PINCKNEY DISPATCH. -...

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PINCKNEY DISPATCH. VOL. Ill PINCKNEY, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, JULY IG, 1885. NO. 27 SB PINCKNEY DISPATCH. J. LNEWKIRK, PUBLISHER. IHQID THUBBDATH. SnbMription Price, $1.00 per Year, ADVERTISING RATES . rrindent advertisements, 26 conte per inch for Ant insertion and ten cents per inch for each subse- quent Insertion. Local notices, 5 cents per line for each Insertion. Special rates for regulsrsdwrtiae- menta by theyear or quarter. ALL ADVERTISING BILLS DUE QUARTERLY. This paper may be found on file at Geo. I*. BowtTl T C'o'e. Newspaper Advertising Bureau Otlpruce St..) where advertising contracts may '*• made for It in New York. INTERESTING TOPICS. Light weight Gloves and Mittens cheap, at * LAKIN & OYKrar. " f^prdance with oar rulee, the papor will be (libera- RAILROAD CARD. Grand Trunk Railway Time Table. MICH. AIB LINE DIVISION. GOING EAST. STATIONS. GOING WEST. P. X 4:60 ^m-frm 3:60 2:40 2:00 8:05 7:20 6:40 6:10 5:40 5:20 4:4!S 4:25 8:40 8:00 7:35 7 :05 tt:a5 6:10 !A. M. V. K . l P . M. 10:20 9:40 9:15 8:55 8:40 8:25 8:10 7:80 RlOOEWAV ! H:&>" -• Armada 10:001 Romeo j 10:30. ! Rochester ill:*: \ dPfPontiac{-:^| 2 J Wironi J 6:05 3:00; d. V— ( a. 6:40, V So. Lyon- A. M. 3.--¾) 1 a. jd. 7:30! i Hamburg, I 8:0(): 3:401 PINCKNEY j n:40, 3:.¾i Mount Ferrier ! ^:15. 4:10| Stockbridge I 9 :.'3.51 -1:25( Henrietta, '• 10:05 J JACKSON 10:45: SKHI 5:55 6:15 6::¾) 7:05 7:30 All trains run by '"sentral standard" time. All trains run daily, Sundays excepted. W.J. SPICEK, JOSEPH HICKSON, Superintendent. General Manager. BUSINESS CARDS. T H HOAG, M. D., ' (T10M(EOPATHIC.) PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Office at residence on East Main street. T\ M. GREENE, M. D., PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, PLAINFIELD, MICHIGAN. Office at residence. Special attention given to surgery and diseases of the throat and luni»s. TAMES MAHKEY, NOTARY PUBLIC And insurance Agent. Leeal pajyers made on •hort notice and reasonable term*. Ollico on Main St., near Postofflce Pinckney, Mich. RIMES & JOHNSON, Proprietors of G PINCKNEY FLOURING AND CUS- TOM MILLS, Dealers in Flour and Feed. Cash paid for all kinds of grain. Pinckney, Michigan. VLT V. VAN WINKLE, ATTORNEY & COUNSELOR at LAW and SOLICITOR in CHANCEKY- Office over Slgler's Drug .Store. PINCKNEY T\ D. BENNETT, PAINTER AND PAPER HANGER. All work in this line executed with neatness and dispatch. T>ANGS & KIRKLA.NT), ATTORNEYS, 830 OPERA HOUSE BLOCK, CHICAGO, attend carefully to business sent them from other places. PINCKMY EXCHANGE BANK G. W. TEEPLE, • •^BANKER,^ Does a General Banking Business. Money Loaned on Approved Notes.— Deposits received. Certificates issued on time deposits, And payable on- demand. COLLECTIONS A SPECIALTY. FARMERS, buy your Binding Wire and Twine of JAS. T. EAMAN & Co., Anderson, Mich. • CARPENTERING AND JOINERING.— Those wishing anything done in this line will do well to call on 26w4. JOHN SMITH. REWARD. A reward of $25 will be paid, and full protection guaranteed, to any person who will furnish information that will lead to the conviction of the person or persons who committed the recent out- rages upon the church property and cemetery in this vicinity. By order of Protective League, of Unadilla. "Hated, July 7, 1885. TRESPASS NOTICE. All persons are hereby forbid tres- passing in my huckleberry swamp and- piekingberries-- there from after—this date. . LEWIS LOVE. Dated, Pinckney, July 2, 1885. WAIT FOR CATHCART—The photo- grapher. He will be in Pinckney soon with his car, and make you pic- tures satisfactory and reasonable. Any quantity of huckleberries want- ed at Anderson Station for cash or trade. 27tf. J A S . T . EAMAN & Co. CATHCAR7, THE PHOTOGRAHHER—in- tends coming here soon. If you want some good pictures taken wait for him and he will give you satisfaction. I have let my huckleberry swamp to Mrs. Thomas Carrol, and all persons are forbidden to pick berries without her consent. MRS. O. W. HAZE. "ABERDEEN ANGUS GRADES.—The Pol- led Aberdeen bull, "The Don" at the Scotch Stock Farm, will serve a limit- ed number of cows at not less than §5 per cow, cash. Apply early to 23tf. W M . COLLIE, Herdsman. I have "on hand some first class cider vinegar which I will sell cheap. In- quire at Pettysville cider mill. 24w3. S. M. COOKE. PETTYS\7LLE\MILLP. —Having repair- ed my mills 1 am now ready to do first class work. Flour, as good as any brand on hand, we?-also keep feed for PUBLISHER'S NOTCE. jyThose receiving their papers with a red X over this paragraph," w\\\ please notice that their subscription expires with next number. A blue X signifies that the time has expired, and that, in ac- tio tied until subscription is renewed. HOME NEWS. 3^: Warm days. Very dull times. Nice fishing weather. Oat harvest is nearly here. Very good ice cream weather. Where are our base ball players? Nearly time for squirrel hunting. The M. E. parsonage has received a coat of paint. H. O. Barnard is in Brighton this week on business. El Mahdi, the Egyptian prophet, is reported to be dead. sal sale. 24w5 S. A. PKTTYS. James Marker, of this place, has se- cured the agency of the Allan Line of Steamers He is also agent for the celebrated Jones Scales. Farmers, call at Markey's and see the new Climax light MOWER, tor which he is agent. It is a model of beauty and perfection. •The HERO to the front again for 1885. Farmers, look to your interest and get the Hero Reaper and save your grain and clover seed, a reaper that you can depend upon in all kinds and conditions of grmn. Don't be deceived by buying a poor, cheap ma- chine because you can get it at a low price. The Hero is sold on its merits, any good farmer can have one on trial. I keep a few here in stock, also a full line of repairs always on hand. I also sell the Hoosier Grain Drills which are Xv OUR PRODUCE MARKET. > CORRECTED WEEKLY DY Jnly 18,1885. TOMPKINSdbtSWON Wheat, No. 1 white $ ,86 " No.2white, -. K> No. 2 red 90 No.Sred, H5 Oats , Corn i '<« Barley, 1 00®l 50 Beaniy. 7ft@i 00 Dried Apples 03® .00 Potatoes, ; ..... „, .25 Butter,, ,rf.„„. 10 BM»,.\ —'. 10 Dressed OJiickens ,«-.. 12 Clover Seed,..., (¾ 4.50 Bresaseri Pork 5.00 WANTED. Wheat, Beans and Clover Seed, hiffhftst prices paid. Tompkins & lsmon. acknowledged to be the best drill made. I have corn and field Cultivators for one or two horses, shovel plows and horse hoes and plow repairs io»' var- ious plows. I am also agent for the J. I. Case celebrated threshing ma- chir^s and steam nnrrlnes. JAS. MARKEY, General Agent. 22tf Pinckn?y, Mich. 'THAT HACKING COUGH can be so quickly cured by .Shiloh's Cure. We ~gu~arafilee~it: WILL YOU SUFFER with Dys- pepsia and Liver Complaint? Shiloh's Vitalizer is guaranteed to cure you: SLEEPLESS N IGHTS, made miser- able by that terrible cough. Shiloh's Cure is the remedy for vou. CATARRH CURED, health and sweet breath secured, by Shiloh's Ca- tarrh Remedy. Price 50 cents. Nasal Injector free. For lame back, side or. chest, use Shiloh's Porous Plaster. Price 25 cts. t SHILOH'S COUGH and Consump- tion Cure is sofcLhyus on a guarantee. It cures consumption. SHILOH'S VITALIZE!! is what you need for constipation, loss of appe- tite, dizziness, and all symptoms of dypepsia. Price 10 and 75 cents per bottle. CROUP, WHOOPING COUGH and bronctiitis immediately relieved by Shiloh's Cure. For sale by H. F. Si^lei & Bio. Will Harris, living on Dexter street, has painted his house. G. A. Richards returned to Grand Rapids Saturday last. Thomas Conklin called on his- two* sons in Jackson last week. Mr. and Mrs. J. Clark visited Stock- bridge friends ovei Sunday. Miss Carrie Dailey, of Detroit, visit- ed her parents ;»ear this place last week. Mrs. Royce, of Hamburg village, is a guest of EL A. Mann's family this week. Messrs. L. F. an4 M. A. Rose, ot Bay City, were in town a few days last week. Mr. M. H. Melvin, of Detroit, visited his brother Martin, near this place first of the week. Miss Millie Tucker, of Howell, is visiting her sister, Mrs. Ed. Parker, in tnis place. Sirs. Geo. W. Crofoot, of Howell, is visiting her mother, Mrs. Sophia Webb, near this place. Miss Amelia Loch, of Brighton, is the guest of her friend, Miss Julia Barnard this week. Mrs. Estella Graham, of Detroit, is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. Green, of this place. Good harvest weather, and the far- mers irn improving ^n t'lH" fiathpr-' ing in the sheaves of wheat. Mrs. Jennie Curtis and little daugh- ter, of Lansing, are visiting their aunt, Mrs. C. F. LaRue this week. Miss Madison, who has been visit- ing friends here returned to her home at Wixom first of the week. Mr. and Mrs. Spears, of Howell, are spending a few days this week visiting their son John, in this place, A party of fishers consisting cf ladies visited Silver Lake Wednesday last and reported a good time. Fred Parker, conductor on the rail- road at East Saginaw, visited his wife at this place first of the week. The'Milford/ri'me-'s has changed its- form to a 6-column quarto, and. is otherwise very much inproved in looks. The musical entertainment on our streets with the banjo and mouth or- gan Friday ftyftrnrglast was very good. « Miss Clella Stocken. of West Branch, will visit friends and relatives in Pinckney and vicinity for several weeks. Road master Lenon has fi\ed up Stewart and Webster streets in fine shape with Waldon's combined road builder. Mann Bros, have built a salt rack on the west side of their store and have a quantity of salt displayed thereon. Mr. Ed. C. Brown and family, of Sheldon, Iowa, visited Mrs. Brown's parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Kearney last week. The other night James Bogan, of Genoa, had a social hop in bis n e * barn. About 30 couples enjoyed a goodtime., : - Mr. and Mrs. John Jackson called on their sons in Uaadilla the first of this week. A cheap excursion over the M. A. L. railroad to Detroit, including a ride on the river, will be .given early in Au- gust. One hundred three-year-old weath- ers of A. Buck, of Hamburg, sheared 920 pounds, and the clip was sold for 24 cents straight. W. R. Bigham, formerly of the South Lyon Excelsion, will work in the Stock- bridge Sun office, and has moved his family to that place-. M*iss Minnie Westfall, Mis3 Floy Haire and Mrs. E. S. Clark, o-f Stock- bridge, are here taking rousic lessons of Prof. L. A. Tuttle. Master Willie and Benn-ie Page, of Ann Arbor, who have been visiting Emil Brown for a few days, reku-ned to their home Tuesday last. Mrs. Parker and son Ruel and Mr. Pennington, of Vermont, are visiting Mrs. J. D. Benaett and family. They will remain for several weeks. Bert Wassoo and family, Kitsie Doty and Mrs. A. G. Weston, of Una- dilla, are enjoying a vacation camping on the banks of Orchard Lake. Mr. and Mrs. T. G. Beebe started Tuesday morning for Wheatfield, where Mr. Beebe will help his brother- in-law, Chas. Frost harvest his wheat. Mr. Thos. Read has built an addi- tion to the west end of his elevator to store lime and plaster in; he is a'so having tbe elevator lettered, ft. E. Finch is doing the work. Mr. L. H. Beebe returned Tuesday from a visit among friends and rela- -fcives in Fowlerville and Dansvilte. Mrs. Beebe, who accompanied biro will remain with their son at Fowlerville for a short time. The.. Ladie's Mite Society, of St- Stephens' church, Hamburg, will meet on Saturday July, I8jth. tor a social and the annual election of officers at Hon.' E. B. Winans. The election will be held at 4 p. ii\ Ira Cook, of South Lyon, was in town Tuesday last and talks <>f buying the barber business of John Yancy. j Ira is a good barber, and a fine young mrm, therefore we would like to have him come and live with us. Quite a number from this village attended the game of ball at How- ell Tuesday between the Howell team and the Hiawathas of Detroit. The game was not very clo^e, the score being 19 and 12 in favor of the Hia- wathas club. W. B. Doff, our enterprising boot and shoe merchant will close out his stock by Sept. 1, 1SS5, at cost. Now is the time for people to get their sup- ply of boots and shoes at greatly re- duced prices. Read his advertisement on last page, it will interest you. James Markey, Esq., of this place, started Tuesday morning tor Sandus- ky, Ohio, to see the New Hero Self- binder work in wheat. This machine is manufactured by the Saadusky ma- chine .and agricultural works, for which he is State Agent. There will be a Pionotsa meeting oi- this County held at Howell, on Thurs- day, August 27th, 18S,\ Jerome Tur- ner, of Owosso, will deliver the ad- dress. All are invited to attend this meeting as it will be one of interest. Program will be issued next week. The following is the program for Normal Music School at public school house in this place: 1» Harmony and thorough bass class at 2 p. M. 2. Piano and organ class at 8 p. M. 3. Class in voice culture at 4:30 p. M. 4. Guitar class at 6:30 P. M. 5W Notation and reading class at 8 p. a. The following ought to be observed in tbis village: "Three- cases of cholera reported in Toledo, which is getting it pretty near home. Qur health officer shoufdsee that our village is kept well cleansed, and every citizmn should do all in his power to aid biui xn his work/V-South Lyon Picket. Miss Frank ie Bards, of this place, who has been teaching school at Una- dilla for the-past three months, closed! it oe Friday last with appropriate ex- ercises. This is the third term Miss. Burch has taught in that district and she i^yery much liked by her pupils and the people of that vicinity. The installation of officers of the I.. 0. 0. F., of Plainfield Lodge, No. 40,. took place last Saturday evening. Following the installation was a boun- tiful ice cream treat. The occasion- was one of tbe most pleasant in the history of the lodge. This lodge is in excellent condition, and with its newly- elected N. Gt., B . Bueb, Esq., its pros- pects are-bright. Here is a hint for farmers. I<ast- fall a man at Clyde, N. Y., had a n u m - ber of stumps which he wished to re- move. He bored holes m them, insert- ed saltpeter, filled* \*p. wiih water, and then plugged : tha Knl^a. AbOnt a month ago- he took out tbe- plugs, pour- ed-in kerosene oil amd set fire. To©; stwmpe have smouldered away with-. out Mazing, and now there is nothing left but ashes*—Caro Advertiser. There is said to be one lavyyer in . heaven. How he got there is not pos- ; itively known, but it is conjectured- that he passedhimself off for an editor and slipped in unexpected. When his. dodge was discovered they searched. the realms of felicity in all their length and breadth for another lawyer to- draw the papers for his ejectment, but they couldn't find one and of course he held the fort.—Ex^ Prof. L. A. Tuttte. assisted by Miss Ida E. Tuttle, gave a corucert-at the M. \ E. church on Monday evening last to- a fair siaed. audience^ This concert was for tbe purpose- of organizing. classes in vocal and instrumental mus- ic including piano, organ, violin, vi- oloncello, guitar, banjo, musical no- tation, theory, harmony,.chorus prac- tice and voice culture. After the con- cert be explained his method of teach- ings the classes and announced that he- would have a meeting at the school house on Tuesday evening, (which he did) to see if he could organize a class^ in either of the branclues, and by tak- ing the names of those who wished to- join found that he could get enough; for two or three branches, and proceed- ed with the- school at once. Prof. Tut- tle is a graduate of the New York Normal Academy ot Music, and hav- ing been a teacher fdr the past twenty-five years, ought to give satis- faction to his pupils. A PREACHER I> LUCK. A trained preacher becomes some- . w T hai instinctive, and is both a setter and a pointer. He can sit in his buggy and point strait to ap ice cream social, a birthday party or to a wedding with small intimation to the affairs. But my piece is about being in, luck. Last Saturday,-the 11th inst., was-Mrs. My- % roaWasson's sixty-fifth birthday, the- old gentleman had prepared a surprise for his wife, and vvhen Samw and Mit."~ with their excellent wives, bringing- choice viands came abotiit 4 p. M. the old lady began to '^rn^ll the rat." About this time of day I left my homo in TTnnrUnn ""<* maffa Awry fnrn jn the road strait to that table fall of eat* . ables, and not the least intimation of the affair had I received. But blood will teii. Said the old gentleman "I am glad you cams, it is the eld lady's. birthday and we are having a nice little time." I fotwdi that all true. l\ think Sam. and Mit. CA* eat more ica cream than any two men in Plainfield/ Just as we sit down to the table My- ron (that's tbe old gent) brought out a., beautiful silver caster, that he had , k^pt hid, and set it on the table saying "there, naotbcMS your birthday pres- ent, bow (io you like|itr "Why fath- er, that's just what I wanted, it is splendid," said grand-ma Wasson, A new bright spot was made in the lives of father and mother Wasson which, they will not* forget. It was a pleas- j ant occasion, and I was all there ju.f t as though I had been invited» 'H* ...J b ..X " « . ,. \ \ >. ^1.1^,-., 1 ^ wrtftf ; . vr ...^.'i^.Ci.-

Transcript of PINCKNEY DISPATCH. -...

Page 1: PINCKNEY DISPATCH. - pinckneylocalhistory.orgpinckneylocalhistory.org/Dispatch/1885-07-16.pdfpinckney dispatch. vol. ill pinckney, michigan, thursday, july ig, 1885. no. 27 sb pinckney

PINCKNEY DISPATCH. VOL. Ill PINCKNEY, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, JULY IG, 1885. NO. 27

S B

PINCKNEY DISPATCH. J. L N E W K I R K , PUBLISHER.

IHQID THUBBDATH.

SnbMription Price, $1.00 per Year,

ADVERTISING RATES .

rrindent advertisements, 26 conte per inch for Ant insertion and ten cents per inch for each subse­quent Insertion. Local notices, 5 cents per line for each Insertion. Special rates for regulsrsdwrtiae-menta by theyear or quarter.

ALL ADVERTISING BILLS DUE QUARTERLY.

This paper may be found on file at Geo. I*. BowtTl T C'o'e. Newspaper Advertising Bureau Ot lpruce St..) where advertising contracts may

' * • made for It in New York.

INTERESTING TOPICS.

Light weight Gloves and Mittens c h e a p , a t * L A K I N & OYKrar. " f^prdance with oar rulee, the papor will be (libera-

RAILROAD CARD.

Grand Trunk Railway Time Table.

MICH. AIB LINE DIVISION.

GOING EAST. STATIONS. GOING WEST.

P. X 4:60 ^m-frm 3:60 2:40

2:00 8:05 7:20 6:40

6:10 5:40 5:20 4:4!S 4:25 8:40 8:00

7:35

7:05 tt:a5

6:10

!A. M. V. K . l P . M.

10:20 9:40

9:15

8:55 8:40 8:25 8:10

7:80

RlOOEWAV ! H:&>" -• Armada 10:001

Romeo j 10:30. ! Rochester i l l :*: \

d P f P o n t i a c { - : ^ | 2 J Wironi J 6:05 3:00;

d. V— ( a. 6:40, V So. Lyon- A. M. 3.--¾)1

a. jd. 7:30! i Hamburg, I 8:0(): 3:401

PINCKNEY j n:40, 3:.¾i Mount Ferrier ! ^:15. 4:10|

Stockbridge I 9 :.'3.51 -1:25( Henrietta, '• 10:05 J JACKSON 10:45: SKHI

5:55 6:15 6::¾) 7:05

7:30

All trains run by '"sentral standard" time. All trains run daily, Sundays excepted.

W.J . SPICEK, JOSEPH HICKSON, Superintendent. General Manager.

BUSINESS CARDS.

T H HOAG, M. D.,

' (T10M(EOPATHIC.)

PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Office at residence on East Main street.

T\ M. GREENE, M. D.,

PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, PLAINFIELD, MICHIGAN.

Office at residence. Special attention given to surgery and diseases of the throat and luni»s.

TAMES MAHKEY,

NOTARY PUBLIC And insurance Agent. Leeal pajyers made on •hort notice and reasonable term*. Ollico on Main St., near Postofflce Pinckney, Mich.

RIMES & JOHNSON, Proprietors of G

PINCKNEY FLOURING AND CUS­TOM MILLS,

Dealers in Flour and Feed. Cash paid for all kinds of grain. Pinckney, Michigan.

VLT V. VAN WINKLE,

ATTORNEY & COUNSELOR at LAW and SOLICITOR in CHANCEKY-

Office over Slgler's Drug .Store. PINCKNEY

T \ D. BENNETT,

PAINTER AND PAPER HANGER. All work in this line executed with neatness

and dispatch.

T>ANGS & KIRKLA.NT),

ATTORNEYS, 8 3 0 O P E R A H O U S E BLOCK, CHICAGO, attend

carefully to business sent them from other places.

PINCKMY EXCHANGE BANK

G. W. TEEPLE, • •^BANKER,^

Does a General Banking Business.

Money Loaned on Approved Notes.—

Deposits received. Certificates issued on time deposits,

And payable on- demand.

COLLECTIONS A SPECIALTY.

FARMERS, buy your Binding Wire and Twine of

JAS. T. EAMAN & Co., Anderson, Mich. •

CARPENTERING AND JOINERING.— Those wishing anything done in this line will do well to call on

26w4. JOHN SMITH.

REWARD. A reward of $25 will be paid, and full

protection guaranteed, to any person who will furnish information that will lead to the conviction of the person or persons who committed the recent out­rages upon the church property and cemetery in this vicinity. By order of Protective League, of Unadilla. "Hated, July 7, 1885.

TRESPASS NOTICE. All persons are hereby forbid tres­

passing in my huckleberry swamp and-piekingberries-- there from after—this date. . LEWIS LOVE.

Dated, Pinckney, July 2, 1885.

WAIT FOR CATHCART—The photo­grapher. He will be in Pinckney soon with his car, and make you pic­tures satisfactory and reasonable.

Any quantity of huckleberries want­ed at Anderson Station for cash or trade.

27tf. J A S . T . EAMAN & Co.

CATHCAR7, THE PHOTOGRAHHER—in­tends coming here soon. If you want some good pictures taken wait for him and he will give you satisfaction.

I have let my huckleberry swamp to Mrs. Thomas Carrol, and all persons are forbidden to pick berries without her consent. MRS. O. W. HAZE.

