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WHOLE NUMBKP «6».<br />
THE CGBUKNA JOURNAL,<br />
fry Thmitmp<br />
"parry -,w ia*<br />
: .TT? ^ ^ : ^ ^ . ^ ^ 3 ^ VS;^" »/7..--¾.^<br />
•/«*•<br />
©*c«<br />
81B8UCH I W&LCH Ptifelm,<br />
****»>—One Year, 81.4* kU month* tiftr<br />
•nt*, tiiree mouth* twenty-Ave eeat*.<br />
AdrwtWo« rutcs made knovo at tbe oJBe*<br />
'FIRST'IISS FACILITIES FOR<br />
JOB & COMMCRGIAL<br />
PRINTING.<br />
TOLEDO r\<br />
NARBOR<br />
AND<br />
NORTHM<br />
RAtHMAY<br />
^W • wV • ^s» ^s*aawlunwnnBnnaaaannaaBw9a| (^unii^eja<br />
mtttXE** MBC1*BY.<br />
oood«u*<br />
A,*vrrrb*fc*wr AT<br />
fa<br />
aWATOOft ©Bh%CaTAWIAK<br />
WATSOH A OMrWN.<br />
JUtorntyt uttf Ciaaisiortat Uw.<br />
iKatleaalBaak. tut—u.Mfcm.<br />
TAJ UJJBOJST<br />
JSswMcenathtc /lajawowa<br />
Ovncaovam McMaiaasni<br />
IhMSftano*. *r&, bkwkcast of Jail, on<br />
ntclztaiu -<br />
—8. F. COOPER,-<br />
Xoiary Publk4HealEstate Agynt,<br />
OOBUNKA, wen.<br />
-"ATTOKMKV AT LAW.—<br />
OSce over,?tntiratloaal SaalcQiroBiia.<br />
draattOoortr *"*<br />
XXKHK & B0XF8.<br />
ATTO&NBTS ANPCO0N3KU)BSAT LAW,<br />
OtKttfa WlUla** , *Sk»efc,Ow**e«, Mk*.<br />
•BATT.KTt<br />
PHYSICIAN AND SOKG3EON,<br />
OOBUNKA, Ml (II.<br />
JHJSIXSSS POHTYim<br />
The beat under shirt for fifty cent* In<br />
the county at Clark* for thirty five eta.<br />
The COBUMXA JemtWAL and New<br />
York Tribune both paper* for one ye%r<br />
for 91.00.<br />
If you want to buy a good piano or<br />
a good organ cheap, very cheap, call on<br />
me. Instruction on either instrument.<br />
Miss Nora Coil in*.<br />
Now is your time to subscribe for the<br />
COHHttNNA JORUNAL.<br />
The leading county paper, the Oos-<br />
VXKA JOURNAL, and the leading national<br />
paper, the New York Tribune, you can<br />
now get for the price of one. $1.00 per<br />
year. ' •'<br />
FARMERS RKAD THIS, J have 20 good<br />
fine-wool rams, healthy good sized and<br />
good condition, worth from twice to<br />
five time* price naked. They are on the<br />
market for the next 30 days at #6 per<br />
bead. Yow pfek of the flock In the order<br />
of your coming; the first man takes<br />
the floek. Also severe! good young<br />
work horses or driver* and several good<br />
cows; a part,«ew in milk, atooa few fine<br />
woof^d Vermont Beg. ewe*~etl wiU be<br />
•eld if takes within time •anted at low<br />
price, either ensh or good notes on timu.<br />
latoo hare several good lamia for tale<br />
at a bargain and several to rent to good<br />
tenant*. See me at my office la Cor-<br />
•*•*» for particulars, P. X. poox.<br />
Money to loan to parties wlahing to<br />
bwlld in Coranna A, L. CBAXBUTB<br />
Gall and see our SOcta, Jersey over<br />
shirt worth 75cts. atClark**<br />
FLOSEXC* AUOUSTA Masxiar, a graduate<br />
of the Metropolitan CoBege of<br />
Marie, New York City and Olivet Con-<br />
•erratofy ?r,vu Olivet, Mien,<br />
Teaches Piano and Harmony, at the residence<br />
of J. F. BramweU, Wednesday<br />
and Saturdays.<br />
House end tot tor tale or exchange.<br />
For farther information, call oa or ad-<br />
J. F. DKWSY,<br />
WAMTKD iMMWVUzmx at the Grand<br />
Central, tnreegfrhv<br />
The biggest stock of genta overshirts<br />
la the county at Clark*.<br />
Apple barrel* for aale, at the cooper<br />
^M»P, opposite of grt*t miii,Cornnna<br />
Mich.<br />
Coll In* hat got the best raubherboeU<br />
on the top of the earth. Every pair warranted.<br />
If they do not wear at represented<br />
come back and get another pair.<br />
For Sale; One half of a block of<br />
land, houte and barn in the third ward,<br />
Coranna, a bargain to the man that ha*<br />
the oath. Inquire at this office.<br />
Apple Barrels, for sale at the Cooper<br />
•hop opposite the Corunna flouring<br />
anil!. Call or address, Wo. Wniteley<br />
Corunna Mich.<br />
Two second hand coal store* for sale<br />
enquire of F. G Morrlce at Sheriff<br />
idence.<br />
X ITEMS OP INTEREST.<br />
—Carl Pickert of Detroit, Sondayed<br />
in Corunna.<br />
—L. Hanghtoa of Manhattan, here<br />
orer Sunday.<br />
(<br />
—Benj. Cate ofDetroit, vurited friend*<br />
here over Sunday.<br />
OOBITNNA, MICHIGAN, NOYEMBEB 10,18½.<br />
—Miss Ella Clary Is setting type, at<br />
Morrlce.<br />
—Miss Abbio Chandler has * new upright<br />
piano.<br />
—Masquerade ball at Durand, to-morrow<br />
event ng.<br />
—Dr. Harvey of Bancroft is takirg a<br />
trip through Florid*.<br />
-A.L Chandler in York State last<br />
week, on legal business.<br />
—James M Goodell is building a fine<br />
residence In the third ward.<br />
—Frank Deyo if clerking In the hard,<br />
ware store of A W. Green of this city.<br />
—Under Sheriff Jewell and T, Longcor<br />
of Vernon, at the connty seat yesterday.<br />
—Mlwj Maud Steele and Louis Moore,<br />
of Shiawassee, were married last Thursday<br />
evening.<br />
—Dr. and Mrs. Cosgrbve. of Bancroft,<br />
have returned from a visit with their<br />
ton at Chicago.<br />
—Mr. Lalng of Washington, D. 0., la<br />
visiting at the home of Alex. McArthur<br />
In this city.<br />
—The Genesee county board of supervisor<br />
fixed the salary of the probate<br />
register at *3G0.<br />
-Win. Knight, Jack Scfaaar and son,<br />
are building a house for Mrs. Gaabar, on<br />
the coal mine road.<br />
—Ex-treasurer James Cummins, who<br />
has been seriously iU with heart trouble,<br />
is slowly Improving.<br />
—Married at Pittsburg, Nov. S. Kev,<br />
J. B. Oliver offleiatlng. Ml** Panllse<br />
Baesel) Mr. F. a Green.<br />
—Mr. Fred Buckle of Caledonia and<br />
Miss Aggie Serr, were married at Vernou<br />
lasTWcdnesday evening.<br />
—lr the parties who took the milk<br />
can beJoagJng to Francis Dyer, wiH return<br />
the tame, they wffl tare trovhle.<br />
^Mrs. W. F. FuBer died at her home<br />
at Smarts Creek, Oct 37. Mrs. Fnlier<br />
wa* a sister of J. N. Walker of Barton.<br />
—Coranna Chapter has it* new fumitnxe<br />
placed in the Masonic hah% which<br />
is now one of the Anest furnished balls<br />
in the county. "<br />
—Harried at Oweeso Nov. 3d, at fhe<br />
hoaae of the bride's mother, Mia* Anna<br />
Goeid to Mr. E. M. DodHy, both of<br />
Owoeso, last w«k.<br />
—The oapttsts have their new haU<br />
hsag and it is a good toned one.<br />
Bro. Blgelow will now have no excuse<br />
for being late at choreh.<br />
—Henry Aage* of Vernon, wa* arraigned<br />
la the Justice'* coart met week,<br />
eharnetf with having sold latoxlcatlng<br />
liquor*, without having paid the annual<br />
tax.<br />
—Matthew Gray, accused of stealing<br />
sheep from W. R. Drury of Beasiugton,<br />
waived examination last Friday and<br />
was bound over to tbeCitoilt court for<br />
trial.<br />
—Mr.M.0. McFarland, the hosUing<br />
merchant of Lennon, ha* engaged a competent<br />
pharmacist and added a large<br />
stock of Drugs, to his general store.<br />
Bead hi* adv In another column.<br />
—Vernon Argus: Lulu Nichols closed<br />
her term of school at the Cronkhite<br />
district last Friday, with an exhibition.<br />
A number of our young people attended<br />
and report a very nice time. Mia*<br />
Nichols has closed a very successful<br />
term,<br />
—Sheriff Morrice took Miss Lillian<br />
Merrill au iu&aue young lady, to her<br />
home at Clarian, last week Wednesday.<br />
Mis* Amy Morrice accompanied thera.<br />
The unfortunate girl won the sympathy<br />
of the Sheriff*8 family and no one could<br />
have been more kind. They belkve<br />
With proper treatment she may recovei<br />
—Miss Grace Shuman, formerly of<br />
this city And Mr. Will.Bemis of Detroit-,<br />
were married at Cbesaning, last Wednesday<br />
afternoon; Rev. - Miller of that<br />
place officiating. A number of Corunua<br />
people were in attendance. The<br />
happy couple left on the evening train<br />
for Perry, where they expect to remain<br />
a few days, when they go to Detroit,<br />
their future home.<br />
—Harley Haney came home to vote.<br />
—Edgar Cole of Antrim, at the county<br />
seat on Monday.<br />
-'Found; a ladies brooch, large size<br />
Inquire at this office.<br />
—Thwe new system of voting become*<br />
more popular as it becomes better un- \<br />
derstood. ;<br />
— Hon. John North wood of New<br />
Lothrcp, has been elected grand representative<br />
to the Sovereign grand lodge.<br />
—Alderman Pettibone received on<br />
Tuesday a magnificent deer head, from<br />
his friend Daniel McDonald of Arenac<br />
countv.<br />
x-Hon* B. A. Snow o! Cbessaning,<br />
closed the campaign for the democrats<br />
in our city, ou Monday evening. His<br />
address was warmly applauded.<br />
For sale: The livery stock of Frank<br />
Deyo, consisting of horses, Mare and<br />
colt, Hack, buggies, cutters, harnesses<br />
etc. Inquire at Green's hardware store,<br />
Corunna, Mich.<br />
—The republican mast meeting in<br />
this city last Saturday afternoon and<br />
evening, was a success. The pyrotechnic<br />
display injtbe evening was tbe finest<br />
ever seen in our city.<br />
—Bev. Woodhouse delivered a democratic<br />
speech at the court bouse, last<br />
Friday evening. About half of his<br />
audience were republicans, and al! were<br />
highly pleased.<br />
—Dr. T. C. Abbott L. L,D„ for twenty<br />
years president of the Miehigjui Agri-<br />
Cttitural College died at his residence<br />
on Monday aged 76 years.<br />
—The Durand republicans had a large<br />
meeting at their village on Monday<br />
evening, accompanied by a torch-light<br />
possession and fire works,<br />
—Owosao Argus: Ed. Bark of Detroit,<br />
entered Thomas Neian*s place on<br />
West Main street this morning and in a<br />
neat speech, presented Mr. NOMA ia hehalf<br />
of the.democrattc^jarty, a Cleveland<br />
plug-hat "Tom" responded thanking<br />
Mr. Bark and the demo*r*t!e patty for<br />
their liberality and set t^ the cigar* to<br />
to everybody in the room. Mr. Burke<br />
is noted for his Joking propensities and<br />
has snores of friend* In this city,<br />
Dtenetrioue Pirn<br />
The dwelling house of Geo. D. Moreau<br />
caught fire Sunday night and wa*<br />
entirely consumed. There was a very<br />
high wind at the time and tbe flame*<br />
were soon communicated to an adjacent<br />
building owned by Mr. Moreau and occupied<br />
by Luke cotter. The fire department<br />
arrived by this time and soon<br />
had the fire under control;<br />
Clarence Kellogz occupied part of the<br />
house with Mr. Moreau, but succeeded<br />
geiting out most of his household<br />
ods. Hi* loss will probably be about<br />
Mr. Cotter will lose about #300.<br />
r. Moreau'* loss will probably foot<br />
about ¢3,000 without Insurance.<br />
Promptly Settled.<br />
CORUNNA, MICH., NOV. 9,1992.<br />
TO WHOM IT MAT CONCERN:<br />
1 euatained a fhe loss en my household<br />
furniture, oa the morning of Nov.<br />
7, 1892 ard carried insurance in the<br />
Orient Insurance Co. of Hartford, Conn*,<br />
represented by W. R. CbapelL, of this<br />
place.<br />
The company made a prompt settlement<br />
with me and I take pleasure in reeommending<br />
both Mr. Chapell and the<br />
above company to those desiring insurance.<br />
L. COTTER.<br />
to sell the penonal properly of Baid<br />
estate,,<br />
Estate of Samuel Keyte decea^d.<br />
Petiton of Moses Keytc praying for the<br />
appointment of an administrator heard<br />
and George W Luring appointed. Ed<br />
gar P.Byeily uud Charles Coasitt appraisers.<br />
In the matter of Bessie VanakID. a<br />
mi. or. License i^ranted. Un. Harriet<br />
H. Stone, guardian, to sell the<br />
real estate of said ward.<br />
Estate of John F. Laubengayer, deceased.<br />
Ludwi^Struber executor and<br />
Sophia Laubengayer, executrix, having<br />
rendered their final accounts and<br />
filed receipts, were discharged by the<br />
Court,<br />
Estate of Charles Goetzen deceased.<br />
Said estate having been settled. John<br />
H. Goetzen, administrator, received<br />
his discharge.<br />
Estate of Pbidelia Stout deceased.<br />
Petition for the appointment of an administrator<br />
tilled by the heirs at law<br />
If earing Monday Nov, nth.<br />
Estate of Miles Hagta a mentally<br />
ineompeteiit j^r^ u li trbara Mickle,<br />
guardian ot'sn id iitc-impotent person<br />
prays torVu'ei S«J u» sell the re al estate<br />
of said incompetent person Hearhig<br />
Monday JN'uv.21»t.<br />
BnnlEetsite TrAnsfor^T<br />
OOBP2TMA W Whitely to D Stafford,<br />
lota 4,5 * «, by 47, $4o0<br />
I> Stafford to R B SUft>rd pi bk^ 49<br />
& /SO, McArthur's add, $100<br />
CALWDONIA EErelethtoP ADerr,<br />
lots 40 Q 41, bk I, Riverside Sub Div.<br />
»200<br />
A V Johnson to B Thompson lot 9<br />
bd 10 Johnson's odd, »200<br />
A Vfohnsoa tor Gerard lots S 44<br />
bk 8, Jobxson'a add; 9S24<br />
DUBAHD C C DeCaojp to C Wea.<br />
Rtfnfl F J Wood to B F Warded,<br />
w # oa w } of a •> nee 6, $70$<br />
SCIOTA A L kfeKee to 8 A dowersby.ptsefitsec<br />
6, $M0<br />
Vrntorow 6 D Kentner to C E<br />
Knight pit t i tee 28 A pt n w } tsc<br />
S7, $9000<br />
Vnricn W Parker to £ A Tho*npson<br />
