*,
thence south 1¾ w %3& chains to tbescuth lint
HABBY S. MYBES,
Jessie 5U(>hardson, K. Brophy, Herbert Cader*
of the above described land at a point 12 link*
Comity Drain Commissioner of
east of the southwest corner of said descripShiawassee County, Michigan. .wood, Kliza Rnigbt, R. F. Bruce, or C. Rica*
ardron, J. A. BieHcrdson. Cbaa. Underwood,
tion.
JOSLIK AMD BREWER,
Frank Farley, X. R. Dickey, James Collar*,
Length of drain on the above description ll
Surveyors.
Ira Shouts, Archie H u t c h i n g George Linear,
S7.67 chains.
Said
Job
will
b
d
l
e
t
by
sections.
Tbe
section
Thence s lft* w On tbe ^ ft of • ft of s e *fc oi at the outlet of tbe said Drain will be let first, K. Fitapsiriek. Cbas, Bennett, John McAvorj*
Daniel Young, Est., John ButkJey, Jr., Ojlftm
sec 15 (Sylvester
* Luneitie Young owner), 0*
the remaining sections in their order up ter
Young. John Bnbkley, ©r., Tboe, Buckie*,
Uiences 42 s w l JO cbalna, thence s 7*£* v &.K and
stream,
in
accordance
with
the
clinffram
now
chains to the south line of the »bo*e describsd on file with the other papers pertaining to said John Buckley, J. Shoutz, Frederick Shoate, Wland a t a point 22.0B chains west Of the south- Drain, in tbe office' of the County Drain Com- H. Rouse, James B. Linsey, Will WilUeciH,C.
Conklin, David Pratt, John Butcher, t . Cram,
east corner of said description.
of the said County of Shiawassee, to T.
Goodwill, aV»u, H. W. Smith, H. Bamett, a
Length of drain on the above description m missioner
which
reference
may
be
had
by
all
parties
inBoukay, J a n e s Riley, John Klru, See- nei Ooa10.15 chains.
terested,
and
bids
will
be
made
and
received
are hereby nolibed that at the time a o f
T h e m e s ?!<• w on the » ft of s w \ of s ft %
Coutrreis will be m»de with the klin
place aforesaid, or at such other time and
of sec la (Thomas Buckley owner), ».7v chains accordingly.
lowest
responsible
bidder
giving
adequate
place theicafter to which said hearing may b*
to the south line of said section at a point 1.S3
for the performance of the work, in a adiourned,
1 shall proceed to receive w d s for
chains west of the southeast corner of said de- security
sum
then
and
there
to
be
fired
by
me,
reserve
the construction ot said "lou.isrs Dram," ia
scription.
ing
to
myself
the
right
to
reject
any
and
«llt
the
manner
herelnijefoi-e stau<d; aad, aUe»
Length i.f drain on the above description is bids. Tbe date for the completion of such con-.
that
a
t
such
time
of letting from nla* o'clomt
t.ji chains.
and the term* of payment therefor, shall bi the forenoon until
five o'clock in tbe afterThence s T V w o n t h e n t t o f n e K of **c 8 tract,
will be announced at tbe time and p}aee Boon, the assessment
for benents and tee
(Geo. Conklin owner) SB links, thence a 8SH* * and
of
letting.
lands comprised within the Youngs Dress
along the south border of highway la37 ebaias
Notice is Further Hereby Given, That at the Special Assessment Districts will be subject to
to the north and south quarter line a t a point
and place of said Letting, or at such other review.
a Unl.s south of the nortb quarter post to said time
time and place thereafter to which I, the Counsection.
And You aad Bach of You, owners and p i t .
Lengtb of drain oa ta* abor* descripttoa U ty Drajtf Commissioner aforesaid, may adjourn sons
Interested in the aforesaid lead*, are
1 Ue same, the assessments for benefits and tbe
19.05 cbaiao,
cited t o appear at the time aad place of
Tbeace a 8SU» w o n tbe « ft of • ft of n w i t si lands comprised within the "Youngs Drain hereby
letting a s aforesaid, and be baaed with
see 0 (James F~ Ltesey owner), ?-M e b a i a s u Special assessment District," and tbe appor- such
to su3b special etasatmcaU aad yet
ta* went line of tb* abor* deaertbed land at a tionments thereof will be announced by me respect
thereto, if yon s o dsetoe,
point tS links south of tb* southwest ooraar «d and will be subject to review for one day from iate/eata In relation
JOGN BOOTWItU*
a i r e o'clock in tbe forenoon until five o'clock
said desrrlr^ou.
County Drain Comatissioeer of tbe
Lengtb oi drrla o a tb* abtwe ooscriptioB to in tb* afternoon.
County of ShUwassee,
Tbe following is a descripttoa of tbe several
tM c b a l a a
Dated, Coranna, Mkb^ January**, A,DwiatV
Tbeace * S»H* v on tb* w V ot it w K of **c tracts or paresis of land constituting tbe
*M n (atyrti* M. a M William i . Wiliiams Special Assessment District of said Drain, v U ;
The Township of New Havoa a t targ* a a d
i),liMnks, tbeae* s r w * m c a a l a s M
I west qaarter line at a point SJ tbe following described lead* la saM Town*
Unkawaatof t a * swatboax; oaraar of s s M *e- skip: AUtlHttL>wrta**A*rBis^v«r*fta*«ast
Xfotfee in Hereby Given. That X, J * t a
weUvOntssy Deafa Omniwl»j<oa«*of<*»C»wtr
of S h i a w a s s e e , and State of Jtlcktgaa. trOt, em
tbe l t t b day of February. A. D. f S S . a t t a *
Township Hall, la tae Towwdrip afi Mew
Haven, & said County of SMmwsasee, a t t e a
o ' c l e x k i s t t e f o r e t i w a a o r t a a t a a y , a w a e a ta
receive Mds for the constnwtton of a certain
Drain baowrc * a d fcmgnasea a s "Yosasja
Drain," located and eetabhshed la tbe Township of Mew Haven la said Coanty of Salawas»ee and described a s follow*, to-wiA:
Commencing a t a point 7 l i n k s south and $t
llnks bass of use north eoraer t o sections * and
I X 8 W K * B, County of nblai
ji stteaigan.
From thence a 1M* w along
lignway oa tbe w S acre* of tae a w frl
4«e f (Kphram Fcttetoofcar, owner)
Lengtbof drain o a tab a t o m
is
4 J S cabins.
Taenc* s » » • e oa fine n X of w % of a w M « f
-ee S e*c I a m s w cor (Fred • • * Angneta / e a *
Vinson, ownera) 1SJ7 rbslao, Bseaea w*M m
•mbs to section Una a t a point l a j g e a a i a o a o s s i
•jf tbs northwest oaanor of aaSi Jaaiittpstaai
Length of draia on ta* above aoaBStpttoa to
rv.efebalBS
Tb«nc«w«*toatao e S S a o f • i M K W a s I
(Cmartes WUU^ms, owner) » l i n k s , t h s n e s s f H *
e along tae west border of raa bigbway S M t
halas tc tae south lino of a a l i sotsioa a t a
K o l s t S t i i a k n a s a t o f t b e c o r a e r t o j s o t a s a B,
3,lS>aadli.
£<nutis t "
isSMScbaias.
T l * o r « s SM"w on the following __-____• _^
i d « ^ A « f S t a i a t m taw above 6tmeripOm
laatoap
I ae»aiawJawawswsaaa»*iaia»awa«i
"A Gcoi Ihmett Bomt"
i of C X Meed Oa> and
a ^ p e n a j ^ Susans' ***wniar w^S unmey
sttythmg then* proprietors say
-If Made by Huod It's feoa.1*
East's fantauflb the best e)2I mnuly aaedHrnt known today." Mas.
«V ft. Fanuv,«S WfiAW S t . Lowell. J t W
* | leawemeed Hood's Ssfiaearilla to any
B. D w r . H Aatou* Stnat
"I am a etna* and healthy venue today,
fcem tokfe* Ho«d*» Sananertila, wnieh I
hose hi fee BOOM ft* all «h* family," Mas.
Faaaus &ux*n. KM Ltvantt s t , Lowett. Macs.
*1 Consider Heod'a Sarftteanna the beet
Haadimrtfaf is the wcrhi.;' M=. Jraxig
M. OiUtLToH. 113 Liberty SL, loiraU. Mae*.
liseod's SenapariUa I* sold everywhere,
ab MM nana) Uqoid, or in tablet form called
K)Q Doses One Dollar, Preonly by C. L Hoed Oo^ Lowell, Mass,
feeders ere. Affirmative, air* AiUtmao;
Negative, Mr. Madison,
sir, Rtcaerdav
Majsl Baker.
M I M Mary Lye*, »a
baa been doing some excellent work In
oar schools, end It 1» fortsniete that
Ovid has bar services for eyea t o e b o n
a period at one day each weak.
Indications point to a large Bomber
of contestants io the Mo*! oratorical
coeteet which will be bold eerJy in
March.
.
,
aaV
6 Per Cent.
Money to Loan
At 6 Per Cent.
Terms Satisfactory to the
Borrower.
Durand Flret National Bank.
At the encua) stockholders' meeting
o! the First National Bank, of Durand,
held on Tuesday of last week, the officers elected were the same as the year
proceeding, as follows:
O T O S S O
Presldent-Lctber Loucks,
Vice President-N, P, Lelend.
Second Vice—George Brooks.Cashier—J. D. Lelaad.
—Mrs. F. S. Peters and Mrs. W. J.
T H S CORUNNA JOURNAL.
AiMt. Caebler—J. L. Van Aletlne.
Simmons, of Meson, are gnesta of their
sister, Miss Kelsey*
WHY SO rYEAK?
WKLCH * JOHNSON, Pronator*.
—Henry Sidney continues to Improve
and
is now able to sit up and bis rapid
MtRtUhed *»*ry Thar*d*y noroins *t Co
rasas, the const;yaeatofSh!it*w**«* county.
recovery
Is expected.
Bswote* to tae inf treats of tbe B«pub>i«*0 Kidney Trouble* May b e S a p o ' n g Your
—For Sale: A bard coal neater in
tac COUACUOD otf general and UMMJ
Life Away. Michigan People Have
good condition. Inquire of Miss Katb•1.40 per. year la, advance.
Learned Thie F a c t
erine Ketoey, Corona*.
to at** la* paper
aaafcvet, and not leave it io the
—A carload of maebinery i s expected
to dou BaaOHCtuacb forycti Al
that yo«r tafcocriptkm la p»M nn (*
this
week for the brick plant. The
When a healthy man or woman begins
yon xeoaeet a* t* atop the
to
ran
down
without
apparent
cause,
kilns
are almost ready.
aad «*ali*y or the i h w t i i m i
ts' the Joowtu. U aboaaaat taati* becomes weak, languid, depressed, suf—John Aobertsoa it able to be back
rata* aa an «4««r*iafaf a w l l w . fer* backache, headache, diaay epaUa
•**•*••»•
.
at tbe Robe Com^aay again and} superof a*w» are eiw*y» aeeevtaal*. Be- and urinary disorders, took to she kideata yea vsll sec***uy neys for the cause of It alL Keep the Intend the mnktag of coals.
that it will he cSadiy re- kidneys well and they will keep you
—Jacob Bittai and WiH GoodwHL of
watt. DoaVe attdae? PtOs cure a*ck
Hew
Haven, ware guests at the Grand
kidneys and keep tbemwetl. Bare it
Mics^gan^saatawony
t
o
p
r
o
w
iL
Central yeatoi day far
attaePoatOOeo,
ICckl***,
JcaaWi pmhHafn, aairlrinmt, a t 9tl
- B d . Shelp, ef
Park street, Falamsaia, Mich,, says: -t
falls
of C.SL Watson at Byraw
bad enjoyed good hearth up t o three
y a a r a a a ^ w a a a l l m g a i t t o e i r f e r from evening within twenty miantea.
my kidneys. My back ached a great
—tf y o a appreciate the use of tbe
deal and grew so week ^ h a t l w s e a n a b
books
from the Ledior' Library come
to Kft even the sfigbteat wetghL At
tmtes these would be sharp, piereittg out to the supper Friday evening.
pains thtougb my loins and kidneys
VILLAGE SCHOOL NOTES
—Do not forget the Ledies' Library
which would always be more severe if I
tea
at Maeeabea Han Friday evening
attempted to stoop or straighten after
stooping. My work, as naaebiaisL cens- from 0 o'clock until all are served.
Gathered From Exchanges Around 0 M ed me t o bead over a grant deal and
—The Odd Fellows will confer the
eonaeaneatfy I waa very much bandiCounty.
capited. I consulted psryeklene bat re- first degree Monday evening. Every
ceived very little relief from their mod* member is requested t o be present.
ideea. t was telling a friend of my
—Ray. Carlos Hanks, of Owoeso, has
BYKUtf SCHOOL.
suffering*, and he advised me to procure
received
a call from a church in Denver,
A aew alrsfcaft f»« been botlt frow Doaa's KMeey PHle, and I ofatetned a
box. The reUaff I fait from the first waa Colo. I t Is probable that be will aci of tbe beeemeni wlcidowa to tbe fer- very great I continued using them,
*
draHcbL I t tfane afforde direct and m y back waa s e e * as strong as ever, cept it.
- M r s , William Toole? died In Howell
9sed l o the fontae* »&d does make a re- in feet, t waa watt ta every way. I do
not
hesitate
ta
iwnmmead
Dean's
MidJan.
SO, aged M years. Mr. and Mrs.
aarkabie ebaage In tbe otUliy of tee
aerPllle."
dkhAl
Tootey ware oM ptoneen «? Uvingttoa
XBVfte
For sate by all dealers
Price SO couaty.
A debate to be feeM n the aear fotore casta. Foster-MWnr* C o . Buffalo,
- K r a . Lladte Beatiey, Sunday fefi on
awahean anaaged wltti Oalnea.
N e w York, Sole Agents l o r Mm -Butted
tba
lot end Usfct the bene* i s her hand.
Ferbapa a DJOTO eejoymbto fiatt^thaw
Dr. Korrta waa called and reduced the
Urn o e e laet rrtday wbea Oaiaet Mgh
taka ma otter.
twAui! were e ^ r a ^ e t a a a » I»H been bad
save. The school, tfty stroag, fcsaded
- M r . and Mrs. C. D . Smith t
HwmmvwMM
h y Mr. Backaey, swooped down on By*
tataed Friday evening In honor of Mr.
Mgh,JaataetbelaetbeUrang. The
and Mrs. Coriett, of Clavamnd,aa4 Mrs.
was eooa thawed and a g e e e l a e ytott
Patrick, ot Chicago.
> the retniL
—Tbe annual inapection of Contnna
O B Monday afternoon Oalnea laterCotamaadery~lu
T, will be bald ThursTHAT I U tRTBBiBT.YOU
aaodlatn room. In charge of Mlai Wood,
day aigbt, by Mm. Sir. Cbaa. Q. Grahaas,
y*Jd Miss Hears t r U l t , end an eqeaiiy
grand captain general.
—C. £ . Fullam waa lo the city yestergwod tlnw was bad by tbe youngsters of
—Vernon W. Boyce wired the new
day. «
both those room*,
bousVand bam of Charles Simoneon at
The high Mhoo) sttendance bsi aver—Mrs. Klon Pond i i »»«*» betfep this
Bancroft last week for electricity: Mr.
aged low chla week on aoooont of siek* week.
Simoaaan has n fine home.
•jeaa. Seven baye been abeent for tbe
—Tbe Ledlcc* Library supper tomor—Sergeant Cornford la becoming s
past three days.
row evening.
regular
orange fiend carrying them
Our janitor com#s in for a goodly
—Phillip Kline, of Vernon, was in tbe around in bis pocket. He claims (or
share of tbe praise by those who ylcit
city Tuesday.
tbetn the beat nerve food y e t .
here, tbey being very compllmfntary
—Sheriff
Watson
Is
confined
to
bis
upon tbe aeat condition of the bulldio^.
—Senator Tuttle, Louis B. McArthnx
borne by illness.
snd Joseph H. Dusnebacke have found
OVID eCHOOL.