"ABERDEEN ANGUS GRADES.—The Pol­led Aberdeen bull, "The Don" at the Scotch Stock Farm, will serve a limit­ed number of cows at not less than §5 per cow, cash. Apply early to

23tf. WM. COLLIE, Herdsman.

I have "on hand some first class cider vinegar which I will sell cheap. In­quire at Pettysville cider mill.

24w3. S. M. COOKE.

PETTYS\7LLE\MILLP. —Having repair­ed my mills 1 am now ready to do first class work. Flour, as good as any brand on hand, we?-also keep feed for

PUBLISHER'S NOTCE. j y T h o s e receiving their papers with a red

X over this paragraph," w\\\ please notice that their subscription expires with next number. A blue X signifies that the time has expired, and that, in ac­

tio tied until subscription is renewed.

HOME NEWS. 3^:

Warm days.

Very dull times.

Nice fishing weather.

Oat harvest is nearly here.

Very good ice cream weather.

Where are our base ball players?

Nearly time for squirrel hunting.

The M. E. parsonage has received a coat of paint.

H. O. Barnard is in Brighton this week on business.

El Mahdi, the Egyptian prophet, is reported to be dead.

sal sale. 24w5 S. A. PKTTYS.

James Marker, of this place, has se­cured the agency of the Allan Line of Steamers He is also agent for the celebrated Jones Scales.

Farmers, call at Markey's and see the new Climax light MOWER, tor which he is agent. It is a model of beauty and perfection.

•The HERO to the front again for 1885. Farmers, look to your interest and get the Hero Reaper and save your grain and clover seed, a reaper that you can depend upon in all kinds and conditions of grmn. Don't be deceived by buying a poor, cheap ma­chine because you can get it at a low price. The Hero is sold on its merits, any good farmer can have one on trial. I keep a few here in stock, also a full line of repairs always on hand. I also sell the Hoosier Grain Drills which are

Xv OUR PRODUCE MARKET.

>

CORRECTED WEEKLY DY

Jnly 18,1885. TOMPKINSdbtSWON

Wheat, No. 1 white $ ,86 " No.2white , - . K>

No. 2 red 90 N o . S r e d , H5

Oats , .¾ Corn i '<« Barley, 1 00®l 50 Beaniy. 7ft@i 00 Dried Apples 03® .00 Potatoes, ;.....„, .25 Butter,, ,rf.„„. 10 B M » , . \ • — ' . 10 Dressed OJiickens ,«-.. 12 Clover Seed, . . . , (¾ 4.50 Bresaseri Pork 5.00

WANTED. Wheat, Beans and Clover Seed,

hiffhftst prices paid. Tompkins & lsmon.

acknowledged to be the best drill made. I have corn and field Cultivators for one or two horses, shovel plows and horse hoes and plow repairs io»' var­ious plows. I am also agent for the J. I. Case celebrated threshing ma-chir^s and steam nnrrlnes.

JAS. MARKEY, General Agent. 22tf Pinckn?y, Mich.

'THAT HACKING COUGH can be so quickly cured by .Shiloh's Cure. We

~gu~arafilee~it: —

WILL YOU SUFFER with Dys­pepsia and Liver Complaint? Shiloh's Vitalizer is guaranteed to cure you:

SLEEPLESS N IGHTS, made miser-able by that terrible cough. Shiloh's Cure is the remedy for vou.

CATARRH CURED, health and sweet breath secured, by Shiloh's Ca­tarrh Remedy. Price 50 cents. Nasal Injector free.

For lame back, side or. chest, use Shiloh's Porous Plaster. Price 25 cts.

t SHILOH'S COUGH and Consump­tion Cure is sofcLhyus on a guarantee. It cures consumption.

SHILOH'S VITALIZE!! is what you need for constipation, loss of appe­tite, dizziness, and all symptoms of dypepsia. Price 10 and 75 cents per bottle.

CROUP, WHOOPING COUGH and bronctiitis immediately relieved by Shiloh's Cure.

For sale by H. F. Si^lei & Bio. —

Will Harris, living on Dexter street, has painted his house.

G. A. Richards returned to Grand Rapids Saturday last.

Thomas Conklin called on his- two* sons in Jackson last week.

Mr. and Mrs. J. Clark visited Stock-bridge friends ovei Sunday.

Miss Carrie Dailey, of Detroit, visit­ed her parents ;»ear this place last week.

Mrs. Royce, of Hamburg village, is a guest of EL A. Mann's family this week.

Messrs. L. F . an4 M. A. Rose, ot Bay City, were in town a few days last week.

Mr. M. H. Melvin, of Detroit, visited his brother Martin, near this place first of the week.

Miss Millie Tucker, of Howell, is visiting her sister, Mrs. Ed. Parker, in tnis place.

Sirs. Geo. W. Crofoot, of Howell, is visiting her mother, Mrs. Sophia Webb, near this place.

Miss Amelia Loch, of Brighton, is the guest of her friend, Miss Julia Barnard this week.

Mrs. Estella Graham, of Detroit, is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. Green, of this place.

Good harvest weather, and the far­

mers irn improving ^ n t'lH" fiathpr-'

ing in the sheaves of wheat.

Mrs. Jennie Curtis and little daugh­ter, of Lansing, are visiting their aunt, Mrs. C. F. LaRue this week.

Miss Madison, who has been visit­ing friends here returned to her home at Wixom first of the week.

Mr. and Mrs. Spears, of Howell, are spending a few days this week visiting their son John, in this place,

A party of fishers consisting cf ladies visited Silver Lake Wednesday last and reported a good time.

Fred Parker, conductor on the rail­road at East Saginaw, visited his wife at this place first of the week.

The'Milford/ri'me-'s has changed its-form to a 6-column quarto, and. is otherwise very much inproved in looks.

The musical entertainment on our streets with the banjo and mouth or-gan Friday ftyftrnrglast w a s very

good. «

Miss Clella Stocken. of West Branch, will visit friends and relatives in Pinckney and vicinity for several weeks.

Road master Lenon has fi\ed up Stewart and Webster streets in fine shape with Waldon's combined road builder.

Mann Bros, have built a salt rack on the west side of their store and have a quantity of salt displayed thereon.

Mr. Ed. C. Brown and family, of Sheldon, Iowa, visited Mrs. Brown's parents, Mr. and Mrs. J . M. Kearney last week.

The other night James Bogan, of Genoa, had a social hop in bis n e * barn. About 30 couples enjoyed a goodtime., : -

Mr. and Mrs. John Jackson called on their sons in Uaadilla the first of this week.

A cheap excursion over the M. A. L. railroad to Detroit, including a ride on the river, will be .given early in Au­gust.

One hundred three-year-old weath­ers of A. Buck, of Hamburg, sheared 920 pounds, and the clip was sold for 24 cents straight.

W. R. Bigham, formerly of the South Lyon Excelsion, will work in the Stock-bridge Sun office, and has moved his family to that place-.

M*iss Minnie Westfall, Mis3 Floy Haire and Mrs. E. S. Clark, o-f Stock-bridge, are here taking rousic lessons of Prof. L. A. Tuttle.

Master Willie and Benn-ie Page, of Ann Arbor, who have been visiting Emil Brown for a few days, reku-ned to their home Tuesday last.

Mrs. Parker and son Ruel and Mr. Pennington, of Vermont, are visiting Mrs. J . D. Benaett and family. They will remain for several weeks.

Bert Wassoo and family, Kitsie Doty and Mrs. A. G. Weston, of Una­dilla, are enjoying a vacation camping on the banks of Orchard Lake.

Mr. and Mrs. T. G. Beebe started Tuesday morning for Wheatfield, where Mr. Beebe will help his brother-in-law, Chas. Frost harvest his wheat.

Mr. Thos. Read has built an addi­tion to the west end of his elevator to store lime and plaster in; he is a'so having tbe elevator lettered, ft. E. Finch is doing the work.

Mr. L. H. Beebe returned Tuesday from a visit among friends and rela-

-fcives in Fowlerville and Dansvilte. Mrs. Beebe, who accompanied biro will remain with their son at Fowlerville for a short time.

The.. Ladie's Mite • Society, of St-Stephens' church, Hamburg, will meet on Saturday July, I8jth. tor a social and the annual election of officers at Hon.' E. B. Winans. The election will be held at 4 p. ii\

Ira Cook, of South Lyon, was in town Tuesday last and talks <>f buying the barber business of John Yancy.

j Ira is a good barber, and a fine young mrm, therefore we would like to have him come and live with us.

Quite a number from this village attended the game of ball at How­ell Tuesday between the Howell team and the Hiawathas of Detroit. The game was not very clo^e, the score being 19 and 12 in favor of the Hia­wathas club.

W. B. Doff, our enterprising boot and shoe merchant will close out his stock by Sept. 1, 1SS5, at cost. Now is the time for people to get their sup­ply of boots and shoes at greatly re­duced prices. Read his advertisement on last page, it will interest you.

James Markey, Esq., of this place, started Tuesday morning tor Sandus­ky, Ohio, to see the New Hero Self-binder work in wheat. This machine is manufactured by the Saadusky ma­chine .and agricultural works, for which he is State Agent.

There will be a Pionotsa meeting oi-this County held at Howell, on Thurs­day, August 27th, 18S,\ Jerome Tur­ner, of Owosso, will deliver the ad­dress. All are invited to attend this meeting as it will be one of interest. Program will be issued next week.

The following is the program for Normal Music School at public school house in this place: 1» Harmony and thorough bass class at 2 p . M. 2. Piano and organ class at 8 p. M. 3. Class in voice culture at 4:30 p. M. 4. Guitar class at 6:30 P. M. 5W Notation and reading class at 8 p. a.

The following ought to be observed in tbis village: "Three- cases of cholera reported in Toledo, which is getting it pretty near home. Qur health officer shoufdsee that our village is kept well cleansed, and every citizmn should do all in his power to aid biui xn his work/V-South Lyon Picket.

Miss Frank ie Bards, of this place, who has been teaching school at Una­dilla for the-past three months, closed! it oe Friday last with appropriate ex­ercises. This is the third term Miss. Burch has taught in that district and she i^yery much liked by her pupils and the people of that vicinity.

The installation of officers of the I.. 0. 0. F., of Plainfield Lodge, No. 40,. took place last Saturday evening. Following the installation was a boun­tiful ice cream treat. The occasion-was one of tbe most pleasant in the history of the lodge. This lodge is in excellent condition, and with its newly-elected N. Gt., B . Bueb, Esq., its pros­pects are-bright.

Here is a hint for farmers. I<ast-fall a man at Clyde, N. Y., had a n u m ­ber of stumps which he wished to re­move. He bored holes m them, insert­ed saltpeter, filled* \*p. wiih water, and then plugged : tha Knl^a. AbOnt a month ago- he took out tbe- plugs, pour­ed-in kerosene oil amd set fire. To©; stwmpe have smouldered away with-. out Mazing, and now there is nothing left but ashes*—Caro Advertiser.

There is said to be one lavyyer in . heaven. How he got there is not pos- ;

itively known, but it is conjectured-that he passedhimself off for an editor and slipped in unexpected. When his. dodge was discovered they searched. the realms of felicity in all their length and breadth for another lawyer to-draw the papers for his ejectment, but they couldn't find one and of course he held the fort.—Ex^ •

Prof. L. A. Tuttte. assisted by Miss Ida E. Tuttle, gave a corucert-at the M. \ E. church on Monday evening last to-a fair siaed. audience^ This concert was for tbe purpose- of organizing. classes in vocal and instrumental mus­ic including piano, organ, violin, vi­oloncello, guitar, banjo, musical no­tation, theory, harmony,.chorus prac­tice and voice culture. After the con­cert be explained his method of teach­ings the classes and announced that he-would have a meeting at the school house on Tuesday evening, (which he did) to see if he could organize a class^ in either of the branclues, and by tak­ing the names of those who wished to-join found that he could get enough; for two or three branches, and proceed­ed with the- school at once. Prof. Tut­tle is a graduate of the New York Normal Academy ot Music, and hav­ing been a teacher fdr the past twenty-five years, ought to give satis­faction to his pupils.

A PREACHER I> LUCK. A trained preacher becomes some- .

wThai instinctive, and is both a setter and a pointer. He can sit in his buggy and point strait to ap ice cream social, a birthday party or to a wedding with small intimation to the affairs. But my piece is about being in, luck. Last Saturday,-the 11th inst., was-Mrs. My- %

roaWasson's sixty-fifth birthday, the-old gentleman had prepared a surprise for his wife, and vvhen Samw and Mit."~ with their excellent wives, bringing-choice viands came abotiit 4 p. M. the old lady began to '^rn^ll the rat." About this time of day I left my homo

in TTnnrUnn " " < * maffa A w r y f n r n j n

the road strait to that table fall of eat* . ables, and not the least intimation of the affair had I received. But blood will teii. Said the old gentleman "I am glad you cams, it is the eld lady's. birthday and we are having a nice little time." I fotwdi that all true. l\ think Sam. and Mit. CA* eat more ica cream than any two men in Plainfield/ Just as we sit down to the table My­ron (that's tbe old gent) brought out a., beautiful silver caster, that he had , k^pt hid, and set it on the table saying "there, naotbcMS your birthday pres­ent, bow (io you l ike | i t r "Why fath­er, that's just what I wanted, it is splendid," said grand-ma Wasson, A new bright spot was made in the lives of father and mother Wasson which, they will not* forget. I t was a pleas- j ant occasion, and I was all there ju.f t as though I had been invited» 'H*

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Page 2: PINCKNEY DISPATCH. - pinckneylocalhistory.orgpinckneylocalhistory.org/Dispatch/1885-07-16.pdfpinckney dispatch. vol. ill pinckney, michigan, thursday, july ig, 1885. no. 27 sb pinckney

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TO CORRESPONDENTS.

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J. I

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All communication* forthti nupcriUoultl be accom­panied by the nime or the nuilior. not «e*ieMtry foi Sbllcatfon, )mt •« »n rvldenec of icood faith on the

rl of the writer. Wrlio mny on one tide of the per. Be particularly CRP-IUI about ftvluf namet

anil d t t eh io have (lie lei "n nud tlRurn plain and 4iitlnct. Proper name* in1 i>r;nu difficult to decipher •ecauae of the careleu maimer ID which the/ art written.

AROUND A GttEAT STATE. A Michigan Cyclone.

A cyclone struck the southwest portion of Allegan township al»>ut midnightJufy 9, doing damage tha t will aggregate ft'SJJOO. Hannibal Har t loses a barn 'worth $1,000, and cattle, t imber and grain worth ¢200 mor*. The Thompsou brothers ' barn was unmdfed, 40 acres of wheat toru uii utnl their orchaid badly hurt , damage $500. The Semon brothers lose 30 acres of fine t i tular and fruit trees, to the amount of |1,0J0. George .fewett loses 35 acres of timber, worth ¢1,200. and Win. Knapp loses 100 fruit trees, worth 11.0 JO. The course of the cyclone was from southwest to north­east and it lasted several minutes. The de­struction was absolutely complete wherever it touched. Besides the above detailed estimates, numerous others lose small numbers of fruit trees and timtMjr, and wheat Is in many in­stances completely 'ruined. No person was injured and no residences damagctt, a.* far as kcard from. ^ - J **^^

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The Mill Men's Strike.

The strike of mill men in the Saginaw Valley-Is assuming serious form. Both the Saginaw's and Bay City arc now in possession of the strikers. The strikers went from Hay City to the Saginaws and compelled the mills in both placcs'to shut down. Mill men In the Sagi-naws were generally satislied with the hours of work, and there" were no Indications of a s t r ike until the Bay City strikers incited them.

In the main the strikers are generally order­ly, but one or two cases of violence having oc-•curred, and those were quickly suppressed.

The manufacturers show no disposition to yield to the strikers, and on the other hand, t h e str ikers are generally determined.

Representative Barry is acting as the leader of the strikers.

M I N 0 B STATE HAPPENINGS.

Charles Kicfer is erecting a Hillsdale.

$20,000 hotel in

&S4.343 barrels of

struck to have 10

There will be 83 agricultural college grad­ua t e s this year.

Gov. Swineford of Alaska, sails for Sitka about August 1st.

T. C. Phillips, a prominent politician of the 10th district, is dead.

During J u n e there were sa l t inspected in Michigan.

Bay City mill men have. hour s lixed as a,day's work.

The Ninth Michigan infantry will have a re­u n i o n a tFowle r vilie, "Aug. 12."

Isle Royalc is suggested as a suitable place for the upper peninsula prison.

Albert Jennings was killed by a falling rock iff Uie-Quiney mine near Marquette.

Fires in Alpena township. Al]>ena county, have partially destroyed the hay crop.

A human skeleton was found buried near t he Flint school building Wednesday.

Benton Harbor and St Joseph shipped- 31,-500 bushels of strawbcrries'in one week.

The Jackson paper company has again com­menced operation, employing thirty hands.

Fowler Bros. ' saw mill in Marion township, near SagiDaw City, was burned recently. Loss

• 18,000. The street railway connecting St; Joseph

and Bentou Harbor will be completed by Augus t 15.

Rev. P. V. Smith of Nebraska has just given $10,000 to Hillsdale college for the endowment o t a chair therein.

Jos. Hal Ion of Jackson died rct^ntly, aged 80 years. Mr. Hullon hud been a resident of

-Michigan since 1S42. The tenth Michigan state camp meeting takes

place at Petoskey July 21 to Aug. 9. Special railroad rates to 'a t tendants .

John lliggins, an industrious young--fellow of Clinton, was disappointed in love, and took the Paris green route to glory* | Mrs. E. Blcomtield of Decrfield, Lenawee county, has 2, COO .silk cocoons and has met with splendid success in silk-production.

.Collector Bancroft of Port Huron, has dis­covered a law which comp.ds him to refuse of­fice to any person who has passed HOth his year.

Prof. Harrower of the state agricultural col­lege, has resigned the chair of pjlitical econo­my. He will continue his studies in Germany.

Heirs of the late Mr. and Mrs. Smith of De­troit, who were killed by tlui cars a short time ago, have brought suit "against thu company fo r $10,000.

A $5,000 monument is to be erected in the central portion of the viliage of Petoskey to the memory of the great chief whose name the town bears*

July 1 there were "78fl prisoners a t Jackson Dur ing June 29 prisoners were received; 14 were discharged; 1 died, and uo one escaped •as far as reported.

Rev. Dr. Samuel Graves of Grand Rapids, lias accepted the presidency of the Atlanta theological scminarv, uad will enter upon the work early iu the fall.

E. A. Ainsworth, charged with writing ob-cceuc l i t e r s to a Charlotte lady, has been held lor triiit at the .September term of the U, S. *ourt at Grand Rapids. .

••"WtrlhmvAndruss died-in Jonesville-reeentlv, aged SO sears. Mr. Anuruss moved into Jack­son county in 18-Ji', and resided there almost continuously until his death.

Evidence against Sam Lightncr was not s t rong enough to hold him for the murder of Eliza Sage, whose deivl body was found near Alice an! The mystery deepens.

George Hendrir, e. Texas cuttle drover, while a t tempt ing to board-a si.' >t.'\ truln on the Michi­gan Central road near Jackson, fell under the •cars and was horribly mangled. He will die.

§Geo. Wat t s of Ionia dropped'a lighted match into an empty \vh:?ky banvl. The barrel ex­ploded and bitw Watt* across the to..in nearly killing him and blew out the glass front of the sa.'ooii.

Will Copeland, a young unmarried man of, Flint was, buried in"a water works trench in wb ;eh he was at work. Efforts were made to rescue him, but life was extinct when he was reached

Prof. F . *A. Barbour, for several vears su­per in tendent of public schools in Coldwater has been appointed to the chair of English l i terature at the state normal, vice Prof. Theo­dore Nelson.

The St. Clair post-office was burglarized of $35 worth of stnmps a few nights ago. The thieves came from Canada. AS they were leav­ing the postofllce, they shot at uud wounded the "watchman.

Thompsctt , a farmer at Cannonsherg, while celebrating the Fourth had a leg-blown off bc-low the knee by the premature discharge of a small cannon, the ramrod passing through i t I t was amputated.

Notwiths t indlng the ex'sting depression in the labor m-.u k t ' tl e ollicials'at the Jackson prhon 'announce that they have the labor of 100 convict- which they will let to the high­est and l>est bidder for cash.

The helrsof Louis DeTruef of Grand Raptda, win, wns*killed bv a l)etri>ft. Grand Haven <fe

I i ed their claim aaraln-t the company, accenting ¢3,500. The heirs sued for $1M.00J.

Collector George \V. J)avis of Grand Rapids has appointed as two of his deputies Jas . S. Trult of Niles a democrat and a fanner, Bud G. Major Tabor of Ionia, formerly clerk »1 the prison and a Greenback Vusionlst.

Harry Stone of Howell, reported as having died at"Chicago of heart disease, actually met) his death from an overdose of morphine, the drug being taken to allay severe pain. Young Stone's remains were buried at Howell.

Frank 1). Lambert, an old and respected citizen of Sault Ste. Marie, died suddenly the other alternoon. He was formerly assistant superintendent of the old canal, under Capt. Gordon. The doctors pronounce the cause of his death --.heart disease. He was u master mason. '

"If any man Is discontented with Michigan let him compare her crop prospects with those of other states and be happy. A trip through central and southern Michigan will convince the most fastidious that there Is no more pro ductive s ta te in the Union."—Uta/ui liapida Denuyra'.

The body of a young man named Fields was found on the Chicago «V Grand Trunk railroad near Imlay City tlie other morning. The re­mains were badly mutilated, several train* hav­ing passed over him dur ng the n i g h t Postal cards were found indicating that he had rela­tions in Armada, Mich., and Litchfield, Ont.

Ex-Congressman Houseman of Grand Rapids, has b.;cu eon,missioned by Secretary Manning to present two gold and one silver medal to Daniel ¥. Miller. P. H. Daly and David Miller, for braverv in rescuing the crew of the H. C. Aekelcy, in'November 1883. The gold medals contain $48 worth of 'metal each,

Messrs. C. W. Richardson, F. W. Gilchrist. W. H. Johnson and Thomas Collins of Alpena have recently purchased ii large amount of pine land In the Georgia Bay region, Canada. The amount repor ted"paid ' for said land Is 1185,000. It is the intention to bring the pine to the Alpena city mills and there manufacture ft into lumber.

Hillsdale is excited over the determination of the Lake Shore & Michigan Southern rail­road to close-up the walk extending direct from the city to the depot and to College hill. It has been used as a publ h* w a Ik more than thirty years. Cars arc left standing across the walk", compelling a long and circuitous route. The final outcome is yet uncertain.

Harrv Stone of Howell suicided in Chicago a few days agd. Young Stone was a dry goods clerk while in Howell, and had recently taken the agency of a sugar house. Ill luck in the new posit.on made him despondent, and is the supposed cause of his suicide. His father is a respected citizen of Howell, to which place the young man ' s remains were taken lor inter m e n t SlHon. W. Wco'.nough of the Battle Creek Daily Moon office, a ' journalist there for 40 years, celebrated his tvlth birthday July 10. when he was -presented by the employes of the Moon office with a handsome caster, replying in an eloquent speech. The day before he set 7,000 cms of type for the paper", corrected the proofs,aud tkeu wrote over two columns of edi­torial.