pt w | of n w A |, see 4, $1600<br />
VOLUME 12,NUMBEB 49<br />
MICHIGAN Rm>h.HMKI>.<br />
Michigan republicans may contemplate<br />
with unrestrained satisfaction the<br />
complete and thorough redemption of<br />
this state from democrat control. A<br />
greater republican victory has not been<br />
achieved In recent year* than that of<br />
TUrsday. Not only has the entire state<br />
ticket been elected, not only nan the<br />
legislature been wrestled from the democracy,<br />
but the republican party has<br />
also obtained a clear majority over al*<br />
Other parties of the state. The probi<br />
bitiohists have dropped out of sight and<br />
the populite strength have dwindled<br />
away to a few thousands., These two<br />
parties have had no influence whatever<br />
in the can vast. Democratic fusion wi th<br />
the people's party availed the fusion<br />
candidate* nothing. They were snowed<br />
under almost a* completely as the<br />
straight-out democrats. Michigan's sterling<br />
republicanism has hot so thoroughly<br />
vindicated itself for the past twelve<br />
years.<br />
They have repudiated the infamous<br />
Miner Jaw, they haae declared against<br />
the democrat gerrymanders and they<br />
hare rejected all the blundering legislation<br />
Inflicted upon the state. They<br />
have beside, condemned the ineoopeteocyasd<br />
dishonesty of thedemoetat<br />
sdrcinistratioa and have given an emphatic<br />
opinion oa the merits of demo*<br />
efat"€0o*oury."<br />
The strong county tleket nominated<br />
—One thing the result of Che election<br />
vjoarly ahowa that the electors are sat<br />
by the republicans was trtranpoantiy<br />
isfied that Carrie A Clatterhoek keeps<br />
elected, irom Judge M Probate KO coro<br />
the largest and best stock of Boots.A<br />
ner*, by majoritie* front three hundred<br />
Shoe* in the county. See their an<br />
to over one thousand*<br />
nouncement in another column.<br />
COU, lot» bk 12, 2d add, $S50.<br />
Roger Sherman 1* elected<br />
—A chicken pie supper win he sezrefi<br />
on Tu^iedajr. Nov. IS, from 4 to 7 o'clock LAKfOSBiTBG Iid« Covert to F » "^ve by oyer five hundred majority.<br />
. tn, at Millard*s Rertaurnut by the la Aiherta, lot 9 bk 4, $800<br />
Marshan K. Ramsey is elected aecator<br />
S te* of tbe Presbyterian church. AD<br />
from fourteenth district, the flletrict,<br />
Owoeso C C fAafapion to F S Dess<br />
are requested to bear in mind that this<br />
church was seriously damaged durinc a tot 7 bk 1, A Crawford's add, $876 includes Shiawassee and Ihgjnahi com><br />
recent cyclone. Necessary repairs have F Smith to E H Odell, lot on see 19 tfes, by a small majority.<br />
been made. Come and assist the Indies, $4*0<br />
The tetania of each town received<br />
Supper 25eta.<br />
UR Steven* to A Love«.Iot • bk 11 will be found ia another cohtmn.<br />
8 K Berne'* add, $2660<br />
Linton is elected.<br />
F 8 NewpeokertcSM Whipple, lott Below we give county return* a* far<br />
4,5, A fl, bk 4, Wm's ddd, $$009<br />
a* obtainable.<br />
MMnek to Ceo Taylor, lot ousee2»<br />
A Fine Home.<br />
Mnrtisinw Llonni<br />
essiiwm.<br />
BbMtF-Dudttv Owos«v . ..<br />
AamL.Oaal/ ^^^<br />
hae* Boob* Haiti...,.._.<br />
Macs**** LotUWs*. 1<br />
r&eiwasaiaw*<br />
*»»•*< mr<br />
PUMUM Bee** Bsaninaton....<br />
CaartafeAdaauiOwoHo,<br />
Clara Qabt ••<br />
Brvfn atnet Ooruana....<br />
noranovCaae<br />
Tlawtar McAyuy New Haven.<br />
KatteHaCro^Flusfauic........<br />
LmrU P. SUapsea Barton.... ,.<br />
B^mat. taekOttttt Burton...<br />
Onrie*H. N«vtFon Durum!...<br />
H<br />
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• •*•• •**• *#**, * + * » * • * • * • ••.<br />
JiritetsCorn*<br />
AO».<br />
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.IT<br />
-.:..8<br />
....SI<br />
....38<br />
p « . . •**»*<<br />
M<br />
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...IS<br />
.. .S3<br />
Fall term of school closed hero last<br />
week.<br />
Mr. T.B. Barry of Saginaw, visited<br />
at H,J). Stoddard's last week,<br />
Frank Moseraull and Clarence<br />
Brown have gone north to spend] the<br />
winter.<br />
lafasit son of Mr. and Mrs. Isaac<br />
Omoi OrroaiTB Co •»•». -Julius Keith of Ovid, visited hi* —James Kelly special agent of the<br />
Monroe, died last Saturday evening<br />
brother here Sunday. ,<br />
National Loan A, Investment Co., Det Mr. and Mrs. John E. Garland have and was buried from the Adventist<br />
BOCTOR If. S. JOKES.<br />
—E. L Mason of Ann Arbor, came roit, Mich., orgonized a local advisory moved into their new house in the first<br />
aaMial sttMitlaaslven to InYaae of Women home to vote on Tuesday.<br />
board In our city, last week, with the<br />
church Monday. Bev. Lane officiat<br />
ward and, after an inspection of the<br />
following well known business men of<br />
and Chttdien.<br />
—Mr. David Frain of this cltv visited<br />
same, we have no hesitation in saying ing.<br />
our place as its officers: Pre*., Clark D.<br />
emcxevD EWM.8TOM. at Mt, Plesant last week.<br />
that for convenience and utility It is Little George, the 8 year old son of<br />
Smith; Vice Pre*., Dr. J. Babington; the finest residence in the city.<br />
—Charles Nichols of Cohoctah, called Sec'y F. M.Kilbourn; Treas. A. T. Nich<br />
Mr. and Mrs. Bee Monroe, fell while<br />
Tbe hall, stairs, double parlor and<br />
on Corunna friends last Saturday. ols ; Att- y James M. Goodell. Directors,<br />
library are finished in oak. The lar^ running and broke his right arm be<br />
Arthur Green, Floyd Burnett, Hugh<br />
chambers and closets upstairs are pleas<br />
OH IP PS.<br />
—Mr. Thomas Tinaley visited A B. Wtffler and A A. Harper.<br />
low the elbow. He is doing well unant<br />
and home like. The kitchen<br />
Ellsworth in Shiawassee last week.<br />
KHOTOGRAPHER,<br />
—Durand Express: It is not true anu dining room are prizes for der the treatment of Dr. Holcomb.<br />
—EditorSleeth and postmasterBoyce that Lee Smedley smokes 23 hours and any house wife. Hard and soft water J. Patterson of Vernon, at the Cor<br />
callers at the JOURNAL office last Satur 59 minutes out of every 24. Lee is a abounds in the kitchen. He has put in<br />
ners Tuesday, with a large drove of<br />
0VQSS8, - M1GH day.<br />
smoker from way bac*t, but he is a chris a system of water woika, so that water<br />
—J. E. Keith of our city, who wab tian and a gentleman, and sleeps eight is furnished in every room in the house cattle.<br />
recently stricken with paralysis ia hours out of every 24 and puts in a part The bath room fo. ais a necessary ad<br />
J, G. KNIGHT improving.<br />
of the balance of time in lighting his junct<br />
He Jutionol Met.<br />
pipe. Don't lie, on your neighbor*, The whole bouee is heated by a hot<br />
Attorney at Law and City Becorder. —The young people of the baptist good people! Lee has fought his good air furnace. The double parlor is fur<br />
OfBce over Tlzst NatknutI Bank. CORUNNA. church, gave R fine literary entertain fight for his country and is entitled to nished with a grate to be used in summent<br />
on Tuesday evening.<br />
all the comfort he can get<br />
mer and fall.<br />
r^IIt8T NATIONAL BANK<br />
—The Woman's Home Missionary!<br />
The arches are finished with fancy<br />
—Vernon Argus; Last Saturday eve tret work, and are very beautiful. A<br />
O ^ OOR.XJNTfT^L Society held a very pleasant meeting at j ning, as George Ralph and sister Julia,<br />
DEMOCRATS IN CLOVER.<br />
fine basement under the whole house,<br />
the residence of Mr*. K. B. Ford on j were driving out of town by the way<br />
PresWent, | Vlee-^reaWent.<br />
gives plenty of room for vegetable*<br />
Tuesday.<br />
of the T. & A A depot, they run into fruit and coal. Tbe bouse is all wired<br />
Cashier, A. T. NICHOU.<br />
Aatl»tantCa*l>ler, W A. KO»B»KRAI«S. —D. W. Lewis, N. K. Potter, James the south bound passenger, striking the for electric lights. The carpets paper<br />
Goff. aod Archy McCaughna of Burns, steps of the baggage car, next to the<br />
FOUR MORE YEABS OF<br />
«nd furniture show exquisite taste and<br />
DIBBCT0B8.<br />
took in the great mass meet! ng here last tender, wl^lo tiie V.JILI was coming to a adds much to the beauty of th* home. GROVES.<br />
ROOaaSKBltMAH I J. DW4C6IX,<br />
BSBA MASOW, I A.fiABKMOJ,<br />
Saturday.<br />
stop for the station. The steps of the<br />
Mr. Frank Millard of this city built<br />
car was smashed, one of the horse's hind<br />
•V D.GA«R!*OW. J PATIUWK ttAIXAOHSR.<br />
tbe house, and the manner in which it<br />
L. W.SlHMOITft,<br />
—The ladies of the Methodist church feet cut off, the buggy a total wreck,<br />
is done is a credit to any builder. Mr. The returns are coming in slowly but<br />
yar"f!oliectioD smade andpromptlrremitt^d<br />
will flive a ten cent tea at Mrs. Howie tt's while the occupants were left in the car<br />
Eugene Huntington did the mason work<br />
on Friday evening. Te* served from riage top, ou top of the horse, unhurt<br />
enough have been received to assure the<br />
in hia usual faultless manner, and the<br />
jywlUpayinterest on r>epo«it*t>v* ed* 5 to 8 o'clock p. uu Everybody cor It seems miraculous that neither of the<br />
the election of Mr. Cleveland for presi<br />
painting was dona by Edward Fortress<br />
«reement.<br />
dially invited to attend,<br />
persona were hurt and one viewing the<br />
while the decorations and papering was dent New York City gave him so large<br />
wreck, would pronounce it an impossi<br />
—Voters should lemeiuber that the<br />
\,ut ou by Charles TUomaa.<br />
a majority which the country outside<br />
bility. The rig was owned by Al. War<br />
hardware stock of A. W. Green is more<br />
&. L. STEWART & CI.<br />
ren, liveryman of Bancroft, and was<br />
Mr. and Mrs. Carland have hosts of were unable to overcome, CLicago did<br />
complete than any other in the county<br />
hired by Mr. B., to take his sister to W.<br />
friends here, who wish them a long the same thing and thus placed Dlinois<br />
aid that he is celling at prices that de<br />
H. Cole * two mile* wuth of town, where<br />
life, full oi happiness, ia their pleasant<br />
fy competition see his notice in another<br />
she i* working. It is supposed th*i Mr.<br />
home.<br />
In the democratic column. Mr, Cleve<br />
column.<br />
land received his largest vote from the<br />
OWOSfO, - Mich.<br />
Raiph, beiag unacquainted with the lo<br />
—Mia* Maggte Young formerly of th i cation of the crossings was not watct-<br />
great cities.<br />
Probate Court<br />
ast&bli»iedl8«*,<br />
] city and Mr. 'Will Stevens of Sbepardeing and run into the train without even<br />
Michigan elects seven out of twelve<br />
N.A,DarCH, __- CASH1EE vllle, Penn., were married at Orango- toeing it; as this is the way it appeared<br />
I vllle, Ohio, on Nov. 8. They left for to several eyowitneases, Tbe fcor^e was<br />
Estate of Mary A. Shickle deceased. congressmen, with one, the Fifth dis<br />
0T"Do a Conservative Bmnkdng Basines*.<br />
j Shepardsville, where they will make it terribly bruised and was shot to end its License granted Cbarle* Shickle as trict, still In douU and have elected<br />
tap "Draw Draxta en all parteof ta* World. 1<br />
their future home.<br />
misery.<br />
administrator with ths will annexed, nine presidential electors.<br />
aV^oneytoloae en real MtateSeenrsttos,<br />
is?: < Hi -1. s*-^L\ • '"ilhiir ai'. k^*^.'^iL' J^*^>kj:L ;..•• •••La'itiLr.<br />
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LKSSON OF THE BBiDSJ"* «».<br />
be swept<br />
They Wing Their Way 8ootbwarl<br />
When tfao Fronts Coma.<br />
Slev. V. rn>wtu Tmlmui* Draw* a Letsoa<br />
Ybefftfrom fi>r Maaklad—The Time<br />
to fern H«»T*«wmM fcwa<br />
the Frost* of 81a.<br />
The following discourse was deiiv-<br />
ered by Eevv J\ DpWitt Talma^c in, the<br />
Brooklyn tabernacle, from the t»«t;<br />
Tb* atcrx ta the hwrwu kaowefca her s|>-<br />
stated ttme; aaaad there--are flocks of<br />
storks, and tartle-dorcs, and cranes,<br />
and swa&kK**,drawn ert in *o=» lines<br />
for flight southward. As Is their<br />
habit, the jamnee had arranged then-<br />
selvea Into two lines, making an angle,<br />
* wedge splitting the air with wild ve-<br />
leeHy, the oM crane, with command<br />
ing can, bidding &e« onw*rd, while<br />
the towns asid the cities and the couti-<br />
wnte slide under tbeav The prophet,<br />
almost blinded from looking into the<br />
dazzling- heavens, stoops down andbe-<br />
gfna to think how much superior the<br />
birds are in sagacity about their safety<br />
than men aftoat theirs; and he puts<br />
bis hand upon the pen, and uegfneto;<br />
write: "Tbe stork in the heaven know*<br />
eth her appointed times and the turtle<br />
and the crane and the swallow observe<br />
the time of their coming; bat my peo<br />
ple know not the judgment of the<br />
Lord." :<br />
If JOTS were In the field to-day, in the<br />
cinmpof tssea at the Forney of the<br />
field, yon would see a convention of<br />
bird* noisy a* theAmerican congress<br />
the last night b*fore adjournment, or<br />