—Ward Sugden, of Shiawassee, wss in s co-psrtaersbip for tbe practice ot law.
A t a xrcent meeting of the school
town
yesterday.
Their office will be in Lau&lng.
beard it was decided to add soother
—A. J. Golick was In Bancroft Toes*
teacher to tbe faculty. Mta Rawe«, 8tb
—MMy task in life," ssld e minister,
grade te&cber, baa been advanced to n&- day on bttsiness.
'
"consists in saving young men." " A n r
sfiatant lu the high school. Miss Violet
—Miss Bessie Csriand was borne from replied a maiden of bis congregation,
Brown, of Jackson, has beea eecared to St, Johns Sunday.
"eave a good looking one for BIS."
teach the eighth grade. She comes
—Seymour Arnold was bald up at
—Frank Wnelan, of Verooo, was in
highly recommended.
O T O U O Saturday evening and robbed of
toe cr*y Saturday.
Tbe second semester begins next Von*
-Lee Berry, of tbe L \ of JL, was his money. He was bit a terrific blow
d e y and oader tae new arrangement
on the bend putting him down and out.
Miss Hswes will teaeh the German and boooe over Sunday.
—The Entre S o u * Club ware band—Mrs. L. M, Tsaner spent Friday and
CosaatereisJ braeebes; Mies Jsckson,
aomnly
entertained Monday evening by
lAtut sad T5n#H»b; Prioclpii Leddlek, Saturday i s DairolL
Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Saultz. Tbe favors
Scteoeeand MafJiemaUc?. SnpL Brosnsn.
—James Dtobrew, of New Eayen, 1A
wars given to E . T. Sidney and Rudolph
Bbtory.
very ill with pe^eoahNila.
Colby.
The last Friday In January occurs tbe
—Fred Branson waa here from An*
—Tbe Owoeso fire depsru&ent was
TsaKtuaaster's Club. A debate—-*Be- trim Tuesday on business.
called out Sunday afternoon by the
aaiced that tbe pretest flow of imigraata
—Truant Officer Dell Guiick was in burning out of a chimney near Robbins
blto U . d. »bOUid be prohibited.^ Tbe
Lennon Friday on basinets.
Table factory. Fortunately no damage
—R. F . K a y , o i Morriee,waa a guest was done.
at the Grsnd Centra) Monday.
—J. Fred Smith, of Byron, was elect—Miss Louise Peacock will entertain ed secretary-treasurer of tbe Michigan
tbe Modern Precliias Satorday.
Holsioln-Freistan breeders association
st
its annual meeting beid in TAnalng
—John Xoyenger was tbe guest of
last week.
Declain McXamee over Sunday.
SAVINGS
BANK
Local ItffoS
When Ybuf
Take Cold
—Tbe W. c . T. U. meat with Mrs.
Leavltt Friday at 3 o'clock p. m.
way is to pay no attention
—Isaac Osborne, Jr., of Morrke, was
to it; at least not until it de- bare Moadsy on probate business.
velops into pneumonia, or
—Mrs. Walter T. Parker entertained
bronchitis, or pleurisy. An- tbe Modern PrecUlaa mat Satorday.
other way is to ask your doc—Mrs. George D. Mason entertained
tor about Ayer's Cherry Pec- Saturday night for Miss £ v a Martens.
toral, If he says, " The best
—Robert Montgomery, of Chicago, Is
thing for colds," then take it. visiting at tbe botce of L. G. Cuditvy,
Do as he says, anyway.
—I Ibrary tapper at Maocabee Hal)
Friday evening be sure and be present.
—Mrs. Elizabeth Boice and Mrs. Klla
Boice, of Byron, were In tbe city Satorday.
—John Durham bas appeal ed a little
wawa the bawds are constipated, po£better
this week but la still confined to
aassswa sobstanc?s are absorbed raw the
Meed instead of being daily removed from hi* bed.
body as nature intended. Knowing
—Found: A door key nesr school
danger, doctors always iaoujre about
bouse.
Gwnsr can baye ssme 'aj calling
ma; condition of the bowels* Avar's P!0ai
u
ibis
office.
»ayta«Jr.C.aywOa>, lowaU,
—Tbe ladles -rant to purchase some
oew
bookt, so .some out to the eupper
ARKEK'S
Friday
evening.
HAS & BALSAM
r i W .<Jt«6 A l l T i ' I . t l ' I iTftTTtll
—iir. and Mrs. S. C. Patebel, of DuNo'.or yaila t o SIUHVT* Oray]
Hair to ita X9atotul Colsr.
rand,
were guests Saturday night at the
Cure* »o^p 4IPTM«I A FMT tslSsA
uc IM« xn. G. J. Cole.
—Christopher Cords, aged 85 years,
died at the home of his daughter, Mrs.
George Deuyes, of Owoeso, laat Friday
nlgas. Mr. Cords was an old resident
of Shiawassee county and resided in
New Haven for years.
Chaa. X. BJ*4ey,
A. D. Whipple,
TroBtoeot
Cha*. W. GcJe,
Oeo. B
Vie* aaeatdent
i
XHB
Owosso Savings Bank
Owe
Capital,
MI«MIe9atra
*
flOO,OO.QO
Pays -4§-
On SnvtwBra
Dcpoeira
DIRBCTORS:
W. B. Cam ham
W. U. KJIpatrleh
K. r . Dodl*y
Oeo. T. k f M H
Chaa. W. Gale
Ch**. x. Kix)*j
W. A. Wootierd
na/
ipkfl
9SS * w j 53=
a largo tnrnoot at Corn e a s Lodge F. A A. M. t o see the work
la the third degree at exfrutptified by
S a p c M. JL Mason, the Iowa ntaal need
in tbe lactam.
%
—C. W. Sterar, the Ann Arbor engineer, who has bean ic the hospital at
Ana Arbor for several weeks, since be*
ing iu|ured in a wreck at Milan, died at
S o'clock Tuesday morning.
—Judge Jeffries, of Detroit, was In
the city yesterday looking after his In*
tarsal* in the vitrified w V c plant which
i t In the'eourse of construction. H«
fODud every thing is* good shape.
—Ttie Juniors of the Owosso high
school tackled Mannto Hatbeway'siodoor nine last week Wednesday evening
snd got beaten 17 to 13. Batteries Jar*
rad-H&ihaway. Upham. Btaeiow.
—Mrs. Chios C. Rsnoos, of Owosso,
died last weefe Tuesday at the home of
ber daughter, Mrs. George Harmon, of
Venice, from pneumonia. Tbe fonerai
was held Friday, interment io Venice.
—John Pnrdie, tbe Flint man arrested
for robbing F. J. Martin, of Letmos., of
a gold watch and a fur coat. Is awaiting
examination in tbe county jell. Ha will
be examined Feb. 13 by Justice Patebel.
—The First National Bank ot Durand
has just Installed n neat of Salty Deposit Boxes of the latest and aaoat approved styles for tbe beaefit of its o a u y
cnstDffiers, both present and
Ave,
—W. H. Faxon, of Ovid,
aonnty agent of CMntonfor thirty years
msgneeL B e bee served longer
s a y e^tuM^saaa la tha state in that
J e s a e E . Stone has been appetntad hto aneawaor.
—The hotel s t Bath waa banted Seti»rd^yBigaAarjo«tl*o*ck)dt The fire
caught Iraia a defective ekuBney sad
waa ..«oS e1iac«Tered natil tbe whole
second anwy waa aiMaaew the occupants
escaping in their ntght d o m i n g .
—Herbert Hill, of New Haves, w h o
loat a hand recentiv, waa pleasantly surprised last w e e s when tnetobersof the
N e w Haven Fjuasers* Club met at bis
place with teams and finished drawing
in kit corn. It waa a very commendable set.
<±-Tbe Woman's Crab mat wttb-Mtta
Lootee Peacock Monday evening. A
sketch ot the Bte of Waahmgton Irving
was g i r m by Mrs-Hnrrick sod an oral
review of Alhantbra waa given by MHa
tmtatk.
The evening proved very
profitable.
—Frank GUaa la aaasngSg acreage
far the Owoeso Soger Coespsay end la
making good. Frank la a huetting
y o u s g man and his word Is good at
gold. The company eouW n e t have
faun4 a a w n competent and worthy
youngman.
—Mia. Holla L. Chase, of Owoeso,
died vary sttddenly Tuesday morning.
She wss 111 but a abort time with neuralgia of the heart. Deeeaaed was formerly Miss Faaole Osborne and was married to Mr. Chase last July and arms s
very estimable lady
—Caleb Parka, of New Hsven, In cornmen ting on tbe return of tbe crows to
McCurdy Park, says tbst there have
been 4 or 5 crows about hie place all
winter. The birds did not go away at
ali, but atayed with tbe csttle, picking
op com about the barn.
—Clerk Day, of Bennington, was in
town Saturday. The town is in herd
shape for ofileers. Mr. Day holding tbe
office of clerk sad justice and The©.
Hicks supervisor and Justice. It looks
as too' a special election will be necessary to straighten tntoga o u t
—Aa the rulmlnatioe of a romance
which started several years ago in the
Cats schooL Howard Bowman, a yoang
newspaper reporter, and Miss Vena
Graham, daughter of Mrs. J. H. Hafaer,
337 Ferry avenue east, were secretly
married ia WI adaor* Tuesday evening.—
Detroit JoumaL
—Clio Messenger: Now that tbe Detroit Free Press baa named tbe republican candidate for governor and the Detroit Journal bss selected Micbi&ta's
candidate for |tne presidency, we wish
they would come to our rescue and aid
us in selecting our Justice of Peace for
tbe ensuing year.
—The Tom Marks Stock Co. will be s t
t i e Owosso Theatre Thursday, Friday
and Saturday nights of this week In
oomedy drama. Mr. Marks baa been in
Owosso before and always plays to
crowded huoeaa. He is one of tbe best
cjomedians on the road and baa a strong
company with him. The street cars
will m a each night after the show,
—The democrats of Livingston county
gathered at Hovett Tuesday afternoon
aad organised a club to be known as
the Livingston County Democrat Club.
The officers ejected are: Wm. P. VanW<nk!cpreu;I*E.Howlett,ft9c'y; W.
E. Robb, trees.; A. E. Cole and B. £ .
Barron, executive committee.
The
question of holding a banquet will be
loft with the executive committee.
—The Grand Central Hotel chimney
horned oat Friday evening with a fierce
blase that appeared aa the 1 the roof was
on fire. Aa alarm was turned in and
the fire department was promptly on
band sad bed the hose rue up to tbe
upper story betore tbe occupenuf were
aware of tbe apparent danger. No
water was thrown and no barta done.
The fire departmeot is to oe commended
fur It* promptness.
—Frank Grtfim, of Clare, has began
eorpaa proeeedraga to
of his eight year oW
now with Mr. and Mrs. John WIBiama.
of Durand. He d e t o * the boy waa left
With Mr. sad Mrs. WiDtome at the time
of his wlfe*s death, hot that be never
reiteqniahed legal guardtanshtp.
—A pleasant surprise waa given at the
home of Mrs. Willie io honor of Mrs.
Adams, of Mexico, N . Y„ by the W. R.
C. Tbe evening was spent in a moat
aajoyabie way at carda, reading s a d
recitation after which dainty refreshments w e r e served. Mr. Newell, a
brother of the t w o sfatsrs, of Dempster,
N . * H was ahjo present.
—At Duraad s t the rtsidtnet of Mar.
FT. 0*Rsfferty, Wtdnssosy, Jan* IS, at
i M p . at, omeuiea taweaairlugwaf Mist
Marea Van Woraser, of
Frank 1% Crease, of Morriee.
weeattliWiaatrsveln^enitWbrowa
Chiffba Panama and Ike groom Is the
conventional Week. The happy couple
left on the 8 : * train lar Detroit They
have tbe beat wishes and eongrattiletioae
of their many frleade,
—Ralph Baker who Is employe 1 at
the plant of the Amertcan Farm Pro*
ducts Company waa badly braised about
the body but not seriously injured this
morning when Driver Eugene Scott's
team which wss ataadlog at tbe m l l k |
dock, started abead suddenly and ran .
away. Brker was caught between the
wagon and the dock, and badly pinched. 1
Dr. Hume attended him. The tetm
siter running some distance and damag-;
lag tbe wagon was caught when it re- j
turned to tbe cold atorageplant.—Argus. I
—Corunna Court No. 083 I. O. F., had
one of the biggest work-feats in its history Friday even tog, when a class of
thirty members were initiated. Aasong
the 150 present were visiting companions to tbe number of about 85, from
Owosso. After tbe work dancing waa
enjoyed until about 11 o'clock at the
opera bouse, wbea tbe Foresters sdV
joarned to the Odd Fallow Hall, and enjoyed an elaborate banquet. After listen
rag to brief speeches O e y r e t a r n r l t o
the opera boose and danced until 3
o'clock Saturday morning, music being
tarnished by a part ot Waaener's orencstra.
from
'"•'fa''"
s a d Mrs. O. J.
bo found edemas will
trr.J,H.
lotcra
in that ronntry, aaay g o out t h e m
this spring for the pwrjaoaa o i making
haying asore MwS.—Durand)
-<*8ftmet Wimssa"
Byron.bi oartakaty entitled f*
o^8l!ertWHlla»asheiehereaa
m
G. Woraatoy, that ha waa ta, t o w n , aK
thesigh gaaeCs a t Hm kosel aatd ha waa
o p before dey break and that biard fcrfa*
to. • W e b a t i e v a l t m r a t a e s a w e i i ^ e d t a
attaauoarlyl
Caa only be had
by using- good Floor. Our
iea4cra, "Festival," **Old
Homestead" and "Shiawassee ChiefT" are made from
the best winter wheat obtainable, tbe entire process
is as clean and sanitary as
it is possible to haver and
the result is a Flour than
can not be beat in the state.
Ask your dealer for a sack.
The Corunna
Milling Co
s= Farmers, Feeders and
Stock Hen.
We have another ca* of that good barrel Salt that
does not harden in the barrel, per barrel
A quantitp of Rock or Packing Salt, in one bushel
sacks, while it lasts, per sr.ck
Oyster Shells, per one hundred pound sack
Less quantities lc per pound.
If you chew or sraoke will sell you Six 5c packages
of miy kind of Smoking Tobacco for
_.._.
Three cuts of any kind of Plug
A Good Fine Cut, L ight or Dark
90c
30c
75c
25c
30c
J. C QUAYLE
Th# OHtfnal Cash Grocar,
iiSCT&WJfftt
tha land which he had given to his
P*Bttfc«. aod of the woai^riSI king
whom God bad ostahHahed upon tbe
throne. And when he had gone and
the first thrill of the story had been
spent she found doubt creeping Into
her heart
ta^Bsj*flaTBBBV swsjsjps*. 3ySjnsj|S>tjaj sja^jsjBSjgaajp
It was naught but the fair dream of
a romancer. No land could "be betSY IMS "WGMWAY AJ*> STarA?*
ter than her land. No gods were
better than the gods of her lathers
and her fathers' fathers. She wouid
not prove disloyal to thorn. But ai
fOwria*C*8r»7KT5Er7*raJUM.)
vays while she sought thus to bring
Scripture Authority - Kings, 10:1-11 herself back to rest content with what
she already possessed, there persist
ed this question:
"What if the story is true?"
SERMON ET1E.
"ASid how shall I ever know whether It la true or not?" she asked her"Behold, a greater than Soloself at, last.
mon is here." Do you hear the
"Why not go and sett?" An Increduchallenge of Scripture? A conlous little laugh burst"'from her Uj*s
templation ot this story of Soloat the very thought of such a thing.
mon and* appreciation of his wisand to prove that it was Impossibledom and glory bring with them
she began to run over in her miud
nothing but condemnation In
the many seemingly insurmountable .
that we can discern the splenthings in the way of such a long,
dors that marked his life and
hard and perilous journey.
She
reign white at trie urn) time
might |ust as well give up her people
we miss the beauty and charm of
and her kingdom oa to undertake such
the son of God, the greater than
a journey, for while she was gone,
Solomon.
what might not hap^n?