Obed Hl 'nde rwood , | aged 12, of Allegan, was drowned the o th t r evening, and his body was recovered the next morning, after an all night search. He and his little brother were playing in the logs, when Ids brother fell into •the'mi'll race. Obed attempted to save blm, but became exhausted and went down. The ITttlc fellow was rescued by a teamster named Libbie.

Ex-Collector of Internal Revenue Stone of Detroit bus in his posses ion the original wtH--nance order ng the . transfer ot .. certain funds In the New Orleans mint to " the govern­ment of the Confederate states of America.' ' The document was signed M irch 7. H H . It was found in the archives of the Confederacy after New Orleans had been taken. It ac­counts for the -reported shortage of funds in the New Orleans mint.

At the annual meeting of the state press as­sociation the following ollicers were elected: A. J. Aldrich presid ut. Frank Moore, O. W. Rrtllni and Jessie Murvner vice-presidents, J. W. Fitzgerald,secretary. Robert Smith treas­urer. TAic next annual meeting will be held at Coldwater. Memorial badges will be presented by the editors to Perry Hannah, of Hannah, Lav A: Co.. Traverse City, and officials of the Grand Hnp'ds & Indiana railroad.

A terrible hail storm passed over a section of country in the'vicinity of Sand Beach three or four miles, wide " by 10 long, going over the lake at Port Hope. Great damage re­sulted to s tanding crops, and even the lives Of* men and animals were endangered. The hail­stones which were from one to four inches In diameter* beat out windows on the west side and otherwise damaged buildings. From a dis­tance the storm-cloud looked like a cyclone.

A man aged about 50 vears supposed to be named McLean and to reside in Grand Haven, was taken ill a few mornings since in a house of prostitution just, outside of Big Rapids, ami diet} in much pain two hours later. But $S in money was found on his person, while it is said that before he entered the house he had a much larger sum. Nettie Golden and "Jim, Crow," two inmates are in jail. The stomach of the dead man was removed, and will be submitted to a chemist for examination.

The cooper shop and warehouse attached, connected with L. B. Johnson *fc'"0o.'s stave factory, in Coldwater, Mas burned the other afternoon, together with all the contents. Loss on budding, stock and tools probably $3,000, with onlv nominal insurance. The cause wits a defective chimney. Truman Ciunda l l and Fred. Millard, firemen, were crushed by a fall-, ing ehirowy and injured seriously, Crandall 's spine and head beiiisr'hurt, and .Millard's head and arm and m h t leg badly bruised.

Asa Weaver, a fanner of Byron township Kent county, has commenced proceedings in. the circuit court against Susana F.. his wife, for bigamy. In i s : s lie was adjtidcre.l insane and sent to Kalami/.oo, but returned two years ago and lived on a farm. In his absence his wife became enamored of Timothy Riley, a young farmer, and last month marrif-i- him. Su-'fiha and Asa were married over tlrirty vears and lived happy until insanity, cause") by a fractured skull received in a tight, separ-aicd them.

done ana it would ne t, p r i o n s oiow to the city. The principal reason for not closing down "is the great cost which It would necessarily en­tail. The mining outlook is far from a pleas­ant one" and many of the mining men think that the worst has not vet been seen , .

itfiiwiiukw train last winter, have comproiaia-.

The remains of a man were discovered lvina in a thicket mntrlhc--errek ami—a-Uuut. threV rods from the track of the Chicago i\:. West Michigan railroad in Big Ra; i i s . From ap-pcaruntvs the body bad lain th - re . several months and had been dvag<red into tne place of concealment by the coat collar. Th:' skull had been crushed and the pants pockets were inside o u t The pants and vest were of- l ight ma­terial and the coat a little darker. A pair of shoes were on the feet. But little more than ttoncs remained. The man was probably of about medium he igh t No one is able to Iden­tity the remains-

Jennie Beemrui, a >oung woman of Kalama­zoo, took oil of tansy with, it was supposed, suicidal intent, a few days ago. The next day she gave birth to a child—a girl, weight eight pounds. The room presented a sight of wretchedness, for *he had lain there for days in labor, and the agony she must have suffered, being unable to'move off her bed/ Is horrible to thirjt of. * I t is said l u r groans were heard the day before, but no one offered relief or gaye any notice of the poor-girl. She has worked in prfvate houses and restaurants, and is the vic­tim of seduction and debauchery. The case has caused great excitement.

The West Repnblic mine, near Ishpemlng, has retired from the list of active producers, throwing lOO men out of employment There is some -Idea upon the part of the management of cloein; down the Lake Superior mine also It I* the largest iron mine in the world, and In

* More S taU- l roops .

f l i e l e g i s l a t u r e h a v i n g a u t h o r i z e d t h e e^j'sting, organizing, equipping and mustering of six additional infantry companies for the state service, to be located at the following ro lp t s : The company raised by Sylvester C. !£ov aud associates at Menominee; the com­pany raised by Daniel Aleumback and assoei atea a t Muskegon; the company raised by Mart G. Borgman and associates at Detroit ; the compauy raised by John E. Tyrrell and as­sociates at Jackson; the company raised by Joseph P. Babcock and associates at Grand Rapids; the company raised by Edward A. Corbiuaud associates at Houghton.

They have been accepted by the governor. The ollicers in charge of these orgauization8

will, when their respective companies are ready for muster, report to Iblj;,-Geu. J . H. Kidd, Iuspcctor-Geueral at Ionia, who will, without delay, muster them into the service of the state.

The companies at Muskegon and Jackson are assigned t o t h e First Regiment. The com­pany at Grand Rapids is assigned to the- Second Regiment The companies at Menominee and Houghton are assigned to the Third Regi­m e n t The formation of the Fourth Regi­ment at Detroit, under General Order No. 24, December 23, 1^84, having been adjudged il­legal, Is set aside, aud it has been organized as follows:

The First Batallion, stationed at Detroit, and Companies D (Capt. Adam Rupp) and F (Capt. Joseph H. Manning), First Regiment stationed respectively at Monroe and Ypsilan-tl, and when mustered into service the com­panies raised by Mart. G. Borgman, at Detroit, are assigned to the First Batallion, which is designated as the Fourth Regiment.

Commanders of companies assigned will re­port for duty to their respective regimental commanders ; those of the First to Col. D. II, McComas, at Lansing; those of the Second to Col. J. 1). Sumner, at Kalamazoo; those of ihe-Thlrd to Col. C. S. Brown, at Flint, and those of the Four th to the regimental commander at Detroit.

DETROIT MARKETS.

W H E A T — T h e market is exciting and active, at the following quotat ions: White—cash 93¾ 0 9 3 ; July, 9¾BCa'iW}^; Aug.. 9 4 . ^ 9 3 ¾ ; S.-pt 94l-£. Red—cash, 9 6 ^ 9 o ; July, 97(a> 96^'A; Aug., 9 7 , ^ - 9 5 ¾ ; Sept., 9 8 ^ @ 9 7 ^ .

Flour—The market is quiet at unchanged quotations, as follows; Mich, wiuter wheat, stone process,¢4 75(«;5 00 Mich, winter, wheat, roller process, 5 OOXu-.") 25 Michigan wiuter whea t p a t e n t s , . . . 5 50( 05 75 Minnesota bakers' 5 00(<£;o 25 Minnesota patents 0 00(a}tS 25 Low grades winter wheat 3 25(((3 75

Rye Flour—Market steady. Fine western brands are quoted at ¢4(44 50.

Oat Meal—For Akron. ¢6 25 ; steel cut, ¢5 75. ...-'--"""

Feed—Tb » market Is firm and steady. Bran mavbe quoUn. at 112 75:ctl3; coarse middlings, $12" 75(rt'.l3-f fine middlings. $13(414.

Corn—The market is veyy dull, at 47(4 48 cent*.

Oats—Dull and weak, at from 34 to 36c. Butter—The market is dull and unchanged.

Dairv rules 1 U«'13c. creamery. 15(4Ulc, while a fancy article occasionally brings lc more than the outside figures named.

Cheese---Prime state aud Ohio full cream 7(48c; skims, 5<46c.

Eirgs—O^uiet and steady at 12e. Apples—Easy at 40(a5 !c % bit box. Cherries—Per basket $1 25(tfl 50; fancy,

$4 75. Dried Fruits—Apples, sun dried, 3(43¼

per lb ; evaporated, 0(47c; peaches, 12c: peurs 10c.

Gooseberries—Per,bu $2 50(3)3. Peaches—Per % bu box, 75C(4J |1 25. Plums—Per bu $ I 50(43, and scarce. Strawberries—Scarce and selling at $4(44 50

per stand, Water Melons—Market well supplied, sell"

ing a $ 3 0 $ : « per 1(X). Beans—Citv picked, on track, $1.27((/1.30:

from store, $1.30(<(1.35; unpicked. 75c(«$l; de­mand light.

Beeswax.-y-Per lb 27(430c: dull. Hay—Market quiet at $12(413 for best timo­

thy haled in car lots on t rack; selling in smaller quantit ies at ¢14(415. Straw $8(4-10 on track.

Honey—Dull; single frames, $10(412, 51b cases in" light request at 8(49c; strained, 9(4 10c.

Onions—For southern, $2 75(43 per bbl. Poultry—Spring chickens, 30(475c; fowls,

8(49c per lb ; roosters, tj(47c; turkeys, 9(410c; pigeons, per pair, old, 30c; squabs, 35c per pair.

Provisions—Mess pork, new, $11(411.25; family, $ 1 1 . 1 2 ^ 1 1 . 3 7 1 , ' , short, clear. ¢12.50(4 12.75; lard in tierces. 6>„'(4'7c; kegs, 7 . ^ (47¾^ pails, 7 lt,(4Sc; smoked hams, 9 ^ ( ^ 9 ^ - : shoilld-ers5%(4ji>c; breakfast bacon, 7;}4(4Sc.; dried beef fift-ms. $13.50((114.00: extra mess beef, $10.50(¾ i'0.7'5.

Potatoes—Old in cars lots arc selling a t 20(4 25c per bu as to condition; from store 30(435c. New southern, $1.75f42.

Tallow—Dull at 4 ^ ( 4 . ^ . Tomatoes—New southern in W •bu box*^

$1 25(41 50: Vegetables—Lettuce, 25c per bu ; spinach,

25.' per bu ; pie plant, 20c perdoz bunches; rad­ishes. 25c per doz bunches; onions, '2i):1 per doz qunches: vegetable oyster, 35c per doz bunches; cucumbers, 3oc per doz; asparagus, 35c per doz bunches; new peas, 05c p e r b u ; s tr ing beans. $t 25 p-T bnx t wax^boms, per btr, $1 40 r cnb-bacres, $2 per two bbl. crate; beets, 30c per doz bunches', new southern cauliflower. $l(«v

,1 75 per dox headu; carrots, 40c per doz; beets, 30c per doz bunches.

LIVK STOCK. CATTI.E—Market strong and prices lf)(41oc

higher; shippinc steers,' $4 90(4ft 25; stockers and feeders, ¢3(44 60: cows, bulla ami n v v ' ^ $2 10(44 40; through Texas catt le lU(«15e burner at Si ^^yv¢l :.5.

Hoos--Market tirm on l igh t with heavy 10c lower; rough and mixed, | S S(Y«;4; packing and shipping 250 to ; 5) lbs, $4(44 15; light weights, $3 'V(44 2 i : skips, $3(a)3 15.

SIIKKP—The best rute«i s t rong; natives, $ ! i. «04 '.(); western $ M 0 @ i 5 0 : Texans, $2 50(33 40. .

gALISMIUrS SENTIMENTS. — ^ *

IN A I R I E Y ADDRE85 HE BAYS HE WILL CONTINUE GLADSTONE'! RUSlIAff

POLICY.

Foreign F l a i h t i .

When parliament reassembled Salisbury made an address stating iu substance that Oludstone's Russian policy would be continued. The Marquis considers affairs in Central Asia In a very unsatisfactory condition, an is alsn affairs in Egypt, When the new government get< fairly ih working order these matters will be carefully considered, and such measure! adopted as "will accrue,to the beat interests of all. England's many 'pledges must and shall be kept at all hazards.

Re[)orts from Spain place the number of new cholera cases at between 1,200 and 1,500 dally, aud the deaths at over one-half of this number

The Welsh university college, a t Abergwill,. Carmar thensh i re , Wales, burned to the grouiui the other morning. The college was built at a cost of £400,000.

The French Chamber of Deputies has revised the old law in force during the French revolu­tion under the provisions of which the statt maintains and educates every seventh chile bom in French lamilies. 5The London Pull Mall Gazette has been pub

llshing a scries of articles ex|*osing the tralik, in young girls for immoral purposes. The ar­ticles created a regular furor in the city. Tht prince of Wales gave orders that the' papci should hereafter he kept from his house. A number of London newsdealers have been ar ralgned on the charge of selling obscene litera ture for handling the paper.

The first public breach between the Parnel itcs and the new government occurred In tht House of Commons, when Mr. Holmes the a t tornev general for Ireland, refused to inquir< into the dismissal of Police Inspector Murphj and justified his dismissal on the ground thai he was connected with the crimes of Inspectoi French and Secretary Cornwall. Mr. Parne l declares that he heard the government decislot with amazement.

THE COUNTRY AT LARGE.

TUB FLAG STII.I . FLOATS; ^

July 4, Mormons in Salt Lake City insisted upon'having the I'nitcd States flag at hull mast. Loyal Americans objected, and resent­ed the insu l t a»d proceeded to lorce the .Mor­mons to raise the flag. After much demurring the flag was run up at full mast.

LOOKS SKHIOl 'S.

Reports received from Ihe Indian country state that the Cheyenncs are committ ing sen ous depredations, and the lives and property o. the settlers are in jeopardy. Twelve companies of infantry were sent by" special train frou: Omaha. 'Gen. Sheridan has been ordered to proceed to the seat ot war;

A COMI'AHISON.

The failures in the United States for the first half of 18S5 are 0,004 in lumber, ns compared with 5,51() for the same period last year, an in­crease of 4'4. The liabilities, Imweycf, for t h r tirVt half of the present year, show a marketl decline, amounting to only 74 millions, as com­pared with 124 millions for the first half ol 1884.

STOltM SWEPT.

A storm of wind and rain, with all the deaths-dealing concomitants swept over portions til Wisconsin July 9. Depots, churches aud houses were demolished, lorests swept away, and crops leveled to the ground; New York state was also visited by a severe storm on tht same day, and the usual damage is reported;

WII.I, COME HOME.

A cablegram from Auckland, New Zealand. to Chief of Police Harrigan of St. Louis, an­nounces the arrival tht re of the police depart ment 's messengers sent from.St. Louisa month ago and the acknowledgement of the requisi­tion for W. H. Lennox Maxwell, who murder­ed C. Arthur Preller at the Southern hotel in that city on April 5, and fled to New Zealand. The ollicers will return with Maxwell by the steamer which sails on the 21 st iust. There was no serious legal complications. The mur­derer was turned Over to the ollicers at ouce.

MOKE ( O t ' K T S NKKDKO.

A special to the New Orleau* Times-Demo crat from F t Smith, Ark., s a \ s 29 murderers from the Indian ttrriiory are confined In tht-United States jail in Ft. Smith aw tilting.trial. The court convene:! July tj with a criminal docket of 192 cases, all for crimes committed in the Indian territ >ry, Over l K) in lian witne. ses are prt sent to attend the court, and more an exp.'ctt-d to arrive daily. The jurisdiction ol t h i w n u r t extend* over 62,(0.1 square miles ol territory inhabited by men of all colors and classes "and the wor>t criminals in the c o u u t n .

rooit l'uosi'KCrs. Six days of st-'adv' rain have practically

ruined the wheat crop throughout eastern Kansas and western Missouri. Harvesting is at a complete standstill. Stacked wheat has been ru ine l , and estimates place the loss in Kansas alone at 1.()00,000 bushels. This does, not include standing wheat. The state board's estimate of 10,000.00.1 bushels of w'k<at was based on alleged improvement In southern Kansas. This estimate took no account of last week's storms. Fears are entertained that the potatoes will rot iu the ground. Minor crops are also suffering.

l)Et 'I ,AKi:i) INSANE.

Several weeks ago the Polk street depot iu Chicago was the scene of a most startling tiageoy. A nuri named Reaume, a passenger on an incoming train from Denver, went mad outside the city limits. When the train reach­ed Chicago his capture was attempted by a platoon of police. In an encounter which fol­lowed OfTVeor Barrett was shot t leatt" 'by the maniac. The latter was wounded, it was thought mortalU', but taken to the hospit i l . The other morning Reaume was taken into the county court and declared insane.

DISAllM THE INDIANS.

There is official authority for the statement that government ollicers in the Indian teirkory-have recommended tha t thciJiuiyefwit^^Te^dis armed, and that Col. Sumner, who is on the ground, concurs in t( at 'view. (Jen. Schofmldj however, does not think there are now sulli-cient troops in the tcrr-tory to accomplish the work ami -tin this account 4m*Issued an ^>rdff concentrating the troop* about the Cheyenne reservation. Should tuc troops make aii un­successful attempt to disarm the Indians (it-n. Schoficld intimates that a bloody Indian war would ensue.

RIKL m O X ' T MEAN-TO.

W o r d has"been received 'bv Dr. Liset from

I

parlurv a-id : ! ;!r. ' time <f sa i l ing This In­formation must be used to determine the liability of vessls to lw ordered Into quarantine. The president has decided to establish a nation­al patrol along the o a s t .

T H E COt NTUV'S WHEAT 81'1'I 'I.Y.

The J u n e report of the Agricultural Depart­ment .-hows a. slight improvement In winter wheat, which advances the general average from 02 to nearly 65. In Michigan,"Indiana, Illinois and Missouri there has been a slight Improvement The winter wheat region, which does not Include the terri tories, now promises about 215.UTOOC0. The condition of spring wheat continues higher, though the average is slightly reduced. The indications now ' oiut to a crop of about 14\000.000 bush­els, making an aggregate of 303,000,(:0:) bushels. The condition of corn is higher than is higher than in uuv year since ISSO, except the las t ; the area ls'74,'(Kk),tXK) a -res. Wiuter rye has au average of 87 and oats 97.

CAN KMPI.OY CONVICT LABOR.

| T h e secretary of the treasury has decided a contract case Involving an 'important labor question. Bids were recently opened for stone work on the postofiice at IVorla, 111. Messrs Brainerd «fc Co., of Jollet, 111., were the lowest bidders. A protest against their being award­ed the contract was, however, filed by Messrs. Straub A Co., of Buffalo, the next lowest bid­ders, on the ground- tha t Brainerd•-& Co., are contractors for the labor of the Illinois state prison and would employ convict labor on the postofiice. The mutter was referred to Solici­tor McCue, who gave an opinion thut the de­par tment should not bo expected to dictate the means by which the contractors pcrlorm their work, and that he did not l)elieve;the protest a valid one. Secretary Manning sustained the solicitor, and the contract will be awarded to Brainerd & Co.

A DAUINU HOBBEHY.

Two men representing themselves to be plumbers called at the resideuce of Thomas Smith, 50 Eldredge Court, Chicago, about uoou a few days ago, and stated to Mrs. Smith that they had" been sent there by the landlord. Sus-W t i n g nothing1 wrong, Mrs. Smith admitted ihem to the hous*, when they at once assaulted her, and bound uud gagged her. The robbers tore open the bosom of her dress and took about ¢1,000 which her husband had giveu her iu the morning. The robbers proceeded to ransack the house and then returned and cool­ly discussed the best ami most .expeditious way of killing Mr*. Smith. Burning and drowuiug were considered, but after a brief consultation the robbers left thel iouse. and Mrs. Smith se­curely bound. Attcrsomc hours she succeeded iu at t ract ing the attention of passers-by. and tlie police were notified. Mrs, Smith is utterly prostrated, anil her llf£ is, despaired of.

A D C A D C O M M O D R R .

Henry H. Gorringe, late Lieutenant Com" mander United Stat«fS Navy, died at the resi dence of his sister, Mrs. l l i land, in New York July 6. Mr. Gorringe- wa» the son of an Episcopal clergyman and was born at Barba-does. He was finely-ediwiiied, but his taste was for the sea, which he followed almost con stantly from the-age of 14. He was a captain iu tbe'-tticrchant service wheu the war broke out and at once volunteered bis service to the Federal navy aud served through the war in the Mississippi squadron umUrr F a r r a g u t At the close of the war hewaa-.tnade commander of the steamer Memphis, and from 1S6S' to 1871 commanded the Portsmouth, then In the South Atlantic squadron. Four years, from 18?2 to 17ii, he served in the Hydrographk oittce at Washington. Commander Gorringe won his

?reatest lame by landing the obell<k in New orkharl>or July 20, ISSO.aftera perilous voyage

from Egypt. The Commander took occasion to criticise the American Navy Department, ami for doing so was disciplined by Secretary Chandler. Then Commander Gorringe resign­ed from the nayv and became President of the, American Ship Building Company, but the en terprise was a failure. While engaged in set­tling up the affairs of the compauy Mr. Gor riuge met with au accident which eventually caused his death. While hurrying from New York city to his ship yard one day last fall he jumped irom a moving train and received severe spiual injuries, He died a bachelor, his only relative being his sister.

BRUTAL TKK ATM K.ST O f < -OSVICT*.

About the middle of J u n e Gov. Thompson of South Carolina, was informed that the convicts employed in grading the Savannah Valley railroad ia Abbeville 'county were cruelly t rea ted: that one convict had died in "consequence of brutal whippings bv the guards ; that they were over­worked, aud that excessive mortality prevailed among them- The governor immediately in­structed the superintendent of the penitentiary to Investigate tlie charge-. The official report, which has just been made, shows that 16 deaths have occurred since January 1, out of a total foice of alnuit 120 convicts; that seven are unab i t io^uork : that the convicts are re­quired to march nearly three miles to their work with shackles on their legs; that on ac­count of the bad quality of their food scurvy1' has made its appearance and that there has ' been excessive cruelty in punishing the convicts. In describing the effects of the beating of Hen­ry I'orter by A. W. Jackson, who hud. tempo­rary charge" of the convicts during the abaence of the regular overseer, Dr. D. S. Pope, peni­tentiary physician, says: "As evidence of the severity of the whipping inflicted. I would statt; that the tissues have sloughed, leaving an open sore IS inches long by 10 inches wide. The punishment must have been very cruel. I doubt his complete recovery." Other convicts were also cruelly beaten, although the condi­tion of those now at work is said to be "ver.v fair." Jackson, the inhuman guard, has fled to Georgia, but efforts are being made to se­cure his arrest. There is great indignation at these outrages, and steps will probably be taken at The next session of the legislature to discontinue the practice of farming out the convicts to railroad companies and phosphate miners.

T H E BED FIENDS.

C~ayexrae Indians on the i n p.