en the English parliament when some,<br />
unfortunate member proposes Wear*<br />
economy in the queen's household—a<br />
convention of birds all talking at once,<br />
moving and passing resolutions on<br />
the subject o* migration; some pro<br />
pping to go to-morrow, some mov<br />
ing that they go to-day. some mov<br />
ing that they go to Braail, some to<br />
Florida, some to the table-lands of<br />
Mexico, hot ai! iinaaimona in the fact<br />
that they most go aooa, for they have<br />
inarching orders from fthe Lord, writ-<br />
tec on the first white sheet of frost,<br />
«nd in the ptctoriad of th*eaviest, most disagreeable<br />
work of our life and set it to the tune<br />
of '*Antkwh"or "Mount Pisgah."<br />
It is a good sign when you hear a<br />
workman whistle. It is a better sign<br />
when you heat him hum a roundelay.<br />
It b still a better sign when you hear<br />
him sing the vj ords of Isaac Watts or<br />
Charles Wesley. A violin chorded and<br />
strung, if something accidentally<br />
«tHiv» ^ f«*nt. %i ct>id to The*,<br />
And THi8« trt Q» •»great?<br />
Again f remark that the birds of the<br />
air are wiser than we, because they<br />
know when fo start ' If you should go<br />
out now and shout: "Stop, storks aod<br />
cranes; don't be in -a hurry!" they<br />
would say: "No, we can not stop; last<br />
night we heard the.roaring in the woods<br />
bidding ns away, aud the shrill Ante of<br />
the north wind has mounded the re<br />
treat We must go. We must go." So<br />
they gather themselves into companies,<br />
and turning not aside for suirm or<br />
mountain-top or shock of musketry,<br />
over land and sea, straight AS an, arrow<br />
to the mark' they go. And if you come<br />
out this morning" with a sack of corn<br />
and throw it in the fields and try to<br />
get them to stop, they are so far<br />
up they ^vould hardly see it They are<br />
on their svay south. You conld trofstop<br />
them. Oh, that we were as wise a boat<br />
the best time to st&rt for God and<br />
Heaven. We say: "Wait until it is a<br />
little later in the season of mercy.<br />
Wait until some oi those green leaves<br />
of hope are all dried up aud have been<br />
scattered. Wait until next year."<br />
After awhile we start, and it, is too<br />
late, and we perish on the way when<br />
God's wrath is kindled but a little.<br />
There are, you know, exceptional cases<br />
where birds have started too late, and<br />
in the morning you have found them<br />
dead on the snow. And there are those<br />
who have perished half-way between<br />
the world aud Christ They waited un<br />
til the last sickness, when the mind<br />
was gone, or they /ere on the express<br />
train going at forty miles an hour; an d<br />
they came to,the bridge and the "draw<br />
was up" aud they wen', down. How<br />
long to rejx*nt >md pray? Two sec<br />
onds! Two seconds! To do the work<br />
of a life-time and to prepare for the<br />
vast eternity in two ii**onds! I was<br />
rending of an entorUdnment given in a<br />
kiDA's court, and there war* SMukdsna<br />
45—yS. I \ !!••<br />
* ' - . j .<br />
there, with eUbontto '^aeees oi wasie,<br />
Aftey awhile Jdgsmrt cash* and ten**<br />
to play, and he had a blank piece oi<br />
paper before him, and the king fa<br />
miliarly looked over his shoulder and<br />
said: "What are you playing? 'I see<br />
no music before you.** And Mozart put<br />
his hand on his brow, as much %s to<br />
say: "Lam improvising." It was very<br />
well for him, but, oh! my friends, W«<br />
can not extemporise Heaven. It we da<br />
not get prepared in this world we will<br />
never taka part in the orchestral har»<br />
monies of the saved. Ohi that we vert<br />
as Wise as the erane aud the stork, fly*<br />
ing away, flying iwny .fr^m the temp;<br />
est<br />
Some of yon. have felt the pinching<br />
frost of sin. You feel it today. You<br />
are not happy. Thereare voices within<br />
your soul that will not be silenced, j<br />
telMng you that you are sinners, and;<br />
that without the pardon of God you ars j<br />
undone forever. What are you going i<br />
to do, inyfriends.withthe accumulated<br />
transgressions of"this life-time? Will<br />
you stand still and let the avalanche<br />
tumble over you? Oh, that you would<br />
go away into the war:n heart of God's<br />
mercy? The southern grove, redolent<br />
with mag-holi* and cactus, , never<br />
waited for northern flocks as God haa<br />
waited for you, saying: "I have laved<br />
thee with an everlasting love. Come<br />
unto Me. all ye who are weary and<br />
heavy laden and I will give you rest**<br />
Another frost is bidding you away—<br />
it is the frost of sorrow. Where do yon<br />
Hve now? "Oh," yo* say, "I havn<br />
»>ovedL" Why did you inove? You an*: j<br />
**I efett'i wmnt as large a house now as<br />
tatnery. H 'Why do yon not want as<br />
large c house? You say: "My faintly<br />
Is not so large." Where have they gone<br />
to* "Eternity^ Your mind goes back<br />
through that lastsiekness, and through<br />
the nhnost supernatural effort to save<br />
Ufa; and through those prey era that<br />
seemed unnvaHnig, and through that<br />
klee which received noveeponsebeennss<br />
the lips were Kfetess, and I hear the<br />
bells tolling, and I hear the hearts |<br />
breaking—whUe I apeak I hear them :<br />
break. A heart! Another heart]<br />
Alooe! Alonel Akme! This world,<br />
whicft in vour girlhood and boy-<br />
hood was Bunehine, is eold now,<br />
and, oh! weary dove, you fly around<br />
this world as though yon wonld like to<br />
stay, when the wind and the frost and<br />
the blackening clouds would bid 70%<br />
awny into the heart of an aU-comfori-<br />
ing God. Oh, I have noticed again and<br />
again, what a botch this world BUOMSOI<br />
it when it tries to comfort n soul in<br />
tronbiel It says: "Dont cryf How<br />
can we help crying when the heart's<br />
treasures airs scattered, and father is<br />
gone, and mother is gone, and ccsnpan-<br />
Jons nre gone, and the child Is gone, and<br />
•vwythi.ig snjsas gone? It Is noeocs-<br />
tort to tell» ssnanot to cry. The world<br />
comes up and says: "On, it is only the<br />
body of your loved <br />
tie right out of the CeldT'<br />
"No, Indeed; that was not her way of<br />
doing things. What she did first was<br />
to dress herself. Then she stole quietly<br />
down stairs and out into the yxud.<br />
Then she went to the barn *nd got<br />
an oxgoad. Theii she bounded to the<br />
grain field and drove the oxen out<br />
of it"'; . -: ". . ••'.<br />
"And then she went back to bed, I<br />
suppose,'' said one of the women. "Or<br />
did she watch the rest of the night?"<br />
"Neither. She drove those oxen *<br />
mile and a half down the roadAiliehe<br />
(tame to a great field of corn whkh be<br />
longed to that awful man. Then she<br />
took down the bars' and wished the<br />
oxea good morniug. On the way b«ek<br />
she stopped long enough to open the<br />
gate of a pasture in which was quite a<br />
nerd of steers and to set some of them<br />
moving toward the com field, and tbey<br />
found that field, I can assure yon.<br />
Next morning mother told us what she<br />
had done, and wo just hugged and<br />
kissed her till she cried.";>,<br />
"And what came of it?^<br />
"Oh, yes—that's the best part of the<br />
story. The neighbors somehow found<br />
but what had happened aud they were<br />
so pleased over it that they came and<br />
cut mother's grain for nothing. But<br />
jost think of that ninety-five pound<br />
woman drivin? a yoke of oxen a mile<br />
and a half in the middle of the niyht on<br />
such an errand! I always feel proud of<br />
my little mother when I recall ..his epi<br />
sode ia her life."—& Y. Times.<br />
CKIT-qHATj£N DlfcS$. [<br />
r^UandSucs;«stl«MAboosths Fa»hlmm*<br />
nhl* aC4 S««**-ns.l»te.<br />
If you happen to have by you any<br />
eld-fashioned real lace veil*, you will<br />
find thut they can be turned to account<br />
admirably in this way. The pleated<br />
frjU of the material indicates a change<br />
in fashion which wise women should do<br />
their best to avert—namely: a disposi<br />
tion for cuffs, etc., to fall over the hand<br />
as they used to do in the middle ages,<br />
A eiever Frenchwoman, who was show<br />
ing me.'some sleeves in this style, point*<br />
ed out that nobody nsed object to them,<br />
biic.wsc there TV as always the option of<br />
turning them back. They are much<br />
worn en tea gowns, which are thus over<br />
long or else end at the elbow, the elbow<br />
sleeves being' occasionally supplement<br />
ed by long pendants one from the<br />
shoulders.<br />
I am going to describe to you one of<br />
"the most beautiful dresses of the tea-<br />
gown order I have ever seen. It was<br />
made of satin, gold-color shot with<br />
pink, and the oaly trimming used was<br />
some rich lace, headed by bands of<br />
mocher-offpearl,which seemed to reflect<br />
the .different shades in the material.<br />
The sleeves were made high, ending at<br />
the elbow with long pointed lace ruf<br />
fles, and a distinct Watteau train cams<br />
from the top of the high bodice and<br />
•was almost entirely covered wi*,U lace.<br />
If you have by you a. store either of<br />
black or white lace, Which so many<br />
wansen have, you might advisedly<br />
transform some old gown in this way..<br />
In furnishing up a half-worn-out<br />
gown, the fashionable black trimming<br />
will be found to be of grent aid. Black<br />
moire or black satin, or even blaek vel<br />
vet, can be used- on ntasost amy color,<br />
nad moire in going to - be n favorite mw<br />
terisi thrQughcmVtne winter..<br />
For driving mthje^eonnt^y, foe slip^<br />
ping on ai tennis parties when th*<br />
weather turns chlHy, and for the sea<br />
side, it seems to me that the Russisn<br />
jacket has- no rival It is 'generally<br />
made of fine, nergeof a. light ekitb. It<br />
cbmes almost to the Lnee, has a baH<br />
round the Waist and abend round the<br />
neck, the sleeves being gathered into<br />
bands also at the^wnst, and it is gener-:<br />
ally trimmed with a straight-edged<br />
galon, in which, red, bine, and gold ap<br />
pear. A eiever tailor has recently in<br />
vented an easy pmn by k which tlk*<br />
whole-back jackets can be drawn into<br />
the waist at the back. A couple of<br />
loops are placed in the aide-seam* un<br />
der the arm, and an easily detachable<br />
belt books into these, drawing in tha<br />
fullness in the Rrasian style, but, when<br />
removed, the loops are almost invisible.<br />
One of the newest hat-trimmings for<br />
adults ton large bow-of a stiff, natnVat<br />
leaf, dyed sane say it is palm and oth<br />
ers the leaf of the toaaert* plant At<br />
all events it will stand the wear and<br />
of weather and is decidedly orne-<br />
ntaL—Csssett's Family Magasina<br />
HER POWOER PUFF.<br />
$^25¾<br />
Both the method «nd results what<br />
Byrup of Figs »taken; it is pleasant<br />
and refreshing to the taste, and acts<br />
f antly yet promptly on thd Kidneya,<br />
Aver and Bow«J*, eieaaaet the sys<br />
tem effectually, .drepcU colds, head*<br />
acbes and fevers «nd cures JbabiUial<br />
constipation, cyrap of Fig* is tha<br />
only rmedy of its hjod; eter jao-<br />
duced, pleasing to txwtaato nad ac<br />
ceptable to the stomnch, igrjinpt in<br />
its actios and Ufa fcen«fic*i in it.<br />
eflects, prepared «fly fiora the mas*<br />
heakhy and agreeable stmatances,it»<br />
many excellent q,«aKtieji og^neod J4<br />
to au and huve made,ii the moat<br />
popular remed^knowa.<br />
©ymp of Hgt k fcr t^e in JCd<br />
*nd *1 botOesir «R leading drag,<br />
gista. Any jeHahle droggk «h*<br />
may not ha» it en handwiC pre).<br />
It' promptly Jbr say* oia> wfca<br />
tetryii. 1^ tk^ aoenpt SB«^<br />
V/c;.^-.^<br />
aunmiM FW SYRUP ca.<br />
A Pet C»«»ry.<br />
Pet canaries arc by no means uncom<br />
mon. in households, but a pet canary<br />
mixed up with a miscellaneous lot of<br />
playthings in the nursery is something<br />
oat of the ordmary. A three-year-old<br />
Brooklyn girl received a present of a<br />
yenhgi canary from a friend of her<br />
mother several months &go. The child<br />
shoved affection for the bird from the<br />
moment that it was placed in her hands,<br />
and she insisted upon keeping it with<br />
her other playthings. She treated the<br />
bird tenderly, and soon the tiny<br />
creature begun to manifest a fond<br />
ness for its little mistress. For<br />
awhile the canary was allowed<br />
to remain in the small wooden<br />
cage in which it came from the bird<br />
fancier, but as it developed into a sweet<br />
trinff^r the child's -parents provided a<br />
hand&oine wire cage for it Still little<br />
Helen claimed it for one of her piny-<br />
things, and the bird seem to feel that<br />
its special mission was to play with its<br />
mi&treKX Whenever the child built<br />
houses with her blocks the canary<br />
would rustle at the door of<br />