>
T h e queen of the south shaft
"But what if the story Is truer
rise up in the judgment with
came back the question again and
this generation and shall conagain. And it gave her no peace. To
demn It." And the Judgment
every reason great and small which
will be iust, for how can we esshe could think of why she should not
cape when wo have neglected
go on the journey, the question kept
ao great opportunity of seeing
coming back with redoubled force:
and knowing him who is called
"What if It is truer*
•Wonderful, Counsel lor,
The
"If it is true," ahe exclaimed at last,
Mighty Q*d, The Everlasting Fawith an air of decision, I want to
7
ther, The Prince of Peacet*
know. And how shall 1 know save as
True' It hi of the world as IsaI go and see for myself? Did I send
tah deciares: "Whew we shaft
a deputation to this King Solomon, I
lew Mm, there ie no beauty that
should have only their say-so. If
we ahoald deofre him. He ia
Israel baa such a king and such a
oea|Msea w d rejected of men* a
God, I most see and know for myman of sorrows and acquainted
self, if I wouid be satisfied."
<f with grief; *nd we Wd ae it
"And so would you go?*? she asked
were our faoee fVom him; he
herself at last. "Tea, I would," she
was despised nod wo esteemed
exclaimed with an air of decision.
him not" ft fat not that the
Rising nastily as though that matter
beauty and the glory and the
was now settled, she summoned her
power are not there, but it is
waiting maid.
that wo turn our faces from
"Go, FeHea, and dispatch messenhim who would reveal ail these
gers
to the port I would see the
things to «*, m*4 too only the
traveler
who came thither on the
temporal things sf life,
ship and who told such wonderful
Having ears we hear not. But
stories of tbe land from which he
not so with the queen of Sheba,
came. Make baste, for if I remember
the country far, far to the south,
rightfer the boat was to have sailed
for when tidings came of a
this day."
certain King Solomon, and of
Thus admoniahed Felica quickly had
hie wisdom ami the epiendors of
the swiftest runner on his way, and
hie kingdom, she listened to the
that evening he bad returned, bring
acory, nana o*\#tnm>fut vusx one
ins; with him the travel*- wboae
stories and so aroased the fair queen.
•yea that aft she ; t
"Bow can one make tbe Journey to
And ao j \ thy land?" ano demanded; eagerly.
Rtfqaf
"What" exclaimed the man, wonCAMt! Do ye* graep the atgderingiy, "would yon face the fanISoanee or that' worwr
tigue and danger of so long a jourj • yen Mm now, dwelling In
ney r*
and osfftsowwont yon will
"Yes. yes,** the queen responded.
be afrie ie know that
"Thy stories have roused in me a
i; things which are spoken of the £ spirit which will not be stilled. 1
greater King Jason are
most go and prove thy words."
You havo hoard the
"And thou shalt not be disappointYou have boon told ever and
ed," was the confident response.
over again by thoeo who have
One month later found the queen
j \ come straight from the presence \ \
of
Sheba well on her way to the
it of King Jeaua that he and he 1
land
of Israel. Her determination to
J alone can satisfy the heart of %
make
the long, perilous journey had
man, and yet you have been $
come
as
a surprise and ahocfc to her
content to stay where you are %
people,
but
when they realized her
In the far country of sin. Why £
earnestness
of
spirit and desire to
not, like the queen of Sheba, %
learn
the
.iTrth
of the wonderful
come and prove whether the • ^
things
she
had
heard,
thsy had at
things you have heard are realty
last
heartily
entered
into
her plans
so?
and had laden her camels with the
King Solomon received th?
richest treasure which her kingdom
queen of Sheba because she
afforded, for, said they:
came m* an honest inquirer. Me
'Our queen shall carry ofT her best
was willing that she should see '£ to the land •a'here the great and
and hear and know. And the ;£ mighty God rules."
greater than Solomon invites ^
But oh, the wearlsomeness of that
the most searching kind of hon- ^
long
journey.
Had not her desire
est investigation and testing. ^
been so great she would have turned
"Prove me," ia the invitation.
^ back more than once. But it was
ft when on the burning sands of the
desert that the greatest test came.
There was murmuring among her
THE STORY.
great retinue of servants and she was
MffTJT what if the story la fme?" weary and faint and their water was
V and as the question kept press- slmost exhausted. Should she go on
ing itself In upon her, she tapped her or should she turn back? Did not her
daintily-sandaled foot impatiently upon own country offer all that her heart
tfca polished maruto floor, as though could desire?
she demanded answer from tbe very
"But I would know of this wonderstones at her feet
But no answer ful King 8olomou, and of the God who
came to her ears but tbe soft,muf- has his dwelling place in the midst of
fled tap of her foot upon the floor. his people," she cried almost in
"It all comes from listening: to the despair at last, "Tea, I will keep my
idle tales of the wanderer and adven- face set steadfastly toward this land
turer," she exclaimed at last impa- of Israel, though I perUh in the at'
tiently; apd then almost in tbe same tempt"
And with tbe final resolve and the
breath she added:
putting
--ray of tbe temptation to
"But what if the story is true?
turn
hack
there came peace ta her
How 1 uiah I knew.
heart
and
she
said, softly: "Perhaps
"This Kins Solomon of Israel must
the
God
whom
1 seek will bring me
be a wonderful person," she contin'back
this
way
after
1 have seen all
ued musingly to herself, as s_e
the
wonderful
things
of
which I have
threw herself upon the low divan and
heard."
gave free rein to tbe thought* which
crowded into her troubled heart "And
"Yes," said, the queen, lifting her
his God Bust be even more wonderful
eyes
and looking about her. "Yes, I
than.the gods of Shrba.
thought
I was not mistaken. This is
"But no," she added hastily, "this
the
place.
Ah, bow near I came to
cariot be. Let me not be disloyal to
turning
back
in my quest and how
my gods and my land. What fairer
glad
I
am
now
that I kept on. What
la-.ui could they give than tbe spicewonderful
things
have I heard and
laden fields, the golden sands of her
seen.
Truly
the
God
of Solomon is the
rivers and the precious stones? Sureone
and
only
God.
Not
half was told
ly the God of Israel cannot have dot:r>
me
of
all
the
wisdom
and
prosperity
more."
which
tbe
God
of
Isi*el
has
given his
"But your god<j never divided the
servant
Solomon.
And
now
I
go back
waters of a mighty river, nor threw
to
my
land,
and
the
God
of
Solonton
down the walls of a city," came back
the answer as snatches of tbe story shall be my God, and he shall be the
of the nation of Israel came to ber God of my people, for I have seen and
mind as they bad been related to do know that there are no gods like to
her but a few days before by the the God of israeL"
traveler.
Eager fer Bible Knowledge,
This traveler had come on one of
Rev. W. M. Junkin writes from
the trading ships which had touched Korea of the Korean Christians makat a near-by port and tbe wor.dorful
stories of the land from which he ing sacrifices in order to attend the
had come bad reached her ears and Bible teaching services and says:
she had sent for him. And he ha1 "Where but on the mission field can
come, glad of the chance to tell to the you find meD clamoring for Bibles
beautiful queen of the land of Sheba and running with them to anyone who
bis story. Eagerly she had listened c&u teach them saying: 'Tell me the
while be had told of the peopie of meaning?' This is the case here and
Israel, of the God of Israel and hie it is the most encouraging phase of
wonderful leadings ani dealings, of the work in Korea at present"
VISIT Or QUEEN
OF SflEBA
*Th* Iron Way* presents * taitbml picture of Hie
fttsrfa* tea* which It describes, of the trial*, disappoiiiUftfirft.fcaorea and successes of the "*% four^and
of the plot and counterplot m the struggle to make
OaHioniiaaAaotegrslpartof the U n k ^ r o feet a* well
aa in name. The love epiaodee and romantic incidents
•re JotermMca in the story with a akffl that shows
the author to be a real toaster of literary style. <
Seattle Post-MeWgencer.
*Tbe Iron W » " it
•an of tfa* strona>
THE
IRON
"The Iron Way" is
» fever/, nuatling
story, full of action
fitting the times,
and blending "«*
and fiction de*tiotawjr.--Detroit
Fn* Petti.
SAtAB ItATT
of the
£*$t fe w o r t h renirrntoerfag. I t is a
a sexsatioa i a t h e literary
story in which i s
Important incident in
: piraHJi \g romarinrx
Wffi FmdinTbU
I**u*
thm Opmninj Cb>api*r* of
I Q I U S ffjsytifl to |0 j t i i
1»
PURE
DRUGS
RUBBER GOODS."
r
have at last fctxnd what we bave
been looking years to fintl; a complete iinft of Rubber,Goods that the
manufacturers have confidence enough it
to absolutely guarantee for 2 years to the
consumer. We honestly believe every one
of them wis]
last 5 years.
Tins KM if
somocbout
of the ordinary that we
can oat begin to d e scribe the
difference
bttvtfen
"t«E£V£RKITE use*
and the
other kinds,
b a t wish
you might
idrop in at
oar store
and see for
yosrself.
The prices
a r e right
too, in tact
than the other kind, considering
the quality.
Se* var window display this week and
then come in and let as explain the WHY
of k. Remember we are the * £ « * » •
agents in this town for "TBI LILNIIa
USS. MaUni*cror»dbyTH»Il»UtR
Ma* CO.. of ChkftfO.
Compare our prices with
others. We guarantee to sat*
isfy you.
NO OLD STOCK
NO TKC4MLE TO SHOW COO0S
Open all day and evening.
Open Sundavs, 9 to 12 A.
M.; 5 to 7 P.M.
REYNOLDS
& ftOYT
NEWCOmCK CJOC STORE
CORUNNA
zif
^ -
v. ., .*
•3.-
MMiVfcMfBlMWW*
•wiwevaiMw^^vMfvMkM*'
Additional
Locals-
wwsJ
—A gnnC Jary ID Iowa bas indicted
Seers, Boebocfc ± Co^ the mail order
Sim, on tbrae counts. The Urn It
charged with netsg the mails fur fraudulent parpoaea, Tbe firm will have to
defesd the charge o^ misrepresenting
f^od* both by catalogue and circular
and thereby securing people'* money by
these misleadi OR statement*.
—Fred Gotbke, *ged 66. a resident of
Owosso for the past 40 year*, died at
¢-30 Tuesday oven tog. of pneumonia, at
the home of bis daughter, lira. 6 . La
Raise, 220* Cass street. He is survived
by four children, Mrs. Ida sfarow&ky.
of Arcadia, Mich., Cbsa. Gothke, of
Milwaukee, Wis^, Otto Gothke, of Spokane, Wasb., sod Mrs. La Haine, of
Owosso. All of tbe children excepting
Otto were present at the f uoeral.
—Dursnd Express: 0. A. Garfield he*
been arrestee} on the charge o? embezzlement, uela*; arraigned in Justice Potter's court Monday. His examination
wilt he held Saturday morning, end in
the meantime be 1« under a S600 bad
bond. Tbe charge brought by Tbe
People Is fiSrou^b the complaint of
former boodonen of Mr. Garfield, 3 . C.
Patehel and Charles Hash in, who made
good to the village of Durand a deficiency ie Mr. Garfield's accounts.
Don^t use harsh physics. The reardon weakens the bowels, leads to
chronic constipation. Get Doaa'slte*
galece. They cperate easily, tone tbe
atotflaeh, core constipation.
THE FIVE O'CLOCK SUPPER
The Ladies' Library Association Give
One Friday Evening.
The Ladies' Library will serve a tea
at the L. O. T. M, H. hill on FiIAav,
January 33. As tbe association ha*
not tailed on tbe public lor nearly two
years, tuey aru'niucb in need of money
for new books, and tbe citizens are
orged to patronize tbem on this date.
At tbe annual meetiog last Saturday tbe following c!3cer$ were chosen
for the ensuing year:—
President, Mrs. Young.
Vice president, Mrs. Wi filer.
Secretary, Mrs. W. M. Bush.
Treasurer, Miss Evetetb.
Librarian, Miss Hcli. ,
Book committee, Mrs, Hume, Mrs.
Augsbnry, Mrs. McMulIen, Mrs, Bailey, Mrs. H. McCardy and Mrs. L, W.
Sheardy.
Execath. committee, Miss Jennie
Holt, Miss Wcstbrook, Miss Newell,
Mrs. W. J. Parker, MissUcdsey, Mies
Emm* Chandler, Mrs. J. C. Qaayle,
ano Miss Eveleth.
I
R. M A N
How valuable are you?
Would you work for
Fifteen Dollars a Week?
You can make more—yes. much more—but as a starter
we will give you 30 cents an hour, and you use all or
only part of your time, as you prefer.
We want no money for outfit we supply everything
free. No previous experience is necessary, but we do
wim a worker with pluck and perseverance.
Areyqa that man? If so we promise you steady work
and good pay. Want to know more about this? Then
write us at once before someone else gets it.
Address, mentioning this p?.per,
FARM AND HOME
Opportunity
Springfield) Mass.
Department
or
Chicago, HI.
I
Meal Estate Transfers.
S. Scott to a Scott and wife part
section 25, fttrfiejd, $700.
W.ColJiertoJ. .Scott, part section
32, Rush, 1.500.
B . Pearssil to J. noJslngto^ and
wife, part section 1», Vernon, 2.6J0*GT p r o n t o J. Hafl, lot section IS,
Owoaso. 30ft,
JgVBiiasett to W. Sanborn and wife,
part^section 10, HsieltoD, 800. jfcfi^?
3 ^ ~ R a e e toH. Jacobs, and wife, part
sSction 3¾ Owosfo, 500.
" " a E a c e t o X Euesspart section 32,
Owosso, 700.
^W. Whitaker to A. TMrham lots 18
afld 19, block 15, P. L. Co's 2nd axfcritkw, Owosso, I>urao<J, 750V
A . Derbam t o H . Pardonet and v i l e
part section 8, Venice, 1.500.
A. Derbam to D. Peamail and wife,
oartaecMond, Venice, 3,000
—BOLTS WANTTO-Osb^seb,
wood, etan, maple, twees and
bolts, est 9S In. in leogtb, DeHvery
assy bo ssede say tSasa tSna winter.
Write or canapes as for pticss. Fax
A^Msaoa Furnttars Co.
fl
nSOSATa OKPay. • p w of ^fraJgaf,
f Caul*
Cow of Sht»v«*wc oa, At a setskieef taerrebMeCocul for aMA
eeuatv, set* at tee Probate OSsae, ia ta*
Cfty of Coreaoa, on Tuesday, the Ttfe Say «f
Jtonary ta- ifce year eae fttoeaiHie r a w fenar.
Present. MnttSew Busk, Janae oTTtona**,
In tbe m i n e r «t tfteenase of JwafeiJL
Gu^ reading- * t& SRaf ?ae petttton of Lena
Henna prajtvg that wtiwfir'. unratlaa of wUS
estate a s j at m a t e d to the teUtioner or
•one other AaiteWe petvoo.
U fcv erOnee, that the « k Say of Vtebntaxy*
next, as sea o'clock la tfe* foteaee*, as
mM Probat* OSVc, wr aoaiffaed for bemziag
saM Mttbioa.'
Ani tt la fcrtber etSerea, tha* *> e * w •« tala
order e e pnSnahed three anaseeulve weeks
pretlouato —M day of heattoav tetheOorwiafc
Joornai, a nonapafjer fctatSsd am& etreolatlBg
|%onnsasTOsuT>ny wcrnat-B» UJMHW*
We, MM giidOTSlgaed. aavta* bees n m f a l n d
ortheBoB.HatStew B « h , J q 4 s « of PrafcaM
la asd for the Carat? of BWawaMee, Maae of
OoamlBtioaer* to reeetve, esMadae^
aUelahaaaaa denaaadsof an «•#•
a aaM ossate, e> awrbyjctro 1 "
wttl BHM at the ossec of sa«
httaeGI«/ofC9r«i
ty, oa Bosway, tt* St* day of Mar** A. Dv
a m and en aasardey, a e nth day <**
"
A. O. MSI, as tea o*elo*k la the Sshf
Of etteSef aftid day*, far Uw pwoes* of
When in need of an experieneed auctioneer,
one that can tell your
property right, whether
your sale is large or
small, and treat both
aeller and buyer courtsonaly and in a gentlemanly manner, give ma
a call, v
*•* v
•••
D. sstrfau
O. SOYOS,
Qsaiaitai
OYArs or wjcBiOAjr-counr *t aatat
O
'gOOx1 —•
^
-
AS a aswalaa of « M *KAa** Ofian for hahl
Caaaty. aeM at the VMhaM O0Jee, ta thrOh#
of Cetwaaub, oa Soxaraay, the 4th day of J a e w
arjr, i s the year OBC nuMuaad ataehaadrcd
a«4 «M*tft—tat, XeUbow Boaa, Judae of PtvhaM.