From a report just issued by the British agricultural department, it ap­pears that during 1884* of live animaU imported from Canada, 668 cattle, 1,-770 sheep, and one pig were thrown overboard, and 81 catile and 824 sheep landted dead. Of those imported from the United States, 1.57») cattle and 8o7 sheep were thrown overboard, and 85,

; ^ ^7- *"'5o^'ft^»"-,v V """ Q"v"iVJL auA "J cattle and 92 sheep landed dead ,oo- to 1882 shipped 800,000 torts of ore. Seven hundred ^ i ^ a 3 n t A am . ,» i» .„ i , . •Wt wMd.be. ^ftycLfltttjatHprk 5 it WM i trt low oM.BoO animate,

Louis Kiel to the effect that he wishes hi* trial to t i k e place in Lower Canada, a; it Is there-alone h • can get all his witnesses. He dwells on the fact that he never dreamt of war, but was invited In the coui t ry from the I'nitcd .State-* to help petition t ;ie government for the redress of their grievances. He asks not to be treated like a murderer, and not to be chained before the jury has pronounced upon his .case, and feels confident that they will not find him guilty. He savs his incarceration is telling upor. his health, notwithstanding the kind a t tcntion of the jailers. ^

• NO CHOLEUA HERE,

Secretary Manning has IsauetT a circular to the officers of the rcven«c marine, directing t h e m t o t r u i s e acJjYrty with the revenue steamers undep^tteir command upon the outer lines of thij^h^eruising grounds, and to exercise spotd>t"v1zilance in speaking all vessels arriv-

from foreign ports or Irom soulhern ports of the United States, directing inquiries to the

Sort from which the vessel sailed, and t j the oallh of thuac on—boan j—at the time of dc-

A dNpaLch from Topcka, Kansas, aaleJI J u l ! 9, says

.The she-rtff «rf Kingman states that uews b*> been received thatNescatuuga, a liitL* town of :50 people 4- i.-i the possession of the Indians, ami that Coldwater, -oiue mile*- further West, is surrounded by I hem. T!u- sheriff says these ' reports may Tie s» iir-iitIiVnTiT. T-iit he reouestsi Gov. Martin to v i a l :iru> ft) licit they may be prepared. The goveninr has ovih red the military companies at Lurried. Wii.i'ul.l, Wel­l ington and Moiling to be ready 1o move at a moment ' s notice, and has din eted the sheriff of JTiuney county and minor of Dodge City to o r g a n i c foiVc>" and send runnnrti to notuy—xctllcr,—Uwn,- Augur tele-graph? Gov. Mai tin that he hns no tnformn; tion from Fort Ken., ot an outbreak therjvttnt he has ordered three companies *ofjarvalry to Bar iour county.

The gererafsuper intrndef l t 'of the Topcka «fc Santa r e railroad hav t feen directed by the quartermaster, GjltKTat Fort Leavenworth, to send ears toJ^rtft Kiley at once to transport.. troopsjiprfflT A force of men was at work at tlie^afsenal here n y s t of last night get t ing

,ate arms ready lor shipment. A report conies fiotn Prat t Center that a

large nuufber . of settlers had arrived there, fleeing from the Indians, who Mere reported moving north. They also report the massacre of a family named Nhoiicld on Spring creek. Great excitement prevails.

The famous PfetYers hot springs, ne?u Ragatz, Switzerland, which gave out ar the time of the recent eruption of Vosu-Tiua, arc running again.

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IIY W0T3T QI-0 HEAJtT AND L

r1

/

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/

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My •tout old heart und I ore friends, Two bivouac friemH together!

Nor dally wars, nor daly blown, Have colled out our wblte feather.

We've 'Hated till the campu^a eud»— For calm or atorwy weather.

My stout oM heart and I have been Throuuh serious scenes o( treublo.

"We've been deuied; our hopes have died; Our load'B been morctbau double.

Asd vet we've lived. An<l we have Been Some Rrlefa In Lethe bubbk.

Mv stout old heart and 1 have fought borne bitter ngfr B to ending;

And if or not we've victory got, We've not been hurt past mending!

The wounds are all In front we've caught, Aud easier for the tending.

My stout old heart and I, you see, We understand each other.

—Old comrade true, my hand to you! On honor, tell roe whether

You're daunted \el< —"To arms!" beats he, "Retreat Is for another 1"

Eye* right! Guide centre! Forward marckt Jht*x where the colon Jty!

—Six feet of ground, or triumph'* arch — M'J stout oW heart aiul J!

—E. Hough, in The Current. * *m •-

A TALE UF RUE.

Of all tired passengers of the mid­night express bound eastward over the Old Colony road, perhaps there was not one more thoroughly used up than John Coleman, Esq., of the law linn of Coleman & Risrgs, Ashland* Massa­chusetts. From the morning of Nov­ember 1, when he had started for San Francisco, till the evening of this De­cember 1, he had been constantly on I he wing. To aggravate his fatigue, the trip, in a business viewv had been highly unsatisfactory, if not unneces­s a r y /

But as he drew nearer home his .scowl vanished, and the lines about his lirm mouth" "softened. Stretching his long-suffering limbs across the scat, he spread the Evening Journal between his aching eyeB 'and the glare of the bobbing lamps", and indulged in tender speculations. How would Rue look when he appeared before her next morning, two days earlier than he had promised? She might be wat­ering her plants in the bay window", and he would walk in nonchalantly, as if he had left her the evening before, and say, ' Good morning, Rue ," and she would drop her watering-pot and rush toward * him, all smiles and blushes, crying, ' O h , John! John! how glad I am to see you! how I've missed you!"

Dear, warm-hearted, impulsive little Rue! She certainly' waa fond of him. He wished he had never been such a brute as to reproach her about Mr. Lynde. He was convinced now that she had not really cared for the fellow. She hail not only been cordial with him in her free, girlish way. What charming, inimitably ways she had! The lover's reverie merged into a dream. Mr. Coleman was unconscious of the slacking up ot the train at B — , and of the entrance of two young gen­tlemen into the scat in front; but the name of Miss Rue Haywood, spoken almost in his ear, aroused him like an electric shock.

"Mr. Lynde is bewitched with her, that 's, p l a i n / ' continued the voice. "He is having a line time out of Cole-m a"«jT s~ absence -' ' : .

"Pluperfec t / 1 said an answering voice. "They say Miss Rue wouldn' t mind Coleman's taking himself oft for good."

"He ' s an able man. You know there is talk of running him for congress ."

"Oh, yes; ne 's a dig, and all tha t ; but lie's a crotchety old fellow, Makes Miss Rao walk Spanish, I hear. By the way, how are she and Mr. Lynde coming on with the operetta? 1 had to cut last rehearsa l . "

"Famously. Miss Rue's solo will bring down the house. Lynde thinks the enter tainment will root tip at least one hundred dollars toward the new organ. He is jubilant. I believe that instrument comes next te Miss Rue in his affections. Can ' t ho get the music out of it, though? Halloo, here ' s Ashland!"

Wincing beneath his newspaper, Mr. Coleman had recognized the voices as those of two college students re­turning from the lecture at,. B N - — . Forgetful^ai last of travel-stain, wear­iness and headache, he waited tilV Uie youths had left the car, then walked out at the opposite end, his whole en­ergies engrossed in weighing the evi­dence so gratuitously afforded. .How far could ho rely on current go: What a t t i tude should hp^^lfssume toward Rue? Morningjolfnd him un­decided. He muAt^ne governed by Rue's own mjHTner. As a test of her feelinjjMts'ward him he would ask her fpjr-'nis sttko-^to-^vHh4Fftw—itorn—the operetta. If she loved him she would do this cheerfully. Jf she would not do it—Mr. Coleman had not provided for the lat ter contingency when Brid­get ushered hint into Mr^Hay-WoaiUs parlor. Miss Rue and Mr. Lynde were

"practicing H duct for—the * oporotta,-both too wrapt to observe the in t ruder —a fact inexplicable on musical grounds to poor Mr. Coleman, who did not know the notes auart, or c a r to know them. According tohi*"Tn ference, the young pcopjje^w'erc ab­sorbed in each otheivawTne was oft* in limbo. Under UM»S^ circumstances it may not bcMrtfange that his face, that i n s t a p ^ p i o d by 5M*S Rue, was not the

•..of an simiiilvKj man. It promptly emimU'il Mr./Kynde of a waiting pu­

pil, and having congratulated Mr. Cole in nn ori his safe return, he hustled his mnsi£ under his arm and depar ted

lue wheeled the bin rasy-ehair ni/ i iont ot tin* grate, playfully forced

er sullen Hiilor Into it, aiHi perched ;eis«'!t on its arm to hear about his

lnnriM'V.. ll:ul he been ill? N o ? ' T h e n

his head ached. Shouldn' t she try to niaffneUzo it and put aim U> sleep?

No, he preferred that she should not. He had kept his eyes closed too long already.

As well might a zephyr have at­tempted to pet an iccburg. With a shiver Miss Rue slipped from ner perch, and seated herself with her work in a neighboring rocker. Wha t had come over John? She had never seen him like this before. He did not seem a bit glad to meet her. H e turned away Iram the dis t ract ing vis­ion, mentally p repa r ing his brief— this astute lawyer, as ignorant of the na ture of a girl as an elephant of the s t ructure of a rose. Presently he be­gan about the festival He admit ted that Rue had once confided to him her intention of part icipat ing in an oper­etta, but be had supposed an operet ta to be something like an oratorio, not a jumbling of silly love songs. Did she think it becoming in herself, an engaged young lady, to carol amor­ous ditties from morning to night with a tuneful swain?

"They are burlesques, John , only burlesques. If 1 had dreamed of your disapproving I wouldn ' t have prom­ised to sing, but I can ' t re t ract n o w / 1

"Not when I part icularly request it, Rue?"

"Indeed, no, John. I have the leading part . I c an ' t refuse t" act without offending Mr. L y n d e . "

"On the other hand, you can ' t per­sist in acting without offending m e / '

"Now, John, do be reasonable. How should 1 feel, announcing at the next rehearsal tha t I must be excused —Mr. Coleman was not willing to have me connected with the operet ta? What would Mr. Lynde th ink?"

"Oh, if his opinion has more weigh t "with you than mine, I will r e t i r e . "

" John , you 're too absura. Can ' t you see how ridiculous it would look for me to- throw up my par t the mo­ment you came home? People would say you are jealous of Mr. Lynde/.1

"The jackuapes!" "And that you were a blue-bird.

John , I 'm not sure but they 'd be r i g h t . "

"If I 'm a tyrant , Rufelle, you ' re an amazingly fearless Fa t ima ."

" I don ' t propose tcftje yo t r rFa t ima, J o h n . "

W h a u l id Rue intend by thatP The wrinkle in Mr. Coleman's forehead deepened into & t rench, his brown face Hushed like an oak in October.

"Please lay aside paradoxes, Ru­felle. Do you mean you don ' t wish to marry me? Rumor has told nae a s m u c h . "

In truth, Miss Rue had meant noth­ing of the kind, but her lover's insulting tone exasperated her into silence Had it come to this, that she could not wink without first consulting his lord­ship. Her blue eyes Hashed ominously, the steel hook in her lingers dar ted in and out of her crotcheting with a mur­derous rapidity.

• 'Rumor has told me as 'much , " repeated - Mr. —GolemanT as im­pressively as if he had been addressing a jury.

And you let people talk about me, John, and listen to wha t they

?" say _ might have known tha t a girl

who would not respect my dig­nity could not value my esteem. Tyrant or not, Rufelle, a t l e a s t I 'vo no desire to rivet gal l ing fet­ters . Henceforth you are free to smile upon Mr. Lynde or any o t h e r gen t leman ."

Ha<T he omit te d t h e 1 as t sentence, affectionate, kindly little Rue could even then have " m a d e u p " with John, but this was too much for her temper. Snatching the golden cir­clet from her engagement finger, she flung it at her lover, with cheeks aflame.

••Take back your r i ng , " she cried; " t he girl who wears it should be a saint or a simpleton, and I 'm neither. Good­bye, J o h n . "

Auburn head erect, chin in air. she swept out of the room with all the stateliness psssible to a slight gir l of five feet two. She felt hers to be a r ighteous indignation. J o h n had

much as glanced a t any other girl. That he had not wanted to glance at any other girl had no bearing what­ever upon the case, yet the l awyer ' s stern eye moistened as he thought of the three months of happiness which had been his beiore this brilliant now organist appeared upon the scene with the graces and uccraplishments admir­ed by ladies, and scorned by himself, matter-of-fact John Coleman. From the outset he had distrusted the win­some gal lant 's influence over Rue, with what reason the sequel had proved.

Shocked at his pa r tne r ' s ill looks, Mr- Riggs in greet ing him asked if ho had had a chill.

"Yes , something of that n a t u r e , " was the grim reply. "How about the suit of Ingalls versus Wade? I find a flaw in the i nd i c tmen t / 1

Mr. Coleman was in the mood foi finding Haws. His habitual self-con­trol had deserted him. Once he nearbj annihilated Mr. Riggs for casually mentioning Mr. Lynde and his reported engagement.

"Oho! I recollect now; Coleman had a lien on the young woman him­self. Queer I should have forgotten," mused the discomlitted advocate, dip ping his pen in the ink.

That night Mr. Coleman had a chill —no metaphorical heart ague, but a genuine physical bone-shaking rigoi that demanded blankets and hot bricks and a heroic dose of quinine.

" H e ' s caught malar ia from some oi those confounded western bog-holes/1

said ihe doctor aside to the landlord. "Un.ess we break it up he 's in for a fever. See that he has a good nurse. I ' l l be roUnd in the morn ing . "

The landlord himself sat up with the patient , and a busy night he had till daybreak, when Mr. Coleman sank intc a drowse. The weary watcher im­proved this opportuni ty to Steal away for a nap, and sent his son to take his place by the bedside. After an hour ' s sleep the sick man awoke refreshed,, the ringing in his ears greater , but the throbbinsr of his temples less, the pain in his l imbs no longer absolutely un­bearable.

"Heigho! tha t you, H a r r y ? " he said, catching sight of the boy munching an apple for enter ta inment . Where were you when I came home last night? 1 d idn ' t see you." '

" A t St. Mark 's , sir, blowing the or­gan. —Mr. Lynde has hired me for the qua r t e r . "

"Oh, he has, has h e ? " Mr. Cole­man turned over in bed and scowled jrt the smoky lamp-chimney. Soon he flopped back again. "Do you like this Lynde fellow, H a r r y ? "

"Tip- top; everybody d o e s / ' Mr. Coleman groaned. " Is tho pain corning on again,

Can I do anything for you?" "Nothing^ thank you, my boy;

pret ty essentially done for. I'd to hear you talk, though. Tell what ' s happened since I 've been away. What ' s this Lynde been up t o ? "

"Oh, he's been Hying around, you 'd better believe."

"Been doing a stiff business, .I sup-poserTtrtving out with the ladies?"

" l i e ' s been driving out with Miss Haywood some. I haven' t seen htm with anybody e l se . "

The invalid suppressed another groan.

"They 've been looking a t dishes and curtains and th ings . "

Mr. Coleman rose savagely upon his elbow. Thrs was ten thousand times worse than he had dreamed. " T h e story I've heard, then, is true, Harry ; Mr. Lynde is going to be mar r i ed . " "

"Why, how did you know, Mr. Cole­man? He said it was a secret. He let me go all over his /house yesterday —he's hired Lunt ' s cottage, corner of Vine street—and things shine, I tell you. You just ought to see those car­pets. Miss Haywood helped him pick 'em out. The other woman don ' t sus­pect a t h ing . "

" W h a t o ther woman'*" "Why , the woman he is going to

mar ry . She lives down in Maine. She thinks after the wedding on Christmas she's coming with Mr. Lynde to his bpardrng-house; but, instead of that .

SCOTTISH CLERICAL UFR.

sir?

I ' m like me

t reat her so. She would not per^otiato patient Griselda for the aniusement of thevtf lage. ^^" -

" John wants-- tb bend the whole world tol i is^vUl," mused she, angri ly, peepi«g"through her chamber blind,

le stalked away chewing his black mustache; "he wants to bend the whole world to his will, and I won ' t be bent. Our engagement is broken, and I 'm glad of i t . "

For full fifteen minutes she was une­quivocally glad.

JuhikColeman thought that he, too, was glad.^ Walking fiercely on, he squared his shoulders, and told him­self that the engagement had been a mistake—an error of judgment , grave self-made man of t l i i r t ^ s t i ou id have been wiser than to^trtfst""his. hap­piness to the k e e p i j ^ o f a gay, capri­cious m a i d e n s - W h y had he been so dotingly-ioha of the child, so hood-wj^keaby her coquetries? Bliud drive-ing idiot* that he was, the sooner he

was burned again in the law the bet­ter. The man ' s soul was hot within him. Ho reviewed his lonely, joyless, orphanhood, his sharp tussel with the world to wring from it his present

/competence^ £LQ1iintil the la t te r had been secured had he allowed himself to think of mar ry ing this bright

no reason—no earthlv reason—to-""sir, he 's eroing to fetch her r ight home

younsr beauty, who as a school girl had first captivated his imagination. To have asked Rue Haywood to become wife while he had no adequate moans for her support *voUld- hiiv** bent in hi* opinion dastardly and eoiuomp+rple. >,•,!• i .» ),-.\,\ ;>u-ijt'ed the tim*<whcn in­

to his bully cot tage. I 'll bet she ' l l be surprised.

Mr- Coleman dropped back upon the pillow with an expression a Raphae l might have despaired of reproducing. He lay there a few minutes reflecting, then sat Dolt-upright, his towel-begirt head in bold relief against the mahog­any head board.

"Blow out the lamp, Harry, p lease ; draw up the curtains and hand noeinv-writ ing desk there on the tab le . I ' l l give you a dol lar if yem'trcarry a mes­sage to Miss Haywood for me this morning,"^- "

'•Bb3*s'"niy soul, Coleman, you are rfough as a pine knot!" exclaimed

the doctor, bolting in as his patient sealed the note. "You had ague enough last night to shake a sensitive mortal into the grave, and here you're up and at tending to business. Let 's feel your pulse. Rapid yet, but softer. If you ' re prudent you' l l be out in a few d a y s . "

Harry rushed off on his er rand, and delivered Mr. Qoleman's billet into the hands of Miss Rue herself, who in his private opinion looked very sober and red-eyed,

' D I : A R RUK:—-(thus ran the missive) I 've been having a chill, one of the bond JuJ< " " -- - - -

Pom« of the Annoyances to Which Minister* are SuujScted in the "Braw Lund."

A not uncommon and perhaps l i t t le Suspected cause of clerioal worry and anuoyance, sometimes even of peril , lies in tho vagaries of people who are mental ly ur.sound. Religious mania is a yery frequent form of such un­soundness, and this often leads to the clergy being objects of attentions far more marked than agreeable. Ext ra­vagan t devotion to, or equally extra­vagant detestat ion of, some special c lergyman, is very common. The former once, in our own experience, gave rise to what, considering all the accidental circumstances and sur­roundings, was • probably the most ludicrous scene ever witnessed in a church. In a city boasting the p o ^ session of one of the finest cathedrals in England there lived a spinster lady somewhat weak in intellect, one whose state, however, did not render any fur­ther supervision necessary than the constant a tendance of a t rus tworthy companion. The rector of the parish in which she lived was the object of her most ardent devotion. To her g rea t despair he resigned his living and went abroad. Some few- years later, on re turn ing to England, he happened to be in the neighborhood, and having been intimately acquainted with many of the chapter , he went one afternoon to the cathedral in order to see some of them. The service was just over, and he was s tanding in the nave, to which there were always many visitors in the afternoon, wai t ing to greet his old friends when they should have disrobed.

J u s t at- the moment when_choristers and clergy were coming in procession down the nave, the poor little woman entered at t he west d o o r ^ She instant*-ly espied her former rector, and be­fore her companion could interfere, rushed toward him. She was ex­tremely small; he a very tali man. Fearing thM in her excitement her greet ing woo Id be ra ther more noisy than was so*inly under the circum­stances, he bent down, as she drew near, to speak to her in a whisper. Rash man! In a moment she clasped him around the neck with both arms and bestowed upon him a painfully audible apostolic salutation. The magnificent cathedral na^e echoed to s t range sounds tha t afternoon. Jsot even the portentous solemnity of a ca thedral verger, in the very presence of the canons in residence, was proof against the t r i a l ; and the white-robed procession disappeared from the sacred precincts with a most indecorous ra­pidity. The victim of this astounding reception, a man possessed of remark­able power over the muscles of his face, was the only person in the cathe­dral who preserved an unmoved gravity of deportment .

A very common form of rel iglou* craze i s a desire to argue out private­ly with a e ' e rgymansome question he has touched upon in proacaing. We once heard a clergymau preach on the text: "All scripture is given by in­spiration of God," and he chanced to make some remarks upon the occa­sional value of apparent ly unimport­ant portions of the scriptures. For some time afterward he was sorely besieged by a hearer who wished to insist on having proved to them the importance of verse 9, chapter iii., Song of Solomon, "King Solomon made himself a chariot of the weOd of Lebanon.41 Fortunately, the clergy­man in question had only been offici­at ing for a friend. Had he been vicar of the parish, liable to be buttonholed as he walked about the streets, his fate would have been pitiable. Worst of all, and often absolutely dangerous to the clergy, is the craze of amission, ei ther to insist upon or prevent the promulgation of some par t icular doer trine. We remember, some years since, seeing the vicar of a large*Lon­don parish officiating for several Sun­days under protection of the police. One of these crazy enthusiasts had taken it into his head that he was to prevent some part of the service being performed, and hail chosen that par­t icular cl.urch as the Held of his oper­ations. His threats asjainst the vicar were sufficiently vehement as to cause it to be deemed advisable, pending .measure* for some res t ra in t beimj.

women in the Southern states; 632,000 are in manufactories, of whom a b o u t one-half are in New York, Massachu­set ts and Pennsylvania; 282,000 a r e milliners, e tc . ; 50,000 are tailors. Of the forty-four occupations recorded a» "personal service" forty And women in them. The 525 female surgeons of, 1870 have increased to 2,478; the 7 lawyers to 75; the t>5 clergymen t o 165. The number of laundries has in­creased from 61,000 in 1870 to 122,000, and of the l a t t e r 108,000 are kept by women. This large increase shows a

fjreat l ightening of the housewife 's abor.—St. Louis Globe-Democrat.

Sunshine. A repor ter from China says that the

French, after being defeated at Lang-Son, wi thdrew to Chu. Well, trie heathens gave them something to Chu on, no mis take .

A nen in a neighboring town haa just died at the age of fifteen years . Aha, that accounts for all the way­worn, ear thweary eggs I have met at the breaktast table dur ing the past de­cade.

The weight of a bushel of beans has been . fixed by '" law a t sixty pounds. Reckoning from tha t basis a Bostoo girl must be full ninety pounds heavie on Sunday evenings than at auy other time during the week.

A te legraph report says that the daughter of a New Jersey farmer ran off' with one of her father 's hands. It does not state which hand, but if i was the one the old gent leman used to slap mosquitos with it was a most untflial act .

A Massachusetts boy recently swal­lowed a larg« five-cornered jackstonft and at l a s t accounts was doing-well . If the small boy continues to evolve

_at.this rate he will soon supplant th ostrich and billygoat in the affection* of humorists.

According to the eternal fitness or thing3 negroes should drive coal carts,. cro9s-eyed men should be detectives,. Bonr old maids should run pickles fac­tories, deaf mu tes should be barbers* and go-ahead boys should be dis tr ict messengers. But somehow it is o the r ­wise ordered.

