Spring Suits, Spring Shoes, LUM

Transcription

Spring Suits, Spring Shoes, LUM
T
B ’C
R
h a n a n
P O L IS H E D
e c o r d
,* -i ►’ •-;5\;
T
.
E V E R Y TH U R SD AY
------ » T ------
ID .
B
O
W
E
E
,
TERMS $1.00 PER ‘YEAR
v » T> » L * in . a d v a h c * ,
A M B U S S ) R U T IO N S DISCON TIN UED A T E X P IR A T IO N .
ADVERTISING RATES.
VOLUME X X X .
LESS THAU ONE YEAR.
O n e w e k -.....- . ...........................$ A'* per
One jonth.....................
.90
Tvfo jo n th s....................................
1.50
T to e m o n t h s ......__________ . . . . 210.
Sir iontps........................................... 8.40
BUCHANAN, BERRIEN COUNTY, M ICHIGAN TH U ES D A Y. JU L Y 9, 1896
NUMBER 24
Inch
“
“
“
I
Now Y ork Democrat had been ITirust oVEr ! present to tho committee. It will not bo
tho head of' Senator Hill. This was tho ‘ long and will deal especially with the
first reference to 'ProsldontiClevclniid; i t . financial question, putting it first in or­
i was unfriendly and it passed without no- ' der and giving it first rank in order of
1 tico at tho hands of tho convention.' W ill
When you take Hood’s Pills. The big, old-fashimportance. It will bo a fiat declaration
lonecV sugar-coated pills, which tear you all to
Made Temporary Chairman c f ; iam . F. Tarpey of _ California f o l - : in favor of tlio free mintage of silver at
lowed
in
favor,
o
f
'
Daniel.
“
Tho
^
pieces, are n ot in it with Hood’s. Easy to take
Democratic Convention.,
money question,” said he, “ is the ' the ratio of 16 to 1 with gold and will de­
>?FICK— In Record Bull dlng.Oak Street
only question 'in'which' the Doinocraey of i clare in terms agaiust awaiting the co-op­
the country has an interest; in' this cam -'! eration of any other nation. This plank
LIVELY FIGHT FOR SDK IETAC7.
pnign. W e Want the temporary chairman will he in the nature of a brief address
of this convention to sound,tho‘ keynote of : and appeal to the people to unite upon the
this convention and go to thp country os a ' reform of tho finances, putting aside all
CHRISTIAN CHURCH. — Sunday services: and easy to operate, is true
H ill N a m ed l>y th e Gold T.Ien fo r Tem po­
Preaching at 10:30 a. m. and 7:00 p m .; Junior C.
declaration of our views. Vjo are are d e -: other questions until the financial system
of
Hood’s
Pills,
-which
are
rary
Chairman
anil
Daniel
by
tlio
SilverE. at 3:00 p m .; Sen. 0 . E at 6:00 p .m .; S.S.torminetl that that keynote will be a silver can be changed.
at 13:00 m Other services: Cottage prayer meet­ up to date in every respect
ites—Scenes and Incidents A ttending the
Proceeding on this theory there will be
speech iu harmony with this views of this
ing Tuesday1evening at 7 :oO; Church prayer meet­ Safe, certain and sure. All
F irst Day’s session o f th e N atioual Dem­
in g Thursday evening at 7 :00; Ladies’ aid evsry
convention.” A volley of cheers greeted a declaration against any change in the
druggists.
25c.
C.
I.
Hood
&
Co.,
Lowell,
Mass.
Wednesday afternoon at 4:a >; Teachers’ meeiiug
ocratic Convention—Trouble In Getting
this brief and onfspokou characterization 1 present tariff until the financial question
Friday evening at 7:00. Pastor's receiving days— The only Pills, to take with. Hood’s Sarsaparilla.
can be disposed of by legislation. There
Into tlio M all.
of the issue oh which the fight hgainst'Mr,
Tuesday and Friday afternoon, 3 to 4.
..will bo a declaration against the issuance
E . R. B lack, Pastor, 11 N. Detroit St.
Hill was mode.
rof money by banks and also against issu­
Chicago, July 8.—A t 11:50 Tuesday the
Cleveland's N am e Cheered.
NITKD BRETHREN CHURCH—Bev. Geo.
Democratic national convention of 1896, a
The speech making continued. Follows ing interest-bearing bonis in time of
Sickafoose, Pastor. Sabbath services: Sab­
gathering that promises to he oue of the of New York talked for H ilt During his peace. Senator Jones, of Arkansas, will
bath. School 12:00 m. ; Preaching 10:30 A.M.; Young
remarks he mentioned the nomination of probably bo chairman of the committee on
People’s Meeting 6:00 r . M.; Preaching 7:00 p . m.
most historic in the annals of that party,
_________
Prayer Meeting and Bible Reading Thursday even­
Cleveland four years ago. This first di­ resolutions.
came
to
order
at
the
Coliseum.
The
ex­
in g 7:00. Everybody invited to all these services.
W a n t a Good R oads Plank.
traordinary conditions surrounding this rect mention of the name, of Cleveland
brought down an outburst: that seemed
ADVENT CHRISTIAN CHURCH—Rev. A. P.
New YORK, July 7.—A member of the
convention, the heated contests for su
Moore, Pastor. Presetting at 10:30 A . 51. and 7:30
really enthusiastic, and proceeded for two
editorial staff of The Daily American
premacy between warring factions in
P . M. Sunday school at 12 M. Y .P , prayer
meeting Thursday evening. Cottage prayer meet­
Wheelman left Monday night for Chi­
AND I AM SPRINGING
state and national organizations, the bit­
ing Tuesday evening. Covenant meeting Satur­
cago where a good roads plank will bo
day beforethe first Sunday o f each month, with
commnniqn the first Snndsy o f the month
presented to the Democratic convention
Strangers always welcome.
on behalf of the wheelmen. It declares
for better roads and suggests that tho
ethodist church , Rev. w. w. divine.
government extend its investigations
Pastor: Sabbath services: Preaching 10:30 >
a .m . and 7:00 p. m .; Sabbath School 12:00 m .;
thereon on a broader and more efficient
Junior League 3:30 p. m .; Epworth League, 6:00
scale. It then declares that the larger
p. nr.; Prayer meeting Thursday evening 7:00 p.
and more populous sta tes should improve
m. Members are expected and strangers arc al­
ways welcome.
their roads by such a system as will pro­
vide for tho payment of a substantial
RESBYTERIAN CHURCH. Rev. O. J. Rob
source of expense by future generations,
erts, Pastor. Sabbath services: Preaching
1030 A. H . and 7:30 P .M . Sabbath School 12:00
by whom, it says, the profits and benefits
i f . Young People’ s meeting 6:30 P. M. Prayer
of good roads will be enjoyed.
meeting, Wednesday evening, 7:30.
terness of
the disputes, and the
AND ALL LINES OF
Convention News a t Gray Cables.
VANGELICAL CHURCH, corner Oak and
personalities o f the mon who have
Second Sts. Rev. F. C. Berger; Pastor. Res­
B u z z a r d s B a y , July 8.—Private Secre­
taken
part
in
them,
have
been
idence 47Main St. Preaching at 1030 a. m. and
tary Thurber came over from his summer
so thoroughly exploited during the past
7.30 p .m . Sunday School 11.45 in., Airs. W- A.
Koehler; Snpt. Young People’s Alliance every
residence at. Marion Monday and prob­
week
that
public
attention
and
interest
Sunday at 6310 p .m . Prayer service Wednesday
ably will remain until after the Chicago
have been aroused in the Chicago conven­
at 7.80 p. m. A ll setts are free. All cordially
convention as the president will have con­
welcomed.
SENATOR DANIELtion. to a degree rarely, if ever, equaled.
siderable extra work while it lasts. The
or three minutes, with niauy people on
A ll of those things, lending n peculiar inO-O. F.—Bncnanan Lodge N o. 75 holds its
, regular meeting, at Odd Fellows Hall, on
their foot in the galleries waving their president w ill be kept informed of the
tcrett
to
this
convention,
could
not
fail
to
progress and the drift of the convention
That are carried in a Shoe
each Tuesday evening.
handkerchiefs
and hats.
The- en­
bring to the vast convention hall the
from start to finish, particularly the suc­
thusiasm
was
noticeably
eonfined
Jt A . M.—Buchanan Lodge N o. 68 holds a
greatest gathering of thq publio that has
cess of the eastern gold mon, Mr. Cleve­
to
the
galleries
Follows
was land and bis soerctary went down the bay
| and Clothing Store.
orbefore
t\ re T
.
.
ever assembled undor liko circumstances
.he fuilm oqn in each month.
followed by Marston, Of Louisiana, for in the afternoon on the steam launch and
in this, or perhaps any other, city iu the
Daniol. Marston was hissed when ho spent an hour or two fishing.
O.U. W.—Bnchanan Lodge N o. 98 holds its
country.
claimed two thirds of tlio convention.
, reolar meeting the let and 3d Friday evenIn Front o f the H a ll.
Thore were loud olios for Hill, and tho
i ng o f each month.
YALE SUFFERS DEFEAT.
In front of the convention, hall the
convention was in an uproar and making
A . R -—Wm. Parrott Post No. 22. Regular
army of subordinate officials contributed fun of Marston. Duncan, of Texas, finally Lcander* W in s tho T hird Trial H eat for
<T, meeting on the first and third Saturday
largely to the disorder. They formed a
secured the floor to speak foe. Daniol and
vailing o f each month. Visiting comrades al­
the Grand Challenge Cup.
long line, four abreast, to gain admission
was followed by Ladd, of Illinois, also for
ways welcom e.
H e n l e y - on -T h a m e s , J uly 8.—The weath­
at a single entrance, where several ex­ Daniel. St. Clair, of West Virginia, sup­
D OBEBT HENDERSON, Ai. D., Physician and
cited men were distributing the badges
ported H ill for temporary chairman, but er was cloudy and oppressive Tuesday and
11 . Surgeon. Office, Rough's Opera Honse Block.
and emblems of official authority. Mean­ said he was for a silver candidate and
there wa^soarccly a breath of air at noon.
Residence, No, 90 Front Street- Calls answered
LOVE AND
j& l
while the doors wore barred to the public
all hours o f the day and night.
A ll tho morning trains arrived heavily
platform.
and the stalwart policemen on guard said
AUuority R e p o r t A dopted.
laden with rowing enthusiasts, but tho
ADVENTURE w
31. BRODRICK, 31. D , Pbyeician, &£.
no one would be admitted until the last
After more speeehmaking the vote on
Office at Mb new residence, Front St., Bucrowd was not as great as had been ex­
officer was at his post within. A t best the the adoption of tho minority report, which
A re the M ost Striking Characteristics
four big entrances could not receive more favored the selection of Daniel for tempo­ pected. The Yale colors were to be seen
everywhere on the grand stand, in the enthan 250 persons a minute, or 15,000 an rary chairman, was taken and resulted as
o f O ur N ew Story . . . .
E. 0 . Colvin, M. D.,
cl isure, on the house boats, launches and
hour.
follows:
P H Y S IC IA N &. S U R G E O N ,,
s nail boats. James R. Roosevelt, secre­
The capacity of the hall is just 15,000, so
Yeas.
Nays.
Office over C, D. Kent's grocery store.
tary of the United States embassy, was
that it would take a full hour with perfect Alabama............................... ....... 23
Residence,. 15 Cayuga. Street.
present, but the United States ambassa­
discipline to pass the groat crowd through
Arkansas............................. ....... 1G
dor, Mr. Thomas F. Bayard, was unable
the doors. The belated stationing of the CaliCornia.............................
to attend the races on account of the ar­
officers promised to make it impossible to
Colorado............................ .
Conuscticut..........................
12 rival of the Ancient and Honorable Artil­
got the people inside the hall by the time
Delaware..............................
lery Com"'iny of Massachusetts.
the convention met. A t 11 o’clock the
A
Iu the tuird trial heat for the Grand
lino of officials stretched four abreast for Florida....... ....................... .. . . 4
„
“ Th* Niagara Falls: Haute"
Georgia.............. .
.......
challenge cup tho word was given at
100 feet and advanced at snail’s pace. The Idaho....................................
1
Both Leaudcr and Yale got away
women, lidding admission tickets were Illinois..................................
E A S T
prettily and together. Contrary to ex­
particularly indignant at not getting in.
Indiana................................
LEAVE BUCHANAN.
pectation Yale showed herself equally
They stood in the streets, hoistingumbrel­ Iowa....................................
Detroit Night Express, No. S.............12:1(1 A Al
quick at starting, but at the end of the
las to keep off the shower of cinders which Kansas.................................. ...... 20
Man. No. 2 ............................................ 9:47 A A!
,
,
Kentucky..............................
......
20
Chicago & Kalamazoo Acorn-., No. 22 7:32 I* M
island Leander bad a lead of one length
filtered from the elevated road every time
Louisiana..............................
and was steadily creeping away, rowing
a train thundered overhead. A t 11:80 tho
W E S T .
10
doors vrero thrown open and the crowds
evenly and powerfully. A s the boats ap­
LEAVE BUCHANA V.
Maryland....................
13
began to enter.
Massachusetts......................
3J peared in sight, near the finish, there was
Chicago Night Express, No. 7............. 3:42 A At
Chicago & Kalamazoo Arc* m., No 21 8:03 A M
A rrival o f Delegations.
88 tremondous applause, shouting and flagMichigan................... ......... ......
Boat., N. Y. & Chi. Special, No. 1.. ..12:00 At
It waving, and the excitement increased un­
One of the first of the loaders to enter Minnesota........................... ...... 7
Mail, No. 3................................................ 3:24 P At
,,
Mississippi..................... .
til it became a hurricane of demonstra­
was Senator Jones of Arkansas. Ho stood Missouri
A, F, Peacock, Local Agent.
.............................
tion in favor of Yale, upon the part of
at the staff of his state greeting all who Montana....... ..... ................. ... .. 0
O. W . Rcnci.ES, G. P; ,V T. A.
the Americans and in favor of Leander
approached him cordially and good natur- Nebraska..................... ........
10 in the case of the British. The Yale par­
edly, seemingly cool and unruffled as he Nevada.................................
8 tisans on the grand stand were fairly wild
surveyed the field and confronted the first New Hampshire....... . .........
20 with excitement and the British were not
clash of the battle which was so soon to New Jersey....... ...... ............
71 a w hit less excited in their counter dem­
begin. Governor Altgeld came over and Now York..,........................
♦*>
Carolina................... .
onstration, especially when at the last
held an earnest consultation with tho North.
In effect Jane 21, 1S95.
Trains leave
North Dakota....................... ...... 6
quarter, It was seen that Leander was the
leader of tho silver forces.
Senator Ohio......................................
G alien, Mich., as follows:
winner,
__________________
Cockrell of Missouri, ono of the mana­ Oregon.......— ...................
F O R T U E NORTH*
Accepts the Challenge.
gers
of
tho
Bland
boom,
who
Pennsylvania.................
....
64
No. 6, Er* Sun , 1:1(1 P. 31.
For St. Joseph
looks liko an animated Uncle Sam Rhode Island........................ ... . . , ,
8
&o. 20, E x San., 8:4a P . 31.
*•
•*
HAVANA, July 8.—General Bradley T.
South Carolina.....................
N o . 14, Ex. Sau * 9.00, a . 31
For St. Joseph
and who is affectionately known In his
By STA N LEY J. W EYM AN,
Johnson, the correspondent of a New York
N o*16, Han. only 9.47, A . 31.
For St. Joeeph
South
Dakota.......................
8
own state as “ Old Garden Sass, the poor­
newspaper here, formerly brigadier-gen­
> o . 20has through sleeping car, St. i otii-s t >
Tennessee......................... ...
est man in the United States senate,”
Mackinaw.
... AUTHOR O F ...
Texas............................... . ...... 30
eral of c a v a lr y in the service of the Con­
with
his
colleague.
Senator
"White
of
Cali­
FOR THE SOUTH.
Utah.....................................
federate states, has accepted the challenge
fornia,
were
the
next
prominent
arrivals.
N o .K V Ex. Son.,12:0S A . M. For Terre Haute
Vermont.......................*.......
*8 to fight a duel, made to him by Senor
Senator Harris, the famous Tennessee Virginia.............................. .___ 23
N o, 15, Ex. Sun., 6:29 P. 31.
For Logaosport
1 Manuel Ampodia, formerly a captain in
N o. 17, San. only, 7:39, P. 31.
F or Logaupport
Washington.....................
...... 5
3 the Spanish army. Both gentlemen
For Complete Time card, giving: all trains and
West Virginia......................
3
stations, and for fu ll information- an to rates
TH IS IS ONE OF
Wisconsin......... .................
21 have named their seconds, and the meet­
through cars, etc., address
. . ing will probably take place soon.
Wyoming..............................
M R . W E YM A N ’S
O. 31. W hbeleb, T . P.
Alaska.......................... ......
2
Terre Haute, lad.
Im plicated.
Arizona................................ ...... 2
BEST STORIES.
Or E . A. F ord,
A real Mr. Malaprop was discovered
District of Columbia............. ..... 2
Gen'l Pass., Agent, St. Louis,. 3fo.
Indian Territory............. .
.... %
the other afternoon in the person of a
New Mexico:............. .
Broadway cable car conductor. The car
o
F O U K X H O P J U L Y EXCURSIO NS
was on a down town trip and had few
V I A T H E V A N D A L IA L IN E
Total...............................
349 passengers until it reached Fourteenth
Tickets will be sold; on July 3d and 4th, good to
street. There half a dozen people, five
H ill D id N ot Vote.
retnrn until July 5th, 1396, inclusive, between all
Mr. Hill did not vote with theNow York
women and one man, got aboard. Three
stations within two hundred miles o£ initial
delegation. The minority report of the
point, at one fare fo r the round trip. Tickets
o f the women and the man found seats
will also be sold to stations on connecting lines
national committee was then declared
together, but the other tw o went to an­
on same basis as above. For foil particulars, call
adopted amid great cheering by the silver
on nearest Vandalia-'Llne Ticket Agent, or address thing to patent? Protect your ideas ; they m ay
other part o f the car, thereby leaving it
i
bring
you
wealth.
Write
JOHN
W
EDDERmen. Chairman Harrity appointed a com­
E. A. FORD,
doubtful as to whether they were mem­
|BiJKN & CO., Patent Attorneys, W ashington.
Gen’ l Passenger Agent.
mittee
to
escort
Mr.
Daniel
to
the
plat­
! D . C., fo r their $1,800 prize offer.
3t
S t . L ouis, 31o.
bers of the party or not. The man with
form. There was tremendous cheering,
the three, instead of giving the exact
waving of hats, handkerchiefs and fans as
c o n v e n t io n c a l l e d to o r d e r .
change, offered a h alf dollar in payment
octogenarian who rules the senate with a Daniel appeared on the stage.
Mr. Daniel then delivered his address.
of the fares, and the conductor was as
rod of iron, and who has been the most
There was great applause when he said
much in the dark as ever. To inquire
conspicuous man in Tennessee for forty
years, came in hot and perspiring after respecting Harrity that no Democratic
was plainly the only way to arrive at
his tussle with the minions of the law at convention bad been presided over with
the truth. With a polite wave of his
the entrance. A t 11:50 one of the Bland more fairness in its preliminary organiza­
hand toward the tw o women in the
tion.
bands entered the south entrance play­
farther corner he asked blandly, “ Are
Daniel
said
the
countries
of
European
ing “ Dixie.” This caused tho first burst
those ladigs implicated?” — New York
of enthusiasm and the air was greeted kings are for the gold standard. Four
Tribune.
with a whirl of cheers. W hen the air was years ago the New York delegation stood
shifted to “ Columbia” the huzzas were re- here for a candidate who was" for the free
Cold Treatm ent F or Pneumonia.
coinage of silver at 16 to 1.
nowed.
Then plunging into the subject before
The Jocal application o f cold is now
•
N ew Y o rk Delegates.
him he drew a picture of the great up­
common in pneumonia. Mortality rang
I t was just noon when, the the first Em­ heaval
in favo" of free silver which had
pire state delegates took seats in the per­ “ swept the country and hud stuck like a
ing from 80 per Cent to nothing is re­
sons of Frederic R. Coudert and ex-Mayor tnr-hoel in the old north state, and had
corded for various methods of treatment,
Grant, a combination, of the reform and written ‘16 to 1’ on tho "saddle-bags of the
while the natural recovery without
Tammany Democracies. A m ong the sil­ Arkausaw Traveler.”
His- mention of
treatment has been found to be about
ver Republicans and Populist leaders who Teller and Dubois was cheered,
90 per cent. Dr. Mays o f Philadelphia
were in places of advantage to watch the
reports
195 cases treated by cold, with
course of proceedings was Jerry Simpson,
CONVENTION NOTES.
3.68 per cent o f deaths. It cannot be be­
the sage of Medicine Lodge. The large
lieved that any treatment invariably
number of ladies present was very notice­ Now H am pshire Delegates Against a B o lt
in A n y Em ergency.
able. Their bright dresses added color to
cures, nDd lie regards this as by far the
the brilliancy of the animated scene which
CHICAGO, July 8.—The New Hampshire
most satisfactory. The action of the
stretched away from the speaker’s plat­ delegation held a caucus Tuesday morn­
cold consists in reducing the fever,
form. A n enthusiastic Boies man carried ing to discuss .the outlook for the gold, strengthening the pulse, toning up the
Enabled us to lay iu a stock of a Boies banner through the aisles in the faction in the convention. The whole heart, diminishing the pain in the chest
delegates’ pit, but there was not an an­
Hardware which we are now offering a t swer to this suggestion for a demonstra­ sentiment of the delegation was against a and alleviating the difficulty in ' breath­
bolt in any contingency. The question- ing.
__________ ________
tion in favor of tho Iowa candidate.
prices hitherto unheard of in Buchanan
was not seriously considered. National
Shortly after 12 Mr. Whitney and Mr.
H e G ot an Answer*
Committeeman Sulloway said after the
ill walked up the center aisle followed
W e are not selling below cost either. W e H
For grave speeches o f importance de­
by m ost o f the New York delegation, but meeting: “ W e New Hampshire men have
make a profit—albeit a sm all one—on every the great Empire state delegation which not the slightest Intention of. leaving the livered with weight Bismarck was, of
is usually received with salvos of cheers in
convention under any circumstances.
coarse, most celebrated. When annoyed,
article. The “ Close Figuring” to which we R Democratic convention took their places These rumors that the eastern delegates he nearly always adopted a jesting tone,
in silence.' Governor Russell and tho may bolt are utterly foolish. I do not
which must have sounded to his fright-'
have already alluded does the rest.
Massachusetts delegation, in which was
believe there is a single delegate who in­
ened friends much as if the tiger in the
George Fred Williams, the free silver de­
tends to bolt. I t is much easier to get out
menagerie had greeted them with a cor­
fender, followed, and like the New York
of the party than it is to get back into it
dial handshake before devouring.
contingent did n ot raise a cry. Owing to
and eastern Democrats w illnot get out.”