Ia the amuor of the eMato of Julia at.
tDtperaoii, deceamd.
Ua rt adiac aod Sllna-tbe prttttoa of Waod*
B-titler poayta** that adattalstraUon of i t U
estate » * / be granted to Jaatea A, Laverock
or oome other «uit«t>le penton.
It 1* oraerrd. ta»t the 3nl day of »brnitry«
n«xt, at tea oVIocit In the forrooon. at *«id
Ih-ob-it* OStee, be aMtidnod for hearins waid
betiuoa.
• s d It 1» forth** ordered, that a copy of this
order be puMtahed ih.tr* »u-K«>iiw}ve w e k o
prcYioua to MOd day of hearing, is tbe Corona*
Journal, a newspaper printed aad clrcul»iiaf
In *»id Countr Of ShiawmiMre.
MATTHEW BrSH,
Judffe ot Prob*'
By Kttberlne E. Kelaey, Probata RrgiaWr,
OF MlCHItiAX, Coanty of Shlaw»a>
bee, so.
SAtTATS
a iie«»£on of the Probate Court for **id
County, held at the Probate Office, in fre City
of Conuw*. oa Saturday, the 4th day of JXRnary, in tbe year one thousand uiue Itondred
ano e-ight.
Present, Matthew Bush, Judge of Probate.
In the matter of the estate of John Ward,
deceased.
On readlsfc asd Sl'ntf *•** petition of John
Boutwell. aa admlaiiitrator, praying for Ucenoft
to sell real estate of said d«ceaaed at pri-rata
saie for tbe porpooe of diMtribtitkM.
It i* ordered, that the Snd day of February,
next, at tea o'clock ia the forenoon, at aald
ProbcM Ottee, be **&lgo*d for hearing said
peUtioo.
And it i» farther ordered, that a copy of this
6 7 d « we jniUuMM*l three uuocontive week*
A O. HATHAWAY
AUCTKNtmi
BYKON.
MICH.
rertoaa to waid day of hearing. In the Comnna
oaraal, a n c w o w w q priated aad eirenlaSBaf;
JhttaUOouatyof
i
atATTHXW BC8H,
Jadce of Probata.
By Katheria* B. Belaty, Secteear of Probate.
Look at your expiration tate
wish to begin the New Year with an acknowledgement of our appreciation of the favors
" shown us during the past year by the people
t% ot this community. Our business through 1907
has been very' satisfactory indeed, and we desire to
thank those who have contributed to the result. We
endeavor to so conduct our business that our customers
will be our friends, and we have oo doubt that the
steady growth of our business is in a large measure due
to the loyalty and influence of our patrons. We hope
to merit a continuance of their good will and to so conduct our store that it will attract those who appreciate
High Quality in Goods and Most Reasonable Prices.
To all our Friends we extend our BEST WISHES
FOR A HAPPY AND PROSPEROUS NEW YEAR.
YOUR* FOR AN HOfJCST DEAL
•*«
A._W.:CURTIS & CO
FUlllllTUstK AWD UNDOtTAJCIIte.
r^r<irti
J-
A.n.1
ICOMMON COUNCIL.
AUCTIONEER
i3i"
KATTMSW KTT8B,
JTuageofprooate.
By BTaSherlae S. Seteer, Pfobat* r
tAt
Oonmnn OomH^Boomn,
Corunna, Mieh., Jan. » , 190«.
At a regular meeting of tbe common
council of tbe City of Coranna, called
to order by tbe Mayor. Present,
Mayor Mcllullen and Aid. Ciutterbucfc
aod Jacobs.
G There being s o quorum present, tbe
council adjourned.
~ ~ IJOUIS N . " S H K A E D Y ~
City Clerk.
-:-¾¾
PHONE « •
&&vL^ri*l\Mi-^ij3kT'iL-r
«f:* ^ ^ - ^ S S i i W i i !
•i.
• i
I
IROTWAT
OFTJJE
zmszBerjoMrjy'Jbtmezjaij&tr
CHAPTER 1.Arrow and Fire.
' Half a century \&c\ the great region
between the Missouri and the Sierra
Nevadas, except, for Denver, Salt Lake
City,, and a few mining camps, was a
trackless, forestless desolation known
only to Indian, coyote, and venturesome emigrant. Yet two men under
the golden wing of the government
planted a line of lonely posts, and
Jinked them with a chain of stage
coaches. Over this treacherous ft«.y
aped daily messages, men and treas j
ore; sped, and arrived—H frost and '
Indians permitted.
Late on an autumn afternoon the
Overland Mail was toiling sunward up
a western rampart of the Rocky moantains. Two passengers were on the
box with the driver. The center man,
booked as Alfred Vincent, was alight,
fair, and, to the superficial eye, young
*o boyishness. His air of one bred
to the best of city refinements contrasted sharply with bis fellow-traveler, who bad been introduced as Mr.
Pbineas Cadwallader, though the
driver afterwards called him "Blownard Cad," which nickname he viadi- cated by a constant stream trf gossip.
But an astute observer would have
seen that he was trying to penetrate
the reserve, the 3light mystery that
surrounded his fellow-traveler.
Yet. whatever the mystery, Alfred
Vincent was now posting westward
-with a letter in his pocket signed by
CoIIla P. Huntington, and directed to
Inland Stanford, governor of California, and president of the Central
Pacific Railroad company. Alfred paid
slight heed to the others. His impatient imagination winged him far from
present inaction, over mountain and
desert, to the far west, to unguessed
conflicts of the future.
"Holy Mackinaw! Only fools would
think of building a railroad through
this God-forsaken country!"
The caustic sentence roused Alfred
from bis reverie; and Phineas noted
that "railroad" was the magic word
that broke the spelL The driver, William Dodge, better known as "Uncle
Billy," readjusted his quid of comfort,
«pat with precision, and touched up a
lagging leader with the tip of bis rodlong whiplash. "Well, rra not taking
the chances of calling Gove'no' Stanford a fooL"
"Of course he ain't He don't intend
to build any railroad, either. Not over
the Sierras, anyway. He's got a better thing." Phineas' stdewise look diligently sought a rift in Alfred's mask.
"Mfaoing?" Uncle Hilly questioned.
"That Dutch Flat Swindle. Those
C. P. fellers have their wagon road
built over the Sierras, and—"
"How in blazes can they build a railroad. Cad, without a wagon road?
Don't they have to feed thoir advance
construction camps? And won't they
have to do it for years, while they
cut their miles of tunnels?"
"Oh, they'll put their railroad
through to Dutch Flat maybe; but
from there on they'll go it by mules;
take all the toll they can get from the
$12,000,000 freightage Nevada pays
•very year to the transportation companies. The C. P. people want a bite
of Louis McLane's pie, that's all."
"They're going to get it, you bet!"
The driver smiled; yet bis low, leisurely words seemed a fiat.
"Not by a jugful!" P^neas lifted
his voice and pounded tl,^ n\r; and
Alfred detected the sham note, the
bid for effect. "What do you suppose
TTE are dolus along the line? Why,
San Francisco merchants can sit in
their offices and sell to all California,
to Nevada, Idaho and southern Oregon, at any price they choose to name.
And McLane and all the other transportation folks can haul the goods at
their own figures; they won't even let
the towns have post offices because
they like to carry letters at half a dollar apiece. San Fra&ei*>co bay's full of
ships, and the mountains are full oi
golf!; and we're getting it going both
•ways, out and in."
"Yes, yo're taking too much," the
driver replied. "Yo're killing yo'
gol'F-i.'S goose."
Phineas' smile was unpleasant "Oh,
ao! She's hearty yet. And we won't
. divvy up the e?gs, either, with those
aeven-by-niue s.copkeepers in-that mud
, hole tbey call Sacramento. Do you
any,pose we'll let them make a fishingpond of the bay, at;d a winter waterinc-place of San Francisco? Not on
. your gold toothpick!"
Uncle Billy's eye flashed its' first
• hint of resentment. "Stanford's worst
enemy wouldn't think of calling him
Seven-by-nine; and I reckon California
voters'll have something to say. Leland's got right smart icfluence with
them."
"Yes. They voted both state and
city bonds, didn't they, Mr. Dodger'
. Vincent asked, joining the conversation at last
"Oh, call me Uncle Billy," said the
driveT. "It's so long since anyone
called me .Dodge, 1 need aa introduction to the name."
"You bet Stanford's got influence
•with the voters," Phineas broke in betvrv Uncle Billy came to Vincent's
question. "But San Francisco brains
and dollars can beat voters any time.
Did any of our citizens subscribe for
stock? The rabble voted bonds for us,
but have the supervisors issued them
yet? You bet not!"
"I should think Gov. Stanford could
compel; the law's with him, isn't it?"
Alfred asked, with a languid air that
well concealed his interest.
"Compel? Compel nothing! The
law's slower'n molasses at the north
pole."
"Anyway," Phineas persisted noisily,
"if anybody's going to build a railroad
It'll be McLane and San Francisco.
By Hookey! If anybody milks this
government cow you bet it'll be ss!"
"Well, we need the railroad," Uncle
Billy said positively.
"Need it? What for? Does the east
care about us? Not a pin, except for
our gold. If they get a railroad they'll
demand more of us; and if we don't
pony up, they'll ship troops over par
own road to whip us in, No, aire*!
We'H he a Pacific republic yet, CaHfonri* SAd the other coast state*. And
the renegades, red and white, here in
this country that's the back door to
hell"'—he waved his hand toward the
poison-pooled, eage-fringed plain they
were crossing-—"they're just the fellera to stand cC Uncle 8am.'*
"Isn't that secession r Alfred asked
with a scrutiny Phineas resented.
"Secession? No, It's self-preservation. Anyway, think of getting a railroad round Cape Horn! It'll take a
century!** v
'Then they'll tote it across the
isthmus," Uncle Billy said calmly.
"Oh, you're dead stock on them
Sacramento chaps, Uncle Billy; and
that is bad for you. They'll host your
game and leave yon flat broke.**
*Cal! on me in :'W~ and—** Uncle
Billy began, when a trace caught on
a rock and snapped. "Accident nunv
beh 12. Thirteen'n be a whoppeh,
boys!" he remarked as nonchalantly
as if he had only tost a whip snapper
in a city street. He stopped the team,
handed the lines to Alfred, and stepped
lightly down to repair the damage.
"Guess rn go inside for a nan."
Phineas yawned and climbed over the
wheel Into the stage.
"Do yoa betteve the Pacific railroad
can be bunt?" Alfred Inquired, when
the swinging six had again settled to
their steady trot. .
*
"I'm betting on It"
"But McLane and San Firanctsco—
it's an immense opposition to fight."
"You're dead right They're setting
up scarecrows aii along the Une. But
Leland Stanford's a good buncombebuster; an' I'm betting on him and
Uis kyah track!"
Alfred's eyes caught the light of
Uncle Bills enthusiasm. "I think lit
put my hand to their wheel if 1 can
lay hold of a spoke,"
The sun was hot, though ths night
bad been painfully cold. The bare
road, now candy and silent, now rocky
and ringing, stretched on and on
through unpeopled solitudes. Maun*
The Road Was a Narrow Rock-Cut,
Two Whits Men Lay Across I t
tain and cliff, magnified in the clear
air, appeared, receded, and advanced
—cheated the Imagination with their
mysterious semblances to man's structures. Alfred Vincent thrilled to each
of these weird voices from the wilderness.
Yet homesickness gripped him as
the rhythmic hoot-beats put him added
miles from- the home he still longed for.
He thoght of his sorrow-stricken mother, her love unvanQuished by any deed
of his; of her teaching; of the still
more potent example of her pure lifii
—these memories saddened, yet softened him; blended his eager vision Of
the approaching west with the benediction of the spired temple. And for
a space his heart 'was attuned to
prayer and paean.
Uncle Billy broke the long silence.
"Not yet my boys," he said affectionately to his team
They had left the black alkaline water behind, had climbed higher, where
a thin film of more innocent-looking
water was spread on the drab earth
before Uera. The November sun W4s
summer-strong, the gust Intolerable;
and the mules coaxed dumbly for
water.
"Not yet boys," Uacle Bill repeated.
-Isn't it s a f e r
"Tea, sale, perhaps, but this Is the of God's best if he is set up a mite She stopped abruptly and turned
away.
sink of the stream; the creek watch's queer."
The driver paled and looked quickly j
"Does he live alone? Oh, no; I supa heap betteh a mile furtheh on."
toward
a tall young man busy at one
The mile was semi-perpendicular, pose he has a-helper aa they have at
of
the
lockers.
He caught the driver's
and brought them alongside a brawl- other stations, hasn't he?" Alfred
wordless
question
and nodded signifing stream, willow-hung, with splash- hoped the driver would tell him more
icantly.
of
the
station
agent,
not
because
of
ing trout in the still pools, and wild
3tella, facing away from them, was
ducks skimming a large pond an the his own interest in the agent, but that
placing
dishes on the table. "1'U have
he
might
be
saved
from
thinking.
edge of a small mesa. After welcome
supper
for
you soon,'' she said present"Yes,
he
has
a
helper,
Gid
Ingram;
draughts for man and mule they
ly.
"We
didn't
dare begin to cook
but
he
s
only
a
boy,
if
he
is
big.
And
veered away to another climb. The
before
for
fear—for
fear—"
Stella,
pore
little
chicken!
She—"
gorgeous evening pageant was eearly
"All
right,
Stella.
These
passengehs, [
Alfred
waited
discreetly.
over when the team swung arouc? a
Mr.
Vincent
and
Mr.
Cadwalladen,
will
"Away
back
in
the
fifties
Anthony
sharp rocky point and one of the leadeat;
but
Gid
an'
I'll
go
and
look
up
the
struck
it
rich
oveh
Washoe
way."
Uners shied far out of the road. The
driver brought them about to a Quick cle Billy began again in a steadier old man first"
Stella flashed him a grateful look
tone. "Struck it powerful rich; panned
standstill, facing back.
before
nodding to the strangers, the
but
money
fasteh'n
he
could
count
It
"There's fresh blood ahead. That
only
acknowledgment
of the introducAnd
what
did
be
do
but
put
up
the
Cooly mule can smell it a mile; it's
the only thing he shies at Hold these durndest biggest palace this side of tion she took time for. She lighted a
ribbons, young feileh, while I prospect 'Frisco—put it, up right there where lantern and set it near the door;
he struck tin. It was a bang-up place brought a whisky flask from behind
a little."
He came back presently, his weath- fo* sbo*; big rooms with floweh gyar- the bar, and ' some white cloth, and
er-beaten face sobered and stern. dens in the carpets, and floweh gyar- placed both beside the lantern.
Alfred sickened at the brokea sen"Wake up in there! Them *njuns has deou) on the walls; gold chairs, and
looking glasse* till yo'd see yo'self so tences, sinister pauses, and still more
blocked the road again."
Phineas, suddenly disturbed from many times yo'd think yo'd got 'em sinister preparations; yet intently
watched the hurrying workers.
bis long and noisy nap, climbed oat again."
"Gid, take out the barley and feed
"That there house," he continued
with poor grace. "The old man has
no business to send passengers over- presently, "stood in a little artincial- 'em double measure. I'll help you
land without escort It's an outrage! tookftg gyarden, just as sassy as a jay- blanket 'em in a minute."