Its cage and ' 'Peep! Peep! Peep!"<br />
until let out then it would hop<br />
from block to block as the iittU, girl<br />
movftd about Nothing appears to give<br />
he? tiny, fellowship so much satisfac<br />
tion as t be permitted to play about<br />
the Misery floor with her affectionate<br />
little Kustresi—N. Y. Srcu.<br />
—Try H^t to msrnify and prolong<br />
grief nor to nvfnVih&e and abbreviate<br />
gladness.—Alex. Madders*<br />
THfT FUNNY STORY.<br />
Re Didn't Hear It, butt He Saw tt»* Point<br />
snd PratttMl Thereby.<br />
He had had a pretty hard day of it<br />
and had gone to bed early. When his<br />
wife entered the room he was sleeping<br />
soundly, and no man likes to be awak<br />
ened half an hour after he get j asleep.<br />
She was evidently amused at some<br />
thing, and as she approached the bed<br />
she exclaimed:<br />
"John; Oil, John!"<br />
He never moved. •<br />
"John! Wake up!** she persisted.<br />
^There's, one of the funniest inci<br />
dents—*'<br />
He still slept and she began to shake<br />
him.<br />
"John! Listen to me!" she cried.<br />
He mumbled something and she shook<br />
him again. He opeued his eyes and<br />
gruffly asked what the trouble was.<br />
'•There's the funniest story in one of<br />
the papers," she said. ? *It*s about Gold-<br />
dust the millionaire, and it makes me<br />
laugh every time I think of it I'll tell<br />
you about it"<br />
"Xy, you won't" he exclaimed hotly.<br />
"What in thunder—"<br />
"Why, John!"<br />
"I suppose you think it's a joke to<br />
wake me up out. of a sound sleep to tell<br />
me some foolish story. What, do you<br />
think I went, to bed for?"<br />
"Don't you want to hear it John?"<br />
she asked in surprise.<br />
"No, I don't"<br />
"Dear me," she said in a puzzled sort<br />
of way, "don't you really like to be<br />
waked up in the middle of the night to<br />
hear a story any more than I do when<br />
I get to bcil first?"<br />
He glared at her and she retreated,<br />
but she knew that the shot had gone<br />
home. He doesn't wake her np any<br />
more an* 7 .xpect her to laufj-h at some<br />
jeke or story :ie heard at the club.—De<br />
troit Free Tress.<br />
Chicago Clergyman (as the bride*<br />
groom hands him his fee;—Four dol»<br />
lars, please<br />
Uridegroom—But I thought your fee<br />
was only two dollars?<br />
Clergyman— It is to regular custom<br />
ers, but you do not patronize me regu<br />
larly. —Texas Siftings.<br />
Coiiftoiine. , .<br />
"I paid the man for finishing the cis<br />
tern tbis morning, Josiah,' *aid Mrs.<br />
Chug water, "aqd it took the last cent<br />
there was in the house."<br />
"Never mind that Samantha," re<br />
plied Mr. Chugwater, soothingly, "we've<br />
got something for a rainy day at last 0<br />
—Chicago Trioune.<br />
—Wisdom never kicks at the iron<br />
walls it can't bring down,—K. Y.<br />
Truth.<br />
WeaWi At* el<br />
fTy m Ceaigf p-stoe.<br />
The world used to say that all Amerr<br />
tesn women powdered, just a& they Say<br />
now that she smokes cigarettes. In the<br />
old days there was a bottle stuck in<br />
some corner of her bedroom, with a<br />
more or less soiled,.stiff rag banging on<br />
the cork, which wa» called into service<br />
ju*t before a start was made lor a shop<br />
ping or calling tour. It was a sort of<br />
swipe and promise, and the services of<br />
several good-natured women friends<br />
wre required along the way to remove<br />
the extraneous lumps of dried powder<br />
which wcfuld naturally be Caaght in<br />
prominent parts of the face or sunk in*<br />
to the pet dimples. But to-day to make<br />
up a face properly is to master an art<br />
having elementary rules as exact as<br />
those of a science. Perhaps a woman's<br />
glass tells her nature was not as lavish,<br />
as it might have been or the informa<br />
tion may come from equally frank<br />
friends. At any rate, she is either en<br />
gaged in a fair encounter with nature<br />
or in a war ;«f fortification against<br />
time's siege. The old white powder has<br />
been superseded by brunette powder,<br />
blonde powder and : natural complexion<br />
powder, all of which are used by direc<br />
tion of the druggist, who tells the ex<br />
pectant fair one exactly what powder<br />
will give a fair imitation of whet has<br />
been or should be. The eyebrow pencil<br />
overcomes deficiencies in the eyebrows<br />
and only.a trained eye can detect the<br />
assumption of reality.—N. Y. Adver<br />
tiser. ' .<br />
Borrowtojc Kettles.<br />
The neighborly habit of borrowing<br />
household utensils is of a very ancient<br />
standing, aod in one case at least has<br />
had the honor of mention in English<br />
literature Rev. Michael Balwhid-<br />
der in his "Annals of the Parish."<br />
in 1760, tells very quaintly of the in<br />
troduction of jam and jelly making in<br />
his parish by the great arrival of sugar<br />
from the West Indies, so that this style<br />
of preserving, hitherto known only<br />
among the gentry came to be a common<br />
thing among the village folks, and adds<br />
that **i» occasioned'a. great fasherie to<br />
Mrs. Bawlhidder; for in the berry time<br />
there was no end to the borrowing of<br />
her brass pan to make jelly and jam,<br />
until Mrs. Toddy, of Cross Kcys^ bought<br />
one, which in its turn came into rsquett<br />
and saved ours." It would now prob<br />
ably be vezy difficult to find any familv<br />
even in the lovtly village that has not a<br />
brass j filly pari of its own, but the<br />
ancient and unwisse custom of borrow<br />
ing household utensils con tiuues in full<br />
force as ever.—N. Y. Tribune.<br />
C »pe» and Clo*ita.<br />
Young ladies will wear round capes<br />
of cloth on which are posed shorter<br />
capes aud box^plaited ruches of miroir<br />
velvet bound with fur. Belted and<br />
girdled^coats more closely fitting than<br />
iiussiau blouses will also be stylish<br />
wraps tor the winter as well as the<br />
derai-season. For older women are long<br />
garments of rich black silks with Wat-<br />
tea u back and large sleeves, richly<br />
trimmed with lace and fur. These<br />
come in three-quarter lengths to be<br />
worn with long bkirts like those of last<br />
winter, and in full lengths that cover<br />
entirely the new short skirts that clear<br />
*he ground.- -Harper's Bazar,<br />
—The Chinese house* are generalljf<br />
ornamented with so many quaint tur<br />
ret* »nd gables that tbey resembta toy<br />
"What is Angak Skr#er fetf<br />
AscasayajB^ereatasaslwd, Xt»<br />
for Dyspepsia?; It ia&special rem<br />
edy for the Stomach awl Ewer.—<br />
Nothing nw*e titan this. We belie**<br />
rtagttdt Hovier cores Dyspepsia,<br />
Weknowitwia. Wc have reason*<br />
for knowing it To-day it fca* an<br />
fcotsored piaea in eveiy town and<br />
country store, pctf&tee* one of<br />
corMtjy,.n^a«aaa^erywiKie, Tha<br />
reason its simp^ef It does ooeUrag,<br />
*nd,4oe3itright, Itcnresdycpepea**<br />
1 —'—'•* ••!• smsssisssSsSiuSV^s-fce^^^H I I | m*^t n —^PSMsmmmwAik*ltcs<br />
(Them1f i «''<br />
DFBUM;S<br />
Km?<br />
• • "• ^K^.-zr.ipviCr- . r :<br />
Salvation Oil trr ttt oetvaat<br />
YOUMS MOTHERS<br />
We offer yaa a remedy which if<br />
used, as directed, insures safety to<br />
life ot both mother and child.<br />
"MOTHERS FRIEND"<br />
'Sobs confinement of its P*nr, Bassos and<br />
Kux, as n°Miy testify.<br />
*• SCrwtfe neeS n*ly *« >»p«W»wf Maimer*<br />
PrtewU »S«WM«MiliruiHi«siMl/r«J«f*4<br />
-U M V «•!•* spteoSltfUr.**<br />
J. S. Jin**, Hsrlow, N. C.<br />
Sent by express, charges prepsid, ea re<br />
ceipt of price, frl.SS per i-otUo. Sold by all<br />
druggists. Book To Uothers muled free.<br />
BaiansLD ZM*vi*.it>u Co..'••Atfeai*.,. Oa.<br />
Bfs Creara Balm<br />
'WIIXCVKB<br />
CATARRH<br />
tjjtmittrjt<br />
^SZVZSSZffi:<br />
••>#>••<br />
X-<br />
*•><br />
«•£•1<br />
» \t.<br />
ISSBSSSI<br />
l^"i lr^i'< Jti M mi'irr'car' n'li f "Triif 'iiri'ii ^.'u^ :...-
assMSjsessniesi<br />
i»l ill III i T I M il<br />
FARM m fiARDBN.<br />
PLEWTY OF LIGHT,<br />
A* E*fi*ltMS Vow* for a Flock at OeS<br />
One of the most essential things to<br />
•> poultry house 1» the window. Plenty<br />
eft* light make* a hagiae comfortable,<br />
swd, ss fowls detest d^sykne,**, too mach<br />
light cannot bt gtvon.<br />
The illustration represent* a building<br />
IS feet long, 8 feet wide, 8 feet high in<br />
front and tt feet high al the rear, the<br />
roof covered with tarred f> It.or any<br />
«ther waterproof material. Two large<br />
-windows, eacfe 4^x70 Inches, give light,<br />
they being piaced hear together at the<br />
southwest earner of the roosting<br />
apartment Two. doors are shown,<br />
one entering the roosting apartment<br />
«a the left and the other the feed<br />
ft* Li^OTCtTay BOU5* WITH SXD wi?i-<br />
tfcoxa, the feed vwd -.fomg.Jigb.4ad % a<br />
window or transom over the door. The<br />
two rooms ere separated by a lath partition.<br />
The roosts are arranged over a<br />
platform at the rear of the roostingnorm*<br />
witfi tbe 7«st» mnder the platform<br />
Tbe/eost of sbs} hoasevineind-<br />
#»g labor^ahe^ld no| 4>keeed$35. "£he<br />
eentiUtoriv one at jtaeb end, are feen<br />
nt H H.~Tfoy ar# crrtnlar ttoftk 12<br />
Inches in diameter «nt in *mch end of<br />
the house near the top; but far Enough<br />
from the front to sieairljee eotnes>posts,<br />
and, as the matter qf^efiftl3.tl?Ti is im~<br />
fortant, the plsV#fv«h may 6e Worthy<br />
of notice.<br />
Rg^ gfv*sevpbih/a* e ventilator, as<br />
aaentioned, they opening an3 "'closing<br />
vy the slid>. N, which runs in grooved •<br />
piece* nailed above and below the<br />
To keep out rain and snow a<br />
-:;. l:..i:..;«*.laWe*:'"<br />
la fitted over the bole, which baa<br />
ealy three sides sad a steping top. The<br />
air enters at the bottom and £>ss*e* a><br />
and tbrouge, the hoie-ia the aid* of the<br />
eoop, as indicated by the arrows.<br />
Of course, the windows may be arranged<br />
differently if preferred, but if<br />
arranged as shown the fowls will have<br />
a light scratching place, while the<br />
roosts, being at tins rear, will be act<br />
of the way of drafts of air from any<br />
source. T be windows cannot be opened,<br />
bat the door should remain open during<br />
the day. The window over the feed<br />
room should be arranged so as to be<br />
raised from the oatiiide.<br />
As a cheap, light and convenient<br />
poultry house for a flock of one dozen<br />
hens the plan is an excellent one.—<br />
Farm and Fireside.<br />
ABOUT FRUIT GROWING.<br />
Beenlrc* cfratliiMd ~ £Mtlff«a*«,<br />
£ni*lMgp*ct>etW9eu fine crops<br />
and partial or ea^ire failure may be<br />
frequently objmr^d. Ofc^ shows the<br />
effect of skill, the -other the result of<br />
neglect On one hand, orchards are<br />
loaded with fine crops of excellent<br />
fruit; on the other partly dead trees<br />
htve,nothing but small iad scrubby<br />
apples. In small-fruit plantations<br />
weeds have had the ascendance; strawberpy,<br />
patches are noted for tteir sickly<br />
and winter-killed appearance, The<br />
owners admit general disappointment<br />
and failure. Bat there are other owners<br />
who give a very different report.<br />
Their small fruits and strawberries<br />
have escaped winter killing by carefully<br />
applied winter protection. Their<br />
rale has been to kill weeds "at whatever<br />
cost," by never allowing them to<br />
grow. They have found the labor very<br />
sma|i to destroy them with a steel rake<br />
or fine harrow passing every week before<br />
Uiey come up, compared with the<br />
hard work to root out the rank mass<br />
when a foot high. In a neighborhood<br />
where both kinds of management prevailed,<br />
lived the owner of a hundredacre<br />
farm, a portion of which was devoted<br />
to xruit-raising generally. His<br />
trees had generous cultivation; a large<br />
part of the manure made on the place<br />
was carefully applied broadcast to the<br />
fruit trees and to the small fruit* The<br />
result of this, long continued, was that<br />
the annual sales from all the different<br />
kinds amounted literally to thousands<br />
of dollars annually. But this success<br />
required continued diligence, intelligence<br />
and skill.—Countrj Gentleman.<br />
DAIRY SUGGESTIONS.<br />
MT.K when first drawn contains animal<br />
odors, and these should be permitted<br />
to escape- before to« milk is<br />
shut up in close cans.<br />
DIRT is the tnilk means bacteria in<br />
the milk, and that means injury to butter<br />
and to health. Keep the adder aud<br />
tbe hand* of the milker cleup<br />
Ir the non-paying cows are not eliminated<br />
from the dairy we may expect<br />
eompiaints against the profitableness<br />
of this excellent industry.<br />
THSEK is a story going 1 through the<br />
papda that the cow got sick because<br />
she draok bad-smelling water from the<br />
barn cistern The cow will become<br />
siek if compelled to drink bad water.<br />
Why abonld she not?—yermers' Voice.<br />