“ Do you mean to break the conven­
'the proportions of the hall it is probable
The gavel used by Chairman Harrity. in
tion of Gastein ?” bluntly demanded the
that the leaders were not recognized.
opening the convention was presented, by
Convention Called to Order.
Ossian Guthrie, of Chicago, and was made
Austrian embassador, Count Kurolyi, of
A t 12:oU Chairman Harrity of the Dem­ from an oak timber taken from old Fort
the Prussian minister president.
ocratic national committee called the con­
Dearborn. The block house .from which
“ No, ” replied the latter, with great
vention to order; After prayer by Rev.
the timber was taken survived the Chicago
directness, “ but even if I did so, do you
Stlrcs of Grace Episcopal church, Mr.
fire and was purchased !by M r.. Guthrie : think I should be such a fool as to tell
Harrity named David B. Hill as the
and other philanthropic citizens and re­
choice of tho national committeo for tem­
erected in South Park, Chicago, as a re­ . you?”
porary chairman amid tremendous cheer­
minder of the city's; frontier 'days.
R em arkable Natural Bridge.
ing by tho gold mon. The silver men
Two Cuban flags are ready for use in
. kept their seats. Clayton of Alabama then . the convention hall if the platform utterOne o f the many natural wonders of
arose to nominate Senator Daniel for tem­ *ances give the occasion. One was made . Arizona scenery made accessible by the
porary chairman, and there was great
by the decorators, while another came di­
opening up o f rail and stage roads is a
cheering at the mention of the senator’ s
W e are now showing-in our Dress Goods Department a large and beautiful line of name. Thomas, o f Colorado, seconded rect from the Cuban headquarters in New j remarkable natural bridge, in 'the Tonto
H ot W e a th e r D ress-F abrics a t E xtrem ely L o w F bices . ■ W e will offer during , the nomination of Daniel. Then McDer- .Y ork. It Is of1 silk, of generous propor- ' basin,hot far from Flagstaff. Thebridge
. tions, showing the single star emblematic 'is 550 feet long, and spans: a canyon
this sale:
.
mott, o f New Jersey, was recognized and
of “ Free Cuba.’ ’
’’
1some 200 feet deep, at the bottom o f
7<s ChaUies, light and dark ground, fo r.. . . . . . ------ -------, -------- 3% c pet yard,
{took the platform, speaking in fav or.of
A t a caucus of the .-Alabama delegation
12%"cCoronet L a w n s . : . . . . . . . — . . . . ----- --------------------•
634cperyafd.
■H ill for temporary chairman.
it was determined to ca.sk the twenty-two 'w hich flows the river. The bridge is o f
19e Corded Dimities; fast colors.. .
------ ------- ---------------. . .l a ^ c per yard.
He was followed b y Waller, of Con­ , votes of the state for Boles. The delega- *rock and is perfectly proportioned. The
2Sc Scotch Zephyr Ginghams.. . . . . . . . . . — . . . . — . . . . - - ,12}£c per yard.
necticut, who also spoko for-th e H ew , tion was’divfded, a ballot giving Boies 8, -underside is gracefully arched and the
19c- Grass Lawn in stripes and d o t s ...
........ ............. — ,12J^c per yard.
Yorker, suggesting HUl fo r temporary ' Bland 6, Bussell 5, Matthew's'' 3, absent 1, .upper perfectly level. The w alls o f the
Imported Irish Dimities, best quality.... ... ... ............. ..
............ 25c per yard.
.chairman and Daniel for permanent ! but under.the unit rule it'w a s agreed 'canyon are honeycombed With caves in
Imported French Organdies, Persian patterns,. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .25c per yard.
chairman.
■that the solid vote'"should be cifst-for 'w hich are a great profusion o f stalactites
Silk Stripe ChaUies, light g r o u n d . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
..........-..2 5 c per yard.'
Waller’s threat to fight silver men was 'Boies. ' * ' . " ' '
' • ' ;aiid stalagmites.— Philadelphia Ledger.
,
applauded
by
the
gold
men
and
hiased
by
^
Fancy Crepons—Fine White Dimities—India Laws— Grass Linens with Insertion to the silver men. Thomas, of Colorado, was
NO D E L A Y ON PLATFORM
Match—and in fact everything made in H ot Weather Dress'Goods at Lowest Prices.
Th© Face.
W e show a large and complete line o f H o t W e a t h e r U n d e r w e a r , a n d H o s i e r y f o b .then recognized to speak fo r DqiiieL
wI f t h e S l l v e r M e n C o n t r o l t h e . C o m m itte e
Silver Men Impatient.
I f we could but read it every human
M e n , W o m e n a d d C h i l d r e n a t P o p u l a r P r ic e s .
’
‘
oil R esolu tion s* •
* * ' ‘
The impatience o f the silyer men yen ted
being carries his life in his face and is
Cqiqago, . July *8l—There_ ,will be no
•Itself in cries of “ Vote,” when- Mr, Thom­
good looking or the reverse as that life
as finished, but Chairman Haiyity called .wastes of tim eonplatform .when the __comOur S u it Sale a t $5, $7, $10 and $15 and Our Shirt
for Charles E .; Waller o f . Alabama'. : lift. ; mltteepnjre.solutiops is appplnted if.the ■hais been good or evil, On our features
W a ist Sale at 25c, 50c, 75c, $1 up. to $5 Each Continues.
.Waller,proved himself fo; b§ a fliiy ,south- .silver m encan control thq matter in.itifis.. ’.the fine chisels o f thought and emotion
emer and he showed feeUng-when he foid ^respect.v The’ platform hM afready been 'a x e ' 'eternally , at Work. — Alexander
.how he had been made to swaliow b i& r
prepared Lit " is " complete - and" 'read y'fo1
r medicine four ■years •ago whan anotmer ,
T- rr»- **nr‘
f V T T f £•*'YEARLY CONTRACTS.
Onflmh, $6.00 foe year o f 52 insertions.
Ttve ii«hea or over, S5.03J per Inch, for’ year o f
52inserHons.
Ope olnm n, $120 for year o f 52 insertions.
No Gripe
Business l>ire«‘t«»rv
0
Spring is Here!
Spring Suits,
Spring Shoes,
M
P
E
SPR IN G GOODS
r
A
G. W. NOBLE.
H.
V A N D A L I A L IN E
TIME TABLE.
fl Gentleman of France/*
IT tflhli BEGIN SOON.
WANTED-AN IDEA££“ nsf f i
F IG U R IN G
W OT W EA TH E R
Dress Goods, Hosiery, Underwear,
Suits and Shirt W aists.
ROSE & ELLSWORTH, South Bend.
MICHIGAN PICKINGS.
M E NEWS IN BRIEF.
WHAT IS GOING ON IN OUR
STATE.
Ehort F ai a^raplis Stating1the Events o f the
Past F ew days,
OWN
Ite m . W h ic h W ill Do o f Interest to O n .
Dcajlcrs Gathered from H ere and There
— Crimes Casualties and Other Occur­
rences o f the W eo k Reported b y W ire ,
D etroit, July 4.—A special to Tho Free
Press from Ironwood, Mich., says: An
extensive shut-down occurred at all of the
mines of tho Metropolitan Iron and Land
company Friday evening, and fully 1,50C
men are forced into idleness. Tho Metro­
politan group of mines includes the Norrie, East Norrie, and Pabst, and their
average yearly shipments combined are
about 1,000,000 tons of ore. The cause of
the shut-down is the slight demand for
iron ore, the fact that they have in stock
piles about 500,000 tons of ore and that the
season is so far advanced with sales so far
of only about 103,000 tons.
The forces were reduced about a month
ago, and the management has made every
effort to sell its product, but outside of a
few small sales they have been unable to
place their ore. The furnaces are run­
ning upon the productions of the smaller
mines, which shaded prices made by the
pool to which the larger ones belong.
MICHIGAN PROHITIONISTS.
N arrow ar.d D road Gauge People
M eetings at* Lansing.
H o ld
L ansing, July 4.—In response to sepa­
rate calls the two wings of the Prohibi­
tion party in Michigan, namely, “ narrow”
and “ broad” guage factions, mot in sepa­
rate state conventions here Friday to
nominate state tickets.
The “ narrow gauge” or so-called “ one
idea” gathering was called by Chairman
Dickie, of Albion. The “ broad gauge”
people, who seem the more numerous,
have declared affiliation with the new Na­
tional party organized by bolters from tho
national Prohibition convention at Pitts­
burg.
Tho latter body, in addition to the other
reformatory planks in its platform, adds
free silver. The “ narrow gauge” conven­
tion adopted resolutions reaffirming tho
party’s former position upon women suf­
frage and indorsed the candidates of the
national Prohibition party on its platform
adopted at Pittsburg.
Tliree-Cent Fares at Detroit.
D etroit , July 3.—Every street car lino
in this city is now collecting 3-cent fares.
The Fort Wayne and Belle Isle road
Thursday sold eight tickets for 25 cents
and took those of other lines for rides.
This is the result of the passage by the
council of the Pingree ordinance giving
an extended franchise to the road iu con­
sideration of cheaper fares. It has thirty
days in which to accept the ordinance.
Novel Parade o f Rheum atics.
Clem ens , Mich., July 3.—A
novel celebration was held Friday night.
It was a rheumatic parade. Headed by a
hand, cripples in chairs and on crutches
marched down Cass street, counter­
marched to Walnut, up Walnut to Foun­
tain bathhouse, and back to the court­
house square to witness a display of fire­
works.
_________
M ount
N aval ATilitia Goes on a Cruise,
D e t r o it , July 7.—The first division o f
tho Michigan naval reserves, numbering
eighty officers and men, boarded the
United States steamship Michigan yester­
day for the annual five days cruise of in­
struction.
State Notes.
Sheriff Rugg has arrested John Chap­
man and W illiam Wood, members of a
gang of cattle and horse thieves, who
have made their headquarters at Yan
Buren, Mich.
Carl Wendell was acquitted of the mur­
der of 5-year-old Eva La Frienere at Me­
nominee. Mich.
Daniel Dumas, while riding into Lako
Linden, Mich., with a friend, was thrown
from the vehicle by the running away of
the team and fatally injured.
Roscoo D. D ix of Berrien Springs,
Mich., ex-commissioner of the state land
office, has announced his candidacy for
the Republican nomination for auditor
general.
A n ordinance has been introduced in the
council of Saginaw, Mich., providing for
the ringing of a curfew boll. Themeas-are is short and pointed. Children under
15 years of age must not loiter on the
streets after 8 o’clock in violation of
which parents or guardians o f children
will he liable to a fine.
The Michigan Republican state central
committee held a meeting at Detroit and
selected Grand Rapids as tho place for
holding the state nominating convention
and fixed the date for Aug. 5.
Convict Fatally Stabbed.
M ichigan Cit y , Ind., July 6.—Elmer
Thomas, colored, of Indianapolis, a conviot in the northern Indiana state prison,
was fatally stabbed Sunday morning dur­
ing chapel services b" Henry Jones, a fel­
low convict. Thomas was sent up from
Marion county for a term of five years for
burglary, and Jones was sont up from the
same county for u term of twenty-one
years for manslaughter.
Jones had a
grudge against Thomas for testifying
against him during his trial at Indianap­
olis.
T he F ou rth at Venice*
V enice, July 6.—In honor of the Amer­
ican warships lying here on the 4th of
July all of the vessels in the basin of St.
Mark were ordered to hoist their gala Hags
on that occasion. The Italian dispatch
vessel Galileo fired a salute of twenty-oua
g u n s . _________________
M innesota Republicans*
St. P aul , July 2.—The Minnesota Re­
publican state convention met here yes­
terday and renominated Governor Clough
for governor and a full ticket. The plat­
form indorses the St. Louis platform and
nominees.
Shakespeare's Heroines*
The fact that boys acted his heroines
may have impelled Shakespeare to pre­
sent his Rosalind, Imogen, Julia and
Viola in doublet and hose, because in
male attire the boys must have looked
and acted their best. It is more easy to
conceive a male representative of Lady
Macbeth than of Juliet, but we, With
our advantages, can never be wholly
reconciled to thq idea of a woman
played by a man. The greatest revolu­
tion in the history of the modern drama
was the introduction of women upon
the stage. This change was cansed not
merely by art considerations, bnt arose
in part from the laxity of morals and of
manners at the restoration; hat never­
theless what a mighty and beneficent
change it w a s! "What gifts and grace,
what loveliness, parity, tenderness,
genias, charm, have been shown to the
delighted world since women have been
played by women within the confines o f
‘‘the magic wooden OI H ow did, how
could, the players o f Shakespeare’s time
procure boys o f such intelligence, beau­
ty, delioacy o f m ind, that they could
w orthily personato pure, lovely* noble
women?
Could w e now tolerate any youth in
such parts as Imogen, Desdemona, Ju­
liet? S till it must be remembered that
the boys who first acted such characters
were probably trained, inspired, "in­
structed •by the master himself, and he
may1w ell have done wonders. It was a
hard condition, and twin born with
Shakespeare’s dramatic- greatness, that
he should. See his women played by lads.
Could he ever have been w holly satis­
fied w ith the result? — Gentleman’s
Magazine.' '
.......
"
r
Tho disease of cattle hill passed its second reading in the British house of lords.
The English house of commons sat
throughout the night to consider the agri­
cultural land rating bill, designed to les­
sen the rates of taxation on agricultural
land, and was still sitting at 5 o’clock in
the morning.
President Ronilla of Honduras has ac­
cepted the resignation of Dr. Juan Aarios
as minister of the interior.
James Taylor of Belvidere, 111., who was
incarcerated for selling liquor without a
license, was found dead in his cell.
Canada has just bestowed names on its
tenitorg bordering the Arctic ocean. It
will hereafter appear on tho map in four
districts or provinces, Ungaga, Franklin,
Mackenzie and Yukon. The four com­
bined contain 1,421,000 square miles, or
nearly seven times the area of the province
of Ontario.
Michael Tferans and Daniel Reidy, two
farmers, were killed by a train while cross­
ing the Erie tracks at Corning, N. Y.
Both horses were cut to pieces.
***
The city council of Joliet, His., has
granted saloon licenses to eighty-one
applicants at 81,000, payable in advance.
Last year there were seventy-three sa­
loons. „
Leading electricians claim that the new
vacuum tube light w ill be three times as
brilliant as the present light and its cost
only one-third as much.
A ll the glass factories in southern New
Jersey have closed down for a period of
two months, giving 5,000 employes an en­
forced vacation.
Mrs. Bear, a Christian scientist, and
David Goodson and his wife of Toronto
have been found guilty of criminal neglect
in falling to call a physician for Ade­
laide Goodson, a daughter, who died of
diphtheria.
London’s new census shows a popula­
tion of 4,411,271 for inner London, and of
1,756,421 for outer London, a total of 6,167,692.
Base Ba l i^
FROM
Sc TO $US EACH.
Excellent Clubs Sc 75c
BAIL HITS, ETC.
A FINE LIN E OF
E B IIE T ls r S ,
OPPOSITE HOTEL, BUCHANAN.
George W ym an & Go. offer
a superb line of Corsets for
you to select from.
*
■William Carey and'team of horses were
killed in a pit near Dayton, O., b y falling
gravel. A half dozen other workmen
were entombed, but escaped serious in­
jury.
It is stated that the Emperor of Ger­
many has just- presented a bust of him­
self, executed in bronze, to Dr. Joacbim.
Next year the English church wiU cele­
brate tho 1,300th anniversary of the bapt­
ism of the first English Christian king by
St. Augustine.
The Methodist church at Grinnell, la.,
which has been used as an armory by
Company K of the state militia, was
wrecked by fire. It is believed that an
incendiary kindled the blaze.
David Blndsoe, a liveryman at Crossville, Ind., had one leg broken and his
skull cracked in a runaway at DrayvUle,
Ills.
Tom Conner, a young man, died of
hydrophobia near Metropolis, His. He
was bitten three months ago by a dog,
which had followed him home.
Clara Herr, who was known in Chicago
as Clara Harris, committed suicide at
Galena, Dls., by taking carbolic acid. Six
months ago she was married to Ernest
Herr of East Dubuque.
*
♦ *
Friendship for free coinage is given by
L. M. "Wade of Mount Yernon, Ind., as his
reason for refusing to go to Chicago and
help ex-Congressman Bynum in his fight
for sound money.
Collector James W . Hunter of the fifth
internal revenue district of Illinois has
issued a report, showing the collections
from spirits and alcohol for the year
amounted to $12,337,020.
Matt Lee, who lived near Oskaloosa,
la., and who was quite wealthy, killed
himself with a revolver. He was 50 years
old and in bad helth.
Two yawls of the towboat Fallie cap­
sized at Cincinnati and threw seven men
into the river, tw o of whom were drowned.
Severe earthquakes are now occurring
daily at Arequipa, Peru. Much damage
has been done to buildings.
A n increase of over §600.000 in Chicago
postoffice receipts over last year is an­
nounced.
W illiam Kelly, of Utica, N. Y., was
struck by a vehicle at Santa Barbara, Cal.,
and fatally injured.
***
Guatemala is holding her annual revo- j
lution.
|
About 100 prominent Republicans have j
left Denver for Chicago to work for silver 5
and the nomination of Teller for presl- ;
dent.
William Haas, 17 years old, who outraged and murdered Mrs. W illiam Broder at Covedale, O., was caught at Hamil­
ton and put in jail at Cincinnati.
The report is that the marriage of
Bertha Eppinghousen, of Terre Haute,
Ind., to Signor Perezone, of South Amer­
ica, set for Thursday in London, was post­
poned on account of the illness of the
bride’ s father. Miss Eppinghousen met
Signor Perezone in Chicago during the
World’s Fair.
Judge Henry j . Wynne, in point of
service the oldest government employe
under the war department, has retired as
chief of the shipping bureau of tbe quar­
termaster’s department at- Jeffersonville,
Ind.
A special to the Omaha Bee from W at­
erloo, la., says: Governor Boies has left
this city for Chicago, unescorted.
Ida Bollinger, 11 years old, fell into an
oat bin at Fort Dodge, la., and was suf­
focated.
** *
Charles Adair, of Elwood, Ind., while
assisting to fire a home-made cannon, suf­
fered the loss of his right arm. He is a
tin plate worker and 20 years of age. The
shock is likely to kill him.
The sixteenth annual convention of the
supreme temple of the Patriarchal. Circle
of America will be held at Elkhart, Ind.,
July 8-10. There w ill he competitive drills
for prizes.
Benjamin Thomas, a prominent citizen
of Elwood, Ind., suffered the loss of his
right hand by the premature explosion of
a cannon cracker.
South Dakota can raise wheat more
cheaply than any other part of the United
States. The cost per acre is $8.57, of
which the rent of tho ground per acre is
11.52,
A man, supposed to be B. Pharion, from
the insane asylum .at Clarinda, la., was
struck by a fast mail train at Galesburg,
Bis., and killed.
Douglas Tilden, the deaf mute sculptor
Df San Francisco, was married the other
day to Miss Bessie Colo, who is also a deaf
mute.
Sirs. Slawson’s Economies.
“ My w ife, ” said M ajor Slawson, “ can
beat the world at economy, bnt it would
be money in m y pocket to have her oth­
erwise. Invariably when she buys a
new gown she gets a yard too little at
first, then she buys more stuff, and has
enough left over for a new waist. To
save that, she bays usually a skirt and
sleeves o f another sort, although she
may he perfectly certain she w ill have
no nse for an extra frock. Bnt that is
not quite up to her economy in eating.
We asked people to tea the other night,
and tw o o f them failed to oome. So to
save the ice cream and fixings they
ought to have eaten, Mrs. Slawson ate
them herself, after 1 had refused the
job. The result was five days in bed,with $80 spent for doctor and nurse—
and the ice cream was only 60 cents a
quart. ” — New York JonrnaL
W e have tins make of Cor­
sets in long and short waists,
fa t or slim. A lso the “S. C.”
W e offer a fu ll line of Ferris
Good Sense W aists.
For children, 25c to 50c; misses,
50c to $1; ladies, $1 to $1.50.
W e offer the Chicago W aist,
for ladies, at $1.
W e offer the hest Summer
Corset we have ever had at 35c
per pair. W e think’ yOu can fit
your form and poeketbook in
onr Corset department.
W e offer all our ladies’ made
up Underwear, Gowns and
Skirts included, at ten per cent
discount for June. W e have
our summer jJine offH ats and
Bonnets.
COM E A K D SE E U S.
South Bend, Ind.
Store closed evenings' except Saturday.
T e e th ! T e e th !
DR. S. OSTRANDER,
3 3 E 3 V T IS T ,
NILES, - - MICH.
Best Set o f Teeth, $8.QQ
Gas or Vitalized Air, also local applications to
gums for painless extraction of teeth.
Fine Gold Fillings, and all modem Dentistry at
reasonable prices.
IAII Work Warranted,
And a written guarantee given for five years.
Four Doors West of Post Office,
TELEPHONE 58, BELL.
LUM
Stop!
Y ou need not go fu r­
ther to look for
1
^ B u ild in g M a t e r ia l.
WM. MONRO,
BUCHANAN. ‘
I w ill have co'nstantly oh ba'nd H ock­
in g V a lle y S oft Goal-"and L ehigh H ard
The feast is such as earth, the gener* . Coal o f the best quality, at th e low est
prices. Orders m ay b e le f t a t M orris'
al mother, pours from her fairest bos­
store. T erm s Ca s h .
om when she smiles in the embrace o f
C.L. "WILSON.
autumn.— Shelley.
.B
■
u c h a n a n
R ecord
v __________________
.
•- * D . H . B O W E R ,
«
PUBLISHER AND PROPRIETOR.
; . T H U R S D A Y , J U L Y 0. 1890
Only-,16$ out of A. possible* 575 o f the weekly
newspapers In Michigan are accordeda circulation
in jLCTDAnTOHTKEs by the American Newspaper
.Oitectory for 1696. and the publishers of the Di­
rectory will guarantee the accuracy o f its rating
oy a reward 5f ape hundsed dollars to the first
person 'wb° Sttccdsafully aseails it. Advertisers
,v should dote the fact that the Buciianan R ecord
is onexst the 166 that are not afraid to let their
* customers know just what they arc buying.
A t a m eeting o f th e Republican
cou n ty com m ittee in St, Joseph, M on­
day, St was decided to hold the first
county convention, to chose delegates
to the State and Senatorial conven­
tions, in that city on Tuesday, July 528,
and the second, or county nom inating
convention, in N iles on Thursday,
September 3. E . A . Blake dee, o f Gar
lien, was selected as tem porary chair­
man o f the first convention and lio n .
L . G. E yfe, o f St. Joseph, to be tem por­
ary chairman o f tbe convention so be
held in N iles.
REPUBLICAN TICKET.
FOR PRESIDENT,
W ILLIAM M'KINLEY.
op om o.