Gideon shouldered the barley just
It isn't my business to clear the road!" bird, setting there on the bare flank
"Here, come up here and hold the of the Si-eery Nevaydys. But the as Stella pulled a pile of. heavy blanteam! Ill help the driver," Alfred whole blamed outfit looked awful tone- kets from a shelf. Alfred started forsome in spite of hem* so grand and ward to help her, and felt himself
called.
"No! I caint trust my team with handsome. It seemed darned out of bending under a load that she had
him! He don't—" Uncle Billy inter- place, like a peafowl in full spread on lifted with ease.
a snowbank."
"I'll take them, stranger." Gideon
rupted.
"Didn't Mr. Anthony have a fam° had dropped the barley and stepped
But authority rang in Alfred's tone.
quickly to Stella's side.
The change had been made, and he tfyT Alfred questioned.
Alfred turned, startled at that which
T e e , OS* Uttle gal; that was alt
was already stalking after the driver.
his
sensitive ear heard in the voice.
Around the point the sight he sud- When he got those domestic cyaros
He
met
a pair of blagk, horning eyes
denly came upon made him real— dealt eat to suit him,, he sent back
fat
a
swarthy
face not yet divorced from
east somewhere tor her. She was a
torn sick and white.
hoyfaJuseas,
though
fefl manhood spoke
1 know it woukt he too much tor peart little sUp *ho«t nine yeah* old
from
the
straight
figure and ftinewy
oveh frost Sacramento Is my
you, boy; hut now yo're hyah get to
movements.
Alfred
needed no interI
used
to
drive
ta
God's
counwork. We haven't a minute to lose.**
preter
for
that
jeaJcw
teofcv needsd «»
try
those
days.
The road here was a narrow rock*
one
to
teH
him
of
the
instant
hostility
"Anthony put her in as mistress of
cut. Two white men lay across hv
that
lurked
in
the
darkling
eye,
and
one scalped, the other with his throat the Btaosfon; an' there she'd stt fa her
found
quick
response
In
his
own
heart
gaping horribly, and more than a high-back chair at the head of the
dozen arrows buried in bis flesh. Be- table as big as Ufa, the only bit of He rettoquisbed the blankets and reyond, the ruins of an emigrant wagon erinoHne present when he'd give grand tired to his chair, his eye the busier
dinnehs to the Washoe quality. The since hands must be idle.
biased lazily.
men
would toast her, and she'd Stan'
He looked about upon the bar in the
"We cain't stop to' anything but to
up
and
bow,
solemn
aa
a
funeraL'*
comer.
Its guttering glass and one
clean the road. These tracks come
kerosene
lame the only brightness in
"What! No woman at ail around
from Anthony's; and they're fresh
the
gloomy
room; upon the dark,
and a heap of 'em. The arrows are h e x r
weapon-bung
walls,
and the significant
"Ob, he had an old woman to look
nearly all different; that means a lot
loop-holes
that
gleamed
small and
of tribes." He spoke in low, tense after her a mite, comb and mend, and
black
against
the
starlit
night
without
tones while, as fast as possible, he such; a good old critteh, but no
Bare
floors,
rude
home-made
furniture
thoroughbred.
And
except
for
her
the
threw the burning debris over the
—ft was life more prbnUfve than A>
little one neveh saw any but men.**
lower side of the cut
fred could possibly have imagined ten
"How did she learn anything?**
Alfred said nothing but joined hi
"Anthony himself taught her; he days before.
the labor with a quick skill that made
One object removed it from savUncle Billy revoke his opinion of the was a teaches, once. She was as peart
agery,
Stella's smalT cane rockragas
chain
lightning;
and
he
had
oodles
small hands. Alfred's back was
ehair.
It
queened the barbarous room,
of
books.
turned, yet he could feel ace—those
au
omen
of
coming civilisation. Frosa
"Anthony
went
flat
broke
a
few
—the gruesome spectacle behind.
the
chair
to
Stella herself Alfred's eye
yeah*
back,
lost
everything,
including
What could be done? How should
wandered,
noting
her incongruous
his
grip.
Some
friend
put
in
a
word
they be disposed of?—but there was
dress,
a
rich
teveader
silk skirt, ones
for
him
with
the
old
mam.
and
he
came
BO time for question.
boasting
a
train,
though
now cut halfoveh
hyah
to
hold
up
this
station."
"Can you bean a hand hyah, Vhv
shoe
snort,
dlartmtng
cosily
French
"Is he cotng to keep her bete alcent and quick?"
boots,
one
4orn
at
the
side.
Her
linen
ways
r
He turned. The driver had already
waist
was
jewel-clasped
at
the
whits
"No.
that's
fretting
hint
He
toM
lifted the shoulders of one; Alfred
me on the .quiet he was fixing to take neck and belted with a sons of assarts
took the feci
clear as diamond*. Her comb,
"Right fo-ward hyah, round the her inside end put her to school tats crystals
banded
with
delicate pink coral, held
yeah in San Francisco."
potat"
in
place
a
coronet
of glinting golden"How old is shW?"
"Too—you arent going to—to
brown
braids,
adorning
hut not dis"She's young enough. Say, young
leave—"
guising
the
Shapeliness
of
her perfect*
"Yes, we'll have to, If we don't felleb!" Uncle Billy turned sharply, ly poised bead. And from all this
want to look the same way mighty and his words were stem. "Likely she miaplaced elegance a short red calico
ain't cut afteh the pattern o' crinoline
soon!"
apron screamed at the eye with the ar"Can't we put them in the stage? yo're used to; but she's fast colons rogance of a boor in power.
all light And if—we may see mo*
It's awful to leave them!"
like—like
what's back ycndeh—I want
Calmly unconscious of Alfred's scru"It may be worse to take them; and
to
stake
you
right
now
to
stand
by
tiny,
Stella was coming and going,
I'm afraid w**u seed the stsg« tor U»e
Stella
Anthony."
preparing
the late supper.
living if—if we get through."
The
team,
unhitched but not unhar"Ton
can
count
on
me."
Alfred said no more; and Uncle Billy
nessed,
was
fed,
blanketed and tied to
The
words
were.curt,
but
something
warmed to him as he saw the clear-cut
the
coach
wheels
in front of the door;
in
their
utterance
satiefied'the
driver.
Jaw set and a steely light creep into
and
Uncle
Billy
stepped Inside and
"Jimmy!
The
barn's
gone!"
Uncle
the da/k violet eyes.
addressed Vincent and Cadwallader.
Billy
exclaimed
as
the
stage
drew
near
"He's game!" Uncle Billy whispered
a square stone house, loop-holed like
"I reckon you two felleha will have
to himself.
a
battle
ship,
with
tiny
points
of
light
to
take turns gyarding that team while
Gently they disposed of the poor, shining through.
we're
gone, If you'd care to get away
mutilated bodies, and hurried back to
from
hyah
with yo' own hair on. Flab,
A
heavy
bar
rattled
to
the
floor
inthe stage. The driver armed each
two
shots,
wait
a minute and fiah one,
side,
the
one
door
opened
cautiously,,
passenger with a rifle and revolver;
if
yo're
molested."
and
a
woman
appeared
holding
a
canand ordering Alfred beside him, and
Gideon came In with an armful of
Phineas to keep the lookout from the dle in hw upligted hand. She was
tall
and
straight,
her
figure
youthful
wood.
Alfred saw him answer the
top, he swung his team into ths road
in
spite
of
unusual
sise;
but
the
driver's
unspoken call, saw both
and drove forward through the cut
flaring
flame,
gleaming
down
over
her
leave
the
house without looking at
with slash and oath.
breeze-tossed hair, cast aging shad- Stella, though h#v apprehensive eyes
Dark was stealing on, yet the sun's ows on her face; and Alfred saw the followed them through the door mto
good-night glory still lingered, its candle-stick shake.
the night
flaming banners striking into the over"It
that
you,
Uncle
Billy?"
The
The simple supper of bacon, tnsbead darkness, flooding earth and
heavens with strange, sinister color. voice was steady, yet Alfred caught cutts, potatoes, beans and dried-apple
pie was on the table. Stella pushed
Alfred thought of what lay behind, and its note of terror.
"Tea,
honey."
Relief
and
tenderup
a short bench and beckoned to
gripped his gun sharply. The team
ness
blended
in
the
answer.
Alfred.
slowed, and Uncle Billy no longer pHed
"Tbe Indians—did you get through
He rose and shook his head. "No,
the lash.
without any trouble?"
HI
let Mr. Cadwallader eat first," he
"See that light there, away yon to
"Yes, without trouble, now that I said, and took bis gun and disapthe left?"
see my little gal's safe." He was peared.
"Yes."
quickly on the ground, his arms
"Crccky, this is good!" Phineas ex"That's Anthony's, the neit station. around her,
claimed
as he looked over the table.
Some one's alive there, and that some
•;Oh, Uncle Billy, father's—oh, I "Milk, by the eternal!"
one is white, or there wouldn't be a
"Yes, but It's our last I guess. They
candle light; the whole place would don't know where he is! The barn's
be alight"
Relief
unspeakable burned, the stock gone, and Gid and got the cow. I—" She stopped abruptbreathed In his words, and a half mile I've fought 'em all—" Her voice brofce, ly and left the room.
and she hid her face on his shoulder.
passed in silence.
Phineas was at heart a coward, yet
he
strove to hide it under bravado;
"This is a terrible way to earn a
CHAPTER II.
aad
he took his turn In the darkness
living!" Alfred said at last
Hai) and Farewell.
with
a half merry, half contemptuous
"Yes; but this job's easy compared
Quickly Stella controlled herself
badinage
that was sufficiently deceivto the trick the pony express boys and was going about the station duties
ing.
used to play."
with a quiet calmness that surprised
Alfred ate sparingly, silently, his
"This is dangerous enough. I won- Alfred.
mind
Intent on impending tragedy.
der the company can induce men to
"We've a little barley in her, forundertake the work. Don't you find tunately, and some blankets for the
"Your hand is hurt, sir," Stella said
it wearing?*
mules; but the hay's gone. You'll have as she placed the hot bacon before
"Oh, yes, I suppose it is. It's right to utifcitch for a few minutes, won't him. Without more words she cut the
smart skoery sometimes, 'specially at you, Uncle Billy? They can't double meat and buttered his biscuit It was
done quickly, incidental]*. She did
night when I make the trip alone. And without a little rest, ewa they?"
I wondeh passengehs don't buck
"Yes, but not for leng. We've got not falter, tsr face was calm. Yet
against being sent across without es- *o be at Maloney's in time to send wlien she came with old linen and
cort, like now."
help back hyah befo' day. The red home-made lotions to dress the angry
"Tbey would if they knew what devils ain't through hyah; there's burn her touch upon Alfred's hand
they'd see. But it's infinitely worse whisky left and brandy, I see, and—" was icy cold.
for you drivers."
The dressing was barely finished
"Not so much, Uncle Billy. I burned
"Well, 1 reckon the Lord knows his all the brandy to make bullets— when Phineas' challenge was heard,
business, an' mine, too. I figger all I melted all the pewter stuff, too."
and a white min't voice replied.
got to do is to see he don't catch me
'That's Curly Joe from Maloney's,"
"Well, 1 sweah! I didn't reckon yo*
asleep on the box."
fatheh'd ever be short on ammuni- Stella said. "Sit still and finish your
A sudden admiration for this hero tion."
supper," she added, as Alfred started
of the desert warmed Alfred's heart
"It's ordered long ago, but the agent to his feet "It's not Indians; you
"This ti-ne I'd hated to let them hasn't sent i t Father"!! come soon— won't be needed."
bacon-colored critters get me before I hope. I t s too bad that you must
Heedless of her words he followed
I got to Anthony's. Those tracks.are help with the team. Uncle Billy."
her to the door, where she stood lookan from Anthony's; and there's more
"That's no matteh. The only thing ing out
than men and property—there's An- is to f«ed and ^et away as soon aa I
"Curly Jo*'s brought some stock,*
thony's little gal, and—"
she said, glancing over -ier shoulder
can. Where'd yo' fatheh go?"
Alfred shivered at the significant
"He took some stock up to the as he came near, "some they *aad a
pause.
meadows this morumg; be should Jcfcinco to buy I heard him say. It's
In the nick of time for «4.**
"Anthony's had hard luck. He's oat •have been fee* before soon,
She stepped back to the table and
poured another cup of coffee. "Have
this fresh cup, sir.. You're not needed
—ROW."
Alfred seated himself and she went
to the kitchen, leaving him to ponder
the adverb of time so significantly
spoken.
Stella did not return, though Air
fred finished his coffee and waited,
the minutes dragging with his inaction, until the searchers returned.
Stella heard them and hastened to
the door, peering into the darkness,
A whispered parley kept her waiting.
At last Uncle Billy stepped into the
light Stella gave him-a quick look,
read the answer to her mute question,
and fled. Alfred saw her white, set
face as she passed.
Duty and love are weapons that affliction at her worst is compelled te
respect Alone Stella fought hea
quick battle for composure; and when
she brought in supper for the two
men her face was less stricken tham
Uncle Billy's. He went to her, too*
her hands in his own, lifted his reluctant eyes to her. "Honey, you—
you must go—In an houh, less time it
possible—"
She met; his look bravely, her vote*
unfaltering, though words came lame*
ry. "But father—I cannot leave him,
Where—where is he?"
"Child, we buried him—Gid and me*
We did" it—good, and I mapped th*
place, so you can find—but not
SteUa Feft HH
Iojun.
get ready quick."
Siesta's head dross**. AJffred saw
her throat throb, her haada ttgfctesi
soavalstveiy oa. Uncle Batty*.
"But the stattoa. a*d the mz&mfm
property—I mustnt leave that tjH—**
8** Sited her fee*; tor ifes twttcho*
ptUfuOy.
'
"Old, you tr!l her you sJat a bar
—yo re a ssan, and brave tffmtfh to
«tay hyah and keep the station tflt
they send some one from Maloney's.''.
"Yes, Stella, you must go- UBC*»
Bill's the boas, r n stay, m he saym,
till the statlfla's irsufted agate; tfeca
r n foJJow you to—to wherever you g»
—eJwnye."
advisers, damMy strivis* to adjust he*
grief stricken sstnd to this hard ear*,
gency.
"Oh, Oideoa, I oant let m at**
atone! I—H
Uncle Billy laid a tender hand om
her ana. "Honey! Cant you bask
up to the game just a mitef WowUstt
yo* paw tell you tof
She nodded and turned aside. Both
men looked at her intently, csp witsi
a passionately yearling gas*. £a a
Tiunr«f^ she faced htm, ssaQtac
iatety, though Alfred saw
tears on her cheek.
~u yo* and Gid win eat e mtle
per i n get ready right away. TO se>
—Tit he good." The
oft Into a sob that
childlike.
"You go right to Jake Beomett,* ilia
driver said as he finished his cofltee a
Httle later. He's oa the railroad at
the 'Front,' whereveh that ia.—To*
teQ him I sent you. Bennett ts one of
Superintendent Gregory's foranea, a
squareh man—his wife's even squareTa
—bell deal you a straight gaase, little
one, There's SaCy BL, too, saw's white,
and can motheh a whole brood Hbe
you and not let one chick get a coid
toe,"
"And m follow as som as I can sRp
this," Gideon added, his glance sweeplug the shadow-peopled room.
"I'm coming myself, honey, rnv
coming to be near you, and to watch,
that Sacramento four tackle the hts>
gest job of buikUng atace BabeL*
Uncle Amy rose and went out
Soon an was ready. SteOa waited
by her trunk for the coach to swine
round.
"Oh, Gideon, how can I leave your*
she sobbed as he came to her side.
"But I wouldn't go unless you stayed.'*
"All aboard, honey!" called the
driver's kind voice from the dark.
"Salt Lake City in ten hours!"
Gideon caught her In an embrace
*he long rexr.embered. It was not farewell, but appropriation. "Goodbye,
tfoppett," he whispered, "I'll cone
9000.**
Hew t h e Got In.