The explosives used by the insur­gents of the United States of Colombia must be very mild. During the seige of Car tagena a shell entered a bed­room and burs t without dis turbing the slumbers of its four young lady occu­pants . 1 could do more execution, by hurl ing a can of Chicago beef with m y strong r ight arm.

An ostrich egg weighs nearly th i r ty times as much as an average hen ' s pgg, but to hear the hen's r emarks «f-ter"laying an ecg one would suppose she had beat the ostrich out of sight. It is a good deal the same way with, human beings. Some will make more fuss and br.tg over their little thin-shelled achievements than o t h r r s d o ' over an invention or work that be­comes historical.—Jack's Sun.

placed upon the man. tha t a police­man in plain clothes-Should be on du-

The Affliction of Money. You have observed the sulcTde

of a broker named Kane, I believe. The only importance of Kane ' s life o r death to me is the revival it br ings u p of his father-in-law. Several years pgo„ in Washington City, 1 s a w a k e e u l i t t l e man who made ehoes at Poughkeepsie„ N. Y., and had accumulated a con­siderable amoun t of money in t h a t buMness. He was nominally a Dem­ocrat, but his money obtained him t h e Republican support . While at Wash­ington he was generally against the Democratic party on the sly. 1 knew him a little and studied him with mod­erate interest, and it was apparen t to me that he was designing to have m e write a speech for him, someth ing which I never did for any Congress­man, and my bashfulne&s and the old fellow's bashfulness, as studied by an outsider, would have matched a lmost any courtship in comedy. I think he-never made his big speech, though he-perhaps got permission to have it printed. He would take his creature-comforts, and yet was exceedingly part icular about the puri ty of those-nearest to him. On one occasion, the-old nlau came tn from a Scotchy kiu*l of a spree, which he sometimes in­dulged in, and pointing with his thumb-to the next door, he said: "Gent le­men, now be par t icular ; I have offV spring in t h e r e . " 1 had forgotten al!:

tv in the chanref during the services. \ about this poor old man with his sev-The possibility that the church might ; eral hundred thousand dollars, unti l I become at any moment the scene ot a ; saw the other day that his son-m-law "sudden struggle between a s ta lwar t policeman ami an excited lunatic could not be held one likely to aid a calm, devotional spirit on the par t of ei ther the vicar or those of the congregat ion who were aware of the ci rcumstances. — Scottish h'evifiv.

rc'ordefT favor to bolievt your houst behaved

I hope sou'11 th> me eon i in i on

*4w»-it was^eOnmig on at

If I j^-ved furiously atyd wqpH^than a savage, as I

his know Ld-trC do forgive me, dear. , I 'm oormTig to beg pardon oiwny knoVs us '^•MMI a*' they' l l - . , t jnp enough. Inclosed nu

eemld'oiler her a n a u i e ^ y j a position, He had wooed her honoraplv. and

i .

use find your vitig. Ever vhm-e, / ,Jl))IN\

account with*

The Sexes in the United Sta tes . Almost all the Southern States have

a nearly equal number of each sex. In J lassachus^t tTIhe teTimle^iretween - ^ and 50 years of age exceed the males of the same age by about 44,000. In seventy-eight cities the excess of fe­males is 148,000. That illiteracy pro-vajls more among women is due prob­ably to the foreign population. Women contr ibute less to pauper ism, thejpretfortion being 31,000 to 3(3,000. The rat io of prison inmates s tands ft/,068 women to 54,190 males. Women are in excess among the insane; men in excess among the idiotic," blind ~Smt~ deaf mutes. The proportion of women who engage in occupations outside jof the household is smaller in the United States than in foreign countr ies , but in no c o u n t r y . is the proport ionate

engaged

had banished his wife from his pres­ence, and then cut his th roa t with a carving knife, so i t oeeur^ed to me that nothing had saved myself and my friends except our failure to make the-same amount of money. To a fool money is a great affliction. The fool is sure to do something wrong with ' money. He will either go and gamble or go and make another family, or-break somebody 1s family, or keep a faat- hnT*n n n d break his neck. You endow a fool anil you equip a tire-balloon to go where it pleases,— Goth in Boaton Globe.

V. S. ^Bon-'t mv

be iini.t be kv.rt'u'.ly t u rd , She knew | frum that day to this had hardly M> | -Toor. dear soul, lufvwll he must agr icu l tu re draw from ,the o\

rrrr oi> :Mvtta.

n u u r trirl

-country

ier occupations

-Of the

-rtr iudu* super ior equal to that in th 2.647,000 women in

is*, «

Wouldn ' t Do. "So you don ' t believe in J a s p e r ' s r e ­

ligion? , said the secretary of s tate, ad­dressing an old negro.

"Nor ' sah, I d o a n / ' " W h y ? . ' "Case ho failed tor pervide fur his

owu Iwusuhol'.-snTh; __ __ " H o w did he fai l?" "Wal l , sah, he tuck er sheep when

or hog wnz jes ' ez handy. Any body oughte r know da t ' a hog will go much furder 'uiotig chillun den er she

Lenum*—h44—y^ri—W hen eep.

-04;:—tint a

occupations ire engaged in , pusson. of thciu ' colored | Arkausu

steals a : / doan steal do fees', jes him down ea er hippercri t an ' er

l ' a t sorler uiau woli't

put bad

w 'I r u y ir.

^i. ^ _

._ ./

" l,«-i»'\:.

V----,.-_. ', : . -1 , - . -

- ^ \

"=«r A '% *LW

*4u\

Page 4: PINCKNEY DISPATCH. - pinckneylocalhistory.orgpinckneylocalhistory.org/Dispatch/1885-07-16.pdfpinckney dispatch. vol. ill pinckney, michigan, thursday, july ig, 1885. no. 27 sb pinckney

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PlNCKNEY DESPATCH. —— w—j^y..-x— -—-

J. L. NEWJIBK, EDITOR AND PUBLISHER

Hackney, Michigan, Thursday, - > : - •

July 18, 18W

Considering the Kelley matter and the utterance at the Stallo banquet it looks as if the memory of Victor Emanuel and the status of King Hum­bert are to play an important part in bur politics.

Is it the fear of beintf reduced to peppermint as. a tonic that throws the 0. G. into convulsions of ^ra th? If that is all, we have no hesitation in assuring our neighbors that, in spite of all that Dr. Leonard can do, the reg­ular old fashioned beverages will be disturbed for some time to come.

Although the indications point to a short wheat crop the country will, in all probability, be blessed this sea­son by an nbundant yield of com, cotton and oats. The condition of corn is the highest since 1880, reports from the cotton producting sections are most promising, and probabilities

- a re favorable for one of the largest Crops of oats that this country has ever raised.

Secretary Manning's order regard­ing the transit of goods across Cana­da was not as objectionable as. the first telegraphic reports made it ap­pear. I t has been customary hereto­fore for vessels to drop down, say from Port Huron to Windsor, and there unload a cargo into cars which would then at once be sealed up by a Unit-

« ^d States custom officer from Detroit, and the carload would be hauled to

" Suspension bridge and into the Unit­ed States without payment of duties either in Canada ox in this country. It is this practice that has been stop­ped by the secretary's order. The right of cars loaded in this country and sealed here to pass across Canada and into the United States again without paying duty is one provided for by the act of July 28, I860, scc-

, tion 3006 of the United States revis­ed statutes. The amount of business affected by the secretary's order is small compared with that supposed to be interferred .with at first. As the Post stated Thursday, it seemed im­possible that Secretary Manning should issue so arbitrary and injurious drti order as that which was first at­tributed to him.—Post.

The practical abandonment of-the campaign against the Arabs is likely to have even more serious results in

•t.

the future than have befallen the Egyptians and English during the past few years. Cardinal Lavigerie, who is said to be the best living au­thority in regard to the extent and influence of Mohammedanism in Af­rica, savs that "the influence of El Mahdi, especially the influence of his successes, will be immeasurably great throughout all Islamic Africa, since victory is to the wild, fanatical tribes conclusive demonstration of the di­vine character and mission of the prophet." There are at present, he says "from the Soudan £o tfie Niger and the Senegal more than sixty,mil­lion Mussulmans—that is to say half savage men—to whom Mohammedan­ism has been an elevation, and at the same time the religion that best suits their instincts." .No one can think without misgivings what this mass ot men would do if ever they find chiefs to lead them, and obtain modern fire­arms and learn how to use them; and England has foes who will gladly sup­ply these needed articles if the oppor-fcunity offers.

enjoyment through 'the year, Whtn this may be done by processes so sim­ple asTo~be_possible in every neigh­borhood then the grower may hope to realize a more adequate price for what he raises. The soldering it up in tin cans, as now done, is a very crude, and in many respects, unstis-factory way to do what we hope to live to see much better done in due time. Ho! you American inventor, why do you not set about devising something far more in keeping with the spirit of the age than the clumsy and in every way primitive method of preserving fruits fresh and pnlatable for the table by putting it in a tin can and soldering it up? There is a better method, and it is now time to be finding the secret out and making vour fortune bv it.—Cin. Times Star.

1776. 1885.

When fruit is produced with such Abundance as this year all over the country it is practically impossible to find profitable sale for it all, As stat­ed a day or two since our strawberry crop began to ripen on the Gulf of Mexico and continued all the Way to Northern Michigan, and the same may be said likewise of reaches and acmie other fruits mid in the mM-ket* of Cincinnati. The genius of the American inventor has got tb devise

more perfect method, ^ r e ^ S ^ C ^ S ! %**"*

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Columbian Oil it has made more—per^ manent cures and given better satis­faction on Kidney Complaints and Rheumatism than any fcnovvn remedy. Its continued series ot wonderful cures in all climates has made it known—a& a safe and reliable agent to emplov against all aches and pains, which are the forerunners of more serious dis' orders. It acts speedily ,and surely, always relieving suffering and often saving life. The protection it affords by its timely use on rheumatism, kid­ney affection, and all aches and pains, wounds, cramping pains* cholera mor­bus, diarrhoea, coughs, colds^ catarrh, and disorders among children,; makes it an invaluable remedy to be kept al­ways on hand in every home. x ^ r o person can afford to be without it, antk. those who have once used -itnever. wilL-It is absolutely certain_.in its remedial effects, and will always cure when cures are possible.

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t

A Walking Skeleton. Mr. E. Springer, of- Mechani^sburg,

Pa., writes: "I was afflicted with lung fever and abcess on luncrs, and reduced to a walking skeleton. Got a free trial bottle of Dr. King's New Discov­ery tor Consumption, which did me so much good that I bought a dollar bot­tle-. After using three bottles, found myself once more a man, completely restored to health, with a hearty ap­petite, and a gain in flesh of 48 lbs."

Call at Winchell's Drug Store and get a free trial bottle of this certain cure for all lung diseases. Large bot-t le$l .

Thousands Say So. Mr. T. W. Atkins, Girard, Kansas,

writes: "I never hesitate to recom­mend your Electric Bitters to my cus­tomers, tttey give entire satisfaction and are rapid sellers.'' Electric Bit­ters are the purest and best medicine known-and will positively cure kidney and liver complaints. Purify the blood and regulate the' bowe.s. No family can afford to be without them. They will save hundreds of dollars in doctor's bills every vear. Sold at 50 cents a- bottle at Winchell's Drug Store?

Kellogg's Columbian Oil is compos­ed of vegetable products in a highly concentrated form, and »acts directly on the kidneys. It cures rheumatism ard all other aches and pains.

The kidneys cannot perform their proper office when diseased and at the same time expel the impurities that should pass off through their proper action. A few doses ot Keilogg's Col­umbian Oil will convince the most skeptical that it acts directly on the kidneys.

t h e greatest Medicine of the Age. KelloggV Columbian Oil is a power­

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or securing to inventors their rigMf^BUke United States, Canada, England, Germany and other foreign countries, at short BOttee-aad-ea reasonable *

Information as to obtaining patents c |

f lven without charge. Hand-books of i ion aent free. Patents obtained throng* Hnna

— A Co. are noticed in the Scientiflo Americani free, rhe advantage of such notice is well understood brail Mrsonswho winh to dispose of their patents. AddreesMUNN A CO., Offioe Ocixsnrio AaTCTMlIt,

Bl Broadway, New York.

E f i f si

HILMMIBE , sncrevuib*****.. fjfcO-* -¾ *A>:^eM*Me^eWe^e^e^e^a»aBeBllll^a^ae^e^a»^—

BesLHewspaper ()" l i s CLASS

IS TBI

KIN0S OF BUILDING MATERIAL

AT F. L. BROWN'S.

IN MICHIGAN,

11

Published ft very Thursday at $2 per year; or,

Nine HiMor$1.00 A ldre« KtgM'paam KeUat*

I.V Al.t RKMPK newnpnper, I.V AM.t* MttcuftCCTS V f M 1 «T-

MWII am the OLltEtt m«titt>era • /1fee/email? nrr ttfHtfhtcU. Karh i tHmeer emntmtnm fifty-mix rolmnn* trell-/tll^«i teitft (fee eeef original and en re fully meleeteA reecMttc;, in ufhieh are article* to interest, a w m w i inmtruet and benefit every recMfer.

Sunday-School Department, UNEXCELLED.

Conducted by Rm>. J. M STTFLEB, D. A , at Cffjeer Theult%l«d Mamillary, PcmMfcj

Oeeter BTITM.KtVB Bibl* JTefee mnm t M M n Bxpomitfonm aire prmtareat ly/*r th*CHUM9TIAMMJBlLAJU>mmA p*mr in tee etfcer pmp«r.

Csf^Suavle ooplee for examination or i Ttnununo FKBB upon applloatton. Bead for tbeaa,

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HOWELL COMMENTS, from th« Republican.

James Basing and James Amos. near neighbors in Mariop, had a quar­rel and the tormer wanted Justice Kiddie t3 place Amos under bonds to keep J h e peace. Basing couldn't make his case strong enough and A. was discharged.

Andrew Crawford, of this place, for some years past a brakeraan on the f). L. & N., had. his right foot badly crush­ed last Friday noun, by slipping and f i l i n g under the cars at Trowbridge.

k *f he foot-war-am pufcated by the com-fcMiny's physician the same day. I t will be so me time yet before he can be brought home.

Harry, son of Orange Stone, ot this village, was a promising young man of 21 years, and for about a year past acted as clerk in Hickey & Goodnow's •tore, severing his connection there

- ^ * n e 27th, to become a salesman on ,f (the road for an eastern firm.

On Tuesday morning of last week ne started west and Wednesday wrote h\ people that he was in Chicago and would start farther west the next day. I t seems that he was not feeling well and remained. F n lay morn in g

^ j e arose, went to bteakfast but did not eat anything. He then requested the clerk to have_ jus bej, made as he did not feel well. For some time past he has often complained of pains in his stomach, and it has been his cus­tom to take a little morphine, which would generally relieve him. On this occasion he-took too much and prob­ably died without an effort as servants were constantfy in the hallway near his room, and heard no noise. Mis-sing him at dinner and supper the « le rka t7 :30 o'clock p. M. went to his room to call him. The door being locked he looked over the transom iind found him lying dead.

The next mornins? seeing mention of the circumstance in the papers, Frank Kelley, formerly of Howell, at once

telegraphed to Mr. Stone, that being the first news he had received.

Mr. Stone left for Chicago Saturda evening and was present at thfv-ftost

I t was discovered last week that the arm ot Mr. Z. M. Piilmerton was not properJy .set, having failed to knit. Mr. Palmerton went to Howell last Saturday and had the ends of the broken bone irritated and je-set. It may be necessary to open tho arm and saw the bcnes oft,a trifle, but we hope that he may not have to suffer such an operation to be performed.

C:~

SOUTH LYON DOTS-From (he Picket.

Married, July 4th, 1885, Mr. Wm. H. l^entiee, of Whitmore Lake, to Mi«s Kittie M. Belding, late of Big Rapids, Mich., Rev. Mr. Calkins of­ficiating.

Frank Meyer, ot Oxford, had his leg blown off with a fragment of a cannon Saturday. A salute »vas beisg fired and Meyer was standing close to the cannon when it exploded, a iragment .Striking his leg and tearing it com­pletely from his body. He died soon after.

While Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Lane were returning from the celebration Saturday, their horse became fright­ened at Mrs. Lane's parasol and ran

J_away, throwing Mrs. Lane from the car r i age "ana*d i s 1 o eating" he r"i:eft s1ro~u1 -der. Dr. Brown w*as called and set the injured portion, and she is now improving rapid4y-.

Carries Anderson, brother of Mrs. T. A. Sayre, who has been gradually fail­ing with consumption for the past year, died Monday morning at six o'clock. He was a young man of •moist excellent qualities, and just in the prime of life, being but 33 years of age, his birthday occurring the day he died. His funeral was held at the Presbyterian church Tuesday after­noon, Rev. S. Calkins conducting the services. A large' number of friends and relatives attended the funeral, and one sister, Mrs. Mitchell, of Freeport, 111., arrived on tlie evening train Tues­day, too late to attend the last sad rites.

mortem Sunday, the verdictl>eiug that he died from an oyer dose of morphine. H i s ' remains arrived here Monday morjungand were at once interred in

beautiful cemetery. From th« Democrat.

A new school house will be built in District No. 2, Iosco.

Mrs . McNamee, an old settler of <}reen Oak, died last week, aged 74 years .

It i« estimated that 975 acres in the towi.ship of Brighton are planted to beans this season.

John Webb, living near William-ston, received a sunstroke on the 1st ins t , from which he died.

Mrs. Sarah Head, of Webberville, died la*t week. The deceased was a daughter of 0 . H. Jones, of Fowler-ville.

Mrs. John Herbst, who has been sick over a year, was conveyed to St. Luke's Hospital in Detroit one day last week. She bore the journey w<»ll. The citi-lzens of Ho Weil have raised a consder able sum to pay her bills in that insti­tution.

A daughter of Willis Fenner, of Deerfield, while picking wild straw­berries on the 2d inst., was bitten by

_a massauga. Promp_t t emedies saved the child.

F0WLERV1LLE PARAGRAPHS From the Review.

"MrrW . H. Sprencer^ornrerly-of this place, lies very low at his residence in

^Detroit An infant daughter of H. J. Van

-Oittette, of Webberville, died on Mon­day.

Mr. and Mrs. F. M. Younglove were called to Dansville on Friday to attend the funeral of his brother's wife, who resides at that place.

A telegram received here on Mon­day announced the serious illness of Mrs. Cornelia Chase, of Cherry Creek, N. Y* Mrs. Chase is a sister of C. E. and J . P. Spencer, of this place, and Dr. H. N. Spencer, of Howell.

Joseph, son ot Edward Scully, of near Webberville, died on Friday of

STOCKBRIDGE NOTES, f r o m t^ -Soln .

arles Rose wintered one swarm of uees through and has had three

—at the—

P1NCKNEY ELEVATOR WHEAT,

BEwisrwootrrrc: For which the highest market

- #^w4il~be-pau price

77/0(9. READ, - Pinckney,

MACKINAC. The Xoat DeUchtftal

SUMMER TOUR \ filMa StetBMn. Low Sates. '

Vour Tripe per Week Between

DETROIT AND MACKINAC And avery Week Day Between *»

DETROIT AND CLEVELAND

I la»t week, of spinel fever, aged five i write far our

•years. The funeral services were held •'Picturesque Micklnsc," Illustrated. I t the catholic church in Oceola, Rev. j 0nMa* * * * * * * * * ***** " » • Father Doberty, of Brighton, official-j Detroit A Cleveland Steam Nav. Co. . * • C. D. WMITCOMB, OCN. PMt, ACT., Ing.v * > DETROIT, Ml CM.

NEW GOODS, NEW GOODS, G-O O X> S ,

WXSX- SIB BRT W mm NEW LAWNS, CHAMBRAYS, GINGHAMS, PRINTS,

WORSTED DRESS GOODS, LACES, GLOVES, ETC.

A fine line of PARASOLS including

-Wl' THE POPULAR COOCWNG PARASOLS. ® Y ^

We are constantly in receipt of New Goods in every Depart­ment. Everything marked in plain figures. The lowest possible price guaranteed on every article.

ABUTTER and EGGS wanted at the highest Market Price in ex­change for GOODS. No trouble to show goods whether you want to buy or not. JJorae and seeJis. _ ^

LAKIN & SYKES.

s FARMERS, READ THIS - * - .

The undersigned having a large stock of all kinds of Lumber, Lath and Shingles at their lumber yard in Pincknev, have decided to reduce their

stock and for the 3 S T E 2 t T S I X T - ^ r > - A T 5 T S will sell

A.T

^ M C K BOTTOM PRICES. Parties about to build will find it to their interest to get our prices. We man­ufacture our own lumber and shingles and will sell according to the times. We keep on hand a fall >tock of Flooring, Siding and Barn Boards, also all

swarms from them.

Born, July 5tli, to Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Cantrill, a daughter.

Lightning struck a tree in Lyndsy's woods last Wednesday nig lit.

The second annual Farmer's picnic will be held at Pleasant Lake Aug. I t , as twelve townships will be represent­ed a big time is expected.

C. W. VanEtten let a rig the other day to a fdlow who just wanted to go to Plainfield, and the next he heard of his "ig was that it was at South Lyon. Th,e fellow had skipped.

The other day as Edwin R. Hawley. of Bunkerhill, was drawing logs to Fitchburg he was doing something about his wagon while it was in mo­tion, the wagon run over hitn, dislo­cated his shoulder, and bruised up Vi is*j arm and body badly. Dr. Conlan was called and set the shoulder and at present he is doing well.

lengths of Bill Stuff and Timbers, and on all bills will give special prices. You will find our Agent, A. L. HOYT, always on hand. Come anU see us, we will satisfy you that we mean business.

QUAKER Is ih.e Best

TABLE SAUCE. Thousands of a r t i c l e arc now manufactured t h a t

in former years L-iJ to be imported, paying high impor t d u t y as i t is now bciDji d"tio cu Lea & Per*

i r ius t ib le sauce ; tb« QUAKER 'IABUK SAi:c*tmke« i t s p i a c o ; it has bt-ea pronnuin't <k»by competent j mines j u s t aw good and evtn Ut'.n. The Q U A K E *

grwrr

T H I Oldest. Brightest, and best of Western Weeklies. Eight pages, fifty-six columns, fine paper, new type. clear print, »nd the most entertaining pnper ofltred the reading public. Suits' every locality, discusses tubjecta with fairness, contains ail the news of tho world attractively presea cd, and is withou a com­petitor in general excellence as a family paper. It coats but

O I T E S O L I i A B .A. T T E .A. R , and every subscriber receives free of charge, postage paid, a copy of

THE

SAUCE i.as Slowly uuT sure ly ^aiiirM great im­portance and is replacing the VTV (wiHznporled sauce on the fehelf of the prever, the tables of the res taurant aud tha tables of the liili and poor IIILU, preatly p r iZ 'd aud relished \>y all on account of its piquancy, arvina, ta*te, s t rength and pui-ent'S'?. Tho m v e u t o r has by years of s tudy of tan secret vir tues Contained in the aro­matic spues cf th" Itidiea and China. *uch ss mace, nutmeg, eitiiiiuuotr, penuii'.e Jamaicagiijgpr. and peppers and buds of t r ees ui .known to moat men. aud bv long pract ice succeeded to combines the i r extracts in such a l iquid form as we now find it of agreeable taste, and so invigorating as to be taken in place of s tomach b i t t e r s . By man­ufacturing this sauce here, heavy impor t du t i e s and freights arc saved, and it is sold at a lower figure to the dealer, wlio making a better profit on Quaker Sauce cau Bell it to the consumer cheaper thau he very best impor ted ar t ic le i ia rd ly e q u a l . int.' ou r s . If your grocer does not keep it , wr i t e us for i rices, etc. Sold in bottles or by the gallon.