FOR VICE PRESIDENT,
GARRET A . HOBART,
OF NF.AV JERSEY.
R e p u b lica n S ta te C on v en tion .
D e tr o it , Micro, July 1 ,1S95.
7V» the Itfjmblimn Electors o f tin Mate ot Mich­
igan:
The State Conventions o f the Republicans of
Michigan is hereby called to meet at Lockerby
Halt, in the city o f Grand Rapids, on Wednesday,
the 6th day o f August. 1696, at 11 o’ clock A. hi.,
for the purpose o f nominating candidates for State
offices, and the transaction o f such other business
as may properly come before the convention.
The delegates from the several connties in each
Congressional District are requested to meet in
District caucus at 10:30o'iocka. m ., on the day
ot the State Convention, and select candidates as
follows, to be presented to the State Convention
for confirmation: One Vice-President, one As­
sistant Secretary, one member each o f the Committeeou “ Credentials,” “ Permanent Organiza­
tion and, Order o f Business” and “ Resolutions,”
apd to transact such other business as they may
dgem necessary. Under the resolution of 13s^
n o delegate will be entitled to a seat in the Con­
vention'who does not reside in the County he pro­
poses to represent .
In accordance with the resolution of 1876, every
county will be entitled to one delegate lor each
five hundred o f the total vote cast for Governor at
the last State election (November, 1804), and one
additional delegate for every fraction amounting
to three hundred, but each organized county will
be entitled to at least two delegates.
In compliance with the resolution adopted in
Detroit, June 2"rd, 1893, the Secretary o f each
County Convention is nrged to forward to the
Sceretarv o f the State Central Committe, Detroit,
bv the earliest mail after the delegates to the
State Convention be chosen, a certified list o f such
delegates as are entitled to seats in the State Con­
vention from their respective counties.
DEXTER M. PERRY, Chairman.
Desxi 3 E. Anw-iKD, Secretary.
The fourth Congressional District will be en­
titled to representation in the State Convention
as follows:
Conntv.
Total vote.
No. Del.
Allegan'....................... ....6573...........................13
Barry....................................5327............................11
Bem en................................ 9366........................... 19
Cass..................................,4899.........................10
St. Joseph........... ............5496........................ 11
Van Bnren..........................5839.............................12
To the Ktpublican Ehctors o f the Fourth Con­
gressional JHstrief:
The district convention ot the Republicans of
the Fourth Congressional District o f Michigan is
hereby called to meet at the Opera Honse in the
city of Three Rivers, on Wednesday the 12th day
o f August, ISIS, at 11 o'clock a. m., for the pur­
pose o f nominating a candidate for member of
congress and fo r the transaction o f snch other
business as may properly come before the conven­
tion.
The several connties o f the district wiii be enti­
tled to representation as follows.
Allegan 13, Barry 11, Berrien 19, Cass 10, St.
Joseph 11, Van Bnren 12.
F. R. GILSON.
'(
M. O. ROWLAND,
I
W. H. GOODMAN,
I
t
R e p n b lie a n C ou n ty C onven tion,
A Republican County Convention will
be lieiil at Martin's Academy of Music in
the city of St. Joseph, on Tuesday, the
2Sth day o f July, 1896, at 10:30 o'clock a.
m., to select nineteen delegates to attend
the State convention to be held in the city
o f Grand Rapids on Wednesday, August 5,
1S9G; to select thirty delegates to attend
the Senatorial convention yet to be called,
and to transact sneh other business ns may
properly come before it.
The following is the apportionment of
delegates to which the several townships
and wards will he entitled on the basis of
total vote for Governor in 1S94:
Votes.
Towns.
Bainbridge........................... . . . . 279
Benton................................ . . . . 460 •
Benton Harbor—1st ward., . . . . 191
“
2nd ward. . . . . 441
“
3rd ward. . . . . 851
“
4tb ward. . . . . 299
fiagar................................... . . . . 230
Lincoln...............................
Oxonoko..............................
Roralton............................ . . . . 23G
S o d a s ................................ . . . . 231
1S1
St. Joseph.......................... .
St. Joseph Cite—1st ward. .. . 415
“
“ 2nd ward. . . . . 454
Watervllet..........................
BIOS
sscoxi> Disiracr.
Berrien................................ . . . . co'J
. . . . 247
Bertrand.......................
Buchanan ........................... . . . . 706
Chikamlng......................... . . . . 177
Galien................................. . . . . 287
Lake.................................... . . . . 343
Buffalo...................... . . . . 243
NUes................................... . . . . 276
NUes (Sty—1st ward......... . . . . 33S
“
2nd ward....... . . . . 201
“
3rd w ard..... . . . . 215
“
4th ward....... . . . . 214
Pipestone........................... . . . . 25S
Three Oaks.................... .
AVcesaw..............................
TH R E E OAKS.
From our ilcgular Correspondent.
J u ly 8, 1896.
Mrs. H enry H a n fer o f Chicago is
visiting friends and relatives in this
vicinity.
R ev. Prank F o x started, Monday,
fo r W ashington, D . G . where h e will
attend the N ational Christian Endeav­
or Convention. H e goes as a county
delegate.
T he Maccabees will g iv e a banquet
in the opera house, this evening. T he
banquet is the result o f a contest be­
tween chosen sides o f the Sir Knight,
in securing new members. T b e con­
test was a success, and now the tent
numbers over one hundred members.
M iss L u lu and Grace Paxson, who
have been a lien in g State N orm al at
Y psilanti. have returned home for
their sum m er vacation.
R e a l E sta te T ra n sfe r.
N an cy C. Summers to Phoebe J. Sinclaire, property in N iles tow nship,
$ 6,000 and other valuable considera­
tions.
James Glover o f Buchanan to A lm ada M orley, same, property in Buchan­
an, $ 100.
E m it G uhl to D aniel Basster, prop­
erty in N e w B uffalo $225.
CO M M O N C O U N C IL .
R e p u b lic a n C on g ression a l Conx
v en tion .
J. 0. BECRAFT,
straight-forw ard com m unication ten­
dered his resignation as president o f
the village. Trustee John Graham is
therefore presiden t p r o tern. Mr, R ich ­
ards who had a m ajority o f v o te s a c­
cordin g to the recount is aw aiting the
decision o f th e circuit judge before
taking any further steps. This decis­
ion w ill nob be rendered until next
wet k, the Judge having so stated to
the R e c o r d in response to a message
o f in qu iry to-day. M r. D o d d in relin­
quishing his post as president does so
w ith th e consciousness o f h aving g iv ­
en the affairs o f the village an Impet­
us toward a business like adm inistra­
tion th a t is approved b y al,:, regardless
o f party affiliation.
Delegates.
9
14
6
14
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9
1
10
15
7
7
6
13
13
17
160
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4453
141
By Order of County Committee.
FRED A. WOODRUFF, Chairman.
H e n r y H . H un tin gton , Secretary.
v T h e D ow agiae Standard's issue o f
Ju ly 3 w as printed upon red and blue
striped w h ite paper, g iv in g the paper
a v ery p a triotic appearance.
G overnor J . T. B ich has issued a
proclam ation, callin g attention to the
cantennial o f the evacuation o f De­
tr o it b y the B ritish, w hich occurred,
J u ly 11,1796, and urging th e hearty co
operation o f every citizen o f the state
in th e celebration o f th e event, at De­
troit, J u ly 11.
T he M ich igan Independent, fo r many
years the organ o f the P rohibition
party, this w eek com es o u t w ith M c­
K in ley & H obart at th e head o f their
colum ns, and in an editorial, states
that the platform o f th e R epublican
party, adopted at St. L ouis, com es near­
est E d ito r Sew ell’s ideas, and there­
fo r e th e In d ep end en t w ill support
M cK inley, H obart, protection and
sound money. There w ill be m any
others that w ill take this same stand,
th is fall.
T h e .F inan cial Plarafc.
T h e Republican party is unreserved­
ly fo r sound m on ey. I t caused the en­
actm ent o f the la w providing f o r the
resum ption o f specie payments in 1S79,
Since th en every dollar has been as
good as gold.
"We are unalterably opposed to every
m easure calculated to debase o a r cur­
rency o r im pair th e credit o f our coun­
try. W e are, therefore, opposed to the
fre e coinage o f silver, except b y inter­
national agreem ent w ith the leading
com m ercial nations o f the w orld,
w h ich w e pledge ourselves to prom ote,
and until such agreement ca n he ob­
tained, the ex istln g g old standard mustbe' preserved. A l l our silv e r and paper
currency m u st h e maintained a t pari­
ty w ith g o ld , and w e fa v o r allm easnres
designed to m aintain in viola b ly the
obligations o f th e U n ited States, and
all our m oney, w hether coin o r paper,
at th e present standard, the standard
o f th e m o st enlightened nations.—
A d op ted by th e R epublican National
C onvention at S t. L ouis, Ju ne 18,1896.
A t a special m eetin g o f th e com m on
iouncil held J u ly 3, as w ill be seen by
rihcial m inutes published In another
:olumn, P residen t D o d d .in a manly,
[OFFICIAL MINUTES.]
R egular m eeting o f the Common
Council o f th e village o f Buchanan
was held in the Council Chamber, F ri
day evening, June 2 6 ,1S96.
Presiden t D od d presiding.
Present— Trustees Bainton, Dalrym ple, Graham, Phelps and W o o d .
A b sen t— Trustee M iller.
M inutes o f th e m eetings held M ay
29, June 12. 15 and 15 were read and
approved.
Trustee Graham m ade report o f th e
hills fo r th e m onth o f June:
RETORT OF FINANCE COMMITTEE.
B uchanan , Mich., June 2 6 ,1S96.
To tlic Honorable President and Common
Council o f the Village o f Buchanan:
We, the Finance Committee, beg leave to
make report o f expenditures for the month
o f May, for the several funds mentioned
below, and after careful examination find
them correct, and recommend fhat orders
be drawn for same;
GENERAL FUND.
John Shook, services....................... S 35 00
Fred Eldrodge, services police........
:> 00
F. P. Bames, salary as chief.......... 12 50
“
“
draying.......................
75
Michigan Independent.....................
100
Beckwith Estate, lighting............... 150 00
Steve Amey, trip to Niles.........
75
G. W . Dalrymple, 8 days on review.
4 00
“
“
S).j “ surveying. 12 75
Alert Hose Co., SO men, 0 m o .. . . . 90 00
Hook & Ladder Co, 15 men, 6 mo. 45 00
J. Ilalm, rent of- ground................. 10 oo
A. A. Worthington............. ............. 45 75
J. C. Wenger, for assessm't r o ll... 100 00
O n motion, the C ouncil adjourned.
C. D . K e n t , Clerk.
A djourned m eeting o f the Common
Council o f the V illa g e o f Buchanan
was held in Council Chamber, M onday
evening, June 2 0 ,1S96.
President Dodd presiding.
Present— Trustees Bainton, Dalrym ­
ple, Graham, P h e lp s M iller, W ood.
M oved by Trustee Dalrym ple, sup­
ported by Trustee Graham, that Ordi­
nance No. 25 be amended to read as
fo llo w s : A yes,G .
[The above and following Ordiances re­
ferred to below will be found in this paper.
— Ed .}
M oved by Trustee Graham, support­
ed by Trustee D alrym ple, that Ordi­
nance N o. 20 be amended to read as
fo llo w s : A yes, 6 .
Moved by Trustee Graham, support­
ed by Trustee Dalrym ple, that the Or­
dinance staking out and p 'Starin g o f
animals in the streets, parks and public
roads he amended to read as fo llo w s:
A yes, 6.
M oved by Trustee Graham, support­
ed by Trustee Dalrymple, that Ordi­
nance N o. 24 be amended to read as
fo llo w s : A yes, G.
M oved by Trustee Dalrymple, sup­
ported b y Trustee Bainton, that Ordi­
nance N o. 15 b e amended to read as
fo llo w s : A yes, G.
M oved b y Trustee Graham, that Or­
dinance N o . 37 be repealed. A yes, 6.
M oved by Trustee- Graham, support­
ed by Trustee Bainton, that Ordinance
N o. 37 relative to fire department be
adopted. A y e s, 6.
M aved b y T rustee Dalrymple, sup­
ported by Trustee Graham, that Ordi­
nance N o. 23 be adopted. Ayes. 6.
M oved by T rustee' Graham, support­
ed by Trustee Bainton, that Ordinance
N o. 31 he repealed. Ayes, 0.
M oved b y Trustee D alrym ple sup­
ported by Trustee Graham. that Ordi­
nance N o. 31 be adopted. A yes, 6.
M oved by Trustee Graham, support­
ed b y Trustee Dalrym ple. that the Or­
dinance on act to license a r d muzzle
o f dogs he repealed. A yes, 6.
M oved b y Trustee Graham, support­
ed b y Trustee Dalrymple, that Ordi­
nance N o . 7 be amended to read a fol­
lo w s: A je s , Bainton, Dalrym ple, Gra­
ham, Miller, W o o d ; nays. Phelps.
M oved by Trustee Graham, support­
ed by Trustee Dalrym ple that Ordi­
nance to prevent bays from ju m p ­
in g upon or running on or about rail­
road trains be amended to read as fo l­
low s. A yes, G.
M oved by Trustee Graham, support­
ed Trustee M iller, that Ordinance N o.
30 be amended to read as fo il nvs:
A y e s, 5.
M oved by Trustee Dalrymple, sup­
ported Trustee Graham, that Ordi­
nance N o. 39 b e amended to read as
follow s. A yes, 6.
M oved by Trustee Graham, support­
ed b y Trustee Dalrymple, that Ordi­
nance N o. 35 be amended to read as
fo llo w s: A yes, 6.
M oved b y Trnstea Dalrymple, sup­
ported. hy T iu stee Graham, th a t Ordi­
nance N o . 27 be amended to read as
fo llo w s : A yes, 6.
M oved b y Trustee Graham, support­
ed b y Trustee Dalrym ple, that Ordi­
nance N o. 17 entitled concealed weap­
ons be repealed. A yes, 6.
M oved by Trustee Dalrymple. sup­
ported by Trustee Graham, that Ordi­
nance N o. 17 he adopted. A yes, 6.
M oved by Trustee W ood, supported
by Trustee Dalrymple, that the Clerk
b e authorized to secure the publication
o f ordinance and amendment.
M oved b y Trustee W ood, supported
b y Trustee Bainton, that th e present
com m ittee on by-law s and ordinances
b e continued, and secure 1,000 copies
o f the by-laws a rd ordinances.
M oved by Trustee W ood, supported
by Trustee Bainton, that the Street
Committee continue the surveying o f
the tow n.
On m otion, the Council adjourned.
C. D. K e n t , Cleik
Special m eeting o f th e Common
Councii, Ju ly 3 , 1SD0.
President Dodd presiding.
Present— Trustees Bainton, Dalrym­
ple. Graham, Phelps and W ood.
A bsent— Trustee Miller.
Trustee W ood, Chairman o f tiie
W ater Commission, reported on peti­
tion fro m residents o f R oe street for
water, that it be granted.
M oved b y Trustee Graham, seconded
by Trustee W ood, that a 1 ne o f fourinch water pipe be laid on R oe street,
connecting with water main on Oak
and Clark streets. Y eas, 5.
President Dodd, at this time, s'ated
$510 50
that he would present his re-ignation
HIGHWAY FUND.
J. M. & S. Rough, lumber........... ..$11 93 to the Com m on Council, which he d id ;
John Strawser, labor................... .. 3 50 thus:
George Smith,
“ ................... .. S 50 To the Members o f the Common Council
Amos Stoner,
“ ................... .. 1 SS
o f the Village o f Buchanan, Mich.:
H onorable Sirs :—A t an election for
Win. W ood, team la b or.............. . . 12 75
Geo. Beede, labor......................... . . 22 G3 Village officers, March 9, 1S9G, the sub­
Geo. Richardson, team labor___ .. 15 00 scriber was, after the counting of the bal­
James Madron, labor................... .. 5 SS lots by the Board o f Inspectors, duly de­
J. Waldron,
“ ................... .. 1 00 clared elected to the office of President.
E. McCollum, team labor............ .. 5 00 Your honorable body, after canvasing this
report, adopted the same. Being then to$S7 57 tified of my election, by your Clerk, I qual­
WATERWORKS FUND.
ified autl entered upon the discharge of my
Pittsburgh Oil Co., oils..................... $94 70 duties as President o f the Village. My
M. C. R. R., freight........................... 30 75 opponent, having contested my election
James B, Claow & Son, iron p ip e ... 3G 80 and, under order of court, a re-count be­
Geo. Howard, services, engineer___ 40 00 ing had, which would seem to show, Mr.
A lex. Myler,,
“
“
40 00 Richards having 3 or 4 more votes more
C. D. Kent, sundries......................... 1 26 than I had, deducting from the 9 votes
John Strawser, labor......................... 2 3S claimed in excess o f my vote, the G votes
Geo. Beede,
“ ......................... 125 in the ballot box in excess o f poll list of
James Madron, “ ......................... 2 75 which three votes were sworn to as chal­
lenged votes never having been east or
S. A . Wood, supplies......................... 3S 00
counted, no identification of the ballot be­
82S7 S9 ing possible, yet it seems to show Mr.
CEMETERY FUND.
Richards to have at least S votes in excess.
I would not accept longer a position on a
Ted Rouse, labor.......................... ..$ 1
F. P . Bames, hauling sand........ .
technical error. I, therefore, resign my
F. M. Shinn, 4 day's labor..........
office as President o f the village.' This
5
resignation to take immediate effect.
Luther Hamilton, 4 day’s labor..
S
Jas. Madron, . 5 “
“
7
With the kindliest regards for each mem­
Jos. Shook, 5 day’s team
“ ..
ber o f the Council, I remain
12
“
“
4 6-10 day’s
“ ..
5
Respectfully yours,
Jacob IIalm,5
“
“ ..
S
I. L. II. D odd .
3
H. R. Hanover, 2M “
“ ..
M oved by Trustee Graham, support­
3
Walt Hanover, SJa “
“ ..
ed b y Trustee W ood, that the resigna­
Lee Bunker, 4 7-10 “
“ ..
7
tion o f President D odd be accepted.
Fred Gawthup, 4)4 “
“ ..
G
A m endm ent b y T rustee Dalrymple,
$72 30 supported by Trustee BaintOD, that the
resignation be n o t accepted. A m end­
RECAPITULATION.
Dalrym ple,
Waterworks fund..............................$2S7 S9 m en t: Y ea s, Bainton,
Cemetery fund..........................
72 30 Phelps; nays, Graham, W ood.
President D od d then sa id : N o R e­
Highway fund................................... S7 57
General fu n d .................................
51050 publican w ould hold an office i f n ot
fa irly entitled to it, and though the
Total........................................... $958 26 tech n ica l error in too m an yvotesrin
ba llot b o x w h ich m ight cause the re­
J o h n Gr a h a m ,
1
count to be throw n out, n o one who
G e o . W . D a l r y m p l e , j- Com.
S. A . W o o d .
l
valued m ajority rule would hold office
M oved b y T rustee Graham, support­ w ith m inority o f vote. H e also said
ed b y Trustee B ainton, that the report his resignation was offered to a vote as
o f the F in a n ce Committee be accepted a courtesy to th e Common Council
and approved, and orders draw n fo r and •h inking them fo r their kin d ly ex­
the several amounts. A yes, Bainton, pressions, he in form ed th e Council
Dalrym ple, Graham, Phelps and W ood. that he resigned and that such resig­
Street Com m issioner Shook m ade nation takes effect at on ce and, calling
report o f th e labor perform ed and ma­ Trustee J o h n Graham, President pro
terial used th e past m onth and, on m o­ tern, to the chair, he retired from the
tion, the same w as accepted and placed same.
On m otion o f Trustee W ood , sup­
on file.
M oved b y Trustee Graham, support­ ported b y Trustee Phelps, th e Council
ed b y T rustee Dalrym ple, th at Ordi­ adjourned.
C. D . K en t , Clerk.
nance N o . 2S o f the Ordinances o f the
V illa g e o f Buchanan, adopted A n g 31,
1SS3, and entitled, R egulation and P ro­
tection o f Cemeteries, be and the same
OF THE
is hereby repealed.
A yes, Bainton,
Dalrym ple, G raham ,Phelps and W ood.
M oved byT rustee Graham,supported
b y T rustee W ood , that Ordinance N o.
2S, fo r the R egulation and P rotection
A N ORDINANCE
o f Cemeteries, he adopted. A y e s. B ain- TO REPEAL ORDINANCE XXVTH OF ORDI­
ton, Dalrym ple, Graham, Phelps and
NANCES OF THE VILLAGE OP BUCHANAN
W ood.
ADOPTED AUGUST 31, 1883, AND ENTI­
M oved b y Trustee Dalrym ple, sup­
TLED “ REGULATION AND PROTECTION
ported b y Trustee Bainton, that an.
OF CEMETERIES.”
Ordinance rela tiv e to the w ork in g o f The Village o f B uchanan ordains:
prisoners, he adopted. A y e s, Bainton,
That ordinance X X V III o f ordinances of
D alrym ple, Graham, Phelps and W ood . the village o f Buchanan, adopted August
M ov ed b y Trustee Graham, support­ 31, 1883, and entitled “ Regulation and pro­
ed b y Trustee Phelps, th at an Ordinance tection of cemeteries,” be and the same is
to prevent encroachments on side­ hereby repealed.
This ordinance shall take effect July 17,
walks, be adopted. A yes, Bainton,
Dalrymple, Graham. Phelps and W o o d 1S96.
Adopted by the Common Council of tlio
— 5.
village of Buchanan, June 26, 1S96.
M oved b y Trustee P helps, supported
I. L. H. DODD, President.
b y Trustee W ood, that an Ordinance
C. D. KENT, Clerk.
relative to th e speed o f bicycles, tricy ­
cles and velocipedes and the riding o f
ORDINANCE X X V III.
the same along the sidew alks and pub­
lic places, and directing th e carrying REGULATION AND PROTECTION OF CEME­
TERIES.
• o f la m p s and hells, be adopted. A yes,
Bainton, D alrym ple, Graham, Phelps The Village o f Buchanan ordains:
Sec . 1. All persons, before making any
and W o o d .
O R D IN A N C E S
VILLAGE OF BUCHANAN.
interments in the cemetery, shall apply to the ( discretion of the court, for every day
the Sexton o f the village, who shall grant such saw logs, timber, lumber, wood, or
a permit for the making of such interment other obstructions shall remain after the
The said sexton shall be the only person expiration of the time fixed in such notice:
allowed to dig graves, for which services Provided, however, that the President of
he is authorized to receive two dollars and said village, or the Common Council, may
fifty cents for digging the grave and attend­ grant a permit for the placing of building
ing the burial o f a person of ten years of materials or other property, temporarily,
age and upwards, and one dollar and sev­ upon any street or sidewalk in front of
entydive cents'for one under ten years of any premises owned or occupied b y th e
applicant, so long as the ■same shall not
age.
.