< » — • — I W ^ » * > » P i ii HI y ^ ^ w y ^ ^ — i ^ —<br />
CAftC Of QRAPCVilieS.<br />
Was* t* i>* to •TWsat *£• j|ae*a*sass<br />
ef Bo* Neat Yea*.<br />
That the ravages of grape rot *»r«<br />
not been as severe as formerly in {om*<br />
sections is con firmed by the statement!<br />
of many prominent growers of grapes,<br />
bat the reasons assigned vary, the majority<br />
of growers beiiug inclined to the<br />
belief that the years 1801 and 1893 weia<br />
unfavorable to the disease. Other<br />
growers affirm that the use of tho<br />
Bordeaux mixture has aided in preventing<br />
the ravages of the rot by destroying<br />
the spores to a great extent.<br />
In some sections of New Jersey, how*<br />
ever, there have been but few cases ot<br />
the appearance of the rot en vines that<br />
were before attacked, although the<br />
vines bad not been sprayed with fungi*<br />
eides at any time.<br />
It is now considered a fact thai the,<br />
rot may be prevented by the use ot tha<br />
proper remedies, and the fact has been<br />
demonstrated by treating selected vines<br />
in vineyard * that were' affected. In all<br />
cases where the fungicides were used<br />
the disease was eithei eradicated or its<br />
effects mitigated, and it is also observed<br />
that by a vigorous treatment<br />
the disease may be wepstrailed as to<br />
do but little damage the succeeding<br />
season, which gives promise of its being<br />
entirely eradicated sd a few years.<br />
The result* of next yearXexperiments<br />
'will throw mu Mo OihtP Vill<br />
8«it Him.<br />
"It's fnnny when a man gets tone<br />
over forty, how he always longs for his<br />
own bed if he happens to be separated<br />
from it," said a returned summer sojourner<br />
at a meeting place.<br />
"When I start toward honu> I always<br />
begin to give rein to my hitherto restrained<br />
desire to get home, and the<br />
main idea in my mind is to get into my<br />
own bed. It isn't because those I nave<br />
been occupying nights were poor ones,<br />
or because mine is superior, bat there's<br />
a something unexplainable when you<br />
land your weary body in it Somehow<br />
it seems as if the outside world was not<br />
quite so powerful in its harassment*.<br />
The sigh you heave when you pull up.<br />
the sheets and put your head into tho<br />
pillow is jnst about the same sise and<br />
build you used to pump ont when you<br />
were a little boy and liad been fearfully<br />
homesick, away for the first time<br />
from home. You can look back to that<br />
time and see with clear eyes at loug<br />
range through time's magnifier that it<br />
was not sick for home that you were,<br />
but just heartsick for your mother, and<br />
when you were once more with h*r and<br />
bedtime came, how, after you were<br />
safely tucked in between the sheets,<br />
she came with softs steps and her thin<br />
hand put up before the lamp to shade<br />
•our face, and gliding up to the bedside,<br />
stood there looking down—steadfast,<br />
solicitous, wistful faces of poor workworn<br />
mothers! Moist eyes have to see<br />
them now with memory's help,"—N. Y. 1<br />
ifcecorder.<br />
EIU»beth*n ••Coukeric"<br />
If they were as good as our ancestors<br />
thought why do we hav* chewets no<br />
more; or marchpanes, kes ions, vaunts,<br />
frians, moyses, pettie service, tansies,<br />
manchers, Florentines, resbons and<br />
condouacks? "Spinnedge tarts" we are<br />
quite willing to do without; and we can<br />
run our nineteenth century course entirely<br />
independent of "black pudding,"<br />
made of blood. "Pettie<br />
services" were "coffins" filled with<br />
eggn, marrow, ginger, sugar and<br />
-suvrants. A Florentine was a pie<br />
of veal, kidney, chicken or pheasant,<br />
"which of them you will," mincc-d with<br />
fcuet, eggs, currant*, 'dates, cinnamon,<br />
mace, f ing«?r, and 'time" and baked in<br />
a sweet cru;>U Our tastes are very different,<br />
Uinger is limited In its use now;<br />
we care not for saffron, and do not cook<br />
dates with fish, flesh or fowl; wa are<br />
not given to tho flavor of sandalwood<br />
tn our dai&ties, and we have a taste in<br />
herbs not of tbe sxxteentb century,—<br />
Chantauqusu.<br />
Wovafober yVkie Awaka<br />
with a profusely-llljatrRted trtt-<br />
*b«m"fiomeJW4iah Castlaa,- wrltte*<br />
Dy Fa/ Adams, a*iisj%>roprlataly<br />
frfntfepteoed by $. splendid fnfl-paga<br />
picture, by «arrett, «f "Marmioa's Defiaooe<br />
to Earl Douglas.•». Alexander<br />
Blaek baa a eanitai deseriptt^e paper on<br />
M Tlie -Babies of the Zoo" at Central<br />
Park, charmlagty illustrated by Irene<br />
Wiiliamson, a pupQ of Beaifd. Edith<br />
Bobinson hm a finp story, "Raglan's<br />
6ubstitote, H of the pluak and bravery<br />
of a fl;arvard boy at a city fire; Mary<br />
SeMen McCobb has a good Thajolciigivragfltory,<br />
"Why Ska wa» Thankfnl, w<br />
and "Mabel's Election Day" i* an appropriate<br />
November story by Ellen<br />
Strong Bartlett. Florence Howe Bsaal<br />
tells of the "Moriarty-Duckliiig Fair.fs<br />
"How BccotV Paid her Way," by Car*<br />
•Hn* K. Hensey, is a bright story of a<br />
bright girL The serials by Kirk Monroe,<br />
"tbe Coral tfhip,» and "That Mary<br />
Ann,* by Kate Upson Clark," which all<br />
the boy and girl readers have voted as<br />
"fine," end with this number, for a new<br />
volume of. the ever-popular Win*<br />
Aw ASS will begin witu the December<br />
number. Price 99 cents s> number,<br />
93^*0 a year. On sale at news stands or<br />
sentpostpald on receipt of price, by D.<br />
Lothrop Company, Publishers, Boste*.<br />
j i i • — ^ -<br />
"Do TOO know a gas-meter u to ma ai><br />
moat homauf^ '-To me, toa It has that<br />
dreadfully human tendency toward mv<br />
trjttb-'*<br />
•tteatteat<br />
Tbe Hatted States government<br />
-*^edt«opea, Kesr. S8,1802, for settSenrBai<br />
under the nomsilead law, t&e nnesmisj<br />
%ddfl ot^s Mstquette A Little BswDe<br />
ai>Tss>Psjli nsnjww refore rcserved&ma<br />
jhtgngsj JiusawmTMitfdgaa. Ai^eaam*<br />
of tfa« Oejenagen eV BruW<br />
has bees denied toe large<br />
*f land in the Upper Peaiasula of<br />
Mkddgen, Tbfs gives an onnreoede&rcd<br />
to leesmvamabw timber andm|sr<br />
wbfim are among tbe best-In abs<br />
PeamsnK and are reached assy<br />
[ertb Star Reate (MilwaakeedcV><br />
BaSrosd) bstweea Chioa«s<br />
linerior. • ^ ^ ^<br />
For farther pafdes3ars address C «.<br />
Bouum, Land and Iremlgration Ajtnt, m<br />
La Suite •trsst, Cbioaga^<br />
.^Wwetomwb^wttodjrjrt the' shades<br />
of bar aneestorsto banft at ytr sarlor Winy<br />
dews was' acta des^&daM ,> ;or : i«y , ~Mayflower<br />
family.—Boston Transcript* )<br />
a< nw CiMb?<br />
how regolarly Its pendulum swinM<br />
to sad fro. Witaldadredregalar¥ydbtao<br />
bowels move when tfc< habit or body ia ref*rmed<br />
by the thorough laxative .sad premotor<br />
of dlgestian an*. Beci-etfOn, Hoatettec's<br />
Stomach Bikers. The Lter, too, ai.<br />
ways affected m ooastfpattcn, reaomeJ tt»<br />
eettvity when this medieiae Itori Hot<br />
less efficacious is it in malarial and kldaey<br />
(rouble, rheumatism and nerro<br />
JSSS.<br />
whoneve.r worrg do a caed aed i deal<br />
_ ..... work ilk they<br />
stedit for.—Barn's Hon.<br />
MT dSfPt<br />
r«*»st»taa<br />
BttStag up all night tessiac a baby tebesp<br />
ft frem^straeft-lesf!^ ereap, m^ttabie<br />
Has veedse** aapf^ wether *er, a<br />
Dr. HoxsM r * Certain Groap Carefo<br />
s*!s pwa<br />
Drogjrissi<br />
ess get It of Robert Stevenson dtCJeTOktease,111<br />
A.P.BOXCT,Buffalo,».Y,m*Tfc<br />
Qxc e£ 9w «—i U*Z4k men is tbe one<br />
wboworrtss abemt thugs he osat belp,—<br />
Barn's Hera.<br />
. ,^,- H»ve T*a #<br />
Dm. at •oxtrmaKa. tft Ibot<br />
ajsaU total pselcafe of manft's lemma<br />
Cam ires to any asffe ikvesiactaat<br />
nef hmjrerst cases, aed curls where oibam<br />
flafl. Sams thu pap# and sen^ address.<br />
Tax aotsader 1& a fisb tbx«require* ptesv<br />
tyof seasoning, aud even then is flev«-<br />
PbiladelpMa Keoord.<br />
Wea-Ur* »»lr oa Steel.<br />
Seed twenty-five cents to £ £L Lord,<br />
Paenlx Building, Chicago, 111;, and obtain a<br />
ta«aAeelpk^pioturtflfine World's Fair<br />
groiads sad build mga, suitable for firamln-.<br />
— i . 9 •<br />
Ms. OLDBO-T- u l remember the first ate<br />
ever naught."- Jits* Pert—^What was iten<br />
tehthyoeaqrjisT"—Life. -<br />
.1 ' •', r«"i<br />
Taos. W. Kssxs will eoncnide bis eaitat<br />
MoV eker's theater, Cbloafla,<br />
fttb. FoIWwng M£. KeeaewfU<br />
aaewosmedyeatiUetf * By Proxy,"<br />
bf amid to bebrinWfl of geoeine Jun,<br />
'*''•'. '• ' • i IP* ••''• "•<br />
Xxpmuajroan peorle dobt tumble when<br />
tbe/ try to get ia a hammre.fc, beoansetbey<br />
bnow tbs ropes.<br />
•—'• ri t . • .<br />
U. Ix Twsrsogde Co., Dnts^ffats. OJSV<br />
eerspert,Ps.t soy Han's Citarrb Cerew<br />
tne beat and *aly smreeure for<br />
ever sold Droggisti sell It, 75c<br />
.————.—»<br />
A St**.—Doctor—"5To man has to dls<br />
more than onee," MAud—"Area't yoa<br />
sorry!"—Life'* Calenciar.<br />
i • •<br />
PuusAirr, W holetome, Speedy, Sor ooes|«<br />
is Bale's Honey of Horehound sod Tar.<br />
Pike's Toothache Drops Cure in one mjjsata<br />
TKXKX is "d suing more pretentaoaa<br />
t*at eapiiali -Gaivestoa 2%»wa><br />
AS efgat-day clock Is a long-winded affair.—Texas<br />
Sifting*.<br />
• * '<br />
Tn* man with push—the fellow who runs<br />
lawn'mower.<br />
A WATCH it a smalLaffair, but we 6f tea<br />
bear ''four men were oh tbe watch."<br />
Tnr. vtonaa who talk* about bcr r.eighbors'l<br />
i no worse ihau the one who listens.<br />
—Rim's Bern.<br />
NO63S in n man Rivincr up because bin<br />
luok g-oes to tue dog» \fhcn they are a!l<br />
muzzled.<br />
No ONE can b anic ihe oyster |pr not<br />
showing his apprcc'.'utioa of the fall opening<br />
mm -S> - • • ! • • III.<br />
*'Tnis>thin\'is worth loo'icinp ioto.'' murmured<br />
th(?-prcLty piri -.-.6 8111) stood in irout<br />
of bcr mirror.—Cliicago Tribune.<br />
' • • •<br />
NHBKASCA lias :u> Indt.in Liwycr. Ot<br />
course lie's a 8ioux.--5l!£.acai>olis Tr.bane.<br />
**Bc sure io conie home t> tea. auntie,"<br />
srtlSi Maiip. "Wc'ro gf>l^>ff to have something<br />
perfectly vw'sdiisUius.."<br />
.
:.1.<br />
*. .<br />
mmmm<br />
CORUNNA JOURNAL<br />
eOJUMTCK * WWXJCM.<br />
•yron.<br />
Mr. F. W. Frwrtt cf Vevttou, in sown<br />
Saturday.<br />
Mra. Delia WiUUros toOwo»soS«turday.<br />
l\*tmaater Ro^ce to Sagfaaw,<br />
Thursday.<br />
Mr. A. E. Richards of Corunua,<br />
Here Monday.<br />
Mr, GVJ. Gibson, went to Detroit,<br />
Friday.<br />
Mrs. Jeunie Clark speut Mouday in<br />
Owosso.<br />
Mrs. J. I). Williams went to Owe*.<br />
80 Saturday,<br />
Miss Maude Savage is visiting friend<br />
in Bancroft this week.'.<br />
Mrs. Dr. Ruggles visited Owoaso,<br />
Tuesday.<br />
Mr. and Mrs F. Savage vjsi ted<br />
friends in Antrim, over aunday.<br />
Mr. T. A. Lawrie accompiuiied by<br />
his son Frank, left this place on Friday<br />
for a few days hunting deer and<br />
flfchlng in the northerers p-it of the<br />
State.<br />
Mr. II. n, Bosenkmn* and wife to<br />
Feuton Wednesday.<br />
Morrtc*.<br />
Otoy Oodney is visiting his eouuts<br />
In Pterry.<br />
Mrs. Y. Morrice spent Sunday with<br />
htr mother Mrs. W. Cfcase,<br />
Mrs. H. Peck fa on the tick list.<br />
Mr*. Ed. McEuteespent Sunday with<br />
bar cousins in New Haven.<br />
Maggie Gibbons of New have* spent<br />
the £rst part of the week with her<br />
eottteav Aggie Sullivan.<br />
Miss; Maud Steel closed Her school<br />
la the Lemon school last Friday, with<br />
•exercises in the afternoon^<br />
The storm of last Fridey night did<br />
considerable damage, tipping over<br />
straw and hay stacks, knocking over<br />
feaces and scattering the corn stalks<br />
for nearly half a mile.<br />
Uncle Nick Sabcns is reported to be<br />
«a the gain.<br />
Mr. Keith, a fine artist of Lansing<br />
8^¾¾^ ^^^-,^.^^1^^^^^.1^^.^ • '^WW??f!!^^!wPF PIP'^BIBIIIPIPP'**^^ •ai<br />
rnnmm<br />
TMC PHILOSOPHY OF THC CIZZARO.<br />
It aw»*I»a UM X»l*a*tive AMU*)' of til*<br />
TOW on our streets the last of the week, pose. When put in motion by the<br />
nusclesi they are capable of producing<br />
msd took the pictures of the re*idene«« some effects upon the contents of the<br />
-of, Mr. Morris, Mr. Moore, Mr. M. V. stomach; thus assisting to grind down<br />
Wixout.<br />
the grain and separating Its parts, so<br />
that the digestive fluid or gastrin Juieo<br />
OwtiMotnd Corunna TetssjrapX Co. eemesteof* readily to eoatact with It.<br />
-~B*rtf*r& ZImes.<br />
SMJinrs mraiAra scaoou<br />
Often vDl be ne opewa opened in any so; pert or or 1<br />
bot*«l»fea~ for teacb>ocTeietfTK|Ay. ~ '• 1 Tteotur<br />
I* Hum iuh* f7Blf«3Mat<br />
fir aawrir<br />
a*»4a , ..._<br />
tm.huiu<br />
«*C ATJONS Wltattot<br />
*H «jner acata at Tm*loam or atsUoa.<br />
A«6fM» C. .4. «K4**V ***»«.,<br />
A reported outbreak of cholera, at<br />
Heltnetta, N. •!.,.., created much excltemaat<br />
in that vicinity. Investigation<br />