CHARM MANUFACTURING CO., Sole Proprietort and Afanufmcturert,

1 Q 6 A 1 0 S S . £ J f c T . , S t , L o * i » - J U .

copy

TIMES ILLUSTRATED HAND-BOOK, alone worth the price of subscription. The Rand-book is a publication or one hundred pages of useful and en­tertaining reading matter, especially prepared and published for the subscribers ofthe ' 'Weekly Times-"

All who take the paper are delighted with it, and the Hand-book wil) be equally satisfactory. Send for speci­men copy of the paper. Address, THE TIMES,

*• 230 Walnut St., Ciacuwan, 0 .

THE CINCINNATI TIMES-STAR, Is the best and cheapest daily psper published in the

West. Eight pages—rorty«eigtit columns—and only six dollars a year, or twelve cents a week. I t is indepen­dent irrpolitics, but aims to be iair jn ryerything, and just to nil parties, individuals, sectior j , and nationali­ties. It you want all the news atrructiveiy and honest­ly presented, subscribe for it. THK LABI/EST .CIBCCUI-TIOH 0» AST fAFUS IN r i M ' i s v i ' 1 .

Address TftF. TIMES-PTAR, r aaaWalantr t t . . C r v c n * x i , 0 .

H H W O O L . CASH FOR WOOL! , . r*>

The undersigned respectfully announce to their friends and patrons that they have completed arrangements for all the<

I Rose Leaf, Fins Cut, , Navy Clippings ! and Snuffs

ijyv

Having rented D. Richards'

BLACKSMITH SHOP i we are now prepared to do all

kinds of

R E P A I R I CT-Gk -

Including Horse•SiioeTirg'r

Machine and Steel' Work done to order.

PAUKER & SPEARS.

Each and every one can spare. Please remember for

THE NEXT THIRTY DAYS! we shall need all the money we can get.

ANDERSON STATION! Is now rilled to overflowing with a

fresh, new and complete stock of Dry

Every thing.in our store will be sold w a y l S ^ T S J f t f n W f c {C^down to the lowest notch/ilSg I™*pect™

A. PRESENT 1 Onr readers for VI df>nts in poat&ge s t a m p s to

iav for mail im: and w r a p p i n g , find names of two look agents, wi l l receive FREE a STE>L F»«>»N P«H-

LOH E oRAy,»o of all OUR PRESIDENTS, inc lud ing CLEVELAND, s»ize * . ' x * inches, worth $4.00.

ADDRESS ELDER PUB, Co., CHICAGO, I I I

THE-

FARMERS' STORE, AT

; , Respectfully Yours,

TEEPLE 4^ CAD WELL. PUSTUrofrT^ry JX73STB 15 , 1 8 8 5 -

Th^i lad to* especially will. fin their interest to see our novelties in. Dress Good^ before buyttTli? elsewhere.^

Every variety of country produce \ taken in exchange for poods or money.'

, •, JAMES T. EAMAN & COf

•1 •;i

'I "I

i ]

J --

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giilihtwj gispattff. J . L. NKWKIUK Puhlihher.

Satoieo »' the Po»u>»»* u M\ OI«U*I> Ktaitet.

TIMELY TOPICS.

SIRMICII /VKL E D W A R D H I C K S - B E A C H

who vras made-Chancellor of the Ex^ chequer upon the accession of the Marquisof_Salisbury_to the Fretuier-ship of England, was born in 1837. He was sent to Eton and Christ church to be educated, and in 1861 received the degree of Bachelor of Arts, HBTs first spurs in when he was elected to serve in Parlia­ment, representing East Gloucester­shire, win h district ho still represents. Being elected as a Conservative, he has never wavered from his faith and has stock"to h's party in both prosperi y and adversity.

PRESIDENT CLEVELAND is undei-stood to be dissatisfied with the^way in which the Utah commission hai executed its duties. Its somwhat tentative, timid methods are attributed to the fact that •the members of the commission are all old men. The president thinks that the work of the commis-ion might be much more vigorously done. He re­gards polygamy as an unmixed evil which ought to be stinsped out, and he does not think the commission does its part in the attempt to effect that end. It is understood ihat after his summer vacation the president will reorganize the Utah commission, with a view to more elective work on its part. There are now three Republicans and two Democrats on the commission. They will probably all hi removed, and younger, more vigorous men appointed in their places. The prcsiden* is de­termined that all the anti-polygamy

CONDENSED NEWS. Great Barrington, Mass., hud a fclOO.OOOflre

.July 7. Lake Shore's semi-annual statement show*

a dendeney of *S5,t>0(5. Over 100 jicr?ons have been lynched in Texas

ID the past six months. (icn Lew Wallace, ex-1'tilted States minister

to Turkey, has rctui IUHI to America. Bi£ Bear and a portion of his humi have hern

t.aptured. The vest of the band will surrender. John Russell Young s'nys China does all in

her power to prevent emigration to the Lulled States.

Spanish Americans want the Vs»ited .State'

f jovernment to buy the northern tier of state* a Mexico.

Employes in the Cleveland rolling mill arf on a strike. Over 15,000 men are idle in con-sequence.

Prof Karnard of the Vanderhilt observatory at Nashville, Tenn., discovered a new comet on the evening of July 7.

Dr. R. II. (filbert, projector of the New York elevated railroad system, is dead, lie had long been troubled with'cbroific diarrluca.

Secretary Whitney has revoked the ordei prohibiting naval othoeis from hnviny their wives with tbi^u while at foreign por:s,

The doctors say John McCullou^h 1 as pro­gressive paralvs-s of the brain, which will had to imbecility niul.d.'uth in u year o>- t.\<>.

Maxwell, the man suspeetet] of the inurdei of Prellar wlio-e derd body was tVim.l in u trunk in a St. l.ouis bond, is making prepara­tions for a loin; fmht.

Mrs. Dudley, the assailant n( <V!Wo*'iir Ros.-a, rerently acquitted on tl'.e ti'roinid of in sanitv hus b.'cn sent totlie asylum at Middle ton, ST.'Y.. until pronounced si;ne.

Canada has ordered new ^uarantiti'1 Tegtr latioiisiiiiainst Mediterrane:i'n and Loudon ves­sels, to remain in force till (October V> next Victoria and Sub.iey arc made ij'.uirantir.e sta­tions.

The .strike of Chk-a^o street car iiriwrs anc conduct'ws still <-ontinues. The eom;ia:iy re­fuse to yield to th.' demand of 11 to striker.- and the belief i> ^jejieral that a gvea' struggle is pending.

The insult to our (lag in Salt Lake City, was under the direct ion of the Mormon church. Leading Mormons say half mas, was th ; prooer

-place fur it, as the Monmms have only hall of their rinhts.

poli t ics were won in 1864, f - - r h c N>w York Conmnvhtl Bulletin esti­mates the aEwrcjrate lire ivu.-t" of ti:e country for June at $>-».750 t>0J>. The total lire Josses in the United Slates tor the first half ol 1-iSJ ja *.\0,75. .),0 W.

A bill ip before tl>c Canadian parliament making a charge of $50 on -eai-h Chiin'inan en-tering the Dominion, and restricting vessel? bringing in Chines-' immigrants to one foi every 50 tons of tonnage.

Ehen E. Rexf.>rd. author of -'Sijver Tares, 1¾ Among the Gold," and other popaiae »ou«js, has been a[>poiuted postmaster at Shioctoa, Wis. The salary of the postmaster ot Shioc-ton, Wis., is $24:2 a year.

A visitor at \h- White house the other dav asserted that he was on a divine mission, iff was arrayed in whit" linen and ornamented with llowers. He saLl he hud a residence in heaven aiid Another In CalifonriHr^

A. J. HuneU". a miner, brought in news from Fronteras of an enja'eiivnt between the Indians and whites.:n miles southeast of l-'ron-teras. in which he reported .(3 Indians and 111 Aiucrieaus killed and several wounded.

John lhtssell Yo.imr. just arrived from th< Flowery Kingdom, says China does all in he; power to prevent emigration t> the I'n.ted States, and that our restriction act merely of­fends thr pride uf the pigtail goveriini/ut."

Catholics of Pennsylvania vigorously* pro­test against the readi'ui: of the 'bible 'in the public.'schools of that state. The matter is under advisement by Judge Mehard, but what­ever the decision, un appeal will be taken.

Five hundred and forty-one mormons, in charge of Elder J. Hansen, arrived .in New York on the st.'anishm Wisconsin the other morning.. They are Danes, Swede* aud Nor­wegians. Thoy started for the west a-t ouce.-

4- The Secretary of the State Board o* Agricul­ture of Missouri est'nntes the yield of wheat at seven and three-tenths' bushels per acre, oi a total of 11.:234,010 bu-hels. The condition ol corn is yp 5 pi r cent.: oata 'Jvi.ti: hasSS.V; spring wheat 64.7. :'

Somebody at Utiea. N. Y., had a sky rocket left over from the Fourth and sent it up Mon­day. It st.itick the loading department of th« Remington Armory, destroyed that stnietur* and $50.00.") worth of cartridges. Smoke and water $25.u0> mere damages. '

John L. .Mc'cktruiv. wh.) ultont tv>-.> s'ears age as grain! treasurer of the Catholic Knights ol America cmLr-zy.led some $22,00tJof tliatorder's money and suddenly disappeared irom his home at (Jraftrn* -W. Va., has l>een found and will probably sulVcr for his crime.

Hibbs. ex'postmaster at Lewiston, I. T.. whe stole ¢15,0.0 and er.me near getting 140.000, has written a letter to Atton.ey-Cbneral Bry­ant, of the pcs.tollice department, C( uinlaining that a registered ,'ett r he sent to a friend con­taining $£0J never rea-hed its destination. f In the case of t'le widow of Stephen A. Doug lass vs. Ch-.ciigo L'uiv. rsity, to rceovrr title LC the property, it lifting a'l •gcd that the trustees had forfeit'd their ir.istin sniTeriny; a mortgage to he foreclosed, the tru-tees aic "iilercd. by tiie court to convey the premis -s to compluina'ut.

Second Lieuh. (."ari-i;ll Meiver. of the V niter] States Marine Ce^rps,.-who . was. trie.dj>v court.-martial in Ne»v York for dvnuUenr.c-^oT) tht Panatna e\] C'.litton. ha:> he n sentenced to twe veaTs^suspcnsion on half pay, and to retain his present uutnber on thi; legist t during that time.

The bureau of statistic- r< p . i t s that, durlnfl the 11 months cndcd^May ..1, V'"i>5, there .Avert exported froin^rhe United State's 5'i0.S>S, 121 gallons of^-mtrieral oils, valut--"!. fit £45.5^1.0^1. Thl^^rrfouiit is nearly $4.0ihj.iA') greater that:

^thr- value of oils cxp'oVcd clr.riug the sami; period in U84.

laws n?h«\-U be honestly aad earnestly puforocd,

, - • ' '

*" A IUL'MG man in Brooklyn, after con­sulting his watch, dropped it into his pocket, when he was startled by an ex­plosion, which was followed by many others in rapid succession. Before he could remove'his clothing it had beei burned through to the flesh and a painful wound inllicted. The hand in which he held the watch was also se­verely btiraed. An examination proved the explosion to have been caused by chlorate of potash tablets, which he was in the habit of can ying loose in his pocket, and which were ignited by the watch being dropped quickly upon t com.

Tiia national museum at Washing­ton has received some relics of the first iron furnace in America'; This was at FalTing-Gree-ki in Chesterfield, county, Virginia, a few mi'es below^Richmond, but on the opposite side of the James. I h e works were begun in 1619, bu t i a -1622 were dest-oved in an Indjiwr'mas-j Wm. H. Tudnty. the need sexton of r-.-t,

„•;, ••"• - -..-^- , , I UeQUie's church. Nxw_Yorl; has been sentem-. sacre They were nevcr^renowed, and i ^ t 0 .J0 Vl...irsi hnpri.-ouinTirr •orT.T.nTnaTlj the goxt—AttoavpV^to manufacture •isaultiiv-j a irirl lu vein-.- of age. Wiien th.

J " " g ' - prnrr) ' , : | | ( eij i;.e se'.il eii<.'C ruur.i 'V fcli iron wa* Gov. Spottswood, neartm; present site of Fredericksburg,

)out 172G. Tod;his"the plantation oi

senseless to the lb oi 'Chamber street Vnn.pitai.

lie \Vas ta.ki u to tin

dl : ig 111r» I")a

Go rge Washington's father^ Angus« t'ne, contributed much ore.

Gen. Nelson A. Miles ei.mini partment, of ti-e Cohoaoi:-,, HA> u.'e.i o.-de; e.l tc

; relieve (icn. (.',. C. Auuu.-. eommarvlircv the. I)e-tpartment, of the ,Mi;s';u-::, Avho has re'ired fr6m octi<-f service, lien. Miles .', ill go imt-nc-

-diatcly into li:c iield to as^iune ^o.nr.iandol T _. , . . ^ , - , , thVforees in 'he Trdiuu territory who are IN Berlin a so-iety has been formed . watchmg4he Indians.

for the development of New Guinea, President"Andrew D.Whit: ofCornollr.nl-and its first stop h to be taken by med- JJJSJ. *%?> " ^ " a E ^ S " " ^ ''"' v S ical pioneers, whok are advertised for in I do not consider myself 1v.uny mt-ans ., ^ A. , . . T , . the right m a n to i>e nominatcil. MY pans I'oi the G e r m a n m/d ica l j ou rna l s . The i r anothe--line of life have been uiade'ih'hherate. first d u t y wiLr be to r epo r t u p o n the h' a i v u carefully, and I can see no adequate

. , , / , . i j .1 , • , reason for chanir ng them.': physical, zoological and ethnological aspects of ^he country. Tho Medical Times thinksnvi^method has some ad­vantages over the variable English cus-torn of bringing isolateiL peoples to a knowledge of the advantages of trade by tho slow measures of missionary so-cietics.

The Hessati fly has made groat devinvtation in the win at Helds of Aariou.- town* in Wnyne COm»ty, New Yorli . In .Vrcaoi:'. t he i c - s is cs-tiniated at *>'J0.O0O. In the immcdintc vicinity of Lyons the loss is ot'tnate.l l>v cnrcful ob­servers at £'00()0. In MHIIC jlaccs ll.e iann-ers Rre' bunting l ie AVIK at lieh'.r in order tc exterminate tin- in-ict i^ far us possible,

It is the purpose of the malingers of the new rvufminnr^ wiiieii is fo lie o'oi-lied ;;t' NeAV Oncans in NM -c-'iMer ti, vetidn and (",ila::;e tlio

•» M(-xieau exhii-.if. and to M-etirc e\Vib..':v fio:n A n Oregon man has htdhnved out the stump tl;e r»out!t Am rirmi ami (.'en;rnl Aim i-ii-an.

of a hug: tree itj the fashi n of a room, cut a states and the West India thi rds , e'eeii'tary "tfrmrnnd AviUiLoAvs In it, and bus there tuk<:u Hwyard proinis-s that this-project. Aviil i-avcjlw up histJLo.le. friendly support of the slate dcparti-ient.

Bill Nyo to a Coiumuuiat. DEAR SIK: Your courteous letter of

the l»t \inst., in which you cordially consent to share my wealth and dwell together with me in fraternal sunshine, is duly received. While I difliko to appear cold and distant to one who seems so veurnfuland so clinging, am! whilo I do not wish to be regarded as purse-proud or arrogant, I must de­cline your kind otter to whack up.

You had not heard, very likely, that I am not now >'* communist. I used to be, 1 admit, and tho society no doubt neglected to strike my name off the role of active members. For a num­ber of years I was quite active as a communist, I would have been more active, but I had conscientious scru­ples against being active in uuything then.

While you maybe perfectly sincere in your belief that the great capitalists like Mr. Gould and Mr. Vanderhilt should divide with you, you will have great dilliculty in making it perfectly clear to them. They will probably demur, and delay, and hem, and haw, and procrastinate, until finally they will get out of it in some way. Still I do not wish to throw cold water on your enterprise. If the other capital­ists look tavorably on the plan, 1 will cheerfully co-operate with them. You go and sco what you can do with Mr. Vanderhilt, and then come to me.

You go on at some length to tell me how most of the wealtii is in the hands of a few mon, and then you attack those men and refer to them in a way that makes my blood run. cold. Ytrtr tell the millionaires of America to be­ware, for the hot breath of a bloody-lianded Nemesisi is~~aTreftdy~in the ain

You may say to Nemesis, it you please, that I have a double-barrel shotgun standing at the head of my bed every night, and that I am in the Nemesis business. You also refer to the-fact that the sleuth-hounds of eter­nal justice are camped on the trail of the pampered milt'toTiaire, a~nd"you ask us to avaunt. it you see the other sleuth-hounds of your society within a week or two, I wish you would say to them that at a regular meeting of the millionaires of this country, after the minutes of the previous meeting had been read and approved, we voted al­most unanimously to discourage any sleuth-hound that we found camped on our trail alter 10 o'clock p. m. Sleuth-hounds who want to ramble over our trails dnriuir oilice hours may do so with the utmost impunity, but after 10 o'clock we want to use our trails f.or other purposes. No man wants to go to the great expense of maintaining a trail winte-r and sum­mer, and then leave.it out nights for other people to use and return U-w4^u they get ready.

I do not censure you, however. If you could convince every one of the utility of communism, it would cer­tainly be a great boon to you. To those who are now enjjajred in feeding: themselves with fiat beer out of a to­mato can, such a change as you sug­gest would fall Ike a ray of sunshiue in a rat hole; but alas! it may never be. I tried it a while, but my ell'orts were futile. The effect of my great strug­gle "seemed to be that men's hearts grew more and more stony, and my pantaloons got thinner and thinner on the seat till it seemed to mo* that the world never was so eold. Then I made some cxptvlmcts 1 ti manual la­bor. As 1 began to work harder and sit down less, 1 found that the world was not so cold, it was only when 1 sat down a long time that 1 felt how cold and rough the world really was.

Perhaps it is so with you. Sedpnt-ary habits and s^ale beer are apt to make us morbid. Sitting on the stone door sills of hallways and public buildings during cold weather is apt to give you an erroneous impression of life.

Of course, I am willing to put my money into a common fund if 1 can

j be convinced that it is best. I was an ! outside passenger on a Leadville coach i some years ago, when a few of our ! friends suggested that we ail put our j money into a common fund, anil I was

almost the tirst one to sec that thoy j.w.ere.rjgj.it. They went away into the ' mountains to apportion ""the"" money

they sfot from our party, but I never got my dividend. Probably they lost my post olhce address. — Nctv York Mercury.

• ' • - • - i ^ ^ > - i • • • • • • .

The Pay of Shurcrs. "What voices are paid tho highest?'*

asked a.'reporter of The Mail and l<h> pnas of Now York, of a prominent singer of that city.

* Afl things -eOjUarl, asoprauo voico commands a larger salary in church choirs than any other. Next a rich contralto, which is worth a gueat deal, "TmcaTisre to few pcorphr- pof*ttss-a-eon— tralto voice. Then follows the teaor, A good tenor is a rarity,"and is always in.demand. Altos get very good sal­aries, but 1 hey must be far abovetho common in voice. Last comes the bass. They get about the poorest sal­ary of any. In view of the fact that church choir singers have had their salaries reduced, aud not a fe>v have position at all, it is expected that the-

music presented next winter at tho churches will uot bo up to the usual -.staiidurd."

<a Noi'thwi'st Indian Tribes. The Imffan tritmn- of tho—Nurihwest

have been!" musci! loving little*. liu<\ •slipping the cherished ring back upon her linger. "But I hope he isn't going to bo subject to these chi l l s . 1 ' sho added1 wi th a doleful look. " I do hope he i sn ' t , for the sake of both of u s . " — I'cnn Shirltu/.

tiyelasdies. Said a West Side belle to the writer

the other day: "There are so many new things employed to make us real sweet that it is really hard to enumer­ate them. Hut to give you some idea uf the labor we go through to capti­vate our admirers, I will mention face powder lirst. As you see, I am a blondo and am compelled to use a pink powder, but my brunette cousin fixes her complexion up with a white powder.11

"And how does she get such nice red lipsP11

"She uses rouge, of course. Hut previous to putting anything of this kind on our face wo have to prepare the ground-work, so to speak."

To illustrate what she said, the belle opened a bu'ieau drawer and took out a (jueer-lookiug object, It wtis a mask which perfectly tilted her face. "When 1 retiie at night," slio sa id , " l take thisj up and rub the in­side with cream. I tie it on ami sleep in it. You see, the lotions 1 use make ihe skin of my face rough, and the application of the cream has a ten­dency to open the pores of the skin, and when 1 wake up my face is smooth and soft, Then here is tho 'hare's foot.1 This 1 _ use to put the powder on." Tho belle kindly-displayed all the articles required to "make her up11for tlio <vpera. There was the face powder, the cream and the ,7ha~reV foot" mentioned. Then she had a cake of nicely perfumed soap, a large bot­tle of elegant cologne, a bottle of toil­e twa te r , perfumed, a balm for the skin, a little bottle of vaseline a wash for the scalp, a metalic brush, an eyebrow pencil and a dark liquid to put on the eyebrow nud lashes; a cake of camphor-ice for the hands if they become chapped; a bottle of hau-doline, one of hair oil, and it box of beauty spots. The latter were simply little pieces of sticking-plastev-eut in-to the shape of stars, crescents, circles and hearts. Another little bottle con­taining a black liquid .was marked "headache cure," and the belle as­sured her visitor that she used it fre­quently after attending a ball. The list of her toilet articles of course in­cluded a comb, a tooth-brush and a nail brush, a sponge of delicate text-' ure, a Turkish towel, a bottle of shoe dressing.^ a wash rag, an atomizer for throwing cologne over herself, a flesh-brush aud a hand-glass. "Then I al­ways keep a breath perfume" suid siie, and she displayed a small box of silver-coated cachous. The top drawer of her dressing-caso contained a paper of sachet powder, and a china box of tooth-paste was part of the comple­ment.

"There, I think you have the whole list,11 she said. "But, by the way. did you ever know that ladies are now shaving off their eye-lashes? It is a fact. After the get them 'shaved off they take fal-e ones and-slick them on, Makes 'em look awful sweet. 1 don't .do it, because I have long lashes." — Chic ago Tribune. -*«

TUTT8A, PILLS

25 YEARS IN U8E» Aa Qr« a f t Medical Trlaaph of th> kfj

SYMPTOMS O f A ^ TORPID LIVERS

L»Mct«pMtlte. B«w«UeMtlT«,Pat»l» t»« k u d , with a dull s«as»tU» »• »*• ha«k »»rt. * • !« ond»r tho •hMltofa fcl&A«, F u l U u s after eating-, with »*la» tatllaatUa to exertloaof body oral«4» I r r i tabi l i ty of tcnyer, jbowaolrlta, with) a foolUf orhaviNfaeiloetod io*»o daty, WOarlaeaa* Dlaslaeia, Flvttoria*at tho Heart, Dati boforetho eyop» Iteadaeh* •vor tho right oyo, Roitloataoaat with fitful dreams, Highly eolorod Urlao, aa4

0 CONSTIPATION, a M T C T T ' a PILLS aro especially a/ - Aed

to such case*, one dnse effects such % fhang«r>ffee!iiigM4to>\su>nUntliesufferer.