•
S ec. 2 All graves dug shall be under obstruct or hinder the travel upon such
the direction of the sexton. Graves for street or sidewalk.
This ordinance shall take effect July 21,
children twelve years of age shall not be
less than live feet deep. Graves for per­ isog;
Adopted by the common council of the
sons over twelve years of age shall not be
. village of Buchanan, June 29, 1896,
less than six feet deep.
' L L . H. DODD, President.
Sec. 3. The sexton shall obtain in all
C. D. KENT, Clerk.
cases of interment a statement o f filename,
place of nativity, residence and age of the
A N ORDINANCE
deceased, the disease of which he or she
died, and in the case of minors the names TO AMEND AN ORDINANCE ENTITLED
“ DUTIES OF CITIZENS AT FIRES,” BEING
of his or her parents, and shall report the
NO, XXXV OF THE PUBLISHED OHDINANsame, together with the number o f the Jot
CES OF THE VILLAGE OF BUCHANAN.
on which such burial is made, to the Clerk,
on the first day of January, April, July The Village o f Buchanan ordaiiis:
and October in each year. ,
That ordinance thirty-five is hereby
Sec . 4. When interments are to be amended to read as follows:
made, at least ten hours previous notice
The Marshal, or any member of the
must be given thereof.
Common Council, may require the assist­
Sec. 5. No proprietor of a lot shall ance o f any by-standers in extinguishing
allow interments in such lots for a remu­ any fire in said village, and in the removal,
neration.
preservation and protection of any proper­
Sec . 6. No disinterment shall be made ty endangered thereby, and in case any by­
without permission being first obtained at stander shall wilfully neglect or refuse to
the office of the Clerk.
comply with such requirement, he shall be
Sec . 7. All interments in lots shall be punished by fine not exceeding twenty-live
restricted to the members o f the family dollars and costs of prosecution, or by im­
and relatives o f the proprietor thereof, prisonment not more than thirty days, or
except special permission be obtained in by both such fine and imprisonment, in
writing from the Clerk.
the discretion of the court.
Sec. S. No person shall take posses­
This ordinance shall take effect July 21,
sion of any lot, or make any Improvements 1S96.
thereon, until the price of such lot shall
Adopted by the Common Council of the
be paid to the Clerk, and a receipt obtain­ village of Buchanan, June 29, 189G.
ed therefor, or satisfactory security given
L L. H. DODD, President.
for the same, nor shall any grave he dug
C. D. KENT, Cleric.
or any interments be made on any lot,
until a conveyance thereof shall have been
A N ORDINANCE.
issued by the Clerk to the purchaser of TO AMEND AN ORDINANCE ENTITLED “ FOR
said lot, excepting where burials are to'be
THE PREVENTION AND ABATEMENT OF
made in that portion of the cemetery known
NUISANCES,” BEING NO. XXVII OF THE
as the general burying field, in which case
PUBLISHED OBDJNANCES OF THE VIL­
a written permit shall first he obtained
LAGE o f b u c h Xn a n .
from the Clerk.
The Village o f Buchanan ordains:
Sec . 9. The sexton, under the direction
That section four of ordinance twenty:
of Uie cemetery committee, shall have full seven is hereby amended to read as fol­
charge of the cemetery grounds, and shall lows:
oversee all works o f improvement upon the
Sec . 4. I f any person shall keep, with­
same, including those on lots owned by in­ in the limits of said village, any slaughter
dividuals, so far as may he necessary to house or yard for the purpose of slaughter­
prevent any disfigurement of the grounds ing animals, or yard for the purpose of
or impairing the general beauty of the feeding any hogs, sheep, cattle or other
same. To this end lie shall oversee the animals to be slaughtered or shipped for
grading of lots, enclosing the same with market without having first obtained a per­
wall, fence or hedge, the removal or plant­ mit from the Common Council of said vil­
ing of trees, shrubbery, etc. _
lage, he shall be punished by fine not ex­
Sec . 10. It shall be the duty of lot ceeding twenty-five dollars and costs of
owners to keep the same in proper order prosecution, or by imprisonment not more
and place and keep in repair permanent than thirty days, or by both such fine and
landmarks of the boundaries of then1 res­ imprisonment, in the discretion of tlie
pective lots; and. in case of failure so to do, court.
the Common Council may cause it to be
This ordinance shall take effect July 21,
done at the expense of the owners.
1896.
Sec. 11. No wall or any close fence for
Adopted by the Common Council of tbe
enclosing lots shall be erected exceeding Village of Buchanan, June 29, 189G.
One foot in height; nor shall any iron fence
I. L. H. DODD, President.
or other enclosure exceed three feet in
C. D. KENT, Clerk.
height above the surrounding grounds. No
hedge shall be more than two and one-half
A N ORDINANCE
feet In height. No inclosure of lots shall To repeal Ordinance X Y II of ordinances
be of wood.
of the Village of Buchanan, adopted
S ec. 13. Tombs shall be erected in
August 31, 18S3, and entitled “ Conceal­
such places as shall he designated by the
ed Weapons, Bon Fires, FireWorks, &c.”
cemetery committee, and shall he erected The Village o f Buchanan ordains:
so as to avoid offensive smells.
That ordinance X V II of ordinances of
Sec . 13. The cemetery committee may the village o f Buchanan, adopted August
direct the removal of any monuments, 31,1883, and entitled “ Concealed weapons,
sepulchral structures, inscriptions or en­ bon fives,, fire works, &e.,” be and the same
closures to lots, or pictures o f any kind, is hereby repealed.
which they shall decide to he offensive,
This ordinance shall take effect July 20,
improper, or injurious to the surrounding 1896.
grounds.
Adopted by the Common Council of the
Sec. 14. All materials brought into the village of Buchanan, June 29, 1S96.
cemetery, to he used in the improvement
I. L. H. DODD, President.
o f lots, must be transported within the
C. D. KENT, Clerk.
grounds in such manner as the sexton shall
direct, and all earth, stone or rubbish ac­
ORDINANCE X V H .
cumulating in improving any lot must be
Concealed Weapons, Bon Fires, Fire
removed by the owner or holder of such
Works, &c.
lot, or at his or her expense.
The Village o f Buchanan ordains:
Sec . 15. The water from the hydrants
Sec . 1. I f any person- shall carry any
and tank in the cemetery shall be used for concealed fire arms, slung shot, or any
watering or sprinkling lots, and for no deadly weapons, he shall be punished by
other purpose whatever, and every person fine not exceeding ten dollars and costs of
shall shut the water off when not actually prosecution, or by imprisonment not more
using the same for the purpose above set than thirty days, or by both such fine and
forth. Whenever water is to be used for imprisonment, in the discretion of the
any purpose other than herein set forth court.
special written permission must first be
Sec . 2. Every person who shall make
secured from the Clerk o f the village.
or kindle, or cause to be made or kindled,
Sec. 1G. N o trees growing within a lot any bon fire within fifty feet of any build­
or border, or in or on the side of an avenue, ing not owned by Mm, or kindle any bon
walk or path, shall be removed except by fire hi any street or alley in this village,
pennission Of tlio cemetery committee; nor except the burning of leaves in tlie autumn
shall any tree or shrub be planted or set of the year, shall be punished by fine not
out on a border or outside of the line of exceeding ten dollars and costs of prose­
the lots without such pennission. Nor cution, or by imprisonment not more than
sliall any trees or shrubs be set within any ten days, or by both such fine and impris­
lot, or grading or any improvements made onment, in tlie discretion of the court.
upon any lot in such a manner as to affect
Sec . S. A ll bon fires are prohibited be­
unfavorably adjoining lots or mar the tween tlie hours of nine o’clock p. m. and
general beauty of the grounds.
five o’clock a. m., and all persons causing
Sec. 17. The proprietors of lots may any fires to be lighted in this village are
erect any proper stone monuments thereon; required to keep in attendance upon and in
may enclose and embellish the same with close supervision thereof, a person of suit­
trees, shrubs, flowers and rural ornaments, able age and discretion. Every person
subject to the approval of tlio cemetery violating the provisions o f this section
committee.
shall be punished by fine not exceeding
Sec. IS. The transfer of lots to be valid ten dollars and costs of prosecution, or by
must receive the consent of the council, imprisonment not exceeding thirty days,
and the person making tlie transfer must or by both such fine and imprisonment, in
sign a memorandum of such transfer in a the discretion of the court.
book kept by the Clerk for that purpose.
Sec . 4. I f any person shall, within fifty
Sec. 19. No vehicle shall be allowed to feet of any building, light or set off any
pass through the grounds faster than a fire cracker, or fire works, .play in any
walk..
manner with fire balls, or discharge or
Sec. 20. No horse shall bo left by the cause to be discharged any cannon, gun or
driver in the grounds unfastened, nor fas­ other fire arms within the corporate limits
tened, except to posts erected for that pur­ of the village of Buchanan, without first
pose.
having received permission of tlie Common
Sec. 21. No person shall be permitted Council, he shall be punished by fine not
to bring any fire-arms into the cemetery exceeding ten dollars and costs of prose­
grounds except on Decoration Day or on cution.
occasions of military interments.
This ordinance shall stand as Ordinance
Sec . 22. All persons are prohibited X V II of ordinances of the village of Bu­
from picking any flowers, either wild or chanan, and shall take effect July 21,1896.
cultivated, or mutilating any tree, shrub
Adopted by the Common Council of the
or plant.
village of Buchanan, June, 29, 1S96.
Sec . 23. A ll persons are prohibited
I. L. H. DODD, President.
from writing upon, scratching, defacing or
C. D. KENT, Clerk.
injuring any monument, fence or other
structure in or belonging to the cemetery.
AN ORDINANCE
Sec . 24. Proprietors of lots and their To amend an Ordinance entitled “ To reg­
families shall be allowed access to tbe
ulate the planting and setting of shade
grounds at all times, observing the rules
trees,” being No. X X of the published
which are or may be adopted for the regu­
ordinances of the village of Buchanan.
lation of visitors.
*
The Village o f Buchanan ordains:
Sec . 25. Any person disturbing the
That ordinance twenty is amended to
quiet and good order of the place, by noise read as follows:
or other improper conduct, shall he com­
I f any person shall plant or set out, or
pelled immediately to leave the grounds.
cause to be planted or set out any tree, on
Sec 2G. The sexton having charge of any street in said village at a distance on
the grounds shall see that the foregoing said street from tlie line of the lots other
rules and regulations are enforced, and than that designated by the Common Coun­
persons violating them shall, on convic­ cil o f said village, he shall be punished by
tion thereof, pay a fine of not less than fine not exceeding five dollars and costs of
five dollars or more than fifty dollars, and suit, or by imprisonment in the county
costs of prosecution, or by imprisonment jail not more than ten days, or by both
in the county jail not more than thirty such fine and imprisonment, in tbe discre­
days, or by both such .fine and imprison­ tion of the court; and if upon being noti­
ment in the discretion of the court.
fied by the Marshal to remove the same he
This ordinance shall stand as ordinance shall refuse to do so, it shall be the duty
X X V III of ordinances of the village of of the Marshal to cut down, dig up, or re­
Buchanan, and shall take effect July 18, move the same at the expense of the per­
1S9G.
son so offending.
Adopted by the Common Council of the
This ordinance shall take effect July 21;
village of Buchanan, June 26, 1S9G.
1S96.
I. L. H. DODD, President.
Adopted by the Common Council of the
C. D. KENT, Clerk.
village of Buchanan, June 29, 1896.
I. L. H. DODD, President.
A N ORDINANCE
C. D. KENT, Clerk.
TO REPEAL AN ORDINANCE ENTITLED “ TO
PROHIBIT THE RUNNING AT LARGE AND
FOR THE LICENSING, MUZZLING, IM­
POUNDING AND DESTRUCTION OF DOGS,”
BEING ONE OF THE PUBLISHED ORDI­
NANCES OF THE VILLAGE OF BUCHANAN.-
The Village o f Buchanan ordains:
That an ordinance of the village of Bu­
chanan, adopted May 1,1892, and entitled
“ To prohibit the running at large and for
the licensing, muzzling, impounding and
destruction of dogs,” he and the same is
hereby repealed.
This ordinance shall take immediate
effect.
Adopted by tlie Common Council of the
village of Buchanan, June 29, 1896.
I. L. H. DODD, President.
C. D. KENT, Clerk.
A N ORDINANCE
TO A3IEND AN ORDINANCE ENTITLED “ TO
PREVENT OBSTRUCTIONS UPON STREETS
AND SIDEWALKS,” BEING NO XXV OF
THE PUBLISHED ORDINANCES OF THE
VILLAGE OF BUCHANAN.
The Village o f Buchanan ordains:
That section one of ordinance twentyfive is amended to read as follows:
I f any person shall place, or cause to be
placed, any saw logs, timber, lumber,
wood, or other obstructions in or up­
on any of the streets or sidewalks of
said village, it shall he the duty of the
Marshal to notify the owner or the person
who placed or caused to he placed such saw
logs, timber, lumber, wood or other ob­
structions upon any street or sidewalk, to
remove the same within twelve hours, and
if the person so notified shall neglect or
refuse to remove the same within the time
mentioned, he shall, on conviction, be pun­
ished by fine not exceeding five dollars and
costs of prosecution, or by imprisonment
in the county jail not more than ten days, ■
by both such fine and imprisonment, in
AN ORDINANCE
T o amend an ordinance entitled “ In Relat io n t o Sand and Gravel,” being No.'
X X X I X of the published ordinances of
the Village of Buchanan.
The Village o f Buchanan ordains:
That ordinance thirty-nine is hereby
amended to read as follows:
No person shall be allowed to take any
earth, sand o f gravel from any street, side­
walk or other public grounds of said vil­
lage, without a permit from the Committee,
on Streets] Sidewalks and. Bridges. Any
person violating the provisions of this or-,
dinance shall] on conviction, he fined not
exceeding twenty-five dollars and costs of
prosecution for each and every offense, or
by imprisonment not more than thirty days,
or by both such fine and imprisonment, in
the discretion of the court.
This ordinance shall take effect July 21,
1896,
Adopted'by the Common Council of the
yillage of Buchanan, June 29, 1896,
I. L. H. DODD, President.
C. D. KENT, Clerk.
A N ORDINANCE
To amend an ordinance entitled “ To Regu­
late the Running of Trains,” being No.
X V o f the published ordinances of the
village of Buchanan.
The Village o f Buchancm ordains:
That ordinance fifteen is amended to read
as follows:
It shall not be lawful to run any railroad
engine, or any passenger or freight car or
cars, upon any railroad within the corpor­
ate limits of the village of Buchanan, at a
rate o f speed greater than twelve miles
per hour. Any person, Company or cor­
poration violating the provisions o f tills
ordinance sh’all, for each and every offense,.
be punished by fine not exceeding one bun-,
dred dollars and costs o f prosecution,'or
by imprisonment In the county jail not
more than ninety days, or by both such
fine and imprisonment, in the discretion of
the court.
This ordinance shall take effect July 21,
1896.
(
Adopted by tlie Common Council o f the
village of Buchanan, June 29, 1896.
I. L. H. DODD, President.
C. D: KENT; Clerk.
A N ORDINANCE
To amend an ordinance entitled “ To Pre­
vent Boys from Jumping Upon or Run­
ning On or About Railroad Trains,”
being No. IV of the ordinances of the
Village of,Buchanan.
The Village o f Buchanan ordains:
That ordinance four is amended to read
as follows:
I f any boy or boys shall be found jump­
ing upon, clinging to, or running upon or
about any car or train of cars on any rail­
road within said village, except he shall
be a passenger on such train, or employe
of. said road, he may be summarily arrest­
ed by the Marshal or by any village police­
man, and may be punished by fine not ex­
ceeding five dollars and costs, or by im­
prisonment not more than ten days, or by
both such fine and imprisonment, in the
discretion of the court.
This ordinance shall take effect July 21,
1896.
Adopted by the Common Council of the
village of Buchanan, June 29, 1896.
I. L. H. DODD, President.
C. D. KENT, Clerk.
AN ORDINANCE
V
A ll the time nowadays. W e are busy making bar­
gains these days. - I f w hat you want don’t appear
one day it w ill another. I f there is something on
your mind to-day, something you want at once;
come right after it; we w ill give you a bargain one
day as w ell as another.
RELATIVE TO THE WORKING OF PRISON­
ERS.
The Village o f Buchanan ordains:
Sec . 1. That whenever any person
shall be imprisoned in the village prison of
said village it shall be lawful for the Mar­
shal of said village, and he is hereby
authorized when so directed by the magisconnnitting such person, to keep such per­
son at labor on the Streets or elsewhere
within tlie limits of said village every day
excepting Sunday, until such person is law­
fully discharged from imprisonment, and
for every day’s labor so performed by any
prisoner, the said prisoner shall be allowed
and credited With the sum of one dollar to­
ward the payment of any fine or costs, the
payment of which would entitle said pris­
oner to a discharge from imprisonment.
Sec. 2. That the Marshal may use such
means as he may deem proper to prevent
the escape of any prisoner while so labor­
ing, and to compel such prisoner to work.
This ordinance shall take effect on the
ISth day of July, 1896.
Adopted by the common council of the
village o f Buchanan June 26, 1S9G.
I. L. H. DODD, President,
C. D. KENT, Clerk.
jT
r j i W e pride ourselves that we can do more for
yon in this line than most houses. Elegance and
economy meet here. Good cloth, line trimmings,
practical workmanship and dainty-1styles are here
for the price of common wear.
A N ORDINANCE
TO PREVENT ENCROACHMENTS ON SIDE­
WALKS.
The Village o f Buchanan ordains:
Sec. 1. If any person shall place or
cause to be placed, or hereafter allow to re­
main any awning over any sidewalk, be­
yond the line of any lot in said village,
which shall not be seven feet and four
inches above the level of the sidewalk
when in use, he shall be punished by fine
not exceeding ten dollars and costs of suit,
or imprisonment in the county jail not ex­
ceeding ten days, or by both such fine and
imprisonment in tlie discretion of tlie court,
for every day such awning shall remain
after the person so offending shall have
been notified by the Marshall of said vil­
lage to remove the same.
Sec , 2. A ll ordinances or parts of or­
dinances inconsistent herewith are hereby
repealed.
This ordinance shall take effect July
18th, 1890.
Adopted by the common council of the
village of Buchanan June 2 6 ,1S96.
I. L. H. DODD, President,
C. D. KENT, Clerk.
AN. ORDINANCE
REGULATING THE SPEED OF BICYCLES,
TRICYCLES AND 'VELOCIPEDES AND THE
RIDING OF THE SAME ALONG STREETS,
SIDEWALKS AND PUBLIC PLACES AND
DIRECTING THE CARRYING OF LASIPS
AND BELLS.
The correct thing, in one and two piece suits. '% fr
Y ou can’t afford to do without one, when you can
buy them from 50 cents to $2.50, at
*
The One Price Large Double Store.
The Village o f Buchanan ordains:
Sec . 1. No person shall ride any bi­
cycle, tricycle or velocipede on, or along
any sidewalk in this village, whether such
sidewalk be of dirt, wood, brick, pavement
force from and after tlie 21st day o f July, furnance, o r heating apparatus o r de­
or cement or any other material.
vice in g ood order, or rem ove such ash
S ec . a. No person shall ride any bi­ 1S96.
A dopted by the com m on cou n cil o f the pile.
cycle, tricycle or velocipede on, along or
village o f Buchanan June 39,1896.
This ordinance shall take effect July
across any Of the streets or avenues in this
I. L. U. DODD, President
21, 1896.
village at a speed greater than six miles an
C.
D.
KENT,
Clerk.
A dop ted h y the Common C ouncil o f
hour.
the village o f Buchanan June 29, 1S96.
Sec . 3. No bicycle, tricycle or veloci­
A N ORDINANCE.
C. D. KENT,
I. L . H . DODD,
pede shall be ridden anywhere within this
To amend an ordinance entitled “ To pro­
Clerk.
• President.
village more than three abreast, and while
hibit the staking out and pasturing of
in motion all bicycles, tricycles and veloci­
animals in the streets, parks and public
A N ORDINANCE
pedes shall be made to keep to the right,
ways,”
T o Am end A n Ord in a n c e E ntitled
and their proper place shall he on the side
The Village o f Buchanan ordains:
“ T o P re ve n t A n im a ls a n d F o w ls
of the road.
That section two of said ordinance he aR unning a t L a r g e ” B eing N o Sec. 4. No persons shall congregate up­
mended
to
read
as
follows:
X X I I I of th e P u blish ed Or d in ­
on any street, avenue, alley or other public
Every person violating the provisions
ances of th e V il l a g e o f B uchan ­
place within this village with bicycles, tri­
of the foregoing section shall, upon con­
an.
cycles or velocipedes in any manner so as
viction
thereof,
be
punished
by
fine
not
The villa ge o f Buchanan ord a in s:
to impede or obstruct the free and equal
passage of horses, teams -or vehicles or exceeding ten dollars and costs of prose­
That section fou r o f ordinance No.
cution, or by imprisonment in the county
persons on foot.
twenty three is hereby amended to read
Sec . 5. Every bicycle, tricycle or ve­ jail not more than twenty days, or by both as follow s:
locipede ridden within this village shall, such fine and imprisonment in the discre­
I f any person being the owner, or
within tbe time in this section herewith tion of the court.
This ordinance shall take effect July 31, having the care o f any geese, tur­
stated, carry a lamp in front of the ma­
keys or poultry o f any kind shall per­
chine so that it can be plainly seen from 1896.
mit the same to run at'large without the
Adopted
by
the
Common
Council
of
tlie
ahead; such lany? shall be of a pattern and
euelos nre of the owner or person hav­
village
of
Buchanan,
June
29,
1S96.
kind made expressly for bicycles by some
ing the care o f the same, at any time, he
I. L. H. DODD, President.
person, firm or corporation in that busi­
or she shall he punished hy a fine not
ness; and such lamp must be, and remain ' C. D. KENT, Clerk.
exceeding five dollars and costs o f suit,
lighted at night, and from and after oneor hy imprisonment not exceeding ten
A N ORDINANCE
lialf hour after sunset, so long as the bi­
days or both such fine and im prison­
cycle, tricycle or velocipede is ridden or T o R epe a l Ordinance X X X V I I of ment hi the discretion o f tbe court.
Ordinances of th e V il l a g e of B u ­
used in. any way.
This ordinance shall take effect Ju ly
chanan , Ad o p t e d A ugust 81,1883, 21, 1S9G.
Sec . 6. Every person riding a bicycle,
an d E ntitled “ R e l a t iv e to F ir e
tricycle or velocipede within the limits of
A dopted b y the com m on council of
D ep artm en t .”
this village shall have upon such machine
the A’illage o f Buchanan June 29, 1896.
The V illage o f Buchanan ord ain s:
a bell of a pattern and kind made express­
C. D. KENT,
I. L . H . DODD.
ly for bicycles by some person, firm or cor­
That ordinance X X X V I I o f ordinan­
Clerk.