showed that the di*e**e was not cholera<br />
but a violent dysentery, which 1» almost<br />
as severe and dangerous as cholera. Mr.<br />
Walter Wlllard, a prominent merchant<br />
of Helsnetta, says Obnraberjain's Colic<br />
Cholera and and Diarrhoea Remedy has<br />
given great satisfaction in the most a<br />
very cases of dysentery. It ib certain*<br />
ly one of the best things ever made. For<br />
sate by F. M.'Klltonrn, druggist.<br />
tjaard Against Loss<br />
Or damage to property by keeping well<br />
nsurcd in some, first clat=s company.<br />
W. R.Chapell is local agent for the<br />
following well known compauys.<br />
The Commercial Union Assurance<br />
Company of London.<br />
lie National Fire Insurance Company<br />
of Hartford, Ct.,<br />
The Niagara Fire 1 nsuvance Comlpanvof<br />
New York.<br />
The Orient Fire Insurance Com*<br />
pany of Hartford CL.<br />
Prompt attention given to business<br />
and the lowest rates at all times.<br />
Cross Osw I u utytica, Geugfrt, Crowp,<br />
Thnsi. SetdbT*nDiMsiMeaaGr<br />
ILOH'SA-CATARRH<br />
JIEMEDX<br />
i Haveytws catatta t<br />
"iev»and0<br />
lector tor f^Its«aopwafoltre«tti)eDt for Its;<br />
is fnrzilsbea<br />
free. fj# CSIlflOD Smk*'* _ Bemedtas are sold by ns en a<br />
irawantee to give satatfaetiba<br />
Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria.<br />
Wlwn Basy «a* «ck, we gmn fcer Caatorl*.<br />
Wb«i «1» wmt a CaCd, ihe crted tor Cattoria,<br />
Wbaa ih« booaua* JDai, aba tSmg to Caetorks<br />
WbaasbsL^Cb^dK^AAgsmttieimOaatorla.<br />
A fowl's giassrd, where so many tees<br />
srtklos tu?n up, is a eurioas trap as<br />
well as a neeessaiy vital organ of the<br />
fewL Diamonds, pearla.eoin, battoua,<br />
tacks, orange peel and about; everything<br />
else, savtf dynamite, have been,<br />
fbnnel in the gfeaarda of fowls.<br />
A fttady of the organ is interesting,<br />
i&xpcritnenta have demonstrated that<br />
what may he called the gastric Juice in<br />
fowls has not sufficient power to dissolve<br />
their food without the aid of the<br />
grinding action of ths eiasard. Before<br />
the fowl is prepared for digestion,<br />
therefore, the grains must be subjected<br />
to a triturating process; sad such as<br />
are not sufficiently braised in this<br />
manner, before passing into* the gist*<br />
sard, are there reduced to the proper<br />
state by Its natural action*<br />
The action of the gizzard is, in this<br />
respect, mechanical, tMs organ serving<br />
as A mill to grind the feed to pieces,<br />
&nd th«n, by means of its powerful<br />
nauscles, pressing it gradually into the<br />
intestines, in the torm of a pulp. The<br />
power of this organ is said to be sufficient<br />
to pulverize hollow globules of<br />
glass in a very short time, and solid<br />
masses of the same substance in a few<br />
weeks. The rapidity of this process<br />
seema to be proportionate generally<br />
to the size of the bird. A chicken, for<br />
example, breaks up such substances as<br />
am received into its stomach less rapidly<br />
than the capon, while the goose<br />
performs the same operation sooner<br />
than either. Needles and erea lancets<br />
given to turkeys have been broken in<br />
pieces and roided without avyjspparent<br />
injury to the stomach. The<br />
reason undoubtedly is that the larger<br />
species of birds have thicker sndmore<br />
powerful organs of digestion.<br />
It has long been the general opinion<br />
that from some deficency in the diges*<br />
tive apparatos fowls are obliged to resort<br />
to the use of stones and gravel in<br />
order to eaable them to dispose of the<br />
food which they consame. Some have<br />
supposed that the nse of stones is to<br />
sheathe the gtsxard, to order to fit it to<br />
break into ssaaller fragmevt* the hartL<br />
angvJar substances which might be<br />
swallowed. They have also been considered<br />
to have medicinal effects. Others<br />
have imagine* 1 that the* acted as<br />
absorbents for undue quantities of acid<br />
in the stomach* or as stf malante to digestion,<br />
while it has even been grave*<br />
ly asserted that they contribute directly<br />
to nutrition.<br />
Repeated experiments, however,<br />
have established that pebbles are not<br />
at all necessary to the trituration of<br />
the hardest kinds of substances which<br />
can be introduced into their stomachs,<br />
and, of course, the usual food of fowls<br />
can be braised without their acid.<br />
They do however, serve a useful pur<br />
f l u orHaaL<br />
There rises a hage wall sevaoty Net<br />
high, toctosiag a sqaare eonrt of which<br />
the side is 740 feet bag. Part ef the<br />
wall, having fallen Into ruin, has been<br />
rebaiit from the ancient materials, but<br />
the whole of the north side, with Its<br />
beautiful pillars, remains perfect. As<br />
the visitors «nt«r the court they stand<br />
*ttU la astonishment at the extreor*<br />
dlnary sight whieh meets their eves;<br />
for here, crowded within those four<br />
high Walls, Is the native Village of<br />
T*4m\W. It was natural enough for<br />
UMJ Arabs to build their mad huts withia<br />
these ready-uiad* fortifications, but<br />
the impression produced by such a<br />
village in such a place is indescribably<br />
strange.<br />
The temple, so to speak, Is eaten out<br />
at the core, and little but the shell re*<br />
mains, fiat here and there a Anted<br />
Corinthian column or group of<br />
columns,With entablature still perfect,<br />
rises in stately grace far over the<br />
wretched huts, the rich, creamy color<br />
of the limestone, and tho beantifcl<br />
moldings of the capitals contrasting<br />
with the clear blue of the cloudless sky.<br />
The best view of the whole is Co be obtained<br />
from the roof of the naos, which,<br />
once beautiful and adorned with sculpture,<br />
is now all battered and defaced<br />
and has been metamorphosed Into a<br />
squalid little mosqos. To describe the<br />
view from that roof were indeed a hopeless<br />
tisk. High iuto the clear blue air<br />
and the golden sunshine rise the stately<br />
columns; crowded and jumblsd and<br />
heaped together tolow, untouched by<br />
the gladdening sunbeams, unfresbened<br />
by the pure, free air.lie all the squalor<br />
and wretchedness of an Arab mud-hut<br />
How the Nation* Laasjlt.<br />
( All the world laughs, though the nations<br />
have different ways of showing<br />
mirth. The Chinese laugh is not as<br />
hearty or as expressive as the European<br />
or American. It is oftener a titter<br />
than a genuine burst of merriment.<br />
There b little character or force in it.<br />
As for the Arabian laugh, we hear<br />
little of Its hilarious ring through the<br />
ages of mirth in the old world. TUK<br />
Arab is generally a stolid fellovr, who<br />
must see good reason for a laugh or be<br />
surprised into it. In Persia a man<br />
who laughs is considered effeminite,<br />
but free license is given to female<br />
j merriment, says the St Louis Republic,<br />
One reads of the "grave Turk* aed<br />
the "sober Egyptian, "but it is not recorded<br />
that they have never momenta<br />
of mirth, when the fez bobs or the veil<br />
shakes under the pressure of some<br />
particularly "^ood thing." In Mahomet<br />
himself Christian writers hsvs noticed<br />
cordiality and jocoseness, and they<br />
say there is a good ringing laugh in<br />
the prophet with all his seriousness.<br />
An American traveler in Europe remarks<br />
the Italian mirth as languid but<br />
musical, the German as deliberate, the<br />
French as spasmodic and uncertain,<br />
the upper class English as guarded and<br />
not always genuine, the lower class<br />
English as explosive, the Scotch of all<br />
classes as hearty, and the Irish as rollicking.<br />
'I'' iw.P<br />
Do You Know?<br />
M.0.M c fARL2AND,<br />
Has one of the luost complete General Stores m the county and keeps<br />
a krge and varied stock of<br />
Oroceries end Drugs.<br />
He also handles Tile, Sewer Pipe, Lumber,<br />
Lath-, Lime Etc.<br />
DRUGS<br />
His Drug Dcpartntent is complete and under<br />
charge of a Registered Pharmacist.<br />
^NOW V00 KNOW that if you live mthis vicinity<br />
ancTwant ANYTHING, it will pay you to<br />
call on M. 0- MSFARLAND.<br />
LENNON, MICH.<br />
Welch<br />
Has opened a new<br />
G roeery Store<br />
AT BYRON.<br />
All goods new and fresh and willjbe sold at<br />
the iowest'easfe price. CASH paid .for Butter<br />
andlEggs. You are cordially invited to<br />
call and examine stock. E.B.WELCH.<br />
We wilUopen and place on sale in our<br />
DRESS GOODS JDEPAFTMENTE<br />
Thursday, October 13,<br />
1,000 YDS.<br />
cf the leading and best makes of FIFTEEN CENT<br />
Printed Fabrics that have been in the market this<br />
year.£These goods are extra width (31 in. wide)<br />
are a well known brand, and have never been sold<br />
forJess than 10£ cts net, at wholesale. To go at<br />
10 CTS.'A YD<br />
We also have a full line of<br />
ALL WOOL STORM<br />
In all colors, in the best goods—the Big Pearl Buttons in all sizes—<br />
|and a fall line of dress trimings to match.<br />
Remember that we buy our goods as cheap as any house in the county<br />
and will sell accordingly. Do not care what people tell you, we<br />
do sell the same goods at a less price taau any other house<br />
Cloaks, Jackets, Carpets, Wall Paper, Lamp,<br />
Boots and Shoes, Rubbers and Groceries.<br />
M. & J. GARLAND.<br />
Now Ready,<br />
iSverytbixiff in the Lone of<br />
T IN-WARE<br />
& OIL HEATERS,<br />
Caj; be bought ot<br />
d. Shuttleworth<br />
•••.w><br />
Builders wanting Eave Troughing are<br />
invited to call and get my terms. Job<br />
work solicited. Eepairing neatly done<br />
0<br />
m<br />
CD<br />
SLOAN<br />
IS RECEIVING EVKBY AY<br />
Buggies,Spring Wagons<br />
60 Tooth Drags,<br />
Toledo, Syracuse<br />
and BreeRvale Prows,<br />
BEAN HARVESTERS<br />
Spring Tooth Harrows/<br />
Corp ColtivatorB,<br />
3 kinds Hay Rakes,<br />
PLOW POINTS<br />
Of 90 different Pattern^ at ale aid Staad, opposite<br />
Vaaamrd H«<br />
FOR SALE BY<br />
JL3XT><br />
T<br />
J.. I<br />
A fine line of<br />
GLOVES 5 MITTENS.<br />
fiifl Kffi • - — - — *****-&* —SUM Mibubtai. -<br />
- . - • • . * — * - . •<br />
a><br />
5<br />
O<br />
1<br />
A
t<br />
*<br />
t<br />
^<br />
•<br />
r<br />
•A<br />
M<br />
^TIW^T::' 5 ?* "**W:f'<br />
Sspwvisors Procwdhg*,<br />
WW''<br />
*.<br />
T<br />
1.<br />
8.<br />
8.<br />
!0.<br />
10.<br />
10.<br />
KJ.<br />
10.<br />
n.<br />
if<br />
w.<br />
tt.<br />
u.<br />
n.<br />
»'•<br />
a.<br />
Hy-ytl40w0Mo etty<br />
prbnsx; school<br />
money.... .......<br />
Br paid Owoaso city<br />
uttQ sttDtM^y* • *••»«*<br />
By paid Vernon twp<br />
pritaary 1011001<br />
WOOST;<br />
Bj patt Veraoe twp<br />
one noser..<br />
Bypatd Antrim pri.<br />
aiarr school<br />
teonc............<br />
By paid ntourfnfton<br />
primary school<br />
money .."<br />
By paid Bennington<br />
fine money.......<br />
By Htid Mld4tebu*7 ,<br />
prjrary tchoyl<br />
money,...<br />
ftvpafc) MWdSeb-ity<br />
aneniouey .....<br />
By paid aitor"? foes<br />
A.B.&lehrfrda....<br />
By paMOftrunoa prin»'y<br />
school tuouay<br />
By paid Corunna ttce<br />
. • mocMcy • «. **•+*«« **<br />
By paid New Haven<br />
primary tt * + * * * + ••-*-»* • •><br />
By paid Perry liquor<br />
By paid Haaettoo,<br />
primary school<br />
nee<br />
BypeJu"iiaaafson'ii>quor<br />
tax.<br />
By p*M Mmim<br />
~ school<br />
»y.<br />
By P**<br />
By paid<br />
tiowoc<br />
tax..<br />
* * * - * v **<br />
IT. By pa**<br />
*. By paH*<br />
tax.*-..<br />
•fly<br />
Hqior<br />
1*.<br />
13.<br />
By^paaf<br />
Same<br />
tax....<br />
38. By wuoJhett<br />
school<br />
Ventee prV<br />
nary school fond<br />
2*. By paid Venice aim<br />
uwoev<br />
80. By paid buildiag^oroer<br />
Puwica a oerr<br />
8*. By part battdfac order<br />
Ibwter &^sew<br />
BytMOdprot>at«ro«<br />
By Jnaink paM •oonryeTk<br />
I4attarter aaiary.<br />
8P. By p'd otosty r<br />
4TI<br />
By_pd<br />
Joa<br />
aypdVi<br />
By pajdeerrr prtntg-<br />
By PMTT SBC sMney<br />
By pattpro*'* att'y<br />
Stfar.aalary......<br />
Br pSM J<br />
1».<br />
P». By 5a5 aparrtwr cr><br />
By aa*l wKoaKf<br />
1.<br />
14<br />
ByfiSeo.Pia^n.<br />
By balaaea........<br />
I)i.<br />
®»balance... ..818,038 43<br />
Totn#W. W. watv M33<br />
M. To ane G. W.<br />
18. To on* S. JAaldwta.<br />
13. To pnir fttfid, C.<br />
W. J ennlnfj......<br />
3a. To Sna W. H. Pot-<br />
SB. To poor fuadC W.<br />
«rata<br />
dtip. No. 8, tax^l<br />
1831.. '.,,..-.-,<br />
at. To tax sale»; re«i»-<br />
'•L. To tax smtoa, state<br />
31. To state tax of 1830<br />
and latartat... ..<br />
81. To state tax of 1331<br />
and interest.<br />
31. To county tax of<br />
ian and iatereat.<br />
31. To ooanty tax of<br />
im and intfieet.<br />
81. To MlddleDury tax<br />
of 18*1 and tater*t<br />
H. To Perry tax of U80<br />
aod intoreat......<br />
H. To Peary tax at W31<br />
3J, TV> Xuttim tax of<br />
1»! andtntereat..<br />