A lady aceostod s little girl who
,
entering one of the fashionable New
York fiats where she knew the rales
were exceedingly strict and, after
some little conversation, said:
"How does it come that you ttve to
tfeesa tats? X thought they woafcl aet
take hi children. How did 70« get
mr
"Why," replied the chUd, "I we*
horned in."
I* was aaftixraoed at a s almnml banaout (a New Tort that fa*.*** needed
to obtato tbe sift of »M.*00by Andrew
DO T O D U S E A
Canente for tbe PUnols coUege at
JaekaoariUe, ni„ had bean rateed.
AU tb? misming paaaengers and crew
of the steamer Ameterdaai were taken
into port at Hook of Holland by the
Norwegian steamer Song*.
Diatrtct Jodge George SI. Eosrnuln
Nothing can answer your
at Butte, Mont, approved a loan of
•200,000 by FAxtkrd Creighton Largey
purpose as well as t h e
to the State Savings banh, a suapendUNION PHONE. 1095
ed HeLote institution, to resume business.
connections in Owosso and
The will of Mrs. Lydia Bradley, who
Corunna.
died at Peoria, "III., leaves 14,003,000
to the Bradley Polytechnic institute,
affiliated with the University of Chicago, and only $5,000 to heirs and
others.
Three valuable miniatures of the
duchess of Fife, the queer* of Norway
and Princess Victoria, all belonging
to Queen Alexandra, were stolen by
burglars from the studio of an engraver in London,
Turie Nordstrom, wanted in Chicago for passing a forged chock amouating to $15,000, was arrested at Mayport, Pla., on board a yaeht which he
had purchased at Brunswick, Ga.
Several hundred men were eluhhedV
by the Chicago police and a number
were more or leas seriously hurt in
l l e t h i n g has ever equalled i t
the loop district when 200 uniformed
ffothing c a n ever surpass i t
patrolmen and detective* charged aa
"army of the unemployed" ha efforts
to disperse them. The' "army** was
marching toward the city hail to demand work. It was finally aisrufted.
Frank J. Constantine, who kfttad
Mrs. Louise Gentry In Chicago and
who attempted suicide in the Jbiiet
penitentiary by throwing himself from
a gallery, died.
APcrfect
ForAJ&Throstt and
severe eartfcqaake tfeoek*
l £ Core £ ' Long Troubles.
terrified the inhabitants of torras ta
tttafle. .TrttBottta*
Caiafaria, Italy, sad did great dama**
to bnndtngg
An attempt to overthrow the moa*
^arcTiy and proclaim Portaga) a republic was nipped in the bud by the
prompt; action of the government The
foani&c* erffe by acting directly on th*) plot was organized by a small group of
jseJb parti without disturbing the rest of advanced republicans, the leaders of
tia* system.
whom were arrested. The plan was to
5o. X for Fevers.
assassinate
Premier Franco and then
Worm*.
Ho. a
depend
for
success
upon street risings,
Teething.
Ho. 3
supported
by
secret
republican mad
Diarrhea.
Ho. 4
labor
organisations,
armed
with bombs
Coughs.
So. 7
and
revolvers.
Neuralgia.
Ho. 8
BeJlevtng that his nines* would re*
Headaehes.
Kb. 9
imtt fetsfly, John Fetter, afed 73 years,
Ho, 10 Dyspepsia.
of South Bethlehem, Pa, confessed
Ho,U
that he mnrttered his daughter, Ella
Ha 1» " Whifcsa.
Fett*r, aged 39 rears, i s November,
Ho. 13 •' Creep.
1C94,
Ho. 14 M T k * W « .
91m at Deer River, liAna*, destroyed
So. I S «
a Meek aad a aalf of the business
Jfc.M "
portilaa of the towhv caastag loss esHa. 19 " Catarrh.
timatsd at f 100.900.
Ke%30 M
Mrs. Heary A. Alexander, daaghter
o.17 " The Kidney*.
of the late (lea. Joseph T. Torrence
«k JO « TheBUddn*
of
Orieaeo eloped from Hyeres,
Ho. TT " L* Gtipp*.
Franco, with William Graham Blake*sauH b*ttl**of pellet* that Attn* vest ton, aa Enalishmaa.
. At Dcwsvism or mailed, 9fe***av
The Baltimore it Ohio railroad cut
MedicaldSdamaOwl fat*.
all
salaries of officers and employes
AJaaa
receiving 9190 a month rud over.
Three firemen were kihed and 15
injured is the worst fire Baltimore
has had since the big conflagration
of 1904. The loss is estimated at
$500,000.
Charles Mitchell aged 70 years, a
retired wholesale dealer, died at St
Joseph, Mo. He v/as wounded on the
Sierrimac in its first day's tight with
the Monitor during the civil war.
Rev. J. W. O'Bryant, who has been
All diseases of Kid&eyi,
pastor of the Hyde Park Methodist
Bladder, misery Organs.
church of St Joseph, Mo., has reAlso RThAMiititttm. Bacfc
a«Be,Ha*rtlHMM*.ar»vel<
signed to become a street car con
Deopsy. Femala Troubles
ductor-on a suburban line.
King Alfonso of Spain while huntDent become discouraged. Then is a
for yon. If necessary write Dr. Fenuer, ing had a narrow escape from being
^ is* spent * life tli^e curing Just s e c *
killed by a wild boar.
• a aayouzt. Ail consultation* Free.
-Dr. Former's Kidney and Backache Cure
The supreme court of the United
ou&Lea
ueuled iu5 potitiuu for on apsuffered greatly of kidney disease foryeare
and reduced i» weight to 320 pounds. I now peal in the Chicago Street Railroad rewHghlGanonads.
organization case.
; W.ILMcGOGlN, Olive Furnace, 0 »
In order to prevent the spread of
Drug/faU.Sft^tL AafcforCoo* Book—Free.
scarlet fever, the board of education
of Minneapolis decided to burn a large
number of text books.
At Dowagiac, Mich., an audience of
CBsrd; Directory.
about ISO, mostly women and children,
was thrown into a panic by a fire in a
free MathodUi 'Church—8emtn moving picture theater. No one was
*rtry Sunday altera*** at 2 :80. Prayer
seriously injured.
tan* every Yharaday ertrii&*.
Three men were arrested in MesOx-unaa Baptlet Cbttrclk. Xorrua*; earriee sina, Sicily, charged with complicity
• » ! ! « . • . a>«*ta*T aerrioe, • : » p. at. B.Y.
P. U. at 0:10 l>- a . Sunday Svhocl, 12 M. in the murder of a paymaster at
Weekly prayer aweting, Tkaradaj ereniaf ** Portage, Pa., several years ago.
fmTwften&lv heart* are beating- for your folDr. W. E, Carter, a veterinary surlawaUsv Leaue Bower, paator.
geon of Meadville, Mo., was tortured
Oaroana M. X- Chnren. Morning- aerrlee at by whitecaps.
I*. Craning aervtee at *'M, Kpworth League
Bennle A. Walker of Canton, 0., is
M l i S p . m.; daaa meeting at 9 * . au Sunday
acne**** 11:*» au; Prayer awetiag Tbnraday thought to be lost In the mountains
evening at f :80. fro* eeata, and a cordial wel- near Los Angeles. Cal. He has been
acorne Wail. R. Woodbaat. Paator.
missing since January 15.
It is announced in N*ew York that
f J 4. <•*
tfi v,f
W. D. Haywood, who was acquitted
on the charge* of murdering ex-Gov.
Steunenberg of Idaho, will be the canIrate
i• < a w ? © p W f i• WVw S
« Ta*»»
" "T*a*re*
" "bat
" ' didate Of the Socialists for president
avedey taeaWar'HEnMItT" SALVE.
Nils Nielson, tender of the lightTbfat reancdy
* bsa
ivmitoetw«&ty-e«eyears
and is the «ily
msnuiteed
and tree cure. P a y house on the New Haven breakwater,
<iiciaae eoAora* ft»
LOata aatfered freai Salt Bneoai, or* box cared. committed suicide by cutting his
threat He had saved many lives.
Aaw assd for M m wd wound*.
Gov. Warner of Michigan announced
that former Gov. John T. Rich had accented an appointment as state treasurer to succeed Frank P. Glazier, who
resigned.
Fire Commissioner Lantry of New
York said the city's fire hose was so
old and rotten they had never dared
to test i t
Judge "Phillips at Cleveland, 0., in
deciding the case against the Amalgamated Glass Workers' union held that
the organisation was in restraint of
trade and ordered its dissolution on
the ground of public policy.
At Albuqaerque, N. M., the trial of
the divorce suit of Mrs. Pearl Turner
_ _ «*«WMirer«ll Vattrnw**M **fi£?£*S against Mark C. Turner, a federal
clerk, was discontinued when the
« «4 dEr «yw« aecwatr •-^ w«F»«h7.
MeCaire MaaaalaMThf •>'*r«'' J ^ t f f ^ o S court vw. uotlflod by telephone that
Mrs. Turner had shot and killed herself.
• Fre<a. «»i»ui»> i««ia.
The Free Methodist semina.? at
• a«yA«tter«Wt
Wesslngtcn Springs, S. D., was" detfte«t a^raaafM
stroyed by fire. The loss 2s $15,000.
.
Tired
Nervous
PnhfiA
riiuiic
*
tl
.
•
i-
•
•
•
LATEST NEWS
OF MICHIGAN
ENC
OF
BRILLIANT
CAREER
•
.i.i—
...
„
;
:
—
1
KIDNEY** *1
BACKACHE
^gCTJREl
a
DrJting's
iscovety
S
fit. FERRER'S
KIDNEY «•
Backache
CURE
I e_i 1*M ijaj V * .
4 1 ^
L^L-<" u-er
ST. WTBS'WI6£
tesnasas
SJBtfn Diseases
D H I N K CURSED, IS T H E
POOR H O U S E .
WOMAN'S BRAVE BATTLE.
Sketches and News Notes From Various Points in the State Gathered
and Briefly Told.
Attorney John Donaldson, a onetime prominent lawyer cf CUo, has
been sect to the poorhouse at the age
of €5 years, broken In health and destitute. Graduating: from the law department of Michigan, Donaldson had
a reputation of being one of the most
brilliant men in his class. He settled
In Clio and soon worked up a good
practice. Later !bc = - v = i tc *f=cr^
aad there met erlth the same success
which he had had in this place. He
aaaia snoved to Menisci*** and yet
agate to Marquette. Drinking hefctts
led to a loas of beainess sad a sliding
down the scale so that his wife divorced him and he imm«sdi£tely let
his pntefjQB go and began drinking
heavily. Finally, a asm financial
stnita, he appealed to relatives who
eared for him. For a time he seemed
to be on the right road again, bat soon
went astray. The e l b a u of the wasted life came when, i s a pttifnlly destitute condition, he was sent to the
poorhouse.
Fought a Arete.
Mary Wagner, of Grand Rapids,
attacked about 9 o'clock p. m. m the
northeastern part of the city. la a
fierce rtruggle with the man Miss
Wagner's clothes were partly torn off,
hat she finally Succeeded In making
her escape and fled to her home, fainting on the doorstep. The man evidently knew her, as he called her by
name. The police are wroldng on the
Pay* the Stat*.
Mate Oft Inspector Neal's report lor
December shows that his depvtmeat
during thatjmroth Inspected zjse^ef
i u i u u i ^4 "•--i IIHIMJtiii*' wit.
After $*y*
2ng all expenses, including salary aad
expense* of the state Inspector and the
deputies, he has a net balance to tarn
over to the state's treasury of
»1,0*5.71 In the foor month* which
he has held the oKBoe he has a act
balance for the state's treasury of
$¢,390, the amount being- derived from
the one-fifth of a cent a gallon paid
by the oil companies for the inspection. For the first eight months of
the year there was turned In to the
state about $7,000, which with the
amount netted to the state during Mr.
Ned's term will make the net sum of
over $15,000 to the state, after paying
all expenses, for the year of 1907. In
1906 it was $10,000.
Old Caucus Goes.
Deputy Attorney General Chase
gave the opinion Friday that as there
was no provision in the state primary
act for caring for the election of delegates to the state convention to chose
delegates to the national convention,
selection of delegates to county conventions would have to be by the old
caucus system.
He said that ivhere everyone in the
party could agree, a primary would
probably be legal because no one
would raise the question, but that in
a difference r,f opinion and the calling
of two conventions, one under a pri
mary and the other by caucus,, it
would be the caucus delegates, who
would be given the seats in the state
convention.
A Road's dad RaKs,
At a hearing before the ta* commission General Superintendent Grant of
the Kalamazoo, Lake Shore & Chicago
railroad, admitted that some of the
steel rails were 30 years old. Tho
average tenure of life for rails is 15
to 20 years. The road is a leased line
of the Pere Marquette, running from
Kalama7XH> to Paw Paw, is 34 miles
long and some day hopes to compete
fn handling through traffic from Kalamaxoo to Chicago. It has been assessed at $420,000, and this the represent
atives informed the tax commission is
100 per cent too high.
Hotel Ablaze.
Fire was discovered In the basement
of the Hotel Vincent, Saginaw, a modern five-story structure owned by
David Rust of Detroit, shortly after €
o'clock Monday ni?ht, and guests and
dining-room girls 8ed In a panic from
the building. Firemen had great difficulty in reaching the flames, but the
fireproof floor kept them from spreading to the upper floors of the building.
The hotel was closed and guests
T-ptit to other hotels. The loss will be
about $20,000, fully covered by insurance.
"Hide-ins" Caught.
Joseph Murphy and Genr^e O'Con
nor, the Jackson prison convicts who
disappeared
Monday, were found
Thursday hiding in the fork factory
of the prison. Both were almost famished from lack of food, having eaten
only a little bread which fellow convlcis smuggled to them. Now O'Connox is ill and Is threatened with
pneumonia from the exposure. The
men were hoping to escape from prison after the search for them was
aiven UT>.
Mrs. Sophie Hutzel, one of the oldest pioneers in Washtenaw county,
died Tuesday at the age of St. She
was born in Germany and came to
Ann Arbor May 20, 1830. Right children survive her. There are also 40
grandchildren and 17 great-grandchil
d.*en.
STATE NEWS IN BRIEF.
Miss Jnez Morse, aged 14, of Harvard, took chloroform and may not recover.
The 2-year-old son of Henry Nault,
of Negannee, choked to death from
croup.
Despondent over lack of work, Louis
Strauss, aged 68, of Owosso, shot and
killed himself.
Stanley Johnson, aged 19, of Grand
Rapids, confesses to six burglaries
since October 1.
Three out of the 52 who took the
phamiiiceutical examination in the D.
of M. were women.
The conduct of the Kalamazoo
county poor house will be investigated
by the supervisors,
The Grand Trunk railroad, after
seven years' litigation, has been assured of a right-of-way into Kalamazoo.
LeRoy Webber, former financial secretary of the Muskegon Carpenters'
union, was acquitted of embezzling
union funds.
Henry Walker, aged 55, walked into
a Bay City saloon Friday, greeted the
proprietor cheerfully and dropped to
the floor, dead.
Memee, the oldest of the surviving
Pottawotamie Indians, is dead at the
age of 78. He settled with his tribe
in Athens in 1832.
The Michigan Central is planntnc;
seveeal Improvements for Kalamazoo,
among them viaducts and the straighteninff out of tracks.
A heavy snowfall is reported from
nearly all points in the state. In the
upper peninsula delayed lumber operations can now proceed.
The 2-year-old child of A. G. Bnerge,
of Read City, died of smallpox and
schools and churches have been
clos*& Two others are ilL
William Fisher, who, assisted by a
Jackson boy, stole 104 watches, has
been sentenced to serve from two and
one-half to five years In the Jackson
prison.
The Eaton county co-operative store
bankruptcy matter from Eaton Rapids
is going to reach t^e circuit court,
where co-operative receivership is to
be tested.
Cold water business men and the
council have protested to the Lake
Shore against the withdrawal of train
No. 155. which leave* here at 4:30 p.
m. for Chicago;
Mrs. J. W. Turner and her daughter were attacked by a robber in their
general store in Rugg, and both were
badly hart in the straggle. James Oli
w , a suspect was arrested.