President.
poration in that business, and such person ces o f the village of Buchanan adopted
so riding shall, before meeting or passing August 81, 1883, and entitled “ Relative
A N ORDIN AN CE
any person, animal, team, vehicle, bicycle, to Fire Department,” he and the same T o R e p e a l Ordinance X X X I of th e
tricycle Or velocipede ring such bell so that is hereby repealed.
Ordinance o f th e V il l a g e of B u ­
it can be heard ahead.
This ordinance shall take effect July
ch anan A d opted A ugust 31, 1883
: Sec . 7. The provisions of this ordi­ 20, 1896.
and E ntitled “ A ssessment and
nance shall not be construed to apply to
A dopted by the com m on council of
C ollection of T a x e s .”
three wheeled velocipedes operated by the village of Buchanan, June 29, 1896. The Village o f B uchanan ord a in s:
children under ten years of age or any in­ C. D. K EN T,
I. L. H . DODD,
That ordinance x x x i ’o f ordinances of
valid chair or vehicle.
Clerk.
President. the village o f Buchanan, adopted A u­
Sec. S. Ordinance number 3S of this
gust 31, 1SS3, and entitled “ Assessment
village entitled “ An ordinance to prevent
and collection o f taxes,” be and the
ORDINANCE X X X V T i.
riding velocipedes, &c., upon sidewalk's,”
same is hereby repealed.
R e l a t iv e to F ir e D epartm en t .
which said ordinance took effect August The V illage o f Buchanan ordains:
This ordinance shall take effect July
31st. 1SS3, is hereby repealed.
S e c . 1. The Fire department shah 20, 1S96.
Sec . 9. Whoever shall violate or fail to
A dopted hy the com m on council of
consist of a Chief, and as m any firemen
comply with any clause, provision or sec­
ho semen, etc., as m ay from time to time the A’illage o f Buchanan June 29,1896, tion o f this ordinance shall be punished by
I. L . H . DODD,
be authorized b y the Common Council C. D. KENT,
fine not exceeding ten dollars and costs of
Clerk.
President.
whose
duties
shall
b
e
governed
as
speci­
prosecution or imprisonment in this county
fied
in
chapter
ten
(10)
of
A
ct
3
of
the
jail not more than ten days or by both such
ORDINANCE X X X I
fine and imprisonment in the discretion of laws o f 1S95 entitled “ A n act to provide T o P r o v id e f o r t h e Co lle ctio n of
for
the
incorporation
o
f
villages
within
the court.
the State o f Michigan, and defining
T axes.
Sec . 10. This ordinance shall stand as
tlieir powers and duties,” and all acts The V illage o f Buchanan ord a in s:
Ordinance No. X X X V III of the ordinances
Se c . 1. The treasurer o f said village,
of the village of Buchanan and shall be in amendatory thereto.
Se c . 2. E very person belonging to upon receiving the assessment roll for
force and take effect from and after tbe
an
organized
fire,
hose
or
hook
and
lad­
said village, shall, fo r the purpose of
18th day of July, 1896.
der com pany in the village o f Buchanan collecting the taxes therein mentioned,
Adopted by the common council of the
m ay obtain a certificate from the clerk be and remain at Ms office or place of
village of Buchanan, June 26, 1S96.
to that effect, and the members of said business in said village, on Saturday of
I. L. H. DODD, President,
companies, during their continuance as each and every week, from eight o’clock
C, D. KENT, Clerk.
such, shall he exem pt from serving on A . M , to fiv-e o’clock P. M ., after receiv’juries aud from paying a p oll tax in ing such roll, until and including the
AN ORDINANCE
said village.
last Saturday o f Ju ly; and upon all taxes
TO AMEND ANT ORDINANCE ENTITLED
Se c . 3. This ordinance shall stand as paid or tendered to liim upon such days
“ CLOSING BUSINESS PLACES ON SUN­
ordinance X X X V l i of ordinances o f the or at any other time before tbe first day
DAY,” BEING NO. VU OF THE PUBLISHED- village o f Buchanan, and shall take ef­
of August thereafter, he shall add one
ORDINANCES OF THE VILLAGE OF BU­
fect Ju ly 21, 1S96.
p er cent fo r collection fees, and upon
CHANAN.
A dopted hy the com m on council of all taxes collected h y him after the first
' The Village o f Buchanan ordains:
the village o f Buchanan June 29, 1896.
day o f August he shall add fou r per
That ordinance seven is amended to C. D. KENT,
I. L . H . DODD,
cent for collection fees.
;
read as follows:
Clerk.
President.
Se c . 2. The Treasiirer shall, im m ed­
I f any person shall keep open any bar­
iately after receiving such roll, give
ber shop, store, saloon, or any other place
notice b y publication in some newspa­
A N ORDINANCE
of business, on the first day of the week,
commonly called Sunday, he shall be pun­ T o A m end An Ord in a n c e E n t it l e d per printed in said village, and by post­
“ F ir e W a r d e n s an d t h e ir D u ­ ing no tices in fiv'e pu blic places In-said
ished by fine not exceeding ten dollars and
village, that the assessment roll lias.:
costs of suit; or by imprisonment not more
t ie s ” B eing N o. x x x v i of th e P ub ­
been placed in his hands fo r collection,
tlian ten days; or by both such fine and im­
l is h e d O rd in a n c es of t h e V i l ­
o f the time witliin which such taxes are
prisonment in the discretion of the court.
l a g e of B u c h a n a n .
to he paid, and the place whery. his of­
Provided, however, that this ordinance The V illage o f B uchanan ordains:
fice Avill he for receiving such taxes as
shall not apply to hotels and boarding
Section one o f ordinance thirty-six is above provided.
houses, or to drug stores open temporarily
hereby amended to read as follow s:
Se c . 3. TMs ordinance shall stand
for the sale of medicines.
This ordinance shall take effect July 21, The cou ncil m ay appoint such number as ordinance x x x i o f ordinances o f the
o f fire wardens as m ay b e deemed nec- village of Buchanan, and shall take e f­
1896.
. Adopted by the common council of the essaryAvho shall receive such compensa­ fect July 21, 1896.
tion as m ay he fixed h y the Common
A dopted b y the com m on council of
village of Buchanan, June 29, 1896.
Council, and Avhose duty it shall he to the village o f Buchanan June 29,1896.
I. L. H. DODD, President,
inspect from time to time, as m ay be C. D. KENT,
I. L . B . DODD,
C. D. KENT, Clerk.ordered b y said Common Council, all
Clerk.
President,
chimneys, stoves, stovepipes, furnaces,
A N ORDINANCE.
and heating apparatus and devices in
To amend an Ordinance entitled “ Keeping all dwellings, buildings and structures
streets and sidewalks in good order.” be­ within said village, and all places where
ing Ordinance No. X X IV o f tbe publish­ combustible or explosive substances
ed Ordinances of the Village of Buchan­ are kept, and also all places where
an.
ashes are deposited, and whenever it
The Village o f Bucha/nam ordains:
shall appear to said Fire W ardens that
That section one of ordinance twenty- any chimney, stove, stove pipe, furnace
four of the ordinances of this “village be and heating apparatus or devices is
amended by striking out the words “ two unsafe, or that ashes are deposited in
If you want to B U Y or SELL R e a l
days” wherever the same occurs therein, places liable to set any building on fire
E state , call on or address
and inserting in lieu thereof the words “ six the said Fire W ardens shall notify the
hours” ; and that section two of said ordi­ owner, occupant Or agent in charge of
nance be amended by striking out the word such premises, in w riting specifying ‘THE B E A L ESTATE REGISTER,
“ twenty-four” wherever the same occurs wherein such danger consists; and such
n o b l e ’s b u il d in g ,
therein, and inserting in lieu thereof the owner or agent shall, within twentyBUCHANAN,
MICH.
word “ six’?.
- *■
four hours after such service, proceed
This ordinance shall take effect and be of to pu t such chimney, stove, stove pipe,
B u ch a n a n
R eco rd.
T H U R S D A Y . J U L Y p, 1890.
Entered at the Post-office at Buchanan, Mich,
as aecond-daasm attcr.
"Will save you money by ordering
your Spring Suit o f him.
Only 166 out 61 a . possible 573 o f the weekly
newspapers in Michigan- are accorded a circulation
in acTUAn figures by the American Newspaper
Directory fo r 1896, and the publishers of the D i­
rectory will guarantee the accuracy o f Its rating
by a reward of one hundred dollars to the first
person who successfully assails it.- Advertisers
should note the fact that the B uchanan .Record
is one or th e166 that are not afraid to let their
customers know just what they are buying.
FIRSTNATIONALBANK, Look! Look! Look.
bibdrbpTbib drop
B U C H A N A N , M ICH ,
C A P I T A L A N D S U R P L U S $ 6 5 ,0 0 0 .
Fine all-wool Suits made to order
fo r $16, $17, $1S, $19 and $20.
Pants made to order from $4.00.
A fine line o f Fancy Vestings.
A
large line o f Piece Goods to
select from.
J
W. T R E N B E T H ,
MERCHANT TAILOR,
R epublican Tow nsh ip Caucus.
Buchanan, Mich.
A R epublican caucus w ill be held in
the cou ncil cham bers Saturday after­
noon, J u ly 18,1896, a t 2 o ’clock , fo r
the purpose o f selectin g tw enty-tw o
delegates to attend th e Republican
county con vention to be held at St.
Joseph, J u ly 2S, 1S9G.
A . A . W o r t h in g t o n , )
D. E H in m a n ,
j- Com.
D . H . B ow er,
)
N ot A
W om an
In Town
That doesn’t admire pretty
Furniture— A few years ago only the
rich could enjoy the luxury o f a nice­
ly furnished home.
It’s different
now.
Everybody can make a cozy
comfortable home. I f you haven’t
much money, or if you have plenty,
step in and sec what we have to offer.
It is simply a case o f a few dollars
and much sense, or in other words, a
few dollars and much furniture, if
you buy the furniture from
GEO. B.
R IC H A R D S.
W E D D IN G
S IL V E R .
W e can offer you many advantages
in the purchase o f Wedding Presents
here. Every article is o f the very
latest pattern, the finest quality,
and ranges from the little priced
souvenir to the finest production o f
the leading silversmiths.
N ew Stock . N ew P rices .
H . E. L O U G H ,
THE JEW ELER.
Druggists and Booksellers,
- -A R E SELLING—
P efu m ery , T o ile t S oap,
Sponges, London Purple, Paris
Green, White Hellebore,
Insect Powder, Hammond’s
Sing Shot,Camphor, Fly Paper
Dye Stuffs, Tablets,
-AND-
D o d d ’s
7SC
Sa r s a p a r i l l a ,
PER B O T T L E .
BUY
TWINE
OF
H R . ADAMS
W A T C H F O R , ..,
— .
PO T GROWN
—:---A I— r
B O A R D M A N ’S,
N E X T W EEK.
Office over Mrs. Berrick's Store.
Residence, C. D . Rent’s, Main Street.
Office hours until 9.00 a. m. 1.00 to 3.30,
7.00 to 8.00 p. m.
I handle the celebrated Lackawanna
and Lehigh hard Coal, and Jackson
H ill Dom estic Lum p soft Coal, Black­
smith Coal. Orders may be le ft at
Runner's drugstore. J . A , STEELE.
D . N . S W I F T D . P . S -,
Graduate o f Dental Department University;
o f M ichigan.
O ffice, Treat & Redden b lock . Successor to S.
OgtrQgdar.
GpLD CROWN AND RJ3DQE w ork .
The Berrien Gounty Y ou n g People’s
P icn ic w ill be held in Niles on A u gu st
,12th.
N iles will v ote on the question o f is­
suing bonds to the am ount o f $27,000
fo r the paym ent o f current outstand­
in g indebtedness, on Ju ly 27.
•
Walter, the eleven-year-old son o f
Chas T aylor, liv in g fo u r miles west o f
tow n, fell fro m an apple tree yesterday
afternoon and broke his le ft thigh.
D r . H enderson is attending the injured
b oy .
T he R ichards metallic saddle is forg­
in g ahead, h aving tw o m ore second
prizes placed to its record, at the Bre­
men races, the A m erica, ridden b y
Paul, being equipped w ith one o f these
saddles.
T h e F ou rth o f Ju ly a t Buchanan
passed v e ry quietly.
O w ing to the in­
a bility to com plete the bicycle track in
time, no races were held, and interest
centered upon th e ball games between
the “ Maple Leaves” and “ Blues.”
List o f letters rem aining uncalled fo r
in the post-office at B uchanan, M ich,
fo r the week ending J u ly 0, 1S9C:
M rs. E . V . Fuller, Mrs. A . M. W elsh,
M r. E . B. Bleakley, J. E . A ustin .
Call fo r letters advertised.
J o h n C. D ic k , P . M.
T he ball gam e between the B lues
and th e Grays, last F riday, resulted in
a score o f 12 to 11 in fa v o r o f the
Blues. Chas. D um bolton o f the Grays
had the m isfortune to have the little
finger o f h is right haud broken in the
gam e by being struck b y the ball.
T he Benton H arbor B lues went to
H artford, Tuesday, and played ball
w ith the H artford team, the latter
w inning the gam e b y a score o f 5 to L
This is the only team that has w on a
gam e from the “B lues” this season.—
Benton H a rb or B an n er-R egister.
A fte r the 17th o f this month, the
last sentence o f the above item w ill
have to amended.
T he house o f O. S. T ou rje had a nar­
row escape from bein g destroyed by
fire Saturday m ornm g. Smoke was
seen issuing fr o m the r o o f o f the porch
whereupon the garden hose from the
yard o f Mrs. W eaver was brought in to
play and the fire extinguished. It was
started b y a fire cracker throw n upon
th e ro o f, A fe w minutes later and
the building w ou ld have been inflames.
F o r the benefit o f the Three Oaks
Press, the mangement o f the “ Blues”
desires us to state th a t the so called
“ South Bend battery” that “ scared”
the Three Oaks team so badly that
they “ lost their nerve” , is the regular
Buchanan battery,, and under an ar­
rangem ent with th e South Bend club,
w henever they play a game the “ Blues”
arrange to let them have their battery.
Messrs. W ill House* Clarence and
A lv a Paul, Joe Richards, D. W. Gramle y and M arion H a roff rode to RrerpeOi
Ind., July 4, to witness the races given
b y the Bremen Cycling club and in
which Messrs. H ouse and P aul were
entered, In the half-m ile open race..
M r. H ou se came in first, beating Y og eli,
th e Brem en crack rider, b y six inches,
the tim e being
in the tw o-m ile
handicap, P a u l w on second prize, m akthe race in 4.34; P aul also won second
in the five-mile handcap, being beaten
by Y o g e li.
T he tim e o f the five-mile
Taee was 1 4 2 2 , Ho us e rode a W inton and Paul an A m erica.
T he Benton H a rb or P a lla d iu m o f
Ju ly 3, states that the m anagem ent o f
the T w in City Base B all club did reply
to Mr. M illar’s request fo r a game, and
pripts a letter from M anager M illar o f
the Buchanan “ Blues” in support Of
the
statement.
W h ile
statement
is true, yet the reply did not com e
fo r a w eek after the game h a d :
been asked fo r. W h ile 'w e arp speak?
jn g o f the matter, w e state that a
game hgs been arranged fo r at last, to
take place fit Bqehanan, J u ly VJ, one
w eek from tom orrow . A s the friends
o f both clubs have been Indulging in
considerable “ blow ing” , the game w ill
b e fo r “ b lood", and n o m istake.
I n ou r accou nt o f th e details o f the
sad accident wbgreljy ly ils o n H atha­
w ay lost his l i f $ some o f the particu­
lars were n o t q u ite correct, and w e de­
sire to state th e fa cts in th e case: T h e
unfortunate you n g m an was betw eenth e cars uncoupling som e o f them,
w h ich w ere to he le ft on the side-triek.i
H e pulled the cou plin g pin w ith hisi
le ft hand and, w hile stepping back,
caught b is righ t fo o t in the guard rail.
F ro m the position in w h ich th e body
w as found, it was evident the young
man had realized his perilous position
and hpa endeavored to saye his left
le g from in ju ry b y sw inging It across
h is righ t fo o t and aw ay fro m the ap­
proaching cars, h u t had n o t succeeded
in getting it entirely clear* when he
yya? stpuok by the train.
I
IN ALMOST EVERYTHING.
R E S P O N S I B I L I T Y $ 1 ,5 0 0 ,0 0 0 .
INTEREST PAID ON TIME DEPOSITS.
Buchanan Markets.
H a y —$12 @ 816 p er ton .
L a rd — 10a. retail.
S a lt,reta il—$ 1.00
F lou r—-$3.60 @84100 p er bb l.
H oney— 12o.
L iv e poultry— 5JJc.
B utter— 12} f o .
E gga— 8o.
W heat— 50@53c.
O a ts —20c
C om —30c.
Clover Seed— §4.00@ $5,00.
R y e — 35c.
Beans— $ 1.00 @1.25
L iv e H ogs— S2.75.
T H E S E ARE T IM E S
Drafts and Exchange made on all points, and a General
Banking Business Transacted.
JNO. F. REYNOLDS, C a s h i e r :
T h e late W ilson H athaw ay carried
an accident policy fo r $350 in the T ra v ­
elers’ A ccid e n t Insurance Co., o f H art­
fo rd .
A n interesting gam e o f ball is looked
fo r tom orrow w hen the M ichigan City
club w ill cross bats w ith our B lues on
th e Buchanan grounds.
P E R SO N A L .
R ay L ee visited Niles, Monday.
W ill B rodriek is at E lkhart today.
Jos. Sedlek visited in Chicago, over
Sunday,
W m . M on ro spent the F ourth
iu
Joliet, 111.
Chas. Redden
M onday.
was over to Niles,
W . J. Jones o f Shawnee died last
W . A . Palm er was a N iles visitor,
w eek Tuesday. H e was w ell k n ow n Tuesday.
a ll over th e county. H is health had
W alter N oble was over from Niles,
been p oor f o r a lon g tim e, havin g been yesterday.
com pletely paralyzed.
J . A . A rth u r w as in N iles, W ednes-
MORRIS’ THE
A t the regular m eeting o f the Y ou n g
People’s A lliance o f the E vangelical
Mrs. Oscar B row n visited relatives
church, the follow in g officers were in Three Oaks and Lakeside, last week.
elected.
Mr. and Mrs. W . L . Hindm an o f
M rs. F . 0 . Berger, Pres.
N iles rode to Buchanan on their wheels,
Miss Sylvia Cauffman, Y ic e Pres.
Tuesday evening.
M iss V irgin ia Barnhart, R ec. Sec.
F re d Cauffman. Cor. Sec.
Mrs. Mary Hetzler, Misses M attie
M iss Carrie A ndres, Tres.
B anta and Sada Oman spent the Fourth
Miss Gertie Berrick, Organist,
at Thrpe Oaks.
R ev. F . C. Berger, Chorister.
Mrs. Im ogene B lake is spending the
F red Cauffman and W ill Rough,
week in Buchanan, the guest o f Mrs.
Ushers.
0 . E . Pagin.
------------Master R ay Emerson o f A dam sville
Som e Mint.
cam e to Buohanan to spend the F ourth
Deputy Sheriff H . A . H athaw ay with his uncle, A l. Emerson.
Mr. and Mrs. E d . Bartmess o f Y o n ­
brought to the R ecord office last Sat­
urday a sample bunch o f m int grow n kers, N . Y ., are visiting his parents,
R ev. and Mrs. J. F . Bartmess.
on land reclaim ed by the fam ous B a Miss L in n ia D u tton returned home,
kertow n drain. T he m int is the finest
M onday afternoon, from an eight
w e ever saw, m easuring 3S inches in week’s v isit in the East.
height.
M rs. E lder w en t to L ansing to spend
-------------m y
the E ourth, and w ill return the latter
p art o f this week.
A L a r g e F u n eral.
D r. W m . R u m l o f Cedar Rapids,
T he funeral o f W ilson Hathaway,
Iow a, arrived in last evening, fo r a
whose sudden death was chronicled in
short visit.
last w eek’s R e c o r d , occurred at the
E dw in W ood brid ge and tw o sons,
M ethodist church, Saturday morning,
W ill and F ran k , visited Buchanan
at 9 o’clock, and was con ducted bv friends, Sunday and Monday.
R ev, W , W . D ivine. T he church was
Mrs A sh er Treat. Misses Zulu Red­
crow ded b y sympathizing friends o f
den and Georgia W ilc o x w ent to Niles,
the deceased young man w h o was w ell- on their wheels, M onday.
lik ed b y everyone, and the floral tri­
Jacob Im h off and daughters, Misses
butes w ere numerous as w ell as beau­ M ary and Cora, w en t to Chicago, Mon­
tifu l. A n opportunity was given the day.
friends to v iew the remains o f the de­
John Morris left, M onday, fo r D ayceased, and it was n otica b le that n o ton, Ohio, w here he w ill visit relatives
trace o f the violent manner In which o f Mrs. Morris.
he m et his death was visable to the
observer. Mr. D iv in e delivered an ex­
cellent sermon, taking his tex t from
the first seven verses o f the tw elfth
chapter o f Ecclesiastes. A quartette
rendered several selections in good
taste. T he pall hearers were the
brother, brother-in-law|and fo u r cous­
ins o f the deceased. A lon g proces­
sion o f carriages follow ed the remains
to Oak R idge cem etery, where the In­
term ent to o k place.
FOUR PER CENT^*annum paid on time deposits,
if left tliree months or longer, at
LEEBROS. & GO’SBANK,
B U C H A N A N , M IC H .
A .B . R.
I
Cross, s s , . . . . .... 6
2
M b y ,3 b . .. . . . . 4
1
Hanover, c , , .
4
0
Silver, p ........ .. . . 4
1
Matthews, c f . . . . . 4
0
Sanders, r f ... . . . . 4
0
Roe, 1 b _____ .. . 4
0
Marshall, I f . . .... 4
0
Brodriek, 2 b. . . . 4
5
Totals............ 37
Freahafer, s s
Hazelton, 1 b ,
Arndt, 2 b . . . .
Lipps, 3 b . . . .
Schafer. I f . . ,
Haggard, c ...
Happ, p ........
Judy, r f . . . . . .
Seifert, c f . . . .
6
SOUTH BEND,
A-B. ‘B.
0
. ‘4
0 0
,. 4
. 4
1 0
i
1
. 4
0 0
. 3
0 0
3
1 1
3
0 0
0 0
T o ta ls ..,____ 85
Innings.. ..1
Bines............,2
H. P.O.
1
2
1
3
2
a
0
i
0
0
0
19
0
1
2
0
3
8 ‘3 4
0
1
3
5*0
27
1
9
6
0
0
0
0
R E S P O N S IB IL ITY
W . 0 . E D W A R D S , Cashier.
Miss L u cy P earce o f B attle Creek,
who has been visitin g her uncle and
aunt, Mr. and Mrs. W. F . Runner,
fo r several m onths past, returned hom e
Friday.