81. To Caieaooia lax of<br />
ltM and interest..<br />
81. To Vernon tax of<br />
IM and latere*:'.<br />
31. ToConrana tax of<br />
1801 aod iatereat.<br />
81. ToOmascetty tax<br />
of 1880 and later*t<br />
a. ToOwoeso ctty tax<br />
of 1381 and iotec't<br />
81, ToBvab drain oer><br />
tlfjoates... ..<br />
31. To sale of state tax<br />
lands..<br />
1. By pa!*) prohaM<br />
- register Sd quarter<br />
salary.,..<br />
1. BypaM school oonv<br />
tttlsaiotiVSd quar<br />
s.<br />
18.<br />
ter salary.<br />
By uaM Mlidinc or*<br />
OCT John Harding<br />
By paid buiVdiojr ord«T^.0.Llnabury<br />
83. By paid 2d or. House<br />
of Correction bill<br />
31. Br p'd probe's judfe<br />
July saimry<br />
31. By p'd Manornnpoer<br />
July salary<br />
31. By paid purchases<br />
31.<br />
31.<br />
3».<br />
31.<br />
SI.<br />
fo r county < ilfioers.<br />
By p'd Juror orders.<br />
By paid sparrow order*<br />
By paid poor orders.<br />
By paid witness orders<br />
,<br />
By Balance<br />
fUttM<br />
4*>48<br />
HSl<br />
.,«».08 j<br />
191081<br />
> 1<br />
«* (to<br />
4^88 80<br />
884 38<br />
«8 73<br />
783 80<br />
388 38<br />
» 51<br />
at oo<br />
88 73<br />
80 80<br />
fi 00<br />
138 83<br />
a* 00<br />
190 00<br />
TT«t<br />
«3 35<br />
33IM<br />
8W00<br />
98 79<br />
Kt»<br />
897 37<br />
3 38<br />
3833<br />
IT 33<br />
«MB8 4»<br />
ttOBMnn<br />
»*<br />
*A nrt<br />
11 83<br />
«83<br />
4 9«<br />
mm<br />
8U M<br />
883<br />
38 4«<br />
733<br />
98 n<br />
• 83<br />
*-M*<br />
• m*<br />
8 31<br />
1»<br />
18173<br />
883<br />
8 85<br />
883<br />
Tt 08<br />
1T5<br />
7783<br />
eo<br />
300 00<br />
200<br />
50 00<br />
88 5»<br />
10*33<br />
77 08<br />
3C 40<br />
400<br />
987 50<br />
«77 SI<br />
6 85»<br />
14,210 14<br />
•IV** 0» 315,606 H<br />
AU3.1. To balance ¢14,816 14<br />
To flue B. P. Byerlr. 1 40<br />
I To liquor tax T. W.<br />
Tewksbury, Morrlce<br />
«71 25<br />
6, To liquor tar H. C>.<br />
Howe-, JlorrifcC 371 23<br />
i:. To poor fund C. W.<br />
leQDtugs. 4 66<br />
11. To fine and costs F.<br />
E. Wel<br />
aod interest..... «J6<br />
80. To stato tax of 1S31<br />
aod interest....... »4T<br />
380 IS 30. To county tax of 1880<br />
and interest...... < 1?<br />
47 Tt<br />
SO. Tt> county tax ot<br />
l&U auu interest. 18«<br />
6S8 98<br />
30. ToStlotat«< of 14*1<br />
and interest....- MSB<br />
11 38<br />
30, To Middlobucy tax<br />
of U»lsw3lnter't 333<br />
mil 33. T> Perry Party tax of td 1830<br />
sna mwxvan.<br />
31<br />
33. To Perry tax of «p»<br />
t»ao<br />
«44<br />
11 54<br />
104<br />
J 45<br />
11 04<br />
582<br />
100<br />
363<br />
100<br />
373<br />
51 41<br />
Mar. 7. Bxpres*.....^.... .......<br />
3. 300 postal cards, trees...<br />
Freight, treas<br />
10. Poeta«*,ou.«i»-rk..<br />
11. l M staple bindorMaroa pens,<br />
8 flex, ruler*, twa;<br />
SO poll hooka, SO fatly sheeta.<br />
dark...<br />
m w ft * m «>>•*<br />
1080 letter hea4s,* pro! judged.<br />
15. Expreea, register.<br />
si. Freight,register<br />
22. BOSenvetopes, t»aa...........<br />
1931.<br />
Oct. 6. 4 qrs blanks, clerk..'.<br />
^ 1 doc Cock A Wooden,<br />
peohoklero, clerk,<br />
$Ua>; 3 areas rubber<br />
handa, trees<br />
3. Bxpreas.. •..... ...<br />
W. Poos, 1 moss trots; *<br />
Itrosupvoe. att'y; 1<br />
sTOMClerk; lgros*<br />
sheriff<br />
SS0 eqnanzat'n blanks<br />
clerk.....<br />
14. I bottle ink treas ....<br />
journal<br />
15. Bxpreas . ....<br />
IS. ano notary blanks elk<br />
84. 100 envelopes regis'r.<br />
100 receipts clerk<br />
¥>. 0. sou certificates, clerk<br />
Postage, clerk<br />
7. Bxpreas,clerk,. ....<br />
ft, 4 qrs. blanks........<br />
4 qts. ink, treas,'. 4<br />
qrs. b!anks,probft'e<br />
14.<br />
20.<br />
J»idg«.......<br />
Freight:<br />
tqr* blanks, clerk ..<br />
A copper kettles,<br />
treas.; * register..<br />
_.. 81. Bxpress<br />
s& 1500 envelopes, prob.<br />
}iHi»re<br />
37. 1 state tax record.tr* s<br />
Dec. 1. Postage, clerk<br />
1 supervisor's record,<br />
clerk.<br />
Postage, clerk<br />
1 sup'd record, clerk..<br />
1 ream legal cup, proa<br />
atty ';.........<br />
7, Express,clerk.......<br />
9. 1 (5 (£r. ejectment Suit<br />
roccid, regiiit^r—.<br />
4 qrs blanks, probate<br />
rejrtster<br />
0. 1 8 qr. record mort*<br />
gajratw,lbaU^rinft,tzoas<br />
14. t8 sbeete carbon paper, I dos<br />
pentMiMera, 1 Ink stand, cut<br />
4qr* tejr*n>lanks, pro. judge.<br />
4qrs ** chirk .....<br />
tqr* " pn>.JQdgo.<br />
1». 1 record mortgages, ter.<br />
1 white copyiax book,"<br />
18.<br />
«0.<br />
xT.<br />
38.<br />
80.<br />
300 sopervisori' voonx Ust*.<br />
43 a^aeMmeui rolls, treaa<br />
» copies tax sales, **<br />
Bxjpresa, register.<br />
Postage, clerk<br />
Bxprees, treas................<br />
a» lists twp ofltoers, cterk....<br />
*?ojtag-e, treus<br />
MufjiUhfft\ pen* and pendb,<br />
ttsTlalO WD1.«4MI*M«I».,MM«<br />
f i^tgMif r cf( * * * t. ••••*••»•• •*•<br />
Nay 3. 3*Jletter heads, clerk.........<br />
4. 161J p xeoord iusan« persona,<br />
pro. Judga<br />
1 numbering- xaacbine,l KTO*<br />
04%lMM3a *0O* OwaWCVV-*. v<br />
7. Express,pro.lodge<br />
10. to sheets lejal blanks, ibottlo<br />
' 103¾¾ *3fl»3* •»»• T V V** V*+4^A*** V<br />
tt. U M abstract blanks, 1M OOTers,l<br />
ruler,register.....<br />
1 reenad aasi«smeat, 1 record<br />
n^ortgagea, rea*........,......<br />
JBriTissetaj^fartblanka,^<br />
doaoena of A, d to Bar. oUr<br />
14. "" » • • r ,* • • • * •<br />
^naap' Vwvask * ***,*»4<br />
30BW •• f a^^aaaaiap aaj^aa^ao ^^r44#m vawnv 8x* T<br />
•ijavwBgft^BBh nlgaalr<br />
• • a**33j^8BBBJW«; Sjaani sm., **w<br />
31, Express cterk........v..<br />
1 «»py Cheever's probate law,<br />
probate Judge.......... ,<br />
93J< Sftf htantss. trees..'-;. ,<br />
m» eoveiopes. rcwister,.......<br />
_ 3L BaYTee*,jfi>OJudg#...i<br />
Intkc a rpTnt Ink, 1 doa peohoAdera,<br />
4*<br />
1 ream legal asp, 1 ot Ink 1<br />
•Bwia^y » • • • • • m • ••«• »••• .•*•<br />
V. Bxpresa. psoa, atcy<br />
i. BK tax Monks, dark...<br />
10. 3 it* oaaaa, 1 bx rubber<br />
1 rec-rJ decree*, vterk ,..,<br />
1 " deads, register........<br />
1 " adarUbar 18, probata<br />
IT. 4 qrv, blanks, ohwk.<br />
sow HoGjlTs1 fasiooera, cterlt...<br />
1 gros pencils, peorfl<br />
ers, 1 roli Bush, 00.1<br />
tl. 1 inkeraaur, treaa ..........,<br />
98. KxDre«a. elark '<br />
N qrs drain blanks, drain com,<br />
SB. Ink eraser, ck'rt t..'<br />
35. 1% qn legal blanks. 00. clerk<br />
One 840 page journal, treas....<br />
38. Postage,clerk.., ............ri<br />
July 1. Express charge*, clerk...... .<br />
7. 8¼ qrs blanks, t bx» rubber*,<br />
•iaTsBAda SjXJnuH* ******* •••••• •••^^v<br />
8 qrs blanks, 100 gustet file*,<br />
*M*>8.na • r • • r • « • > • * • « • • • • • • • » • • . « »<br />
». 1 record mortgage, register..<br />
8S. Bxpress, treas ,<br />
33. 1 eraser, treas<br />
31. MO committee cards, clerk....<br />
500 teller bfl*de, pro. Ju^re....<br />
Aox. 3, 1 gros* pens, "<br />
X 600 circuit court flies, clerk...<br />
3. Binding- x vol*, awasstnent<br />
roHs, treas<br />
10. Bxpreas and dray a^o, Kg ...<br />
3»<br />
too<br />
Si<br />
3S4<br />
443<br />
33 10<br />
35<br />
660<br />
3)<br />
30<br />
1160<br />
30<br />
»39<br />
180<br />
65<br />
2 60<br />
f 80<br />
33<br />
I S<br />
333<br />
J 83<br />
1*5<br />
IS<br />
188<br />
18 88<br />
138<br />
178<br />
137<br />
43<br />
SB<br />
400<br />
100<br />
«0<br />
143<br />
48<br />
300<br />
18 43<br />
78<br />
88<br />
8818<br />
96 18<br />
n*9<br />
,5<br />
883<br />
»88<br />
188<br />
883<br />
IS<br />
4 83<br />
83<br />
f 47<br />
tSt<br />
3177<br />
18 83<br />
H34<br />
888<br />
W<br />
i a<br />
78<br />
ISO<br />
«85<br />
7»<br />
«7<br />
i as<br />
11s<br />
100<br />
80»<br />
678<br />
16 00<br />
as<br />
49<br />
ssd<br />
5 bU<br />
1 00<br />
KSO<br />
11 «4<br />
1 38<br />
188<br />
IS. M reamlewal cap, dram com..<br />
IT. 100 postal cards 611(-1101, aud<br />
printing on &ame<br />
300<br />
IT. Sxpress, clerk .:..... »<br />
IS. 5 ajts ink, 1 «rni*s pencils, %<br />
reanij lejfal cap. clerk...... . 1176<br />
IS. 8xpres», trca^,...<br />
30<br />
18, 1000Clings,clerk<br />
500<br />
SO. 1000 letter beads, clerk...<br />
398<br />
SO. Express, treas<br />
88<br />
S3. 1 ball twine, H lb. manilla paper,<br />
treas...:<br />
36<br />
tS. Bxpre**, register ..,<br />
85<br />
3i). 1 assessment roll, treas<br />
SO<br />
31 Bxpress, treas.<br />
30<br />
Sept.1. 1 taM0 tally sheets,<br />
clerk...:<br />
50 17<br />
8. 10 qrs blanks, clerk<br />
888<br />
8. 100 McCiill's fasteners, 5 qrs<br />
blanks, 1 qt iak, 1 gros peo-<br />
CllS,pro judire<br />
8. 1 dup tax rccint hook, treas 11 40<br />
8. 1 rocoixl. pra jiuiifo<br />
13 34<br />
8. 1 box pens, '• "<br />
I 45<br />
12. Express, tre:»s<br />
•Z.7<br />
15. Postage, eo. uh'rk<br />
1 £6j<br />
15. Expiess, "<br />
i>5<br />
«. " projuil^e<br />
1 70;<br />
Binding tax retunw, treas....<br />
1: l c»u>e San ford's ink.oerk and 1 45<br />
trees<br />
28. 100 letr;i 1 wrappers, clerk and 873<br />
treas<br />
60 certin> of atty, cierk add 2 il<br />
trens<br />
•a. .1 reum legal cup, elera and 485<br />
treas<br />
38. 1 copy Gary's l'robate, prob'c 5 83<br />
Judge<br />
6 00<br />
t ^934 48<br />
On motion of Supervisor Baldwin, the report<br />
j was accepted an accept th* inevitable.<br />
They were thoroughly ashamed<br />
at being embroiled in a paltry quarrel<br />
which was bound to have their names<br />
heralded ovar the five continents.<br />
"Well, if we must fight," said the commander,<br />
who *eted as the doctor 1 * second,<br />
"we shall have a real fisrht and no<br />
-—- nonsense about it." He at once<br />
caller' upon the representative of th*<br />
challenger and said; "My friend has<br />
made more than ample apology for an<br />
offense that was never committed. All<br />
our efforts to settle this tiling arnica*<br />
bly have failed, and my friend is ready<br />
to go out. He will tight with pistols<br />
and will insist that the fight shall go<br />
on as long as the two men can stand<br />
up to.be shot at. Ouly on these conditions.*<br />
That settled it. The French<br />
principal was an expert swordsman,<br />
but he had no intention of being^per-<br />
(orated. The same afternoon he senl<br />
word that he accepted the ex pi--- *•'-••<br />
iiniiswiafi<br />
'ftm<br />
C C C<br />
TONS<br />
JEWELRY & Music STORE.<br />
Th* L»a.t*MSt St vies In<br />
QHAINSr RINO-S, THIMBLES, PESTS-<br />
EAR JEWELS, ETC.<br />
They are charming. Also Novelties in Clocks and Silverware. A fuii<br />
line of bpectticles. Eyes fitted correctly. Strings for • all kni.lo of<br />
musical mstnimcntsand musical merchandise. • Pricar-fko lowest est,<br />
Remember that.<br />
R. A. HAUGHTON.<br />
M.<br />
l8the mail who will sell you<br />
PURE DRUGS,<br />
p..-. PAINTS &<br />
AT B<br />
ALL THE LEADING BRANDS OF GiGARS AND<br />
TOBAGGt). TOILET ARTIGIES OF ALL KIND'<br />
Qiva him a call and yon will never regret<br />
^WE HAVE IT!»^<br />
Ercrythbg YOU want in th« Line of<br />
A Carload of Steel Wire Nails<br />
going at Rock Bottom Prices.<br />
Spring Tooth Riding H&srows<br />
from $25 to $33. Steel Frame<br />
floating spring tooth harrows at<br />
from$13to$21.<br />
AMD<br />
C?<br />
IMPLEMENTS.<br />
Two Carioads of Buggies, Road<br />
Wagons, Wagons, etc. Top Baggies,<br />
$55, $60, $70, $?5 to $ioa<br />
Plcws, 1 %k Harrows Common<br />
Square Dr.tgs, Little Griant Cultivators,<br />
all for sale at the lowest possible<br />
prices.<br />
We are also Agents for the<br />
DOMESTIC SEWING MACHINES<br />
fytytxich we oeWl|5 to ^8 to&s than anu teav~<br />
ctvn
5PS$*^^J^^ 3¾¾^¾^<br />
i^;r^"r*y *JJ ijw^avw,^.-* :SW-<br />
flswsw<br />
£<br />
•tq<br />
LIEOT. 8CHWATKA-<br />
dear? la Cfrtnron.<br />
Me Was Foaad Un*owaeio«» e* the Street<br />
ka rwWHwd • Lanrtantvav Caused<br />
Hit tteatfc-Brief Histerf<br />
of Has Career.<br />
CHRISTIAN WORKER.*<br />
""" c. *. &~Mnw<br />
HIS feAST VOYAGE,<br />
Poarn.A*l\ Ore,, NOT. 3.-Lieut Fred;<br />
erkk G. Sehwatka, who made his name<br />
famous by commanding the expedition<br />
to the Arctic region in search of the<br />
recordsof the lost Sir John Franklin ^ ^ ^ : ^ ^<br />
0<br />
^ ^ ^ ?*<br />
party, is dead, The lieutenant WAS<br />
of tfce W.<br />
Duma, Col, Nor. 1.-The session of<br />
the nation*) W.\C. T. U. was taken up<br />
in electingQueers, The vote for presi<br />
dent resulted in 83« votes for Frances<br />
E. Wiliard, who was taken to the plat<br />
form amid the greatest enthusiast and<br />
the wsTing of handkerchiefs. Mrs.<br />
Duell was elected corresponding secre<br />
tary, Miss Fugh treasurer and Mrs.<br />
Woodbridge recording secretary.<br />
DKSVZB, Col., NOT. S.—The National<br />
Wom«V fl Cbn'B>i»a. Temperance Union<br />
adjourned finally 0¾ Wednesday. Tho<br />
M^M*£I tAJL.<br />
Pr^irbt la Bnotiaad<br />
found at S o'clock Wednesday u*>r«-<br />
ing lying in Fust street, neat<br />
Morrison, by a police itfflcer.<br />
By his aide was 0 half empty bot<br />
tle of laudanum. Be was in a com<br />