A trial was stopped by th* death
of George Burgess, of Spriagpert, father-in-law of Prosecutor Peters.
The
former dropped deed in the Michigan
Central depot In Eaton Rapids.
In an address to the Genesee county prohibition convention W. A. Taylor, of Battle Creek, stste chairman,
declared liquor would be an Issue in
the coming presidential election.
Roy Coldren was first and Percy
Hoiliday second in the men's oratorical contest of Hillsdale college. Miss
Gertrude Worden and Miss Lydla
Beckwith won in the ladies's contest.
Peter Benedict, aged 13, escaped
from an Indian school near London,
Ont., and was caught at Port Huron.
He said "everybody was too tame" in
the school and he planned to rejoin
an Iudian band.
After throwing $100 in bills Unto the
fire, Henry Kanause, a farmer living
near Mason, swallowed the contents
of a bottle of carbolic acid and died a
few minutes after. Insanity Is believed
to be the cause of the act
Oiin Robinson, held In Battle Creek
jail tor assaulting anci rubbing Burt
L. Harris of $400, broke an electric
light' globe and swallowed the small
pieces. Doctors say It would be dangerous to try to remove them. Robinson is likely to die anyway.
Police Sergeant James Fisher, of
Port Huron, will sue Lapeer county
for $50 for capturing William Poulette,
an escaped prisoner. The supervisors
turned down the claim because Poulette was tried on another charge in
Port Huron before being returned.
Word has been received from New
7ark of the death of Miss Gladys Lorraine Elliott daughter of J. & Elliott
a business man formerly of Port Huron, but well known in Detroit Miss
Elliott's death resulted from an operation for tuberculosis of the hip.
David Roach, once an able a.+or,
now a physical wreck, we* sent from
Fort Huron to the Detroit house of
correction for 70 days for using immoral language before women and
children. A* his own lawyer he pleaded for "justice tempered with mercy.. Attorney Richard C. Flannigan, of
Norway, delegate to the constitutional
convention, refuses to be the upper
peninsula candidate for supreme court
justice to succeed Judge Grant. Attorney Allan Reese, of Houghton, has
also been mentioned, but Is expected
to decline.
It 1* generally conceded that the
oAoe of department commander of
he patriarchs Militant of Michigan, I.
'.•>. 0. F., lately maoe vacant by the
Jeatn of Gen. Thomas E. Robinson, of
Detroit, will either go to J. Xewton
Herbst of Charlotte, or Col. John Gillespie, of Detroit
At a bi« meeting of the Muskegon
grange for the purpose of dedicating
the new grange hall, resolutions wera
passed opposing the Initiative and referendum. This is contrary to the* policy adopted at the meeting of the state
grange In Saginaw, when the farmer*
went on record in favor of the Initiative.
Although the roads are in a bad
shape through lack of snow, farmers
crowded the Traverse City market
Tuesday to sell potatoes, the 50-cenl
price being the magnet.
Estimates
place the amount paid by buyers at
$2,000. Fifty thousand bu^els are
held in storage awaiting- the 50-cent
market
NEWS OF THE STATE
RECORD O F A W E E K ' S HAPPENINGS I t t M I C H I G A N .
HONEYMOON CUT SHORT
Groom of Two Days Is Arrested at
Muskegon — Homer
Patch
Charged with Aaatiitirtg
Saloon Keeper.
Muskegon.—A honeymoon of two
days was rude f shattered and a
happy bride was torn from her husband when. Homer Patch of Battle
Creek, wanted by off cera of that county for assaulting and robbing Doc.
Harris, a saloon keeper, January 17,
was arrested in Muskegon. Information reached Muskegon officers that
Patch had left for Muskegon and he
was found in a saloon with $29 in his
pockets. Hatch and, a companion are
alleged to have assaulted Harris, then
robbed his saloon of $385. He went
to bed in aa out-of-the-way Battle
Creek house, bat daring the night
Patch quietly arose and took all the
sva£ and skipped to Kalamazoo,
where he was married two days ago
to a Kalamazoo girl that he had
wooed for some time.
W h e n you feel languid, tired*
nervous and irritable, your vitality is low—your supply of
nerve energy exhausted, and
your system running down foe
lack of power,
The organs of the body are
working poorly, or not at all,
and you are not getting the
nourishment needed. This soori
impoverishes the blood and instead of throwing off the impurities,
distributes
it
all
through the body. This brings
disease and misery.
Feed the nerves witbi D r .
Miles' Nervine, a nerve food, A
nerve medicine, that nourishes
and strengthens the nerves, ami
see how quickly y o u will g e t
strong and vigorous.
"My wife suffered with ufinriinsiima
previous to a recent attack of typnoaf
fever, but after her recovery from tao
fever, she was much worse, and eon*!
hardly control herself being exeeedfngiy nervous when the least exalted.
fibe was very restless at nighL and
never had c. good night's rest. Saw
also suffered much from nervous fafjafl
ache. Dr. Miles' Nervine was reeon*n e n t e d by a friend. After the first
three doses she had a good nl*nFs)
r e s t and a t the end of the first wee***
treatment she was wonderfully f
proved. Continued use of Nervtae
completed her entire eure."
OTTO K9TJ&
1021 Cherry S t , S V U S T H I * , l a s t
Dr. M»s** Nervine U aald by y e n *
druggist, who will <pj*r*nte» that tls*
first bottle will benSAt. if It tam. Is*
win nfuad.your money*
M i k s Medical Co* E D d a r t , I n 3
CAR TAKES LONG SLIDE.
Vehicle •Jump* Track and Tepplee Into
Trench decide Ralls.
Grand Rapids.—Car 302 of the Bast
Bridge street line slid fr?m the rails
from near the top of East Bridge
street hill to Ionia street, where it
struck a pile of dirt excavated from
the East Bridge street sewer, left
the rails and tipped Into tb? trench
where it rested on its sides aga'ost
the edge of the trench. Four passengers were In the car, but none of them
were seriously Injured.
Alleged Thief Arrested.
Owoao.—Asleep in the smoking
room of the Union station at Dorsad
Frank Martin was "touched" for Ms
$100 watch and valuable fur overcoat Grand Trunk Detective Foley
was Botlfled aad shortly afterward arrested a young man who gave the
name of Purdy and on whom the
watch and coat were found.
I* Sswteeced to Werfc.
Houghton,—A novel sentence has
been meted oat to Peter Levesqne, a
Lake Linden young man, by justice
Emll F. Prince, before whom the lad
was tried for larceny. Believing that
Levesqne was Influenced by bad surroundings the judge sentenced the accused to work 30 day* In a lumber
camp.
Pay Cash to County.
Marshall.-—The sum of $3,305 was
paid into the county treasury of Calhoun last year, in contrast with $f.O
the previous year, there being but two
cases tried in 1900 and 41 in 1907.
There will be no taxes for library
money this year, and probably not
nest year.
Ex-Mayor Stebbin* Dead. *
Grand Rapids.—Charles D. Stebbins,
former mayor of Grand Rapids and
city and county treasurer, is dead, at
the a g e t>£ 70 yC«r».
H e ia Survived
by his widow and one daughter. Mr.
Stebbin* was a life-long Democrat.
Died as the Groom Came.
Saginaw.—Death blasted a romance
growing oat of matrimonial bureau
acquaintance when Mrs. Mary E.
west <* widow of 50, died here on the
eve of the proposed marriage.
Kisses Cost 9100,
Battle Creek.—Three kisses cost
Vance Spanlia $100. He caught Mrs.
Grace Demeth and, after embracing
her, began his osculatory operations.
He was fined in justice court
Search for Woman.
Adrian.—Fifty persons searched for
Mrs. Jared Yah Fleet who disappeared, clad only in a wrapper and
shawl. She was thought to be Insane.
Cert's Kick Breaks Rib-,
Ionia.—Job Kingston, an Ionia township farmer, w&a kicked by a colt and
five ribs were- broken, when he stepped
Into the stall to feed the animal.
Predicts End cf World.
Marshall.—Jacob Clark, farmer, was
committed to the Insane auyium. He
accosted persons and told them that
the world would end next week.
Pioneer Passes Away.
Ypsllanti.—Hirau Camp, 84 years, a
pioneer, Is dead. He was the father of
Miss Mary F. Camp, of the Detroit
Central high school.
Boiler Lifts Sidewalk.
Ijansiag.—A heating boiler in t i e T.
M. C. A. blew ap, lifting the sidewalk
under which it was located.
Agent Reappointed.
Bay City.—William Grandy, county
agent, has been reappointed.
Alpena Pioneer Dead.
Alpena.—Mrs. Charles E. Wilcox. 57
years, a sister of former Mayor Frank
C. Holmes, died from complications
following pneumonia. She came to Alpena 37 years ago.
Grasd Tnink Railway System
KA8T BOTJKD FBOlI COBI7NKA.
Jt Detroit Local, except Suud»T
9:19 as*
22 Detroit Express, except STUMIAJ U:B4 aa*
IS Detroit Locai, except Sunday 5:15 fat
H Dnzfend Local, ex. Sunday
9 19 pat
WB3T BOrjTTD FROM COEUKKA
So. 17 Grand Haven Local, ex. Sunday 630 mm
No. 19 GTd Rapid* Local, «x. Sunday 10 OR «*t
No. 13 Cr*tt4 H * T « I Loea!, ex. Sunday 2:56 pie
No. 11 Qrmnd Rapids Local, ex. Simday 627 p a
Solid wide vestibule trains of coaches aad
sleeping cars are operated to N*w York and
Philadelphia, via Niagara FaUa, by the Grand
Trank-Lebigli Valley Route.
G. D. YOUNG, Aat.
No.
No.
No.
Nfc.
kTATS OF MICHIGAN, County of ShfawaaAt a acaaioa of the Probate Court for tmiA
CoBBtj, add at the Probate Oftee £Q the City
of Oonasa, oa Saturday, lb* £8ta day «•
DeesMber, in the yea* one thousand uia* bandie* an* atvaa.
Fr*te*4t Math** Baaa, Jad#e of Pro****.
In the Matter of the eatate «f Lorea La Swar,
0 * reeding and nUnf tb* pctttSon of KU** 1
L*wa*r, feayfaa; that aamnMratioa of
etsSMaaarb* granted to aetWoaer or i
aaliahla piriiwi "
tt la ordered, tfeat the 27ta Say of Jaai
aen, at tea Vetock la the forenoon, at
probate Otteo, be saaifiwa tor bcarin*; s*W
setttMa.
And it 1» fttrtbef ottered, that a eopy of
order be pabUaaod tare* eaecaaslv*
arertona t* aaid day of bearing, iatba Corn aa*
Jonraal, a itcwapajMr printed aatf elrealaSbaa;
la said County of afetewaaae*.
MATTHEW BUSH,
Jul.re of T
Ask
Your
Neighbor
to take
the
Journal.
a&J&JatL
When yoa ass; for the
"u
BEST COUGH CUKE
•nd do not get
Xrap^BabiH
Ton *r* not gtsting the test and wul
be diPappomied, D Y S IALSAX
ousts no more than any other cough
remedy, and yon are entitled to th*
beat when yon ask for i t
Kemp's Balsam will stop any cough,
thai can ha stopped by anj medicine,
and enr* cough* thai cannot be cared
by any o&»x medieme*
Jt Is Always the Best Cough Owe*
At «n drngglsts, 95c, BOe. aad t L
clue.
mm
Mrs. 0 . B, Cbafttn. whose condition
remains unchanged for the betwr.
Insurftnoe
Mr. and f i r s , F. Stull, wbo live
o,Utt§*ooot
south of town, returned Monday
from a three weeks' visit at the
borne of b*r mother, in St. Johns. .
Lester Blank, who has boon making an extended vUit at the home of
his uncle, Byron Blank, north of
town, has returned to his home in
Dansville, N . Y.
i
Mrs. Loren Cates lies 111 at the [
reward I* offered toj
home of her parents, Mr- and Mrs.
James Ralph. Mrs. Gates i s threatanyone for any sub» ]
ened with typhoid twer.
Miss
stance injarkms ro the health found]
Francis Sharraok is caring for her.
in Oalnsftet Baking Powder.
The revival meetings in Antrim
'Purity h a prime essential in ft
close with this week. Eev. A. J .
CaJ m n e t is made only of pore, wholesome j
Martin reports a good attendance
ingredients combined by skilled chemists,
and much Interest manifested by
those outside tbe church during this
I and complies with the pore food law* of I
series of meetings.
all jutes. It is the only high-grade
Mrs. Ted Hankinscs.e&stof here,
Baking Powder on the market told atj
_*A*_
gave
a dinner party Friday. The
i a m d e r a t e ft»Hetv
following -guests from here were
_*a*_
. C n l n n s e t Baking Powder may be!
present from here: Rev. and Mrs.
A. J . Martin and her mother, Mrs.
'freely nsed with the certainty that food]
-*A«Glfford, Mrs. A . I*. Beard, and Mrs.
made with it contains xt#
Fred Stone.
i—It is eheamfteally e r g e c i
With bare ground all around town,
and makes
the men hauled logs all last week on
sleighs tc the sawmill four miles
south and east of town, the roads in
that direction being a bed of ice.
The snow that fell here Sunday put
the roads in excellent condition once
more.
The Ladles 'of the Maccabees,
Venice Fanners' Club on Thursday, Morriee H i v e , will serve a 25 cent
Jan. 23. The following officers were
pie dinner at 12 o'clock,
CORRESPONDENCE elected: President, T. J_. Stewart; chicken
Wednesday, Feb. 5. A full course
vice - president, Chas. Taphouse; dinner will be served by tbe ladles,
secretary and treasurer, Mrs. T. L, after which installation of officers
ofOt*
Stevart; chaplain,Mrs. Wm.Broeks; will take place. Every one i s corof Intent from
reporter.
Miss Grace Miller; pianist, dially invited t o attend tbe dinner.
MUfOUQMOg Lt
Miss Lola Brooks. The next meet*
Mrs. Simpson, living soatb and
in* will be at the home of Mr. and
west
of town, has been very ill for
Mrs. Fred Miller.
the past three weeks, and hat daughKNAGGS BWDGE
ter, Mrs. Addle Simpson, of P o n y ,
Bridge. Mich- Jam.«. M
went there laat week t o bete care
HEW LOTHROP.
A nigbt cap social will be bold <n
for her motber and .was taken. _fH
tbe Grange hall on Tuesday»Jan* 38. ZfOTlAtfczttis M_eh_J*B.S> urn
with pneumonia,
Mrs-, D . M i l l e r
Miss Frieda Wilson i s on. the sick to there earing for both mother and
Miss Fredia Debon, of near
sister.
Lalhgaborg, is visiting: her friend, list.
Mrs. George Cole, of this place.
This week i s mission week s i S*.
Miss A d a Zendler, w a s tbe guest
This Is tbe last week of the naontL. of Mr. and Mrs, Fred Wilson, Sat- Mary's church and a great many
out of town guests are being enterThere are four months of school yet, urday and Sunday.
and then.the long sommer vacation*
Miss Lncy Fnddielon, of Flint, i s tained in tibia parish during tbe
The special services have been a guest at the home o? B e y . andmeetings. Father O'Baflerty h a s
baa help from several points in b i s
discontinued at tbe school house. Mrs. H , JT. Hascott.
OKTGAOB aAXJB-Wbera* defkiu. baa
meetings. The ladles of the parish
Wke*imf>eT«OiTS«o|>at
Altho qnite well attended, not much
Mrs. flnsseil Confer i s resorted
Tr-T
n * -«-**-• * " • •• • - r ' - — * - « interest was manifested in.a spirit- slightly improved in health. S h e i s made the church beautiful with surtoa«e» **•** ana ex-rates \g Wmian A.
Sowers and pahoaa for tho services. Joiet. of tfce T U t n of Venoa, afctavaasee
ual way,
at tbe hospital at Saginaw.
Co-nty, Michigan, of Ow flm p u t , to Sxi<eiu
WaOaeis «f the City of Oktmfc-si*. State of
Elder Heaeott has returned home
AMILY MOTEL
PERRY.