Mrs. H . E . L ough returned, F riday,
from her visit to Mausfieid, Ohio. H er
mother, Mrs. W arren M. B low ers, ac­
com panied her, and will remain in Bu­
chanan for some time.
Mr. and M rs.W . W . B ow er and son,
D. W esley, drove over from Reading,
Hillsdale county, arriving here Tues­
1 day evening.
They will be the guests
o f Mr. and Mrs. W . P. Cartner.
M iss A dah Kingery- went to D ow a­
giac, F rid ay evening, fo r a visit w ith
M iss P earl Pray and other friends.
Mrs. W . S. W ells and children o f
M anistique, Mich., are in Buchanan for
a v isit w ith relatives ang friends.
Miss Olive W oodbridge and George
Southerton visited at Benton H arbor,
over Sunday.
M iss Georgia E m ery, w ho has been
visiting relatives in B attle Creek, re­
turned hom e, Saturday,
Mrs. A n n a F u ller w ent to Chicago
on M onday to jo in her husband. T hey
expect to make tftat city their home.
Grace, o f South Bend, visite(j Bflcha^i?
an friends, the past week!
Mrs. E . J. H opkins and tw o daugh­
ters are m aking D etroit and Jackson
relatives an extended visit.
Miss Maud M ichael o f
was the
guest, qf h i s s e s A nn ie an d ' F rances
Simmon, over Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. H aase o f N iles visited
Mrs. H aase’ s parents, M r. and Mia.
Jos. A n stis, oyer Sjundfiy,
M r. and Mrs. Harry E . Starrett left,
Sunday night, for Detroit, where they
will spend a couple of days.
Mrs. John Graham, Mrg. H- H, Daw
and children ‘ left, Monday, fo r a visit
18
3
p. q. A.
2
5
1
2
6
1
1
0
1
0
13
3
1
0
0
0
0
?1
1
8
0
0
0
0
0
0
Sioux City, Iowa, this morning. Mrs.
Spreng and son will remain for a long­
er yisfy
“
s
H . E. Lough, Sig. Desenberg, L. L.
Redden and John W . and Jos. Beistle
attended the Democratic Convention
at Chicago, this week.
Chas. McCoy of South Chicago spent
the Fourth with bis aunt, M rs- S, K,
37
a
p Y an Zant, returning home, Sunday
evening.
7 8 Q
0 1 1 0 0
0— 5
Second, the quality of the goods is
K E E P T H E S E F A C T S IN M IN D .
C A R M ER & CAR M ER ,
32 FRONT STREET,
BUOHANAN, MICH.
SP E C IA L
SALE
U ilJi
U lllU iU ilL lu
U llil
r llllu i
1 ill [luUliji
Tlie price o h these 'goods w ill be greatly
reduced for the next 10 days. Come early aud get
the cream of the bargains.
S. P. HIGH
LOOKFOB THE BIG BOOT.
$ 5 0 0 ,0 0 0 .
Remember we receive deposits from $1.00 upward in our
Savings Bank Department. Start an account and watch it
grow.
W e solicit your account, whether large or sm all
1 to Mrs. Graham’s sister in N ew Y o rk
0
1 City.
0
1
Dr. T . F . H . Spreng returned home,
6
First, the cash outlay is not great.
first-class. You will do well to
That is where Jim Woodslhaslm oved his stock of
County Committeeman John Graham
attended a m eeting o f th e Republican
County Com m ittee at St. Joseph, M on­
E.
0 day.
0
3
& CARM ER.
Strongest Bank in Southwestern Mich.
a
BUCHANAN BLUBS.
CARM ER
Ladies’
Shirt
Waists,
FAIR,
A L M O S T E V E R Y TH IN G .
B a se B a ll,
Mr. and Mrs. W . F . R unner spent
T he F ourth o f Ju ly was celebrated Sunday w ith relatives near B attle
In B uchanan b y tw o excellent games Creeko f base ball betw een the “ M aple L e a f”
M r. and Mrs. C. D . ICent and son
club o f South B end and the Blues. spent the F ou rth with friends, near
T he afternoon game was the best game Colon, M ich.
Miss K ittie Keiser o f Chicago is v is­
that has been witnessed on the new
ground and was largely attended. The iting her grandmother, Mrs, Batson o f
Oak street.
follow in g is a sum m ary o f each game:
M r. and Mrs. A . A . W orthington
MORNING GAME:
visited relatives in St. Joseph, over
BUCHANAN BLUES.
A .B . R. H. P. 0. A. E. Sunday.
1
1,
Cross, as.......... .. 6
2
0
1
Squire Y in to n visited his mother,
2
Ashby, 3 b.......... .. 0
3
3
0
1
o
2
H. Hanover, c ... . . 6
0
0 , Mrs. W m . D eW in g at Kalamazoo, qver
3
O
Q
3
Silver, 1 f . ......... .. 6
2
Sunday.
o
1
Matthews, P r ,,„
P
1
Sauciers, r f.,;.;.: : I
0
3
Miss Susie T racy o f M ilw aukee is
1
0
Roe, 1 b .............. .. oi
9
0
o
0
3
1
0 spending a tw o week’s vacation with
Marshall, p .... .. 0.
o
2
0 ; Buchanan friends.
1
4
Brodriek, 8 b .. .. 5
.V
13
1
Totals...... . 53 14 14 i i
Mrs. A . Crandall and daughter, Miss
SOUTH BEND.
A. B, R. H. P. 0 , A. E.
0
5
1
,. 4
a
Lipps, 3 U...
3
Schafer, p .. _ .. 4
0
0
a
1
1
0
HUzelton, l b .......... 4
0
i
10
3
u
0
i
4
Arndt, 2 b ......... ... 4
2
0
3
0
1
Fieehafer, s s .......
.. 4
1
i
0
0
0
Judy, r f .................
3
...
0
1
C
Slolert, 1 f............... 3
0
0
0
0
0
0
3
Haggard, c............. 3
0
Rapp, c f . ....... ..
1
A
1
9
TO
T o fa ls ...... . 32
b
87
13
(!
5 G 7 s 9
Innings,.!..1 2 3
B lu e s ....------1 1 2 1 4 3 1 1 ci—14
South Bend..O 0 0 <1 0 0 0 <1 0— p
Stolen base^—Crops, Ashby, Mathews 3, Ufarabali 3, Roe, Arpdt, duejy, Upgaard, Two base
bits—Hoe, H. Hanover. Three base hit—Silver,
Doable plays-e-Hanover to Roe, Sanders to Brod=
rick. Passed ball—Haggard. Wild pitches—
Schafor %■ h it hr pitcher—Judy. Struck out—
by Marshall 3, by Schafer 2, Umpire—Hough,
AFTERNOON GAME.
But you can always save money by buying your SHOES of
D E A L E R IN
George A m es spent the F ourth at
H ill L in ton o f the In d ep end en t office
was quite badly hurt the evening be­ home iu B attle Creek.
fore the F ou rth o f July, a ball from a j Claude M oulton is home on a visit,
rom Grand Rapids.
rom an candle exploding and nearly
cansidg the loss o f sight to one o f his
Mrs. 0 . E . ‘Woods o f Cassopolis vis­
ited Buchanan friends, this week.
eyes
J. L . Beardsley o f Kalam azoo is vis­
iting friends in tow n.
T he Three Oaks citizens that accom ­
panied the ball team lo Buchanan last
Mrs. T. 0. B ison o f Berrien Springs
F riday bad to pay 25 cents admission was in tow n, Tuesday.
fee to the ball park. Other people got
F . D. M ateer o f Joliet, 111, spent the
in fo r 15 cents.—Three Oaks Press.
F ourth in Buchanan.
T he above clipping was referred to
Miss N in a H olliday is visiting in
the Buchanan base ball park manage­
T hree Oaks, this week.
ment, and they state that the 15 cent
E lm er Beardsley o f Chicago spent
rate applied to children, and they did
th e Fourth in Buchanan.
suppose that th e “ citizens” above re­
M r. and Mrs. E d . W eaver o f Chicago
ferred to w ished to b e classified under
are visitin g relatives in tow n.
th e bead o f children.
MisB Carrie B oyle spent the F ourth
at South Bend, visitin g friends.
T he fo llo w in g officers o f Buchanan
D . L . Scoffern o f N ew Carlisle was
L o d g e N o. 75, I. 0 . 0 . F ., were install­ In tow n, yesterday,
ed last Tuesday evening:
Mrs. G. W. N oble visited her sister,
Harry H . Smith, N. G.
Mrs. R ose at Galien, yesterday.
A lv in Rokley, Y . G.
M iss W in iford N ob le is in Chicago
W . G. Hathaway, R . Sec.
visitiD
g her friend, M iss Bessie Taylor.
John H anover, Treas.
Jas. Patterson, R . S. N . G.
W ill Griffith o f Chicago is spending
R . Clawberg, L . S. N . G.
a portion o f his vacation in town.
S. W . Y a n Meter, W .
M rs. Iva F low ers visited Miss Lena
W . L . Hindm an. Con.
M cN iel at D ow agiac, over Sunday.
J . P. A nstis, R , S. Y . G.
N . J. Slater L . S. Y . G.
M rs. S K . Y a n Zant and Mrs. Lou
A . C. L ogan, I. G.
Smith are v isitin g at Galien today.
E lm er Beistle and sister, Miss Jennie,
spent th e F ourth at Benton Harbor.
Big Drop, 10c
<<
5c
.............
“
3c,
lc
10 quart Flaring P ails........................
Se
((
No 8 Copper Bottom Tea Kettles.. . .
35C
it
Range Tea Kettles................. ............
15o
it
No. 8 Copper Bottom Wash B oilers..
75c
tt
I dozen Clothes Pins................. ........
lc
et ■
1 paper Tacks......................................
lc
tt
1 paper Pins........... ............................
lc
tt
6 pair Men’s Hose------------------ 425c
tt
Ladies’ Hose, fast black, per pair.. . .
5e
tt
Earthen Cuspidors............. — ..........
10c
tt
Fast Black Bicycle Hose......................
25c
tt
Men's Fedora aud Derby Hats...........
SSc
Men’s Sweaters................. .................
$3.00
Just received, a fine line o f Granite Iron Ware on which we can give yon 25 per cent
off.
10 quart Dish Pans____ ___________
2 quart Covered Pails........................
I
South Bend.. .2 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0— 3
Mrs. Helen Green o f Minneapolis,
Stolen bases—Ashby 2, Matthews 3. Two base w ho was called here by the accident to
hit—Rapp, Struck out—by Rapp 9, by Silver 3.
Hit ‘by pitcher—Sanders. 'Wild pitch—Rapp. her nephew, W ilson Hathaway, will
Passed ball—Hnggard, Umpire—Bprr.
remain some time and visit relatives.
Mrs. K id well and Miss N on a Morley
went to Plym outh. Ind., Friday.
Miss
M orley returned home on Monday, but
Mrs. K id well remained for a visit with
friends.
Mr. and Mrs. F . J. H olden o f C hica­
g o were the g u ests o t C. Q. H am ilton
and fam ily, over Sunday, Mr, H olden
returning hom e on Monday, but Mrs.
Holden remained fo r a few week’s
visit.
W ANTED.
A few acres o f tim bered land. W ill
buy the lan d with tim ber o n it , or the
tim ber alone. A ddress or call on
0 . E. P A G IN , 19 R iver St.
Frank A. Kobe, 44, Lake township; An­
nette Edwards, 49, same.
.Andrew Landis, 25, Sawyer; Hattie E.
Wharton, 16, New Troy.
Wm. Hunt, 21, Pipestone; Lona Shep­
ard, IS, same,
Orin Moore. 23, Benton Harbor; Olla
Orcutt, 25, same,
Frank Donahue, 28, Indiana; Maude
Squire, 30, Benton township.
Denis A. Baldwin, 19, Watervliet;
Claudia E. Martin, IS, Hagar.
Noble Wells, 23, Bainbridge; Eva Van
Eanken, IS, same.
Cbas. Hall, 26, Benton Harbor; Eva
Miksell, 24, Benton tp.
Fory Nichols, 22, Spinks’ Corners;
Grace Ingram, 21, same.
------------- 5S?-«-*“r---------—
ph ere was an unexpected reunion of
several members o f Co. C. 25th M ichi­
gan Infantry in Benton H arbor W ed­
nesday, and the old veterans who hap­
pened Jo m eet took ice cream together.
They were, Messrs. E . W . Jennings,
M erit N ichols, Isaac long and Isaac
Mqddo^ o f Benton H arbor; Eli Grabb,
Miflburg, John Schriner, Pipestone, 0.L - Blake, Buchanan, and A . J. Tibbs,
Eau Claire.-Benton i ‘arbor Palladium BASE B A L L .
M ICH LGA N C IT Y Y S . B LU E S
at Buchanan to-m orrow afternoon.
A N N U A L M E ETIN G .
The adjourned annual m eeting of
Buchanan B uilding, Loan and Savings
A ssociation fo r the election o f D irec­
tors and transaction o f other business,
w ill he held in the Secretary’s office in
R ough’s block, Ju ly 21, 1896, at 7:30
p. m.
J ohn C. D ic k , Sec.
T he new Gallery heats them all for
fine work and lo w prices.
ELSO N , A rtist,
Opposite H otel.
V I L L A G E T A X N O TICE .
V illa g e taxes for the year 1896 are
n ow due. N otice is hereby given, that
I will be at the office o f Treat & R ed­
den Tuesdays and Saturdays to re­
ceive payment.
W . W . T R E A T , Assessor.
F o r the best w ork and latest styles,
call on
MISS C A R R IE S H A F E R .
F o r a good meal, go to A rth u r’s
Restaurant,
Jaxon Soap hurts no fabric.
Mrs. H ow ard Smith, dressmaking
parlors over store o f G. W . Noble.
A ll the latest styles,
W - H . K e l l e r , Groceries, F ruits
and Confectionary, at Scott’s old stand,
Buchanan, M ich.
Send a 2 cent stamp for a handsome set
Of Jaxon Soap pictures.
at Buchanan to-morrow afternoon.
LOST.
A light grey overcoat, containing a
note book. Finder will please return.
\t
DR. R, HENDERSON.
W hen Baby- was sick, we gave her Costoria.
W hen she was a Child, she cried fo r Castoria.
--------------------------------
When she becam e M ss, She clung to Costoria.
When she had Children, She gave them Castoria.
The first and most important thing
for the proper understanding of and
rational treatment of chronic or lin­
gering disease o f any kind, is’its thor?
ough examinations and true diagnosis. Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria.
Y o u can secure this with a full explan­ Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria.
ation o f the cause, nature and extent
of-your disorder free o f charge by en­ Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria
closing a lock o f hair, with name and
age, to D r E. F , Butterfield, Syracuse, 0 H O O D ’S P lliliS cure L iver Ills.
N. Y ,
—ad®. Jan3Q-6mo. ^ Biliousness, Indigestion, Headache.'
A pleasant laxative. A ll Druggists.
i
CHEAP FOR CASH.
T he next regular review o f E ast
H iv e N o. 19, L . O. T. H., w ill be held
Tuesday evening, July 14, 1S96.
B e r t h a R oe , R. K.
Last summer one o f our grandehilren was sick vsith a severe bow el trou­
ble. 0 ,ur doctor’s remedies had failed,
then we tried Chamberlain’s Colic
Cholera aud Diarrhoea Remedy, w hich
Purify your blood with Hood’ s Sarsaparilla*
which, will givo yoii au appetite* toueyoxir stom­ gave very speedy relief. W e regard it
ach, and strengthen your nerves.
as the best medicine ever put on the
market for bow el complaints.— Mrs. E.
BASE B A LL.
G Gregory, Frederiekstow n, M o. This
M IC H IG A N C IT Y Y S. B LU E S
certainly is the best medicine ever put
at Buchanan to-m orrow afternoon.
on the market, fo r disentery, summer
eommer complaint, colic and cholera
W ANTED,
infantum in children. I t never fails
Gentlemen hoarders.
to give prompt relief wnen used in
MRS. J. H . P A U L ,
reasonable time and the plain printed
directions are follow ed . Many m oth­
76 F r o n t St.
ers have expressed their sincere grati­
BASEBALLtude fo r th e cures it has effected. F o r
M ICH IG AN C IT Y YS. BLUES
sale by Bartnore, the druggist.
July
Clairvoyant Examinations Free.
H e wants to see you, as he w ill sell you boots aud shoes
The L adies’ A id Society o f th eE van gelical church will sell ice cream and
cake, in the store form erly occupied by
J. K . W oods, first door east o f the postoffice, Saturday afternoon and evening
M iss F loren ce Hinm an o f Buchanan
A U C T IO N ,
and F red H all o f R oyalton called on
friends in tow n, Sunday. Misses H in ­
I w ill hold m yself in readiness to do
man and Maude Sprague are now the any and all kinds o f auction work.
guests o f M iss N in a Sparks.—Berrien
L eave orders w ith J. C. W enger, or at
Springs E ra .
C. H . Baker’s store, or w rite fo r terms.
Mr. F . H- Weisgerb'er and fam ily o f
H. A. H ATH AW AY,
Jackson w ill make a visit o f seve.al
D eputy Sheriff,
weeks with relatives in tow n. Mrs.
Buchanan, Mich.
Weisgerher was a sister o f Wilson
H athaw ay, and was called here b y the
T he M. C. R . R . Co. w ill sell excur­
sudden death o f her brother.
sion tickets to L ansing on Ju ly 15 and
M iss H elen ¥ rench returned home,
Tuesday, from H urley, W is „ where 16, lim ited to return n ot later than
she. has been teaching school, the past Ju ly 17th, also on A ugu st 4, 5 and 6,
l ear. She w ill leave, Saturday night, lim ited to return until A u g . 7th;
fo r W ashington, D . C., to attend the
T o L udington, M ich., A u g . 1 to S in ­
Christian Endeavor Convention.— Cass­
clusive, lim ited to return until A ug.
opolis Democrat.
15th;
Joh n Page o f Buchanau cam e to
T o Benzouia, Mich., July 13 to 22 in­
Benton Harbor, Monday, aud on Tues­
day he started fo r L im a, Qhio, to visit clusive, lim ited to return until A u g .
his old h om e— Captain J. F .P eck , w ho 17th;
is doing an extensive lum ber business
T o St. Louis, Mo., July 20 to 21, lim ­
in Missouri, w as in the city visitin g
ited
to return July 27th, at one firsthis son, M yron J. Peck, before going to
his home in Buchanan.— Benton H ar­ class lim ited fare fo r the round trip.
bor B anner-R egister.
A . F . P e a c o c k , T ick et A gt.
M arriage Licenses.
BOOTS & SHOES.
AN D
OF
E. S. RO E.
SPECIAL
JUNE SALK
WASH SILKS.
25 pieces fancy Japanese Silk and 10
pieces of natural linen color silk,
closing price................. - .................. 25c
20 pieces Printed Japanese Silk, clos­
ing price .................................................... 15c
W ASH GOODS.
12tyc Dimities and Lawns.............. <§KC
19c Organdies.................................... 1214 c
25c Dimities......................................
17c
Scotch Zephyr Ginghams.. . . . . . . . . 12y.c
SILK W A ISTS.
S 5.00 Waists................................ $ 3.50
7.50 W aists................................ 5.00
10.00 W aists............................ , . 7.3714
S H IR T W A I S T S .
$1.25 Shirt Waists, correct in every
way, closing price....................
90c
81.50, $1.75 quality, closing price, $1.25
Higher grades reduced in proportion.
FANS,
for graduation purposes.
at lowest prices.
Largest stock
W H IT E K ID A N D C H A M O IS
G LO VES.
4-buttou White E d Gloves, latest black
stitching, $1.25 quality, closing price 90c
4-button finest E d , $1.50 quality, clos­
ing price........ ...............................$1.10
4- button Chamois Gloves, $1 quality,
closing price...................................... 65c
5- button Chamois Gloves, $1 quality,
closing price.......... .......................
65c
L A D IE S ’
S U I T S A N D D R E S S S K IR T S .
25 Ladies’ Suits, black and na,vy,
tailor made, $7.50 quality, closing
p rice..................... - •.......................$4.98
$9.00 Suits, closing price.................... $6.00
25 Sample Suits, one o f a kind only,
jackets are silk .lined, to close at half price.
50 figured Mohair and Serge Dress
Skirts, rustle lined, velvet hound,
$3.50 quality, closing price_____ _ _ $1.89
$4.50 quality, closing price.......... 2.98
$5 black and White Check Skirts,
closing price..... ............................. 3.98
House Wrappers from 39c up.
OUR SALE OF SUMMER UNDERWEAR AND HOSIERY CONTINUES.
G R O S S M A N ’ S,
SO U TH B EN D , IND.
(Hase Sanborns
Coffee
BestCoffeegrowamthc^farld
Perfection,ofsti’eitgtK&flaswa'
G u aran teed ab so lu tely p u re
T R E A T & R E D D E N , Sole AgentSs Buchanan.
Highest of all in Leaveningtower,—Latest LT<.5i£"-o~f,\"Report
M IL ITIA . CALLED OUT.
MORE
A b ^ o l v t e c v
TOMMY JONES, THE FROG HUNTER.
C O M P L E T E IN ' T H I S I S S U E .
[.Copyright, 1S0G, Ijy Walter B. Guild, Boston.]
Tom m y Jones was one o f those boys
w ho liked to throw stones at any harm­
less little bird, tnrtle, frog or other help­
less creatures w h ich could n ot throw any­
thing hack at him.
H o was always picking upon and an­
noying all o f the smaller boys and girls,
and was a regular little tyrant whenever
h e saw any chance to bother any one.
smaller and weaker than himself.
One day Tom m y said to me, “ Come
on, "Walt; come w ith m e and k ill a lot
o f frog s.”
H ow , oversince I had gotten acquaint­
ed w ith the fairies I had known that
Felines, the flying eat, was ready to tell
o f any cruel act, so that unless I behaved
w ell there w ou ld be no more rides
through the air on his hack and no more
visits to" the fairies.
Y ou scc. the fairies are especially bind
hearted, but w hen it comes to punishing
p u r e
sum. or n .u g n ; vneu no w ould croak a
regular frog; croak, on ly so loud that it
seemed as i f all (he. frogs Tom m y and
Patsy had over killed had joined in one
Awful croak.
Felinus then ran out and gave the
greatest growl you ever heard. Tommy
could bear no more, so h e just dropped
down on his knees, and Patsy began to
stagger and tremble.
How they both begged when the frog
spoke and told them to keep still and
never to tell a living sonl abont their
adventurel
“ H ow go hack and g e t your hats and
tho can, ” said tho frogs, “ and i f either
o f you ever comes here again to steal
m ilk, or i f you ever k ill another frog,
you w ill see us again.”
The hoys promised as m uch as you
could wish, and the frog w h o had caught
the stones w hich they threw at him
n o w came up and took each h oy b y the
hand and said, “ Shake hands on it to
never break your promise. ”
The boys each shook hands w ith all
three o f the frogs, and then w ith each
other, and made a great ceremony, as
the frogs directed.