Th*y lneroo.se the A ppctlte,*fi« cause tho body Vi Toko o n F le i t t . t in^ ibe sjntem U no*rlsh«d,And by ihoirTonle Action oa tt« WtseoUve Ortrans.tUa-ular s too l s aro pro*^p»<. Hrlca U5e» 44Mnrray Wt..K.T.

TUTTS HAIR DYE. •GSAT H in t or WHUKSKS changed to a

GLoasr BLACK by a slnjjle application of tbi* DTK. I t imparts a uaturat color, acta instantaneounly. Sold by Druggists, O* sentby expvoe* on receiptor 9 1 . « 9 Offlco,44 Murray St. , New York.^

Improved Western Washer M i l C S . Ho. lfor family of 0 98

Ko. 2 fbrlarye fiially 9 Ko. 3 for Hotel and Laandry, • . . . 10

Over 20,000 in use*

the The Burro.

Apart fiom the Indians and Mexicans, these animals are the most characteristic anil ubiquitous objects in New Mexico. The shaggy little brutes range from the size ot a small Newfoundland to that of a six-months old heifer. It is practically impossi­ble to overload them. They will car­ry all that can be piled on their backs. 1 have frequently seen a solid heap ol wood gliding mysteriously into town, with no apparent motive power, but 1 knew that somewhere underneath the pile there was hidden a burro. When released from their burdens they will immediately set to work, with diligences/ and gusto picking up a living in J.ke midst of stones and dry cactu^-where any other animal wouluV""starvc to death. Joe proceededfo attach them, by..a wonderful scries of'khoTsVlo t h e -

sujwportin-g posts under the house. I watched him curiously as he tied knot after kuot, and at length ventured to inquire whether burros usually em­ployed their spare time in performing juggling tricks.

Joe regarded me with a smile which was compounded of one part of good-natuied contempt, two of superior knowledge, and thrco of genuino amusement.

4 ' \Wal ,M he said, ''you are summat of. -a tenderfoot; that 's &o. Whyv. a. burro is a born devil.5-- ^

"Do you mean to say that a bvprro can undo one-tit those knots with his TlJelhT^r^slrCTt ' - — ^ don't pur-foas-U) say wliatlie does

Thousands of ladies arc tiring it. and ibty speak of it ia the highest terms, saying tuat they would rather dispense with any other household article, than this excellent Washer. No well-regulated family will be without it, as i t tares the clothes. sares labor,, aavea time, seres fuel, saves soap, aad makes washday no longer a dread, bat rather a pleasant recreation, aa much as such la possible.

H0KT0N BPF'G CO., Agents Wanted. Ft. Wayne, Ind.

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i E 3 fife b - § « p

Sw§ 1

1 British-'territories number about 34,-: (ion. Tlii're are ('htppewas and Crees, ', 17.11 0*, Crees of the plains and woods; I 8,1.')7; lHaek&Hjt. 0.07:5; Sioux, 2,000, ' There are also about 1(5,000 in the r«-' imi i tn tnv itf lli,> l l m N r m P,;i,y 1 ;om)):iny1S

territory. The Crees are a trouble­some lot and giivo our fronlior post.; in Moutauua some trouble last sum-

! mer.

it with. He may do it with his tail for all I know, but If you will learn me a knot that a burro can't undo, if you give him time enough, I will toll you thank*. Why, the father of all evil is not a patch on an old jack burro fur infernal cleverness and mischief."— fliryc Harrison, in Harper*s Magazine for i/ay.

m, , . _ - • — » • sen •— •—• ,^ ->

The Proper Way to Retaliate. "Don't know What to do," remark­

ed a millionaire to his doctor. "I want to i>,o into the country and live quielly and without ostentation."

, "Why don't you do it? Your health demand* a rest of that sort."

"Yes, 1 know it ," repliod the p.-.. t ient, "but my money gives me away. What shall I do?" -

"in that case,/' nnswerei: TtTTT physician, "why don't you give j your' money away ?"— ..Veto )->r/i, >4JraphUr

WRIGHT'S INDIAN VEGETABLEPlLLS • OB THE

And ail Bilious Comptaiht© Sale to take, bolnp; purely vepe'nbin; no aria-

lux rriceiii cu. All Dr-.w^uu -

Page 7: PINCKNEY DISPATCH. - pinckneylocalhistory.orgpinckneylocalhistory.org/Dispatch/1885-07-16.pdfpinckney dispatch. vol. ill pinckney, michigan, thursday, july ig, 1885. no. 27 sb pinckney

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rWm WARMER » • «W-1

T I P P E C A N O E THE BC8T

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TOXIC

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FACT AND FANCY.

TC_ I T? p £j ' # SATISFACTION GUARANTEED.

H. H. WASHES 4 CO., SoobMtor, H.Y. FO_T"

A_ll SENSATIONS.

. $1.00 A BOTTLE,

g. H. WAKSER& Co., Rochester, N. Y.

J H J L L I P V A N T A S E L , Newark, N . Y . , tul-"crod for m.tnv years from dv-pepsi* and malassim-lation of food, and nport* th* ih - derived greater >enefit from Warner's TII^MCANOK, The Beat, hea from any other medj__>c he ever used. His laughter also used it w i t j f l f c v x u when every other (nown remedy failed, V

AS A

Oonstitutioral Toric. I T M A S N O E Q U A L .

$ 1 . 0 ( ) A B o t t l e :

l i . Hr WAKNER & Co Rochester, N, T.

W , K. SAGK of St. Johns, Mich., w>s completely rrroetrattd hy l a * ha<^t4»i|M-«*«iurcd during; die late war. He returned home wrecked both in mind and body. For twenty year* he tdmply existed, half the time more tieau than alive uolil he was restore—- _. tohealthby W - r n c r V T i r r s x a N O i , tl»e West. He ad*m> s all old vei_ to Uy it. Write to him at ot. John*, Mich *

BRM5

wee

- T H t BEST TONIC.

T h _ medic ine , combining Iron with pure Tegetable tonics, quickly and completely Cure* I>yape|>»la, I n d l « e a t l o n . Weakness*, tr»\ . . _ I m p u r e B l o o d , M a l a r i a , (Jht l laaud F e v e r s ,

l * i a t It l e a n unfail ing remedy for Diseases of the

a n d N r u r a l c i a .

K i d n e y s a n d I . lver . It la invaluable -for Diseases peculiar to

W o m e n , and all who lead sedentary lives. It does not injure the teeth, cause headachcor

produce constipation—OULT Iron medicine* do. Itenrlches'nnd purifies the blood, stimulates

the appetite, nuls the assimilation of food, re-

Prof. IJcokmoro nays that lobsters are now taken almost entirely from deep water, and at Um present rate of decrease will shortly become ouriosi-ties, to be found only in museums. * Brick houses avo a loti^-felt want in Texas, according to The .vw Antonio Times, which chronicles with joy the fact that preparations are being made at Columbus to erect such buildings.

An old man in Allegheny county, Pennsylvania, received $o,0!.)0 from his chirdren on ngroeina: not to marry a fascinating girl of 17. Then he mar­ried her and gave her the money, and fcvhe disappeared with it.

A suit for $5,000 damages has been instituted by a resident of Rome, Ga., against a local grocer who displayed in front of bis store a card with the name of the prosecutor on it and the words "Deadbeat, $6.38."

The dude collar this season, it is authoritatively announced, will be narrow and will have the corners slightly turned down. He will now have an opportunity of looking around bim and of seeing what is going on in the world.

The Baltimore American truly says a man who will give up the editorship of an influential, American paper for a second-rate foreign appointment is not made of that sterner stuff which enters so largely into the make-up of all good editors.

It is well, sometimes, to have a care and not yawn too loudly or to open the mouth to wide while indulging in this peculiar pastime. A Rochester lady a few days since was unfortunate enough to dislocate her jaws while indulging in an ordinary everyday yawn.

, ;Yes t s i r / ' said the entomologist, " I can tame Hies so that when I whis­tle they will come and alight on my hand." "Pshaw!" naid the bald-head­ed man, "that 's nothing. They come and alight on my head witho n_y whistling." T_e nctomologist s* down.

A citizen of Boston, in looking over the genealogical records of his family, noticed the'following: "Abiah—died 1799, aged 17. Tradition says she went to a ball dressed in the manner, of later days, 'beauifully but not warmly; 'caught cold, and "died four days after. The dress was an heirloom in the family of Ira."

A man at Union City, Pa., puzzled his neighbors by frequently carrying a paper bag, evidently containing something heavy, to his room. What he could do with so much flour was a mystery, bnt the other night the matter was explained when the man slipped upon the ice and burst the bag, disclosing a t in pail lilleil with beer. , ' . The kirmess which opened recently

in New York is a festival which origi-natct!«a the Netherlands many years ago. It is supposed that Hie word is derived from kerk, the Dutch for church, and messe.feast and was origi nally a church festival. Teuier aird-other Flemish artists have illustrated the old-time scenes of the "^kefmesse," as it was then ca l led .^-

The many Ameffeans who have viewed wijh^wonder and admiration the rejaratns of Heidelberg castle,

licves Heartburn and Belching, and strength- spkrh'did even in decay , will be g l a d to e n F o V h ! m e r m ^ *-** l h e r e p o r t e d i n j u r y ' t o the Energy, <fcc, it has no equal.

J&- The genuine has above trade mark and crossed red linos on wrapper Take no other.

uuuijkf DKOW* n i E « y u i ; co., BALTIMORE, an

MALT —BITTERS,

If you wish to be relieved of those _terrib!e S i ck H e a d a c h e s - and that miserable S o u r S toa t* a e t i . It will, when taken according to direc-_•&*, c u r e a n y caae o f S ick H e a d a c h e er S o u r S t o m a c h . It cleans the lining of

i a e h and t o w e l * , promote* healthy action and s t r e e t secretions. It makes p u r e M o « d and gives it free flow, thus sending n u t r i m e n t to every part. It is the safes t , apeed lea t and ' a n r e s t V e g e t a b l e Remedy i-ver invented for all diaeaaoa of the s t o m a c h and l i v e r .

J. M. M-ore, of Farmlni^on. Mich., says: My •nflTerlng from Kick H e a d a c h e and S o u r S t o m a c h was terrible. One bottle of Hops and Malt Bitters cured me.

Do not get H o p s and m a l t Bitters con­founded with inferior preparations of similar name. For sale by all druggists.

f"B!TT!rirtJtJ;IJETilOIT,tlCH, T.H. IlIVeHM AN * W N S . i*t-ro1t,ttlrtr.r^ ^ . ¾ ^ JAMES _ . DAVIS & CO- Detroit, Mlch„ ( A " e ' ° t f

CHENEY'S StomachI Liver

I REGULATOR] feUREg COMSTIPATIO. .

Torpid Llyer.lndlgestlon, Heartburn, Malaria, Rheumatism, Palpitation of the Heart when arising from indigestion or deranged condition oJthe stomach, Sick Headache or Higrain, jPUes ana. Femalecomplaiats. Tha onSr med< letae In the world ta*5 ^ ^ ^ ^

P a a l t i r c l y Cara i C ^ n s t l p t f n .

• 1.00 per bottle ; 6 bottles. §4.00 • E M D r o i l CIKOULARS, FBBK. CHENEY A C O . , Prop'ro,

UaaaXaetartV'Y Oaaatots, T O L E D O . O*

foundations by the railway tunnel be­neath them existed only in imagina­tion. A commission appointed to makfl_an examination says it linds the foundations in perfect condition.

The. ex-Empress Eugene wrote the following pathetic sentence in a private letter to Monsij;-nor (lodduril tit Chiselnurst: "t am left alone, the solo remnant of a shipwreck which prove? how fragile and vain arc the grandeurs of tin-world."

Everybody in Lomlon who has daughters t< marry gives a hall, if possible, inasmuch us, if they du not, their girls, unless possessed o! some extraordinary attraction or very higl rank, receive sca*vc;'ly any invitations "to sucL entertainments. ,

. Health, Wealth and Happiness Are mofe intimately connected with a sound stomach and good condition ot the blood than most people suppose Thin blood means weakness, languor and misery. A dyspeptic stomach means all the horrors you can think of. Brown's Iron Bitters means euricheJ blood, good digestion, healthy appetite, swegt_«leep and vigorous strength. Mr. Henry Hallarn;; »"o <th 17th street, St. Louis, says, "brown's Iron Bitters re­lieved me of dyspepsia,, purified my blo':d, and gave me an appetite.r"' Thousands of others testify in the same wav.

Recent army lists contain the nain^s of only three .Waterloo oJllcers—Gen George Whicho-cote, who joined the arniv in 1^11; the Earl of A fbetttftrie, w ht+- tnite-1 e-1 -.-.the a 'M ny +mly t w. > months lxfore the battle; and Lieut. Andrew tiarJne-Vwh,> e n t e r a l the j.rULiidXL 1*J.L

If you feel nervous as to your kidneys, liver, ior urinary organs, use Huut's,Remedy'.

Mr, Kegnn Paul. tJie^l^ndorFjnil-li?B^r71)nnT $27.i5i.) for theuwluiseript of Gordon's diary.

Manv^rrfan who had lost nrrve, vigor anr energyThas been cured by Hunt's Remedy.

The nicAcl, which wa; unt 1 r.uite recentlj looked UTKin with contetnt>t in San Francisco, has already revolutionized the prices of certiiir. things and. services in that city, and the Chronicle expresses t\v opinion that eoppoi cents will soon be as current as the nickel.

Woit'i Knowing. Trio worst scnhl nr 1 urn run he

• car If Cole'!* («rt><)H su lvc Is projj PrutJKists «t ;Ti mul Hi c e n t * .

<a*»etrvplthout i 7 u s e d . So ld 1)>

r.*<

A gentleman tlshifrtf in Lough Currane, In -land, and antxTTul and a half trout, whose stoma< hafpearedTThtlsuallv distended. Vpoi ripnuijf'tt open he found a fully tiedgeil spar row; quite perfect, without even a feather dis­turbed. Let fly ilslu rtnen take the hint.

Joshua Tuthill, Saginaw, Mich., had Bright1! Di-'jease, aud was cured by Huut's Remedy.

Tired Laoguid Doll Kxat'.ly cxprc»«C8 tti> condhloti of lliomands of peo' pie at this season of ttic year. TU« depressing effectf of the waiin wcaDifi1 and the v.'4'iilci'r)L'd condition of ^he boly, are quickly ovurcomc by tin* use ot Hood's Sur»a[i^rllla. Why nufferi ouycr when a remedy 1» »c cloa*! at hand? Tak<: It uow. K will Klvt: you health, utreugth, and ciierity.

"I took Hood'n Surnapartlla for lo.i* of app«tlt«*. dyxpepnla, and Kt'tieral Un^uor l i did me a van; amouat of Kood, and 1 h.ist'iio hesitancy in recoin nn-udlog It to my frlendu »mrt till uuedlotc medicine." J. W. WiM.KKDur', (julncy. III.

"ll'wd'j* San*aparllU toru-ii up my system, purlflpi-roy blood. »hurjx*n» m/ api>etlti*, and S-CIUK to build nie over." W. .(. HI.XIK, ConiliiK. N. V.

"1 could not sluep, and In the uinmlng had hard!> 'lfe enoujjji to Kft out of tx'd. I had no appetite, aud my fac«* would breali our with piinpliiH. I decided to take. Hood's Karxaparllla, and uooti bc^an lo slee1' soundly; could get up without that tired and languid feeling, uzid ray appetite Improved." it. A, SAMKQBD, Kent, O.

Hood's Sarsapariila g o l d by all drugalatH. SI m i x for «i. Made only by C. I. H O O D & CO., A p o t h e c a r i e s , L o w e l l , Maas.

IOO Poses One Dollar. At Mr. Beckert Dcnison's. r e c n t sale the

Duke of Hamilton bought back SOIUL* of hi* own pictures for half tlK' price he had given for them. »

Queen Victoria has commanded that the Princesses Louise of Wales an 1 Victoria of Teck are no:, to go out much, but are only to be taken to a few specially favored houses. She strongly disapproves of unmarried Prin­cesses attending parties, ex: e;jt at the palace, presumably, says the Loudon Truth, because none of her own daughters were, allowed to do so.

The Duke of Schleswig-Hol-tein-Augu-ten-burg, it is said, will shortly proceed to Eng­land to become a suitor for the hand of the Princess Louise of Wales. He came of aare last Feruary, is the nephew of Prince Chris­tian, possesses large family estates in Silesia, and enjoys an allowance of £15,000 u year from the German government; so, for a German prince, he is a decided ^>arf(,

Over 375 candidates applied for admission to Harvard college this year, of which number 218. took their examinations at Cambridge. Of these. 162 passed, '.#* without conditions; 49 put off part of their work until the fall, and seven were rejected. "This is a good showTng. When the results from the examinations in other places are received it is anticipated that the next freshmen class at Harvard will prove to be the largest on record.

The Pamoaa Notre Dame. On the 30th of last January, the Sis-

<ers of the most noted Catholic ladies seminary in the United States, the famous Notre Dame, at Govanstown. near Baltimore, Md., made public a card, certi ying to the beneficial results attending the use of Red Star Cough Cure in that institution. They state that they found ittiticacious alike for relieving coughs, oppressions on the chest and irritation of the throat. Officials of the Board of Health of Brooklyn. Baltimore and other cities have likewise publicly proclaimed the virtues of this new discovery, which is entirely free from opiates, poisons and other objections.

Young ostriches are warmed out of their shells by incubators in California, and mani fest great astonishment when they dis they are not in an African desert. Jthe'y have

• not" yet b'-eo-rie a; customed to this continent.

M. L. Bla i r^ -ATderman , 5th W a r d , Scrnnton^-PtC^ s t a t ed Nov. 9 '83 : He hao^v^ed Dr. T h o m a s ' Ec lec t r ic Oil for

>rains, bMrns, cuts , bruises and rheu m a t b n i . Cured every t ime .

^ A man from Canada was in Toledo. Ohio, a

few days ago l.uutiug for his wife. <>7 vears old, who, he says, eloped'in April last with an Ohio man of -1 . " Th" woman has twelve children and several grandchildren.

B*.D DRAINAGE causes rairh sickness, and bad and tmproper action of the liver and kidneys is bad drainage to the

'human system, which Burdock Blood Bitters remedy.

It is estimated that the annual product of the marble quarries of Vermont is 1, 01),0 0 cubic fe.'t, with an increase of about 75.000 feet a year.

BEWAKE OF FRAUDS—Be sure you get the genuine Dr. Thomas' Kclectrij Oil. It cures Colds, Croup. AstTTma. Deafness and Rheumatism.

A story comes from Cali'ornia that a )>oV\v? officer at Los Angeles has become delirious from the too frequent brushing of his teeth.

George Campbell, TTop^insviHe, Ky., says: Burdock Blood Bitters is the best preparation for the Blood and Stomach ever manufactured.

IT WILL PAY YOTJ TO GO TO

DETROIT AND HAVE YOUR

EXAMINED AND PITTED WITH 8PECTACLE8 OR EYE GLASSES

R O E H M ^ W R I G H T S , IMPORTERS. JEWELERS AND OP-TICIANS. 140 WOODWARD AVE. THEY MAKE NO CHARGE FOR] TESTING EYES. AND SELDOM FAIL TO GIVE RELIEF.

-Dsmdp. i t i r « Jtecay, W e a a a M * Itcbllitr In M « a from «*r1j

. lantiocd, fret _ _>r«l«a and all forma or Itcbllitr In M«a from early error, ignorance, vtcaorezr «-»•*• Qylckljraad £atUy Cwrr4 wltlioutronrtnt-m-nt h\ ihn

ZCIVIALE T R E A T M E N T S Bow firmly e«- abnahed In Americaaaietir •nltaascrlta PUCK to curneat iaiiilrcra. (not to boys, orcurio-ilty-aeekrrs), lar^e til minted work on JHarsaeaW U s ti*m\l»-Vriuury Orgtana. Qrala m « N m t a CBealed,forSeeuulurtampa.) Olvrstentimonlala, bossV net*and medical ref.Tenitrs.Ac. C'*u»u\iai\»m_fr*m. CIVIAUC ACEN« V. 1 7 4 > n l t o « ht., Ntw f wrfc

Bi Ki Ki RADWAT'S READY RELIEF.

A C U B E F O R A X L

"Hail Columbia" is 87 years old.

When you visit or leave New York city, via Central depot, save Baggage Expressage and $3 Carriage Hire, and stop at the Orand Union Hotel, opposite said depot. S x hundred ele­gant rooms fitted up at a cost of one million dollars; $1 and upwards per day. European plan. Elevator. Restaurant supplied with the best. Horse earn, stages and elevated rail­road to all depot. Families can live better for less money at the Grand Union Hotel th&n-at any other'flrat-elass hotel in the city.

Cleveland can sing tenor.

ng born on

Hojtettrr's Stom­ach Bittern, as a spe­cific f'ir Indigestion, utatids alone. When the resources of the r>hnrmar.op<r!a have hern c:.!;; U'ted.wlth out, r.t leisf, dolrijf nMre than mlt'g.f' iuK the <•< mplalnt, a course of thU whole­some <* t ii m a c h I c i!fleet* n perfect and P'rniur cot cure. In all ( »se»of drupepnia the liver Is more or le*,* disordered, and upon thin inipt'rtRnt liipiul the I'.lrti-r^ iicf with rejtularrl bttnet-iie<«, M'Kiilntlnx arid ItivitforHtlnif e v e r y M'creth e and aR»lmi-1 K t i n tt <» r ft a r on which 1> o d 1 1 y an d ittenrnl health _d,»-pe;iJ. i'or sale

J j IDru^gfats aiidTTt .lie! s genera l ly .^

A colt was born recently tveigh'-'d twelve pr.•urn's only forcied and is diung welL

in Indiana which It was perfectly

'BOTJOH ON CATARRH." Correct o f f e n s i v e o j o r s ;it mi.-e. (\>\n\>:ete enro of A-orst c a * e s , a l s o u i i e n w l e d ns ^;irgte tor D i p h t l i e r l a Sore Thro.nt. Koul Hreuth. .Nn.-.

There are no white servant-* at the Whit? I louse/,

^ THE HOPE OF TSE NATION.

Children, slow in development, puitv, scraway aa.l lellcate, use "Well's Health Renewer."

Parisian belles now carry pistols. «

CATARRH OF THE BLADDER. SttnglnK. Irritation, inr ta inmat ' cn . all K i d n e y and

t'rlnavy Complaint* , cured hy "I' lK-hu-^alha." 11.

•W

If afflicted with sore ever, use Dr. Isaac Thompson's Eye Water. Druggists sell I t 35c.

Those nersons whodo not need Iron, but who are troubled with Nervousness and Dyspepsia, will find in Carter's Little NERVE PUls a most desirable article. They are mostly used in com* bination with Carter's Little Liver Pills, and In this way often exert a most magical effect. Take just one pill of each kind immediately after eating and you will be free from Indiges­tion and Dyspepsia. In vials at 23 cent*. Sold by all Druggists. .