Blves, ecsema, Itch or salt rheum sets 0^1^--..^^....0^ pftrKoatacSta ear Sfngte F
Boom* and Oaitee to rest by the day,
from Flint, where he has been
you crasv. Can't bear the tench of of Septcatter, A. D. 19», mad retorted to tbe week or month, BATBS &X&0ONABLB.
Ferry, Wea* Jan. 28. W».
sisting i n a series of revivals.
clothing. Dosn's Ointment cures ofCee of the Reenter o* Deed* for saM Oooaty, Thesltnntioniathe n o d ConTeniettt m the
Wra. Crosby and daughter, Mrs. your
Mr. Wiisey is sick in bed with
the most obstinate esses. Why suffer. tnUberStof Morw«ea.aB pa«cs « 0 a-4 4M, eity for both ahoppern nnd pien-are ee-kera.
George Whitesall, of Uwoaso, at- ASi
GOT. Weodtward and! Charintta A T * * ,
OB the ttta dar of Otpttiotr. A. D. tSOS, on
rheumatism.
d.si*gi*u sell It.
whtek _ w r t a c « t a o n is elalnwd to be d«e *» Write for partteoiarn. Telephone Grand
tended
the
funeral
of
A
.
Guliek,
on
Revival meetings will be begun in
tbete^eofUiie-otteetforvrtaeip-la-d interWednesday.
est, tfc* nm of Tar*6 Baadred Qtreatj^r-ry
tbe M. E . etmreh this week.
TJIseasea of Women and GhSMtim
Corunns School Notes.
aad Threat. -O-Tea fl-naredtb- D»U*r»(St7fc«).
For a short time the Thursday
Charles Davis i s some better onwMnbraitororoo«edlft«»atlawor
la
e_«itr
COafTjTTrlA,
*
are bete and the school year bavins beek taken
toveeovertte-Meef-eeesw
der tbe eare of Dr. Spence, of Belie evening prayer meetings at the
M.
P.
cfauroh
will
be
in
the
form
of
b
j
«aM-MrtMSc
or
mnj
^*rt
sbereo*.
notice
is ban* gone.
Oak.
in hereof gt-en, that by Tirtae of tbe power of
cottage prayer meeting. On next
Time S e n s e s was absent front school oale eontaiaefl in aaU _Mivtc&e«> ond tbe
Tbe stockholders of the Ferry Thursday evening tbe meeting will
lm thin eoniMB are
__^
g _ _._._. k— •_____»__ _a_____Pt _n____Asft A__^d _____k_r_________ _____j_l
the rata of one cent for each word
Glove & Mitten Company held a be held at tbe borne of Mrs. Knot Monday.
mortgage will be ftnteiqnud by aafeof the prant- at
•eAttOfStoyn^ ttt LgtW
deacilbad tkoriln, ot eo M C * thereof • • •tftten. Ho oa*4aser£!ea
meeting last night. The factory Munson.
Mary Young ass returned to school lean
mmjhemtrrmmrr t s easjefy the ankl owe of ^ B M ^ F B B J B_SF BBMBH namsn^H ai^^ff* AS>4_P
will resume operations tomorrow.
MATTHKWfAlfH
WALTCft tUSM
ntoaey now 4«e ta-reoa, together wtth tntereet y t ^ a i o r * of gnJc^retn-na andean ba
after a few weeks' absence.
Mrs. McKellops, aged 91 years,
theteoo at «0*rateof K-epercane.nor
advnaaaf* ta a u t t v
with
The eoM weather effected the atssos* from the dot. of thfai notice
sustained a slight stroke of paralysis
Wivetof^ber
d-MS> Honiara,
MQRRICE
a fee of
!«ClTiaA»l
with
ail
For Sale—One good yearling heifer COKUMNA, kWO
Saturday. Her sister, Miss .Laura JfetUee, Wen., J u . ttt SMB.
pbere la s e n * of taw rooms.
„
„in
tWefwwsto-o-*,** and alxty-ftve tboeks of corn stalks.
Brown i s suffering from a severe
The girls bold s m e t i n g la tbe high n«bu. auettoa or Tendne. t o tba_blgk*at WdMrs. Henry Ailing, of this place,
Chas. Knlgfat.
attack of tbe grip and bronchitis.
nt tbe froat door of the Oowrt Booae, in the
school roaai Friday eight. While tbe der.
City iff Oontnna- Mlebigna (anid Cenrt ttoono
Bath ladies were in the same sick 1» on tbe sick list.
For
Sale
or
Bent:—26
aeroa of
being the bnlbttag in which the circuit Oonrt
bed.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _
Mrs. HatUe Penny i s under a nesting was secret. It has been rumored, fore«i*wai-te« County, Mlehigna, la twld),an land, Ktroalre of 3frs. Adelbort
upos tbe FrsshsseaV esmpos, that they toe seta ear • ( « * * « & , a. D . tees, Miner, Corunna,Mi«h.
physician's care this week.
IStL
tea o'Otoeit la the foiUHum of anld day.
ELSIE
Mrs. Carrie Herron, of Ovid, is a art going to organise s basket hall team. «t
OOlLt anal >e<dlnJienOCo.^Qh*ta»ngS^«*,
nun-lMt are deaetibed in aald asartgnge an
The *MK aiybt ») Voet of tba
guest at the home of H . J . Fuller.
Kale, Jan. «8.
Aa tedoor team of Ooraana nigh ioUo-nhto-wtt:
North One Bnndred (i30) Vnetof t o t Tee (!P)
C R U N N A , - MICHIGAN.
The Clinton Co. teachers' institute
Mrs. Susan McCarthy's condition school boys defeated tho Sophosaore and
tbe Went Sixteen (IS) r_et of the Korth
will be held at the Elsie high school remains unchanged at this writing.
Hnadred «a»i feet of Lot Wine <*>. Vernon
team of Owosso, in fact the best high One
prever; nnd Went Bfilf (K> of l « t Thlrta« %a*lrlat. MUo B.
on Saturday. Feb. 1.
A Co., SM Mth S*,
W. A . Cohley, who has bean ill
<lS>'tn Mock Three (3), nit in Verson VUlage
O.C
Cai-ag*i Cl* - *The pupils of Dist. No. 4, Fairfield, for the past week, is in the store school team of Owosso, by the score of proper; and n certain face* or parcel of land*
Oetreit.
17 ta 11. Jarred, who pitched for tbe deaortbed aa follow*: Ooatmeneing at the
give a toe social on Friday evening, once more.
eoalhweet eomer of Lot Mainber Ten (tSKin
Ottleo and aaoidsaoe,
JPeb. 7, at the home of Harry H o n Block SU , « , in Vernon proper, aad mnning
Mrs. Peter Meyers returned Fri- locals, did good work.
A Certain Cure for Aching Feet,
son.
thence
Sonth
parallel
with
Waiettt
atreet
One
door went of
day from a two months' stay at
James Jarrad spent Sunday at bis Hnadred Fifty (ISO) feet, thence enat On* Hna- Attea<- Poet tana, a powder: enw* Tired,
Miss Agnes Craham, of Latogs- Yonngstown, N . Y .
, anu-ten feet. Sample aeot
dred Fifty (MO) rnet, tbenee Horth One Hnaboms in Antrim.
bnrg, wbo has been visiting her
pi* ef F*oSVS**s SAHRS-ar OD&LTNKA,
dred Sifty (180) Poet, thence We« One Hondrrd
HIGHOAH
Mrs.
L
.
Bronse,
of
Charlotte,
visSunt. Mason will be in Arcadia the gifty <1H> Feet to place of beginning, all in tbe OOKW-F,'_a,aaew
nephew, Win. Bsllentlne, died at bis ited her daughter. Mrs. J . Cady, a
Allen a.
recorded plat of tfce Village o* Verooa, Cooaty Oiatavad.
d,teBey, H. Y.
home on Thursday, aged 84. Tbe portion of this week.
last of the week.
of Shiawnaaon and State of HJchigan.
remains were shipped to Laingsburg
Commencing Monday, Feb, 3rd, the _to«e4 Deeec-ber Slat. 1SSTJennie Coburn, of this place, who
T t > _ ^ Begntate yonr Sre with a WaLIAM J . PACKER,
en Friday.
KCOSnB WAU-tCK,
I •_" | - _ B U t 3 B B O T B I B B
Mortgagee.
has been dangerously ill wfth pneu- afternoon session will last from IS SO to JOSaPH H. OOLLDTS,
While looking after the barn monia, i s improving.
A «%• »_< THBnMIOeTAT. U*-e* Attoeoey at Law. Soocskw la
Attomer tot Mortgngnc
3
3D
instead
of
from
1:00
to
3
sOO.
ontontHMl
m per cent of yonr eeal bOhv
chores last Saturday Mrs. Cella ColAddreae Qomnnn, Hiebigna.
for free booklet*
Aahjfoer dealrr or
Herbert Hankinson i s confined to
Homer Stewart Is a new pupil of the
lins, of Fairfield, fell tbiongh the
Co Jtoeheeter, W,Y. 19
barn floor, breaking the large bone the house by an abcess on b i s face. 9th grade. B e finished the first semesin her left leg. Dr. Beal, of Elsie, Dr. Shaw is in attendance.
TATE OF JUOEOQAJf, County et 8niawaaCORUWNA*
try's worh In the Owosso schools.
a n a mtL
was called and reduced tbe fracture.
A large crowd from here attended
.
The
teachers
say
that
Friday
Is
pay
At a aeaaion of tbe ProbatoCourt fornaid
the invited party given In Perry on
G o u t y , held at the Probate OOfee, in the CU?
day. It has bean six weeks since the arOerntaa.eaSn^Swday,«ieUtbday
Friday at Brawn's opera boose.
of Ja*f
SOUTH VENICE.
nary, in the year en* taoi-twnd nine hnadred
Mr. and Mrs. Fairy AUcott drove last
and eight.
(LaeaefTJ-dteO
Sooth Venice, Mich., Jan. %, t*M.
through to.Ypsflantf, Friday, where
Miss Mieson was a visitor at the ruseTnl. Matthew Bank, Judge of Probate.
In
the
-natter
of
the
eatnte
of
Harriet
B.
Mrs. Fred Bayea, of Erie, visited they will remain for a Urz days wfth eighth grsde Monday.
relatives here last week.
Sling the petition of Jeflerfar naose wefl tfalaed ia Bwaacw
There was ao school la the eighth OnD.rendJngaad
.
. - tor
. praying
Mrs. J . T. Bancroft, who h a s been
H i s s Lydia Treubrodt,,of Feoton,
MrJhetb
That » w i y - - e r e arc
grsde Tuesday afternoon.
to *e3 teai eatnte of a**d dteceaeea nt private
enjoyed a vacation last w*ek at the spending a few days at her former
sow ovtr aflyOCO a w!« wfut giaooior the pnjnmut of debta.
Ralph Drake has qolt school and re- It la ordered; that the ttehdny of ttebntaty,
home at Springport, Mich., has reborne of her parents hare.
atcscinWOswwk Boanwni Uotturned home.
at ten o'clock in the forenoon, at aald
turned
to bis home in Flfat,
v-rirty now doing so wsM ts tMs
Mr«and Mrs. Fred Miller enterbe aartgned for bearing said
Walter Short moved his family
growing city*
r. T*e<
Look for Important saaooaeeaient In
tained the Vernon Baptist Ladies'
t h a t * copy of this
better than today. Vhynot
Aid Society last Wednesday. There and household effects from the Fer- next week's school notes.
OfO]
wis
were fifty present. Tho next meet- ris house, on Mill street, to Mont•tea, on aaalary aa
Sept. K- L. Mason wUI deliver tbe
ing will be with Mr. and Mrs. T. L . rose, Saturday.
and rfvealatfcag
pertence deatrawe, bat
opportnaity tcr rbrJttt
Stewart on Wednesday, Feb, 36, an Master Harold Compton 1» ill. Memorial address May 30, having reXATTHSWBUBH,
lkrfeer ; Bo*»»,St*j^o;pkrwT<Brk.
«jrkf
all day meeting.
Dr. Compton i s able to be out once ceived an invitation front H. F. Wallace
Judge of Probate.
W. SLnavr, Probate Begister.
Venice Grange will install their more after a fortnight's confinement Post G. A, R., and has accepted the B y ]
officers Wednesday, Feb. 8, with the to the house by illness.
same.
Williamson, of Durand Grange, inThe program social held WednesThe 6, 7 *nd 8tb grades will each have turn oaiewiAL LAXATIWK OOOQM SYWUB*
stalling officer. The meeting will be day evening by the Epworth League
extras
this year for the first time.
at the home of Hiram Stewart. Tbe at the heme of Pearle Davis w a s a
ladies will serve an oyster dinner.
Mies
Sanders visited the bigb school
success financially and otherwise.
Mr. and Mrs. B. W. Calkins very
Miss Grace Chaff in, of Detroit, Friday.
pleasantly «utertaiued tbe South spent Saturday with her mother,
The date of expiratkm of yotat
Onr Stock was Never Larger nor
Our Prices Lower «# _* ^ &>
HMQM
F you have been waiting for reduced
prices on Fur or Buffalo Cloth Coats,
don't wait any longer, but come and
see our stock- We can please you on the
price, quality and fit Come to the only
place in the county where die plain prices
are marked ot the original ticket
M
r
THE ADDISON CARDS.
Miss H. B. Ball, JW. D.
UINERS
BUSH
St BtUtSwHl
AUSTIN E.RJCHAROS
PATENTS 15¾¾
E. fl. BAILEY, M. D.
F
S
DETROIT
D* H e
I
Wasted
Wben Others Fafl, Try Us
KlttIinijUATIYtni)lfY-TA«
Grippe or Influenza, whichever you like
to call it, Is one of the most weakening
diseases known.
Scoffs
Emutsion,
which is Cod
liver OS and Hypophospbites in easily digested form, is the greatest strength-builder
known to medical science.
It is so easily digested that it sinks into
the system, making new blood and new fat,
and strengthening nerveavand muscles.
Use Scott's
Emulsion
tHm
Inflaenxn*
tanmhtsbh foe Cough* mod Co****
ALL DRUGGISTS | BOo. .AND »1.00»
Dissecting a Violin.
Not one person in a hundred has
tne slightest notion of how many part*
or pieces there are In a violin. Hero
is a list of them: Back, 2 pieces;
belly, 2; coins and blocks, <; sides, 6;
side-linings, 12; bar, 1; purflings, St;
neck, 1; finger-board, l ; nut, 1; bridge,
1; string for tall board, 1; guard "or
string, l; sound-post, 1; strings, 4;
pegs, 4; total, 69 pieces. Three kinds
of wood are used—maple, pine and
ebony. Maple fs used for the back,
the neck, the side-pieces and the
bridge. Pine is used for the belly, tho
bar, the coins and blocks, the side
linings and the sound-post. Ebony hi
used for the finger-board, the taliboard, the nut, the guard for string
of tail-board, the pegs and the button.
it
NEAT
to come NstesesJ
for us to do
P
•HINTING.
THSTIBD F R E E .
C. S. ALLISON & SON*
OfttlctawtB otad J e w e t e l r s
117.M. Washington 8t„ Owosso.
Warm Slippers
WARM SHOES—We have some broken lines of
Warm Slippers and Shoes in which the sizes are somewhat broken up
after the holiday trade. We will make a liberal reduction on them to
close them out. If you want something splendid in warm, comforuWe
shoes, come and see us. You will be pleased because it will pay you
to do so, both as a money proposition and by adding great comfort to
yourself. ,
Ben Jensen's Favorite Dish.
Rare Ben Jonson asked no better
treat than a pork pie with an -ion*
dance of Canary wine.
An Uncomfortable Moment.
Perhaps the most uncomfortable moment In a tns-?'s life U that one in
wWcL he takes a seat In a box at a
play and sees his employer sitting In
an orchestra chair among the ordinary people.
sobscriptioa h on your paper with
yoor nacie* Under st*c- circumstances there is no excuse for yoatf
aubacr^ittoD being dclmqwent.
CURRIE d CLUTTERBUCK
CORUNNA,
MICHIGAN