Then the frogs took the fa iry m ilk
cans off from the hoys’ heads, and the
boys g ot their hats and the m ilk can
w hich they had bronght and started to
go home as sheepishly as ever I saw
any tw o hoys in m y life.
The first frog then stepped up and
told them that they w ou ld have to eat
the stones that they threw at him , and
offered each boy the one he had thrown.
This scared them again, and they both
said: “ W e can’ t eat a rock, sir. Please,
w on ’ t you forgive us w ithout it, sir.
W e thought that you was only a frog,
sir. ”
The fro g then puffed him self up to
about tw ice his usual size, and looked
very dignified as he said:
“ W ell, i f you really are telling the
truth, you can eat what I give you. ”
The hoys reached out their hands, and
somehow the frog passed them each a
big, ju icy orange instead o f the stone.
He saw them eat the oranges before he
let them get away.
On finding such kindness, both Tom ­
m y and Patsy were completely sur­
prised. They said that it was too good
to expect that a frog which they had
tried to k ill should give them the best
oranges they ever tasted.
Felinus smiled, and as soon as they
were out o f hearing I fa irly roared w ith
laughter. But I have never before told
any one about it, not even father, so
you are the very first ones to hear o f
Tom m y’s reform. F or Tom m y was re­
formed.
The teacher noticed at school that
Tom m y and Patsy behaved better. There
were not so many pencils lost as there
"G et a rock, Pat,” said Tommy,
a cruel hey or ,man w h o kills innocent
thirds or frogs “ ju st fo r fun.’ ’ they some­
times give them, a scare that w ill last
f o r a lifetim e.
H ow , F elines had heard Tom m y’s in ­
vitation, and he looked at m e in such a
queer sort o f w ay that I immediately said,
“ H o ; and don’ t yon g o either, T om .”
Tom m y called m e a little “ goody
goody tied to his mother’s apron string,
Sunday school, white haired, darling
baby boy” and ran away ju st too quick­
ly for m e to catch him and teach him
better manners.
A s soon as Tom m y was out o f sight
F elines said: “ H ow , I am ju st glad you
didn’t catch him. Y ou ought to be above
fighting because a foolish fellow calls
you “names. It w ouldn’ t have proved
anything to your credit i f you had caught
him and given him a solid pounding.
You ju st leave Tom m y’s case to m y
treatment, and I ’ll show him one o f our
fa iry frogs from F rog River, Fairyland.
Say nothing, but be ready to get up early
tomorrow morning, before sunrise. ”
H ow , w e sold milk, and in warm
weather w e used to put the n igh t’s m ilk
in a big can and set it in a spring to
keep cool until morning. Father had
said that.iately the m ilk had seemed to
he thin and watery looking, and that he
thonght the cows needed more cornstalks
and a fe w beets and small potatoes to
eat, so as to make their m ilk richer, and
that w e had better turn them into the
north pasture.
I knew Tom m y Jones and thonght
that perhaps if he should go to visit his
aunt up in Hew Hampshire our m ilk
m ight be richer, but father said, ‘ ‘ Oh,
n o ; it can’t be that he w ould steal the
m ilk and pour water into the can to fill r h en th e y bega n to d r u m u p o n th e b o t­
tom s o f th e ir f a i r y m ilk ca n s.
it up. ’ ’ I didn’t w ant to think so either,
hut a ll the same I knew where H ellie jsed to be. There was no more coaxing
Smith’slead pencils had gone, and 1 had >f us boys to go frog hunting, and fa m y ow n opinion o f Thomas Jones, Esq. ;hcr said he noticed a great improve­
The next morning, ju st abont h alf an ment in the m ilk since the cows had
hour before sunrise, Felinus jum ped up been turned into the north pasture.
It is always risky at any tim e to be
on m y bed and brushed his velvety paw
across m y face to waken me. “ Jump with people w ho do not behave them­
up, ” he said, “ and be quick about it i f selves, but I never expected to be m is­
you .want to see some fu n .” I pu t on taken fo r Tommy. However, his had
habits and the care less gossip o f some
m y clothes and ran out after Felinus.
"We were jn st n icely settled behind highly respectable frogs w ho ought to
the little clum p o f bushes b y the spring i have known better very nearly left yon
w hen along cam e Tom m y w ith a t w o ' children w ithout any uncle to tell you
quart can in h is hand. P at Brady was these stories.
w ith him, and Pat was Tom m y’s regu­
C a rly lo a n d S c o tt,
lar chum.
“ T o read o f Scott,” says Temple Bar,
P at said to T om m y: “ “What’ s that “ makes most others, even o f the noblest
alongside o f the can there? Sure it ’s the and best, appear sm all by comparison.”
The w riter illustrates his meaning by
biggest fro g ever I saw ,” said Patsy.
Tom m y looked, and sure as you live pointing to the contrast between Carlyle
there was a fa iry fr o g h a lf #as large as and Scott in the matter o f sleep, n o th ­
him self. “ G et a reck, P a t,” said Tom ­ ing, he says, short o f a “ treacle sleep,”
in which h e could lie “ sound as a
my, “ and w e w ill k ill h im .” Theyeach
stone” fo r hours, could satisfy Carlyle.
picked up a stone as large as yonr fist,
H is naps were serious things, and if
ran toward the frog and threw them any inroad from without or w ithin were
w ith all their m ight.
made upon them, anathemas and “ waes
T he frog was 'sittin g in as round m e 's” w ould be sure to follow , while
shouldered and sleepy looking a posture constant nights o f waking and aching
as I ever saw a lazy h o y take; and as his w ould be m et by Scott w ith scarce a
back was turned tow ard the boys they, grumble or b y a playful one.
A . d o g , w h o s e y e lp in g h a d d is tu rb e d
o f course, thonght that they w ou ld kill
h is s lu m b e rs , m o v e d C a r ly le t o th e j o ­
the largest frog that ever lived.
c o s e ly sa v a g e w is h th a t h e h a d th e a n i­
Y ou see, they were not acquainted
m a l b y it s b i n d le g s w it h in rea ch o f a
w ith fairy frogs and did n ot know that s to n e w a ll.
the uncles and cousins o f this frog were,
“ B ilious and headache this morn­
m any o f them, as large as a man.
in g ,” notes Scott, under the influence
They didn’t know, either, that this o f a like infliction occurring in the very
honest, sleepy looking fr og was watch­ midst o f his sea o f troubles. “ A dog
in g them through a m irror w hich he had howled a ll night and left me little
placed in the water for their special sleep. Poor cu r!” w ith an outgoing o f
sympathy toward the unconscious troubenefit.'
bler of his repose. ‘ ‘ I dare say he had
Felinus and. I saw the who2e perform- ;
his distresses, as I have mine. ”
once, and what did Mr. F airy Frog do
but stand on his hind legs and catch the
N ot t o B e B on e.
atones, one in each hand, jnst as easily
It was in a Braxton tram car. He took
as the best catcher in the Boston boseout a piece o f paper on which there
ball'clu b w ou ld catch a ball. W ell, you
were many figures and said:
" I ’ve been trying to invent a puzzle
may think, all you w ish to think, but
to put on the market, but I can only get
Pat.and T om didn’t stop to think, bnt
so far w ith it, ”
ran for. a ll they were worth. They drop­
“ ■What is it?” asked the other.
ped the tw o quart can, and their hats
“ This represents a tram car. •There
blew o ff their heads, hut fast as they ran
are 13 men on one side and 8 women on
the fro g ran faster, and, what was still
the other. ”
worse, ont came tw o more frogs, each
“ I see. You want to get 10 on a side. ”
with a can in his hand. They jumped
“ No, I don’ t. Another woman gets
leapfrog fashion upon the shoulders of. in the car, making 9 women to 13 men. ’ ’
“ E xactly.”
Tom m y and P at and pu t the cans over
“
She must have a seat. She looks at
the hoys’ heads. Then they began to
the 13 m en, and” —
drum'upon the bottoms o f their fairy
“ A nd one o f them gets up and offers
m ilk cans in snch a lively w ay that
her a seat, o f course. ”
Tommy and P at were frightened half
“ Yes, o f course. N ow what I want is
out o f their wits.
to place her among the 8 wom en.”
-Firsirthe frogs w ould pound and drum
“ M y dear sir,” said the other, as he
on'the : bottom o f the cans; then they
turned away, “ yon had better tackle the
problem o f perpetual motion. It can’t
w ould scratch w ith some gravel stones,
as i f 'they were trying to cu t a hole : be done. I f there were but 7 women it
couldn’t be done. Either make your 9
through to get at the boys.
women get off and take cabs, or let one
The third frog ju st stood on his hind
o f the men g o on the top and catch
legs, opened his m outh and croaked;
cold.
London Fun.
then h e laughed a m ost unthinkable
SERIOUS RIOTING
AT CLEVELAND.
OCCURS
Nbn-ITnrou Aten on Bicycles A ttacked b y a
M ob o f Strikers and On© o f T hom I s
K nocked O ff H is W h e e l— Ho Draws His
Revolver and F ires into tho Crowd and
t h e B a llo t K ills a S p e c ta to r-A tte m p ts
M a d e to L y n c h t h e S h o o te r.
C l e v e l a n d , July 3.—Tho most sorlous
rioting that has yet marked the strlko at
tbo Brown h Disting works took placo
Thursday afternoon. A bystander was
shot through tho heart by a non-union
man, and tho latter narrowly escaped
lynching. A t 5 o’clock 230 police wore
massed at tho works, thou tho gates were
thrown open and tho workmon, 150 in
number, surrounded by a hollow square
of police juarched out. Tho moh outside
numbered from 5,000 to 7,000, and a show­
er of stones greotod the column. Tho po­
lice forced a, passago through tho rioters,
using
their cluhs freely.
A s tho
main hody of police and workmen
disappeared two young men, named re­
spectively Albort G. Saunders and W ill­
iam H. Yernon, came out of tho yard on
thoir bicycles. Tho have been employed
at the works for a week, and wore at onco
recognized by tho hindmost members of
the mob, which was following tho police.
A big stone struck Saunders on the head
and ho fell from the wheel. Yernon dis­
mounted to render Mm assistance. Tho
rioters were ou them in an instant, and
blows and kicks: wore showered on tho
prostrate anon.
Bystander Shot Through tho H eart.
Saunders managed to get his revolver
out of his pocket, and rising to his knees,
fired at the crowd. The bullet pierced tho
heart o f W illiam Rcttger, 21 years old,
who was watching the strikers, and ho
fell dead in his tracks. Just then twenty
policemen, who had been detached front
the main body came up. A fierce fight
between the squad o f police and tho mob
ensued, and with great difficulty Saunders
and Yernon were taken to the office of a
near-by factory. They were placed inside
tho building, a small one-story affair, and
the police stood guard outside. A s if by
magic a rope appeared in the hands of
some of tho mob, and cries of “ Lynch
bun,” “ Lynch the scab,” were raised.
A determined rush was made at the lino
o f police, but tho leaders of the mob foil
back with bodies bruised and heads
broken by the heavy clubs in the hands
o f the bluecoats. A second chargo mot
with the rat,no reception, and the mob
again retreated. Meantime the telephone
wires had been busy and two companies
of tho Fifth regiment, O. H. &., which
hod been under arms all day, wore ordered
to the scene, The troops arrived just as
the moh was preparing to chargo the po­
lice for tho third time. The troops drew
up across the street and leveled their rifles
at the crowd, which at once scattered in
every direction.
E scorted b y T roops.
A patrol wagon was driven up and
Saunders and Yernon were placed in and
taken to the central station, one company
of the troops escorting the wagon and the
other holding the moh in check. A t the
central. station Saunders was locked up,
tho charge of manslaughter being
formally made against him. Yernon was
taken home by the police. In the mean­
time the main hody of police escorting tho
non-union men had reached tho Wilson
aveiino station, followed by an immense
niob, who knew nothing of the exciting
scenes going on at the hoisting works.
As
soon as the workmen wero
safely inside the
station the or­
der to charge was given, and 350
police wont at fu ll speed toward the
moh, which broke and fled. For five min­
utes the clubbing continued, and every
man or boy who came within reach of tho
police was hit. Stephen B. O'Neil, the
driver of a wagon which contained sev­
eral strikers, was pulled off his scat and
severely clubbed. Five other men were
badly hurt and taken to hospitals. About
8 o'clock the mob at the hoisting works
having dispersed the troops wero sent
back to their armories. A t Berea, tho
scene of the quarry men’s strike, threo
companies of militia were on duty Thurs­
day. No disorder was reported.
C l e v e l a n d , July 6.—Tho funeral of
W illiam Rettgor, who was killed by A.
Cr. Saunders, one of tho non-union em­
ployes of the Brown Hoisting company,
on Friday, took place Sunday afternoon.
A s a result of the manifesto issued by the
strike committee, inviting all workingmen to attend the funeral, 10,000 men
were in line. It was said the demonstra­
tion was the largest of Its nature in the
history of the state. The manifesto, which
was made public through tho press on
Friday afternoon, was an appeal to all
union men to attend the funeral, and
each man was asked to wear a white rib­
bon. Thousands of men responded, and
in each buttonhole and on each arm was
a tiny bow of white ribbon, relieved here
and there by a piece of crepe.
On each banner and flag was a whito
streamer. The formation of tho parade
was quiet. The silence was oppressive in
its intensity, and was relieved only at in­
tervals by the roll o f muffled drums. The
funeral was held at the Church of tho
Immaculate Conception in Superior
street, where Mgr. T. P . Thorp preached
tho sermon. Immense crowds blocked
the entrance to the church, and it was
only with great difficulty that the mar­
shals of the parade were able to make the
crowds give way for the remains to he
taken into tho edifice. W ithin there was
but little pomp or ceremony.
There was no music, no singing, save
the plain Latin ritual of the Catholic
ehurch. A fter tho usual prayers the priest
led the way down the aislo chanting the
Miserere. Father Thorp’s sermon was
conservative in tone and was a great dis­
appointment to those who had hoped for
n spark which would kindle the smolder­
ing sentiments o f the crowd into a blaze.
The fuuer.il procession from tho church to
Woodland cemetery was witnessed by
fully 60,000 people.
T h e Germ Theory*
What the world owes to Louis Pasteur
the w orld’s great vocabulary is incom­
petent to express. Through his re­
searches, and Ihoso o f the students who
have coma after him , the light has been
turned upon w bat has hitherto been to­
tal darkness. Doubt, experiments and
uncertainty have given way to precision
and accuracy iu diagnosis. As the farm­
er knows that the chinch bug is the
cause o f h is withered crops, so the phy­
sician knows that the bacillus o f certain
diseases brings about certain symptoms.
Tho microscope is the physician’s reli­
ance. A few drops of blood, a bit of
tissue, a little perspiration brought un»
der the oyo o f this magic assistant w ill
toll him at onco tlio causo and progress
o f (lie disease. And it is not alone the
physician w ho benefits by this knowl­
edge. Tho farmer, tbo vinoyardist, the
dairyman, (ho stock raiser, (ho cultiva­
tor o f tho silkworm aud tlio enthusiast
on bees are alike indebted to the dis­
coverer o f tho germ origiu o f disease
for inevitable aids in thoir business. A
necessity o f the near future is an im ­
provement in microscopes and their
cheapening, so that knowledge of germs
may bccomo moro widespread. Every
township should l.ttvo its bacteriologist
a u d its microscopic equipment. There
is n o study more intoresling, and nouo
that is so important to humanity.—
New Y ork Lot • n'__________
Sou nd a n d E le c tr ic ity .
A curious circumstance illustrating
the difference iu speed between sound,
which travols through tho air, and elec­
tricity, through wire as its guide and
conductor, occurred iii California. A cer­
tain powder works blew up iu a town
w hile a railway telegraph operator was
telegraphing to another in a neighbor­
ing town. A t tho iustaut of the occur­
rence he telegraphed tho news to the
operator, who, 60 seconds afterward,
heard tho report o f the explosion. He
knew i t had occurred by wiro just one
minnto before b e heard tho report.
Sound travels at about tbo rate o f 1,140
feet pier second, w hile electricity accom­
plished 1S6 ,000 m iles in the same short
period of time,
T h o u g h t o f I t H e r s e lf*
A friend of tho Sauntercr has a docidediy original little daughter. One
day the teacher discovered her in hand
to hand combat with a child of her own
age.
“ Don’t you know you are doing very
wrong?” said the toacher rebnkingly,
“ and that such evil actions are caused
by ibo promptings of tbo devil?”
“ W ell,” was her answer, ' ‘ maybe the
devil did tell mo to pull her hair, but I
thought of spilling iu her face all m y­
se lf.” — Boston Budget.
W h a t H o W anted.
In tho midst of a stormy discussion a
gentlemau r.iso to settle the matter in
dispute. Waving his hand majestically
he began, “ G- ntlemen, all I want is
common sente. ”
“ Exactly, ”
interrupted
another.
“ That is precisely what you do w ant.”
— Loudon Tit-Bits. _______
W liat JFourth o f J u ly Means.
I f th e Fourth o f .Inly means a n yth in g
in tho w o rld ’ s life aud thought, it m eans
liborty, in heren t right, in divid u a l privilogo, h um an progress— a h igher ideal Of
m anhood and governm ent. I t means g o v ­
ernm ent fo r the sako o f the governed and
governm ent b y tlio govern ed.— C hicago
Intor Ocoan.
Scrofula
Makes life m isery to thousands o f
people. It manifests itself in m any
different w ays, like goitre, swellings,
running sores, boils, salt rheum and
pitnples and other eruptions. Scarce­
ly a man is w h olly free from it, in
some form . It clings tenaciously until
the last vestige o f scrofulous poison is
eradicated b y H ood ’s Sarsaparilla, the
One T ru e Blood Purifier.
Thousands o f volu n tary, testimonials
toll o f suffering from scrofula, often
inherited and m ost tenacious, positivcly , perfectly and permanently cured b y
Sarsaparilla
Be sure to
Hood’s
Ilo o n ’s and only H oo d ’ s .
are the nest atter-dinner
i t la S pills, aid digestion. 25c.
—
TH E —
PINGREE
Mrs. Anna Gap, wife nf EiDeputy U. S, Marshal,
Columbus, Kan., says:
“ I w a s d e liv e r e d ,
Of TWINS iu
le s s t h a n 30 m in ­
u te s a u d w i t h
s c a r c e ly a n y p a in
a ft e r u s in g o n ly
t w o b o t t le s o f
“MOTHERS’
FRIEND’’
iV otn U.S.Journal o f iledtctnt
Prof. W . H. Peeke, who
makes a specialty of
Epilepsy, has without
doubt treated and cur­
ed more casts than any
I living Physician; his
I success is astonishing.
W e have heard of cases
o f so years’ standing
c u r e d by
h im . H o
i publishes a
Iv a lu a b le
[ w o r k on
th is d is ­
ease, which
ho sends
;W i t h
a
largo bot­
tle o f his absolute cure, free to any sufferers
who m ay send their P. O. and Express address.
W e advise any one wishing a euro to address
Prof.W. n . PEEKE, F, D., 4 Cedar St:, NewYork
D I D N O T ST TF F E R A F T E R W A R D .
ty S e n t by Express ormall, on receipt of price.
8 1 .0 0 p e r bottle. Book “ TO MOTHERS*1
mailed free.
ol
m
—
V
The modern stand-
u
ard Family Medi-
OS
CL k L C u r p o u S L
cine:
Cures
the
u
>
common every-day
M
ills of humanity.
TRADE
Z.
K C c L n iA jS
o
MARK
!j■
T hrough B uffet Sleeping: Car to
M ack inaw , M ich .
C H IC A G O , JU L Y 7T H ,
“ BIG FOUR ROUTE.” One lowest FirstClass Regular Fare for the round trip.
Tickets on sale July 3,4, 5 and 6 with return limit
until July lzth inclusive.
National Educational Association,
Commencing June 23d, the Vandalia Line will
inaugurate through Pullman Buffet Sleeping Car
service between St. Louis and Mackinaw. Sleep­
ers will run via Terre Haute, St. Joeepli, Grand
Rapids and Petoskey-Bay View. This will be the
only line of through cars from St. Louis to the
delightful and cool resorts of Michigan. Passeners for Charlevoix change sleepers at St. Joseph
y stepping from one car to another on the same
train. The through service will be continued
later this season, and the last sleeping car will
leave Mackinaw, Sunday night, September 27th,
1S96 For detailed information, address nearest
Vandalia Line Agent, or E . A. Ford, General Pas­
senger Agent, St. Louis
2t
§
“ BIG FOUR ROUTE.” One Fare for the
'Round Trip Plus $2.00 Membership Fee.
Tickets on sale July 5 and 6, good returning
until July 12th, with privilege o£ extension
until September 12.
Y. P. S. C.-E. Convention,
W A S H I N G T O N , J U L Y 7 -1 3 .
Tickets on sale July 4, 5, C and 7, good returning
until July Nth, with privilege ol extension
until July 3lBt.
B. Y . P .U . C O N V E N T I O N
M IL W A U K E E , J U L Y 16- 19,
“ BIG FOUR ROUTE.”
One Fare for
the Round Trip.
® * B I G F O U R R O U T E ._ g J
T ub P ovuiab R oots Between thb Michigan
Cities and all Southern P oints.
Trains carrying passengers leave Niles as
follows:
GOING NORTH
GOING SOUTH.
No. 22
1:22 p m
|No. 23
8:02 a m
N o. 24
5:45 p m |No. 25
1:57 a m
No. 2S*
8:02 a m
|No. 27»
0:57 p m
*The above train runs between Benton Harbor
and Elkhart only.
L . O. S u a e f e b , Agent,
Benton Harbor,
O scab G. M u r r a y , Traffic Manager,
Cincinnati, O.
D. At. Martin, G. P. A.,
Cincinnati, O.
O. S. B lackman , Trav. Pass. Agt.,
Anderson, Ind.
-SOLD BY-
J . B. R Y N E A R S O N ,
58 F r o n t S t .,
B u c h a n a n , M ic h .
-------- a l s o , -------
Pipe Pitting, Tubular W ell W ork,
Pumps, Hydrants, Etc.
The COAST U N b to MACKINAC
For Men, Women,
Boys and Cirls.
CLEVELAND
In all sizes, widths and styles; fine
and medium grades.
MACKINAC*
CAVEATS,
For information and free Handbook write to
M.TJNN & CO., 861 Broadway, N ew Y ork.
Oldest bureau for securing patents in America.
Every patent taken out by us is brought before
the public by a notice given free o f charge in the
The Pingree “ Neverslip’s Winter
Shoes for men, save wearing rub­
bers, do not heat the feet, prevent
dampness striking through soles,
and make walking in slippery places
comfortable and safe. Also used
extensively in Bicycle shoes.
J a e u t ific J U itm Q H
Largest circulation of any scientific paper In the
world. Splendidly illustrated. No intelligent
man should be without it,. Weekly, $ 3 . 0 0 a
year; $1.50 six months. Address, MUNN & CO..