TF YOU WANT A DOG Send 15 cents for I)oo B.CTKK9' GVIDJE, IUO eajrraTlnira, eolored plate. Asaoclated Fanciers, J37 South Et«ht Street, Philadelphia^,.

The purest, sweetest and best Cod Liver Oil tn the world, manufactured from fresh, healthy livers, up on the sea-shore. It Is absolutely »ure and sweet. Patients who have once taken tt prefer It to all others. Physicians have decided It superlor-to anyof the other oils In market. Made by CASWELL HA.Z.U$D, * Co.. Sew York.

Chapped Hands, Face. Pimples, and Rough Skin, cured.by U»lOK Juniper Tar Soap, made by CxawxLL, HAZ AJI* «fc Co., New York.

High Priced Batter. Dairymao ofien wonder how their more favored

c mpelilors get such h u h prices for their butter the year round. It is by a^wavt- having a ua.fortn p i t edged article. To put the "gilt edge" o i , when the Mistures do not do it. they use Wells, Richard­son _ OG'S Improved Butter Color. Evert butter maker can rlo the .sam.-. Sold everywhere and warranved as harmless as salt, and perfect in opera­tion. •

A C A R © . — T o all who are suffering from errors of-youth, nervous weaksie**, early dm-ay. li*» of .mtfn-jiood. etc.. 1 will send a reel.pi* that wili^cwe you, FRKfc OF CH.VP.trK. ThU srreut remejlyVrHis discov­ered bv a missionary to South Auiefu-a. Send self-addressed envelope" to KEV.,.^OSKPH T. 1SMAX, Station D, New York. ^^_

UaHa'j»HCauftft-* iJ>rB!,H''>'forfan'11}r Q8('- Only sold n a l l a r u a a u W - I n b o t t l e s . lle-*t aud c h e a p e s t .

bUMMEB COMPLAINTS A t«s_moonf-1 la half a tumbler of water will 1B •

few rioraents cure CP.AMP8. SPASMS. SOUB 8T0M-ACHTNAUSEA, VOMITING. HEABThURN, NEKV-0USNEH8. KLEEPLESSNESS. t4U)K HEADACHE, D1ARRHCEA. DYSENTEKY.CHOLEKA MORBUS COLIC. FLATUIJJ&'CY. A_fD ALL IXTEKNAl PAIX8.

For CHOLERA and severe eases of the foregoloj Complaint*, see our printed directions.

MALARIA J2f ITi VARIOUS FO&X9 FMYEM AXB AQVEf

_ | e r e Is not a remedial agent In this world that will ore Fever and Ague and all other Malartous,_BIUous,

H " ttltUATU ¾

~W

% • LYDtA E. PINKHAM'8 • < VEGETABLE COMPQiiflD • . • is A ro_rrrrs cur_e ?oa • - • All those pnl -ra l Ccmplaints • and We.-uefttrs so eomaioa "* * #,*-'• • * t» our best t * « * « • 0 * FEMALE rOPCLiTIOX. < t Ti\ie(l laUialJ , pU)*r L<*«_«• _rm.

• H* pa~*o« t* sol^i/ A ' fi* **g.'r*'.i««f* baling ^ a:»cjst ar.i t^t T*>-'f " ' 1"»'*» B i , < * t k a t - 4°** • » ' ** eUimt i» A), thous'- i^«oj iaJ.VJ can Qladlv teatifi. • • It wiU cure enUrely »J1 yrariaa tiovMe*, Ir{_.n_o_ Hon and Ci^raticni, Filling and V. pl_ecut_ts, aat consequent Spi-rU Weakness, and if paxUcularlj adapted to the eliango of life. • • • • • » * «.-• • • • • It removes Kalitrie^,VTatu!enrv,d^roysallcrwr__f for stimulants and rellevis >V««krii6» of theStoirunch It cures Elwitiag, Htadacben, ;<>;t-vous Pro»vr_Uon, Osneral IVbiHiy, Siecpleiiwessi, Liepresfsion and Indi gtcrtion. That leclintc ot bearing down, causing pain, antf backache. 1s alwuyn permaneotly enrvd br ltaua*. • Bend stamp to Lynn, Ma**, for yftinphlet. Letters o.' t«qu-r7«o&fldent__iy_—werod- 'fnftaUat_r_ja_rta

I Especia'Jv "In Cholera

'ildjfe's K^td Infantum 1» the use of

1 liivaluabie. Manv ciise* oonld he cited wl-.ere everything else had faffed, ami l.ldgo's Food has been tried and retained. Hy the »rreugrh trnpai ed and Its tieutrnl action «>n the bowel*, the phyi»u»rfin has heen ahleto use-»tte4t-re!ie'<ii<'s ss to i'ttctH^wrleri-resloratlon of the patient to health.

Prills thovrc>_n_ yet raps out th-cuttu.jy^rf tha Diill at e_eh stujii^rnrtvi-s, -,he c.vsir.jror diii.*

•le limit r it i> It-t it follow. re»t»TTu' »iil vl;B<n;t r,-nioviii)i'

•vo—l K_i_t-^si»):- than ul.y oilier an l dr..-* tlio too'.* faster: AVo a_.tj rt*a_«

KI a i- ui 11- ¾ R-^aitd 1oo'4

L i j - C S . v | \ Vlwrburing J i W V ^ s _ * . f a. •_• LAKOK,

^ . W I L L S '

& HYMAN, T i r r i N , O H I C

Lumbago, Backacht>H*_a>'che. Toothache, B o r e Tht^aU9we lH^s^ . t*pr* i i lMi» .Br« ia«_ >

Bnrna»J»>5ul«la>, F r o a t U l t r a , _. * « A-M>rnK* nontLY PAIXS A o *«•«». SoW by Dryafftu.nd P-»l«r*ev<rywti-r«. Fifty CauUaU>__,

DIPT, iiotn In 11 L»U(U«CM. TI1E OOAKLES A. VOCE LEU CO.

lt»_. VOQ_L_i*C04 XUlUagr*. 14^1 .1 .4 ,

TAt'CTIT AST) SITUATIONS l-'l'it N IMU:n Cin-iilar« free

i T I X K I t K n S . , . I n n e s k l U e . W i s .

enr and other fevers (aided quickly as KADWAY'S

RADWAY'fc READY

by RADWAT'S PILLS) ao READY RELIEF. ^^ _ T

_ . RELIEF I S A CFREFOR EVERY PAIN. TOOTHAt HE, HEADACHE^ SCIAT­ICA, LUMBAGO, NEURALGIA. RHElT^ATIbM. SWELLING OF THE JOI-NTS. SPRAINS, BRUISES, PAINS IN THE BACR\. CHEST OR LIMBS.

The application of the READY RELIEF to the part or parts where the palu or difficulty exists will afford instant ease and comfort. _ _ ^ . „ __ . .__ ._ ,

It was the first and U m K ONLY PAIN REMEDY that instantly stops the most excruciating pains, allays inflammation, and Cures Congestions, whether of the Lungs, Stomach, Bowels, or other glands or organ* OJ one application.

PRICE. 3u CENTS per bottle. 8old by droggistt.

DR. RADWAY's

SARSAPARILLIAN RESOLVENT, The Great Blood Purifier-

4_

Chronic r.heumatism. Scrdfula.' Glandular Swetllng. Hacking. Drv Cough, Cancerous Affection*. Syphilitic Complaints. Bleeding of the Lungs, Dyspepsia. Water Brash. White Swellings, Tumwrs. Pimples, Blotches, Eruptions of the Face, Ultera Skin and Hip Diseases; Mercurial Diseases. Female Complaints, Gout, Dropsy. Rickets. Salt ltheum. Bronchitis, Consumption, Kid­ney, Blsdder, Liver Complaints, etc.

Dr Radway's Sarsaparillap Resolvent. A remedy composed of Ingredients of extraordinary medical properties, essential to purify, heal, repair and Invigorate the broken-down and wasted body— <jvicx. PLKASA?ixr^Ar_ and P«BMA.VXXT In Its treat­ment and cure. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. One Dollar a bottle.

BR. RADWAY'S REGULATING PILLS, 27½ Great Liver and Stomach Remedy.

Perfectly tasteless, elegantly coated, purge, regulate, purify, cleanse and strengthen.

Dr. Radway's Pills, for the cure of all disorders of the Stomach. Liver, Bowels, .Kidneys, Bladder, Nervous 1)1 senses. Loss of Appetite. Headache, Con-Blipatlon. <•ontlvenes*. Indicention. Dyspepsia, ntlrous nesa. Fever. Inflammation of the Bowels, Piles, and all dearariifement* of the Internal Vlsi-era. Purely vegetable, containing no mercury, minerals, or dela-terous drugs.

Price 25 cents per box. Sold by all druggists. _

READ "FALSE AND TKUE." Bend s letter Ktamp to DR. RADWAY *CO„ No. C

Warren street. New York. £_f Information worm housands w.Ul he sent u> yuu.

".fTTl-

N O M O R E

BOSS COLUW PAD

Of Zinc A Leather . « O H E 5 E C K 8 . Tt will positively prevent cbaOng aad care sore

W i t h e r ? . Horse can be worked while cure Is per­fected. . Har e.j maker* win refual money If not sa-ltoai after :<> days trial.

UliXTKR CLHTIS, Madison, Wi_-_

$50 REWARD will _• r«4« *>' -ajr firala Paa •T *a-M ««• —-4 «aa tl-aa aa4 ka> u aaeh braia t SOTS la M « a_T M*«r P i t a t , stOXAJtCM Crata aad M * d a«-«ra_»r •*4 Itaasfs* M- *ar l a t p r a r M W a r « « * a N MU1 * t - Isaa-U t*r wkluS v* • _ « _ n » . Ctrsa-U, M < PrtM LM _ - t M tnt,

IEWM»«ICHIKtO.,

If PAGES LIQUID GLUE «8MK_kkW,H«IUttWiH3S

_ . Awarded QOLO MEDAL, LONDON, 1S8J. Csud ZM by Masoa k Hamlin Orran and Piano Co.. Pall mas ¢ 1 Palace Car Co . *e. Mfd nnl- by th« KUS8 A

EvtRYWHERl. aar8atnpi«Tin Can by Mail. Oc.

lASTHMA cujSiSl i G e n t a a Am J m a C a r e neveryaiiJtogl-* iw.1 |sMdia(« rt'io/in the worst c*Bes4ns_rsjs com fort-1 I abte sleep; effects e a r c a where ail JthersJ aiL-41 ltriale<>nri*e**ttomottikep<teat Pr lewoOCTSnal

R. U. AWARE THAT

rd's Clima-- Pl_g bearing a -rd tin tag; that LorUlardl I t u s e f . e n f fine cut ; that Loiill_rd'«

iTy ( 'Urf ' tnga and that Lorillard's J*nufla,ai1 "t T!.i chejuy-'. vi'inllty cons'iered ? ^

•I'i .I •

:- t t l

; v

- t f t 5 - U — J * . __. %/. KGAVS IMPERIAL TRUSS

This new truss has a spiral sprlng.-anc >(iR\i>t A ff.D t'KfcssrrRKrytinasTo everr,

Tion. retHlnlittf the h e r n i a a l w a y s , ^ f r u r e s . )\\'<>rn i n v and M « I H T w i t h cemftfff . E n c l o s *

sraiiiT> for ("'TCTil^vr^t'T^din-trottrHTisTrftals.-' Auk v . m - d ' r u / c ' s t . F . t .AN'S lXLWKTTlAL'TRUSS CO.. B o x i > S A;ti> Arl>or,MU-h.

• i-MB B f j r f i a

BirwMtri

CHSAPIST.**

HESHERS S i f , n t t .»•_-

Clirtrlilln att«Mttoall awctoo* > Wnftae rai-UBtQm.

aadi.-i(_staT_»Aaia>«_r * T_y_» Oos, M___U_»kl. , I*-__-MSW-_i- i !• _niai«.>urerelieT tBTtfWI

"stowf 11« Co* lostowa, 1

B l l r * l l B s T l i » o « o U » y s . N o | » y tl I C o r a d . W l I V 111 Da. J. brii'iiK.MS Leoa..oa, Ohio.

—^ff&^ffS'^Si

CURES Rheumatism. l W | T l | I F l l I _ ^ I .LB U I I L . bago, Lame Back, Sp/alns • • ^ • • ^ • • m l ^ s y ^ r i a _ s l ! and Bruises, Asthma, Catarrh,Cou»hs,Colds, Sore Throat. Diphtheria, Burns,|

I Frost Bites, Tooth, Ear, and Headache, and all pains and Aches. FOSTER, jmnVlty* COMPANY. Vr*prlrtor»t&uffnlo, 2»>tr York, V. 8. A.

i

i

i

* 1 i3

\

Z-y --

V^^.T^*'*,.. V -

Page 8: PINCKNEY DISPATCH. - pinckneylocalhistory.orgpinckneylocalhistory.org/Dispatch/1885-07-16.pdfpinckney dispatch. vol. ill pinckney, michigan, thursday, july ig, 1885. no. 27 sb pinckney

•Mi

. SOUTH LYON DOTS Prom the Excelsior,

, Willie Monehan, son of 'John and Elizabeth Monehau, of Given Oak, iiied last week Tuesday of consump­tion, in his 9th year. . The brick work on A. E. Bullock's building and the new bank is com­pleted. Thej carpenter work will be pushed rapidly until finished.

Rev. John Gourleyand family start­ed Monday for a tour weeks adsenee in Pennsylvania. Hispulpit will be supplied by Revs. Brown and Gilford during his absence.

The village cannon that was stolen about two weeks a<ja—from Ch&llis

"Bros, blacksmith sho|r \vas found on the morning of the 4th. The guilty parties placed a postal in the post-office addressed to Geo. Hamilton stating where the niissin artillery could be found. I t was con­cealed in the bushes in James Dun­can's woods a few' rods north of this place.

BRIGHTON SAYINGS. From tbe Argus.

Viola O'Neal, after a six year's adsenee, has returned to the paternal roof for a few weeks visit.

Mrs. J . S. Holden, of Green Oak, was prostrated last week by a stroke of paralysis. She still lies very low and vague hopes of her recovery are entertained.

/

/

Someone not inclined to walk, took one of L. Moon's mules from the pasture the other night, rode him' nearly to Howell, and then let him go. The beast was recovered at Mr. Pless' in Genoa, Sunday night last,

Mr. Wm, Fay returned Monday from Memphis, Teun., where he has been for several years past. He re­ports his brother Peter well, and as steady as a clock, having lost b u t ^ just one week's time$ since l i i r ' two years stay there. /CPeter"^ foreman

~7n a large refine'ryC '

The farm house of Mr. Charles Hartwipk, in Genoa, was discovered to be/ on fire last Thursday about nodn. Mr. H . was absent at the

/time, but the neighbors after a strong fight succeeded in subduing the flames. The insurance had been al­lowed to expire a short time ago.

Hack feu's Arnica SalTe. THK BXST S.VLVE in the world for

Cut" Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Fever Sores, Tetter, Chapned' Hands, Chilblains, Corns, and all sliin Eruptions, and positively cures Piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction, or money refunded. Price 25 cents per box. For Sale, at WIXCHF.LL'S DKUO STOKE.

To the Afflicted. Since the introduction of Kellogg's

Columbian Oil it has made more per­manent cures and given better satis­faction on Kidney Complaints and Rheumatism than any known remedy. Its continued series ot wonderful cures in all climates has made it known as a safe and reliable agent to employ against all aches and pains, which are the forerunners of more serious dis* orders. It acts speedily and surely, always relieving sutf>ring and often saving life. The protection it affords by its timely u>e on rheumatism, kid­ney affection, and all aches and pains,

'^Wounds, cramping pains, cholera mor-piece. or bus, diarrhoea, coughs, colds, catarrh,

and disorders among children, makes it an invaluable remedy to be kept al­ways on hand in every home. No person can afford to be without it, and-those who have once used it nevor will. It is absolutely certain in its remedial effects, and will always cure when cures are possible.

Call at WINCHELL'S DKVG STOKE and get a memorandum book giving-more full details of the curative properties of this wonderful-medicine.

Thousands Say So. Mr. T. W. Atkins, Girard, Kansas,

writes: u l never hesitate to recom­mend your Electric Bitters to my cus­tomers, they give entire satisfaction and arerirapid sellers.1 'Electric-Bit­ters are the purest and best medicine known and will positively cure kidney and liver complaints. Purify the blood i and regulate the bowels- No family can afford to be without them. They will save hundreds of dodars in doctor's bills every year. Sold at 50 cents a bottle at Winchell's Drug Store.

$1.25 $1.25

DETEOIT

WEEKtY POST the best weekly in Michigan

19 Months for $1.2]

V !

r

M

DEXTER CUPPINGS-?rom the Leader .,

A party of Ypsilantians are in camp at Base Lake. . A young man was baptised at the Baptist Church last Sunday.

H. Wilson, of Webster, has received $1,100 back pension, and hereafter $6 monthly.

A valuable cow.belonging to Y rffT Aprill, of Scio, was killedjiy4tg4ttttmg recently.

Last Sunjlay'a party ot six of our youn^people—of equal gender—start-

f

%

••<*

a quiet excursion to Wintmore Lake to recuperate from the effects of the 4th. The driver—a well-known salesman, with an habituaP'getting lost" propensity—after spending the forenoon in driving devious ways— all but the right one—pulled up at Nofthfield, where a cheap guide was procured, and the excursion proceeded. After several minor "catastrophes" the lake was reached, and a boat-ride in­dulged in; but fortune did not lavor the brave, for a "rdTjapfisnT"was the outcome. The ride home eventful for its-various way, beautiful music, and very drowsy el^cufsion,sts. ' "

Mr. TleynoTHs,of Ahn"Arbor, drove to our place last week, and hitched his horse m front of one of our stores. Two men helped themselves and dr^vtf away. The horse was fawicf next morning between Ann Arbor and Dex­ter, and'died shortly alter being taken home, from over-driving,

As Mrs. Win. Stevens and Mrs. •"Stunley^wcre riding on Monday, they drove up to the Stebbins House and stopped a moment, when a guest of wind blew a piece of drapery from the carrage, -frightening the .horse, which commenced running, throwing both ladies out, brusing them con­siderable and smashing the buggy yp.ry badly hrforo the horse was stop, ped. For the ladies it was a marrow «scape..

The WEEKLY POST will lie sent on all subscriptions r^ceivtfil on or before August 1, lNS^'-TiiTtll January 1, >.N7,

$1.2o! $1.25! $1.25! The WEEKLY POST has special

telegraph service from all the world has among its special oorrespojidtfhts, Grant,Sherman, Dana Jj4irdstone, Bis-4nrtrk, and all JjiiMeading writers of the world>bas complete r a m i , iiouso-hoid-alfd State News departments.and is emphatically the best family news­paper m Michigan. Every Democrat should read it. No Republican can do without it.

SUBSCRIBE NOW. +•—

Address

THE POST, Detroit, Mich.

$1-35 $1.9©

^1 <!>\ PRICE LIST>

•of-

-I GROCERIES d. r

-at-

jsrRIOHARDS' I- a

Sugar, Granulated. ..., 7fe '• Confectioners A 7c " Extra 0.. Yellow b' | " Brown . &a

Coffee, Arbuckles 18c » Dilworth. 18c

McLaughlin's xxxx 18c Old Government Java and Mo-

cho mixed ..Me " Green Rio 12|c

Teas 15,25, 40, 50, GOc Pure Spices, per lb.. 40c Bird Seed, Saleratus, Corn Starch, Gloss Starch, It ai sins, Rice, Prunes. Oat Meal,

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Soap, 3 b ^ s f o r 25c

8c <c 8u 8c

.10 to 12c, 8c

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4c .Galvanic

Axmj-Magnetic

Soap, 4 bars for 25c. j XntV washboard Town Talk, G bars, 25c Lard, per Herring, per box, .'.. .20c White Fish,101b kits. . . . 7 7 . . . .ft .00 Mackerel, 15 lb kits $1.25 Dried Beef, sliced, per lb 18c Sugar-cured Hams •* . ..^-11 c Mason Fruit Cans, 1 q t , per tloz. $1.25

u u o > ' " $1.50

I t takes but a short time for a person to see that the stock carried by

MANN BROTHERS ' Is by far the most complete in town. A beautiful line of

NEW TINSEL WINDOW SHADES V • A . I J I I T I E J O O F -

IMPORTANT. '"Whfn vou-vialt or loav*> New York City, save kiutrii'..'*' ^NprosPUj.'t- and carrum*1 liirt> ami ptop at tin' (irund Union Hotel, oppoe i[,» Uramf (JPtitral Depot.

Kle L'iint roomp flttted up at a coyt of one mil lion dollars, rt'ituccii to $1.00 arwl upwards dav. European plsirf, EiVvsitoi'. Ke«tn plied with the lie^t. H o w carp-ftHffplevHted railroad to all dopyts. KaniiHtyt-^fan live better for lens money at the (irjyKt^T'nion IU*tt>l than any other rtrst-cltissJis+ttH in the city

WANTED! AGENTS TO *EU,

TUNISOIST'S New ami superior subscription Atlases, Maps and Charts. AJ> payinp as any agency in the world. For cataloKiie." free, address II, "»•<. Tl'NlSON. Chhiai:o, i l l . : New York City, N. Y.: Cincinnati, (),; Atlanta, . (ia.: London, Canada; St. Paul, Minn., or Kansas City, Mo.

DANIEL F. EWEN, GENERAL AGENT, - PINCKNEY, MICH. '

Kello^'s-Columbian Oil is compos­ed of vegetable products in a highly concentrated form, and act* directly on the.kidneys. It cures rheumatism and all other aches and pains.

The kidneys cannot perform their proper office when diseased and at the same time expel the impurities that should pass off through their-proper action. A few doses ot Kelloprg's - (Col­umbian Oil will convince the most skeptical that it acts directly on the kidnevs.

CLOSING Desiring to close out ourjoasrmess by Sept. 1st, 1885, we offer all

BOOTS, SHOES AND RUBBERS -in stock-

T CO ST! This is a Genuine Clearing Sale. The business will positively be closed as

soon as the gooda can be sold. You are cordially invited to inspect ^stock and compare prices.——

LADIES' Cal f Shoes $1.25, reduced f rem $2.00

LADIES' Goat Shoes $1.75, " " $2.50 and a proportionate reduction un all goods. Big drive in

GENTLEMENS' CALF AND KIP BOOTS.

W. B. H0FF, PINCKNEY.

That beats anything in town. L A D I E S , f a m i n e the new

EMBOSSED AND TINSEL BELTS. We must call your attention to our elegant line of

LADIES' HANDKERCHIEFS,. Our store is full, and the goods are going to

go. Prices are what knock, and we are always ready to meet any

— —competition.— _ We have a full line of Tinsel Trimming Braid. G E N T L E M E N , we musir

call vonr attention, to ovir line of

AN^TIFF-HAISt the very latest shapes. ~

MANN BROS/ - PINCKNEY.

YOU WILL ALWAYS

1ST GOODS AND LOW PRICES

AT WINCHELL'S DRUG STORE.

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