P ublishers , 3 0 1 Broadway, New York City.
l i f e of
2 New Steel Passenger Steam ers
’
These goods are for sale by relfabl'e dealers in all cities and towns'in
Michigan and the West.
New York City,
Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria.
l
3HCCEItTiUmCOMPANY. TTWUBRAYSTBECT, NEWYORKCITY.
PREPARATIONS FOR
OF NOVEMBER 3 ARE ALREADY WELD UNDER W A Y .
A NEW
President of the United States
S TO BE ELE.GTED, AND THE
T H E N E W Y O R K W E E K L Y T R IB U N E ,
•will as always, be found in the thickest of the fight, bat­
tling vigorously for SOUND BU SINESS PR INCIPLES,
which will bring PR O SP E R IT Y TO T H E N A TIO N .
T H E N E W -Y O R K W E E K L Y TR IBU N E is not only the
leading Republican paper of the country, but is PRE-EM I­
N E N T L Y A N A T IO N A L F A M IL Y N E W SP A P E R .
Its campaign news ancl discussions will interest every
American citizen.
A ll the news o£ the day, Foreign Correspondence, Agri­
cultural Department, Market Reports, Short Stories complete
in each number, Comic Pictures, Fashion Plates with elaborate
descriptions, and a variety of items of household interest,
make up A N ID E A L F A M IL Y PA PE R .
W e furnish T H E ; B U C H A N A N
R E C O R D and
Y O R K W E E K L Y T R I B U N E (both papers),
NEW
ONE Y E A R FOR O N L Y $1.25,
C A S H IN A D V A N C E .
T H E B U C H A N A N RECORD.
V
NOTICE OF SALE 111 EQUITY.
BR O W N ’S CURE
R E L IA B L E .
E F F E C T IV E .
A positive remedy for Dyspepsia, Constipa­
tion, Indigestion and Loss of Appetite. By
its prompt and favorable action upon the
Stomach, Liver, Liver and Kidneys,
BROWN’S CURE strenghens and builds up
the Nervous System, thereby doing away
with Debility, and relieving all distress
arising from Insomnia and Nervousness.
N the Circeit Conrt o f the United States for the
Western District o f Michigan, Southern Divi­
sion. In Equity.
T h e M ic h ig a n T r u s t C o m p a n y , Complainant,
»*■
I
va.
H a t c h G gti .k r y C ompany- Defendant.
In pursuance and by virtue o f a decree oi said
Court made on the loarth day o f October, A D.
181)5, in the above entitled cause, I shall sell at
public auction to the highest bidder, on tfriday,
the seventh day ot August, 1S9G, at ten o'clock in
the forenoon of that day, at the front door of the
office o f the defendant, the Hatch Cutlery Com­
wonderful power, one that will restore pany. in the village o f Buchanan, in the County
o f Berrien, in the State o f Michigan, in said
them to comfortable health and strength.
Southern Division of the Western District o f Mich­
Price 75 cents per bottle, at druggists, igan, the following described real estate and
property
lying nnd being in the County o f Berrien
or sent on receipt of price.
and State of Michigan, aud known and described
The Thomas-Brown Pharmacy Co., Chicago.
as the real estate described as lot six and the east
half o f lot five in John Hamilton’ s original plat
jan.30me
o f the village o f Buchanan, and also beginning at
the northwest corner of said lot six, running
thence north sixty-four and one-balf feet; thence
M O RTGAGE S A L E .
east two hundred and thirty-six feet; thence south
sixtyfonr and one-balf feet; thence west two
. First publication April 30,1896.
hundred and thirty-six feet to the place o f begin­
EFAULT has been made in tlie payment o f a ning: also commencing one hundred and forty
certain mortgage made by Leonard J. .Mer­ feet east o f the southwest corner of lot one, in
chant and Caroline E. Merchant to Margaret L. .Ed­ John Hamilton's addition to snch tillage, running
wards, dated June 27,18S7, and recorded in the thence north one hundred and ninety-eight feet;
office o f the Register of Deeds for Berrien county, thence cast fifty-eight feet; thence south’seven tyMichigan, on June 29th, 1887, in Liber 39 o f Mort­ tbree feet; thence west thirty-five and one-half
gages, on page 614, which mortgage was, on Octo­ Jcet: thence eonth one hundred and twenty-five
ber 26, 1887, duly assigned by the said Margaret L. feet; thence west twenty-two and one-hair feet to
Edwards to Newton vanderveer, since deceased, the place o f beginning, excepting one hundred
by assignment bearing that date and recorded in and thirty-two leet o f the south end o f said last
said Bcgister’s office on April 27, 1896, in Liber above described parcel; and all right, title and
59 o f mortgages, at page 592, on which mortgage interest in and to the property described as be­
there is claimed to be due at this date the enm of ginning two hundred feet from the southeast cor­
two thousand one hundred and seventeen dollars ner o f the abutment adjoining the south end of
and thirty-Beven cents, and no suit or proceedings the dam formerly owned by the Bncbanan Power
at law having heen instituted to recover the and Electric Company, situate on the St Joseph
moneys secured by said mortgage or any part river in the village o f Buchanan, connty o f Berrien
thereof, and the undersigned Earing been duty and State o f Michigan; thence west titty feet;
appointed Administratrix o f the estate o f said thence south two hundred feet: thence east fifty
Hewton Vanderveer; now therefore, by virtue o f feet; thence north to the place o f beginning; and
the power o f sale contained in said mortgage, the all right, title and interest in aud to a volume
premises described in said mortgage os lots one o f water o f three hundred horse power capacity;
two and three, block sixty-eight, in Hoyt's second and all right, title and interest in and to a certain
addition to the village, now city, o f St. Joseph, agreement, executed by the Buchanan Power and
Berrien Connty, Michigan, will be sold at public Electric Company in iavor o f the Hatch Cutlery
auction to the highest bidder, at the lront door of Company, wherein said Buchanan Power and
the Court House in in the city o f St. Joseph, in Electric Company agrees to generate for seven
said county, on Monday, the 27lh day of July, years to and for the Hatch Cutlery Company free
1896, at ten o'clock A. M., to satiety the amount o f cost, an electric current of three hundred horse
due on said mortgage and all legal costs, fees and power, us set out and described in the instrument
duly recorded in the Register's office o f Berrien
chargee.
County, on the JOth day o f August, A- D; 1894, on
JDated April 28,1896.
pages 50G-508, in liber 7. And all right, title and
J a n e IE. V a n D e r V e e u ,
Administratrix o f the estate o f .Newton Vander- interest in and to the bnildiDgsand improvements
upon the property hereinbefore described, and all
vecr, deceased.
C harles N . Sears , Attorney for Administratrix. right, title and interest in the office fixtures, ma­
chinery, motots, electric generators, electric
Last publication July 23,1S96.
wires, and all other electric machinery and iampB
o f whutever kind and nature. Ail tools and mer­
chandise now owned or possessed by said Hatch
Cutlery Company, or wbicb may at any time here­
after during the life ot said mortgage or o f the
decree in this cause be owned or possessed by it,
and situate at or in the factory, yards or place o f
business o f said corporation at Buchanan, Mich­
. SPECIFICS ape scientifically igan, or upon any lands which are or may be held
or
owned by said Hatch Cutlery Company and
p re p a r e d R e m e d ie s ; have situate
at Buchanan aforesaid.
Also nil other property o f the several kinds and
been used for half a century
descriptions above designated ol which said
w ith entire success.
Hatch Cutlery Company may be or become pos­
sessed during the life of said instrument or of
so.
SPECIFIC FOB
said
decree.
X—Fevers, Congestions, Inflammations.
The property sold will cover and inclnde any
Worm s, WormFever, Worm Colic...
and all additions which have been made by the
3 —Teething, Colic»Crying,Wakefulness
corporation, the Hatch Cutlery Company, or by
4.—Diarrhea, o f Children or Adults......
the Receiver appointed under the order o f said
7—Coughs, Colds, Bronchitis.................
Court o f April I9th, 1895, or which may have been
made or may be made by the Receiver continued
ti—Ncuraigia, Toothache, Faceache.....
under the terms o f said decree, to the properties
9 —Headaches, Sick Headache, Yertigo.
10 —
Dyspepsia, Biliousness, Constipationhereinbefore described or any part thereof, in­
cluding all substituted and after acquired property
11—Suppressed or Painful Periods....
o f the several kinds and descriptions above desig­
1 2 —W hites, Too Profuse Periods............
nated or any o f them, or which may be procured
1 3 —Croup, Laryngitis, Hoarseness.....
to replace said properties or any o f them.
1 4 —Salt Rlicum* Erysipelas, Eruptions.
The Court has ordered and decreed in and by its
1 3 —Rheumatism, or Rheumatic Pains..
said decree that the premises and properly there­
XG—Malaria, Chills, Fever and Ague......
in described and bereby advertised to be sold
1 9 —Catarrh, Influenza, Cold In theHead
shall first be offeredJfor sale as an entirety, but
the Master is authorized to offer the stock o f m er­
2 0 —W hooping Cough,................ .
chandise
as one parcel, the machinery, tools and
f Y —K idney D iseases,............................
fixtures as another parcel and the lands with the
2 8 —Nervous D ebility............................
buildings thereon and the water power and priv­
3 0 —Urinary W eak n ess,........................
ileges appurtenant thereto as a third parcel, or t o
3X—Sore Throaty Quinsy,Diphtheria...*
offer the mortgaged premises and property in
two or more parcels, in such manner, as the com­
plainant trustee may think a fit mode in which to '
obtain the highest possible price. And the Master
is empowered to strike off to the purchasers th c
SoM by Druggists, or sent prepaid on receipt o f price,
mortgaged premises and property in two or more
25c., or 5 for $1., (may be assorted), except 28, $1. site only.
in case it is found that more is bid fo r
DtHuMPuaKYS’ Manual(Enlarged&RoviBed)MAiLEDFRKK parcels
them in that manner than when exposed ns one
XnmPJIURYS* 21ED. C O . , H I St 1 1 0 William S t.,S o w York.
parcel.
Dated at Grand Rapids, Michigan, June 19lb,
THOS. 5 . SPRAOUB £ SOI*
1S96.
Attorneys and Solicitors o f Pat­
JOHN S. LAWRENCE,
ents, United States and foreign.
Master in Chancery.
Correspondence solicited. Instxac­
W eak W om en S S T S T S
■i
“7 7 ” for G R IP.
tion Prmpblet tree. 3 7 WRST
, c o n g r e s s s t r e e t , D ETR OIT
MICH, tstablisbed 1863.
B utterfield & K e e n e t .
Solicitors for Complainant.
Graham & Morton Transportation Go.
The Greatest Perfection y e t attained in Boat
Construction — Luxurious Equipment, Artistic
Furnishing. Decoration and Elficlent Service,
insuring the highest degree o f
CGriFORT. SPEED
AND SA F E TY .
Toledo, Detroit # Mackinac
Four T h.hs
per
W eek BErwEEN
PETOSKEY. “ THE SOO." MARQUETTE,
AND DJLUTH.
LOW RATES t o Picturesque Mackinac and
Return, including Heals a * t Berths. From
Cleveland. $ 18; from Toledo, $ 15 ; from Detroit,
M cK in
ley
EVERY EVENING
Between Detroit and Cleveland
_ Connecting at Clevel.in \ w tth.Karliest Trains
for all points B 1st. South and Southwest and. at
Detroit for all points North aiid NQrtliwesL ;
Sunday Trips Jumt July^August and September f nly.
And HOBART, Bepnblican candidates fo r Presi­
dent and Vice President, by ROBT. P. PORTER,
. .EVERY DAY BETWEEN
the noted journalist, present editor of the, Cleve­
land World , aud intimate friend o f MnTCTTJr.TaV Cleveland, Putdn=Bay # Toledo
for twenty years. Absolutely the only authentic Send for Illustrated Pam phlet. Address
XiIFE OF McKINLEY published. For more than
A. A . SCHANTZi
p. j^DETROIT, MICH.
two years in preparation,, and the only work that
has received the endorsement o f MAJ. McKIN­
!&
LEY and his most intimate friends. No book
equal to it as a seller. ‘ Everybody wants the book
published at McKinley's home. Porter’s book
sells at sight. Readers will accept no other: A
gold mine for live, active workers. Our agents
are clearing ftpm $XO to $20 a day.* Chance for
thousands o f others to do, as well. This, is the
opportunity of your life. The highest commis­
sion paid. , ORDER OUTFIT NOyY, S e n d e e , . A gents Wanted: to sell the Life and Speeches of"
[stamps taken] as an evidence o f good faith,
McKinley, with Proceedings of St. Louis Conven­
which amount will be refunded with agent’s first tion, Platform of Party and other valuable infor­
order, if it is only for one book, making OUTFIT
mation. 320pagee,with20fullpage‘illuBtrations.
FREE. .Books on ’ time. Charges prepaid, leav­ Price, cloth. $1.00; half morocco,* $1.50. Sixty
ing profits *clear. Act 'quick, or while yon are P er (Jejlt. Discount to Agents. \ Send'80 cents :io r
waiting-others will cut jrou o^t.
'ProBpfefctuB taud“fffll particulars, and go tonvork
**T H E N. ^ H A m L T d N PUB." CO.,
; at»ohce« •Y6u can. sell 200 copies imyonr town.
Address 3V*S. Ogilvie Publishing' Company,* 67
2765 The Arcade, Cleveland, 0 .
Rose Street, Hew York.
June25t8
William McKinley.
B a n k G row th.
Carlos M artyn , D . D.,
$13-50.
AGENTS WANTED ™J20
They are made by securely insert­
ing a piece of especially prepared
rubber in, but not through, the out­
er sole by the McKay Patent Process.
“ T he use o f Castoria is so universal and
its merits so w ell known, that it seems a
w ork o f supererogation to endorse it . Pew
are the intelligent families w ho do not keep
Castoria w ithin easy reach.”
HUMPHREYS’
A SHOE W IT H A RECORD.
_ tr a d e m arks ,
Desicn p a t e n t s ,
COPYRIGHTS, etc.
“ For several years I have recommended
Castoria, and shall always continue to do
so as it has invariably produced beneficial
results.”
B dwin B. P ardee , M. D.,
225th Street and ?th Avenue,
Hew York City.
Write your name and address on a postal card, send it to Geo. W. Best, Tribune
Building, New York City, and a sample copy of THE NEW YORK WEEKLY
TRIBUNE will be mailed to you.
R-I-P-A-N-S
O.
U
Democratic. National Convention
“ Castorla is so w e ll adapted to children
C a storla destroys worms, allays feverish­
ness, cures diarrhoea and wind colic, relieves that I recommend it as superior to a n y pre­
scription know n to m e.”
teething troubles, and cures constipation.
H . A . A rcher , M. D.,
C a storla contains no paregoric, morphine,
i i i So. Oxford Str., Brooklyn, N. V.
o r opium in any form.
Address all orders to
Cfi
. f a ^ r O ^ ^ f a
V
BBADFIELD REGULATOR C O., ATLANTA, GA.
S O L D B Y A L L D R U G G IS T S .
Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago and
St. Louis Railway,
Lord Esher, who, when president of
the court o f appeal, used to keep up a
rn nn ingfireof “ chaff” on learned coun­
sel, sometimes g o t a Roland fo r his Oli­
ver— as when a young barrister, in the
course of argument, stated that no rea­
sonable person could doubt one particnlar proposition.
“ But I doubt it very m uch,” said the
judge.
The youthful advocate, not one whit
abashed, replied, “ I said n o reasonable
person, m y lord. ”
The master o f the rolls could only
gasp, “ Proceed, sir; proceed 1” — Liver­
pool Mercury.
r-
F . J. C H E N EY & CO.. Toledo. O.
r g ’-Snld by all druggists, 75c.
H all’s F am ily P ills are the best.
Tickets on sale July 14 to 16, good returning
on July 20, 21 and 22, with privilege of
extension until August 5th,
A B o la n d F o r I lls O liver.
ton Star.
There is m ore catarrh in this section
o f the country than all other diseases
put together, and until the last few
years was supposed to be incurable.
F or a great m any years doctors pro­
nounced it a local disease, and pre­
scribed local remedies, and by con­
stantly failin g to cure with local treat­
ment, pronounced it incurable. Sci­
ence has proven catarrh to he a consti­
tutional disease, and th erefore requires
constitutional treatm ent. H all’s Ca­
tarrh Cur , m anufactured by F . .T.
Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the only
constitional remedy on the market. It
is taken internally in doses from ten
drops to a teaspoon fill. It acts direct­
ly upon the blood and mucous surfaces
o f the -ystein. They offer one hun­
dred dollars fo r any case it fails to cure.
Send fo r circulars and testimonials.
Address,
“ BIG FOUR ROUTE.”
One Fare for
the Round Trip.
Ashley of Boston, whose case against E.
J. (Lucky) Baldwin, a prominent capital­
ist and horseman, for seduction under
promise of marriage has been on trial in
tho superior court here for several weeks,
created a sensation in the court room
Thursday morning by walking over to
Baldwin, drawing a revolver and firing at
his head. Bystanders knocked the wea­
pon aside in time to rave Baldwin's life
and the only injury was a slight grazing
of the soalp. The woman was removed to
the city prison and it is believed her mind
is unbalanced.________________
The fond Washington mother has
found a new sim ile for her developing
youngster. She no longer likens him to
a weed or a mushroom, bnt declares,
with pardonable pride, that he is„
“ grow ing like a gas b ill.” — Washing­
“ As if a brick were lying in my stom­
ach.” is the discription by a dyspeptic of
after eating.
This is one o f the commonest symptoms
o f indigestion. I f you have if, take Shaker
Digestive Cordial.
Not only this symptom, but all the symp­
toms of indigestion are cured by Shaker
Digestive Cordial.
So many medicines to cure this one dis­
order. Only one that can be called suc­
cessful, because only one that acts in a
simple, natural, and yet scientific way,
Shaker Digestive Cordial.
Purely vegetable, and containing no dan­
gerous ingredients, Shaker Digestive Cor­
dial tones up, strengthens, and restores to
health all the digestive organs.
Sold by druggists, price 10 cents to §1.00
a bottle.
A D jg glu g Pish.
The digging fish is a native of the
lakes aud rivers of central Africa.
When the dry season approaches, it bur­
rows iu the mud at the bottom of its
residence to the depth o f two or three ’
feet, goes tr, sleep and awaits the return
of the wet season.— Chicago Chronicle.
Prepared only by C. L Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass.
T r ie d to K i l l L u c k y B a ld w in .
A l l th e V o w e l I n O ne W o r d .
struck by Gericault when he sent his
‘R aft o f the Medusa” to tho Salon o f
1819. Gros, indeed, had in some o f his
Napoleonic pictures shown an inclina­
tion to
natural passion, but had
not pursued it far, so this picture o f
Gericanlt’s really marks a turning point
in Fronch art. Tbo intenso feeling em ­
bodied in it forms a wonderful fo il to
tho iinpassiveness c f D avid’s “ Sabine
W omen,” which hangs in the same
room in tho Louvre, There also reap­
pears in it the omptional element of
chiaroscuro, which had been almost
banished by tho classic school, and the
color Etiikes a chord in complete Sym­
pathy with the tragedy of "the situation.
The whole in ciden t' is w ell conceived;
tho elements of nature, the w ild heaving
of tho sea, the lowering sky, w ith its
bright rifts, are attuned to the mingled
despair aud liopo of the forlorn creatures
on the raft.
A few years later Delacroix exhibited
bis first picture, and the battle between
romanticism aud those in authority be­
gan in grim earnest. One can easily
imagiao tho consternation, the. angry
wrangling, the wordy War, which the
nppcr.ranco c f this picture stirred. The
passion of the color and the drama o f the
light and shade, the vigorous and suggestivo drawing and the fu ll yet fluent
impasto were new and startling to
painters trained in a school where a con­
vention of form and a certain restricted
range o f emotion and subject were en­
forced. The classic movement inaugu­
rated by David aud continued by Ingres
purged French art of the vapid triviali­
ties in which it had sank and set up
higher ideal, but it was at the expense
of liberty, in whose sacred name it
claimed tho right to reign. I t was
against tho cold formalism o f this school
that the m en o f 1830 had to contend.—
Blackwood’s Magazine.
A n innovation that is -worthy o f m u ch consideration is the determination o f j
farmers‘and land leasers In eastern Col­
orado and western Kansas to go into the ;
breeding business. They have discovered ■
that that country, because o f its dryness,
isn o t adapted to general farming. Kaffir
corn and sorghum, however, can' be ;
raised to good advantage, and these two
staples are -very desirable.as feed for
stock. A n influx of breeding cows has
therefore begun and. the chief industry
o f that country w ill hereafter be raising
cattle. These cows are brought from
New Mexico, Arizona and western Col­
orado, says the Denver Field aud Farm.
B U F F A L O , J U L Y 7- 11,
SAN F r a n cisco , July 2.— Miss Lillian
There are bnt six words in the E ng­
lish language which contain a ll the vow ­
els in regular order— viz, abstemious,
arsenious, aneuious, facetious, materious
and tragedious. There is but one word
which contains them in regular reverse
order and that word is dnoiiteral.
Besides the above thero are 149 Eng­
lish words which contain a ll the vowels
in irregular order. Twelve o f these b e­
gin w ith the letter a ; 7 w ith b, 23 with
c, 16 w ith d, 14 w ith o, 4 with f, 7 with
g> 1 with li, 6 with i, 3 w ith j, 3 with
m , 3 with n, 2 with o, 13 w ith p, 1
w ith q, 5 with r, 9 with s, 2 w ith t, 15
w ith n and 6 with v . — St. Lonis R e­
public.
A W o r th y ln n o v a tio n .
A F ren ch A r t D eparture.
The first note of sincere dissent was
2
T W IC E D A I L Y
S T E A M E R S TO C H IC A G O .
Connecting w ith the Vandalia Railway at St. Joseph and with
C. C. C. & W . S. R . R . at Benton Harbor.
BeginningMav 25th and continuing until about Sept. 30th the steamers o f this line w ill make two
tripB each way dally between Benton Harbor, St. Joseph and Chicago, on the following schedule:
Leave St. Joseph at 4:30 P . M. and 10:30 P . M., daily including Sunday. Leave Chicago at 9:30 A.
M. and II :30 P.-M. daily, including Sunday. Extra trips on Saturday leave St. Joseph at 8 A . M. and
leave Chicago at 2 P. M. Running time across lake, four hours.
The eqiupinent of this line includes the side wheel steamers "C ily o f Chicago” and “ City o f Mil­
waukee,” (the largest and finest west of Detroit), and the newly rebuilt propeller “ City o f Louisville.”
ServIcSfirst-class. '.Connections with all Big Four andYandalla trains.. Tickets on sale at all stations
Chicago dock, foot of Wabash Ave.
J. H, GRAHAM; Pres,, Benton Harbor, Mich.