atose condition and was immediately<br />
-removed to St Charles hotel, where he<br />
was placed in a chair. The supposi<br />
tion at first was that the lieutenant<br />
was intoxicated, but as his condition<br />
grew alarming at the end of anhourthe<br />
patrol wagon was called and the sick<br />
man was taken to the city ju.iL Dr.<br />
Wheeler, the city physician, at once<br />
discovered that the lieutenant was suf<br />
fering from what appeared to be nar<br />
cotic poisoning. From the jail the<br />
lieutenant was immediately sent to the<br />
Good Samaritan hospital, where ever;-<br />
thing was done for him, bat he died at<br />
3 o'clock a. m.<br />
Lieut Sehwatka had been sugerlng<br />
from a complication of troubles and<br />
bad shown symptoms of apoplexy on<br />
numerous occasions. Bis life had beeu<br />
marked by such a degree of convivial<br />
ity that bis stomach had of recent<br />
years given him much trouble, and<br />
for the purpose of finding relief<br />
be used small quantities of iand-<br />
atam, usually taking from fifteen to<br />
twenty drops. Tuesday evenin^hisstosp^<br />
aeb trouble came on with such severity;<br />
that be complained bitterly and sought<br />
belief. Going to a drug stor? Ue asked<br />
for two ounces of laudanum. /Tbe-.<br />
druggist asked him if be bad a prefcrip-<br />
tion. Be replied that he had not, but<br />
as he wan a graduate of a medical col<br />
lege he eould »c<br />
the tetter, uader dste of Apr$ % IMS,<br />
ataitoff the dcttth of Sir John rranVIiu on<br />
Jose 7, 1HT. Tbl« expedition wss »lso noted<br />
for the fact thst be mad* the longest siedrf><br />
jouraey oa record, hiiviog travwsoU J.4&J *t*t-<br />
ute miles. -I?Brla« the trtjn he di*coTer*d<br />
Bock's river, uhlch he named ia houor of<br />
Pretidrut Hsye*. Lieut ^bw^tkt vu id V><br />
asko this trip hy reading tlje siory of Cs|>t<br />
Thouka* F. Bmrry"* wbsUts; ejepedtnoa in<br />
Scpalso hay is !87I73 Cspt Barry tnet<br />
trltb Ss^ntmanx who described surSBgW w& *<br />
ksd pasted tbroofh that region *everal yeani<br />
before,sBd who hftd burled papers, silver epooftS<br />
awl other relic* In the cavern. Tho rmull of<br />
I^eut. Scbwsths't explorations created n great<br />
sensation at the UEM throughout the civilised<br />
world. ,,,<br />
Heafterwhid explored the eourse of the Yu<br />
kon river la Alaska, ant! la July, ISM, he re-<br />
Joined his rocimcat. The Ansust toUowint be<br />
resigned the coaboission of first lieutenant,<br />
Third cavalry, which ho had held since Match<br />
ZS, 18¾ Two years later the New York Time*<br />
flitted out aa exploring expedition sad placed<br />
Itieat Sehwatka In chareeT<br />
Nearly thrte yean m#o, W. D. Boyee, of Chi<br />
cago, sent him to atexiio to discover sad<br />
brute back to dvlUsatUm a race of peo-<br />
•te known a* the "cave dwellers." Bw<br />
jFQceeedetf 1 ia getUaf three different<br />
.Beads or fsmfltes of these people, eat<br />
sal got aw&y from him except the<br />
last family, which he took to Chicago sad<br />
pat on ezhibittwB at Central Music ball<br />
«ader the management sad Oaascuu hacking of<br />
W. D. Boyee, of that city. After exhibiting<br />
these people there for several months, be sent<br />
then back to Mexico.<br />
Lient Sehwatka received the Roquet!* Arc<br />
tic medal tram the Geographical Society of<br />
Paris sad a medal from the Imperial Geograph<br />
ical Society of Russia. He was made an<br />
honorary member of the geographical so<br />
cieties of Geneva, Rorae and Brnnea. Among<br />
his most noted writing* are "Along Alaska'*<br />
Great River" and -Niarod in the North," pub<br />
lished ua 18», and "The Children of the Cold,"<br />
published in 16*<br />
PORIXAKB, Ore., Nov. *.—The coro<br />
ner held an inquest on the remains of<br />
the late Lieut. Frederick G. Sehwatka.<br />
The jury returned a verdict that Use<br />
deceased came to his death from an<br />
overdose of morphine taken, acciden<br />
tally. The remains will he interred<br />
at Salem, Ore.<br />
tions was adopted. The reso<br />
lutions pledge the meral support<br />
of the Wpmtn's Christian Temperance<br />
Union to the prohibition party;<br />
urge jsongress to make a full inve&tigs<br />
tion of the liquor traffic and to^ablish<br />
the amount oi alcoholic liquors manu<br />
factured and consumed, and Ihe rela<br />
tion of such intoxicants to crime, pov<br />
erty and death. A protest is saade<br />
against the longer disfranchisement of<br />
women.<br />
KILLED FIVE PERSONS.<br />
aa Insane OtBeial<br />
The Terrible Work of<br />
In Ireland.<br />
DwiAtt, Nov. a,—A horrible crime<br />
was committed Monday night in the<br />
Bcyal Irish constabulary barracks at<br />
Ballinardina, County Kildare. Con<br />
stable Pilkington seized, M is sup<br />
posed, with a sudden fit of in<br />
sanity, entered the bedrctonS wnere<br />
Se*gt> Logan and his wife w||re sleeping<br />
aafi shpt them with a revo|ver, killlpg<br />
tbjan instantly. The mbdmsn then<br />
turned to the sleeping rooms of Logan's<br />
children, and, attacking tben% left<br />
them ail for dead. Two were found<br />
withtbftir beads crashed in, three fa<br />
tally injured and the remaining two<br />
seriously injured. Pilkington then<br />
tried to burn the' barracks, but the<br />
rtarm spretdi'apd, finding aimieif dfc-<br />
d>v^»d^ daratnitted stUclaeJ '<br />
KILLED BY THE CARS.<br />
Am,..A«w«;,JIVrtb4dl*t MimU^tr mud His<br />
.--:. tnie 9wW« wMb a T^rrfh4*\A*c4dent.<br />
CoBXuro, N, Y-, Sov. 4.—A shocking<br />
accidens- happened a* Painted Post<br />
/ThAjaday^ afternoon. As Rev.. J. G.<br />
Bradbury^ retired Methodist preacher,<br />
and his wife, both over 70, were grow<br />
ing the ..Erie, tracks Mrs. Bradbury's<br />
iv4tftw*awght between a tin and a<br />
yi^MaVbafAre H>. Brad btry could<br />
seles»» her botb wtre struck ^>y»« fast<br />
icxpresa traifi 'Mrs. Brsxtbury «ras In<br />
stantly killed and her body was horri<br />
bly mangled. Mr. Bradbury was badly<br />
injured «nd may not survive the result<br />
of the shock and injuries. Re was one<br />
of the beat kxwwn Methodist ministers<br />
to inss jetton, -.<br />
THIEVES.<br />
v*W<br />
OajUf kt at<br />
SrKARvnJjt, Kan., Kov. fc— Three<br />
masked t*ea> rode into this townyeater-<br />
day tn^nirmr and halted in front of the<br />
Bennessr bank. Two at the masked<br />
men mat isakls a*d U>e third<br />
remained on the outside holding<br />
his Winchester aimed at Cash<br />
ier Baird, whoa* crippded and unable<br />
to ttsfi but otas hasjd Tasjy compelled<br />
Ten'XlwM XMkt aael staay reraoai La,<br />
Jarod—Tfe* Kl^eml Maei aTaa iNwoeel<br />
aw' Work Thmasrh Cosa-<br />
: ptoteiy Kxnaeitee).<br />
A FiTAi COIXISrOH.<br />
LOMWX, NOT. A—A terrible railway<br />
accident, in which at least thirteen<br />
lire^were lost and thirty persons were<br />
injured, occurred early Wednesday<br />
Voming near Thir&k, in Yorkshire,<br />
The east const express train for Lon<br />
don collided at full speed with 4 goods<br />
train on a siding at Manor House and<br />
the wre-sk of the express train was<br />
complete.<br />
The wreck took fire almost instantly<br />
from esaaping.gtsa, hud the smoke and<br />
flame, with the shrieks of the dying<br />
and wounded, made a horrible scene.<br />
All day and throughout the . night<br />
men have been working upon<br />
the wreck, and it i* expected<br />
that when the tender of the<br />
express engine is removed several<br />
bodies will be found beneath it. The<br />
signal man, Holmes, who is held re<br />
sponsible for the disaster, shows signs<br />
of men* al derangement Much sym<br />
pathy is expressed far him, and there<br />
are not a few people who declare that<br />
the staikmmaator ia the one who is<br />
really responsible for the wreck.<br />
Holme* bad passed Tuesday night<br />
at tho bedside of ' his dying<br />
child. After the death of the<br />
child be asked the stationmaster<br />
for leave of absence, bwt his re^ust<br />
Sfas refused a?* he was compelled to<br />
tolte swt piaee M the Sfgaals. Pbysi-<br />
cally WM-n otft by the fatigue ef^ bis<br />
siekbed vigiW and tiitd taenta^y, he<br />
fell asleep. The accident gives special<br />
mteresV to tbe evidence of the<br />
;Wrtnesses • BOW testifying sa to<br />
railway management before the<br />
royal labor commission,. Tb^s ,m«n<br />
assert that they «ie overworked, while<br />
the raUway c^Bcials testify tliat it is<br />
impossible to werk the traffic of their<br />
lines m a fixed day of ten hours, < An<br />
other lesson taught by the accident is<br />
the superiority of the Americau car<br />
ever the JSngUab ear. In a eaUision<br />
the latter eoliapae like egg boxes.<br />
^M**mm srssp<br />
I f i — s 3C<br />
HUM OR NBW8 ITEKS.<br />
ANOTHER OUTOBEAK IN BRAZIL<br />
Iriehttosr Keported In Forte Aletre, State<br />
of Xtte «tra»de Oo sal.<br />
VALPARAISO, Now. A — A dispatch<br />
from Ysjuarpn, BauaX says that att»<br />
ether revolution has broken out in<br />
Porto Alegre, ia the state of Bio<br />
Qrande do SuL. The gorerament troops<br />
ebargad on the rewoiutauaiata and kiiled<br />
a number of them. Ther* ia greater-<br />
ettometttifajthe state of Bio Grande do<br />
Sul and it is feared that the scenes of<br />
the last rerotutiosi will be repeated. A<br />
nomber of yoinsg sne» of the oppeaiag<br />
forces at Santiago del Estero have ^-<br />
dulged In street fighting and several<br />
livea svere tosi. ,<br />
PRESIDENT HARRISON'S CARD.<br />
lis Qeaiefalssas to tbe<br />
.. he? saw Bts SrasaAthtea.<br />
_ _ _ WasHnroTOjr, Nor. A—The president<br />
Mr.llalrdi to!ope- r theism all^^"saf^and ! J»* ^ ^ 1 ¾ t h e publication of the<br />
hand over 110,000 in gold, all of the : WW?****; eard:<br />
money that the bank had on hand.<br />
They then mounted their honors and<br />
rode awsy.<br />
... ,fi^r.. ..^^1^-.^^,^^--0^11 Chief W.<br />
F. Mtssimer, of the brotherhood of<br />
Carmen, while in /.his city, is con<br />
versation with a reporter about<br />
the recent trouble between rail<br />
way employers and employes, said:<br />
"We bare a little surprise in<br />
store for them ia (be shape of<br />
an international organisation: of rail<br />
way employes which merudes any rail<br />
road employe from the track man op.<br />
The organization will be in shape be<br />
fore January and meetings in regard<br />
to it are being bald all over the United<br />
States. **<br />
"fwe ssprcssicas<br />
sad our family ia<br />
iadjvlduwu,<br />
ftytttpstsy with xee<br />
ffwstftorrow from<br />
societies, from church<br />
j conveetlona, from pnhlia meetings, from<br />
j political clubs and committees of all<br />
; BAFti«a, ud. indeed from ail our pgpple,<br />
i have been so tesder sad so full of respect and<br />
I IOTC for Mrs. HaiTl»»» that I reluctantly aban<br />
don the parpc^e of making a personal achnowl-<br />
I edgment of each. We ire grateful, very grate-<br />
; ful, for this Croat cup of good will sad lor your<br />
! prayerful intercesaloss.<br />
j "May God give to each of you ia every trial<br />
. thst grace aad strength which you have asked<br />
7or BS. BsstJAina ttuuusos."<br />
Tan Loon Not Uanged Tea.<br />
Coixxsra, O., Nov. 2,—Frank Van<br />
Loon, the Columbus Grove bank rob<br />
ber and murderer, was to have been<br />
executed at the penitentiary sttuex<br />
Tuesday night, but the supreme court<br />
granted a motion for leave to filo a pe<br />
tition, which will delay the execution<br />
about four mouths.<br />
Woaaaa Suffrage in Kits I and.<br />
Losnwtf, Nov. 4.-At the coming ses-<br />
sioa of parliament Viscount Wolmer<br />
{liberal unionist) will introduce in the<br />
house of commons a woman's suffrage<br />
bill, it is esweted that the bill will<br />
rwceive ISO votes from conservative and<br />
liberal members.<br />
The I'ublio Ilebl.<br />
WASHIXGTOX, NOV. «.—The public<br />
debt statement issued yesterday showed<br />
that the interest and non-interest bear<br />
ing debt decreased S!9fl,2S0 during the<br />
month of October. The cash in the<br />
Iveasury was*7eo,S0'»H4Su.<br />
JTwaaber of Cliio*j»*n iCnterlng Cnuads.<br />
CTTTAWA, Oot, Nov. 4.-The total<br />
nnetber of Chinese who entered Cauada<br />
and paid tlie poM-ttix of £50 each dur<br />
ing the fiscal year ended June R0, 109-2,<br />
.«•« R,*7«. as ngaintt 2,114 during the<br />
fiwtvious yea/.<br />
j Klaatewa Bedtee Msaiaw. ia a Cellar.<br />
j . %T. PspfXASBUBtt, NOT. A—While the<br />
: police weft searching the house of a<br />
I suspected smuggler in the district of<br />
j Toejiefcy, Poland, they discovered the<br />
j dooomposexi bodies of nineteen persons,<br />
1 men, women and children. It is not<br />
Trrrrnatvug; Tits ifssiisii j known whether these persons ware<br />
QutJfcr. 111. KOT. S.-While onload- " ^ ' T 1 w wh 1^"^ ^ 5*"** *?<br />
ing bananas ant of t car Wednesday ! ^ H t ^ l ^ S t x 5 ^ ^^°<br />
aft*..rno,.0., Nov, 3,—Up to.e late<br />
hour Wednesday nigh*, owners bad re<br />
ceived no news of the missing steamer<br />
Uilcher and have given up, all<br />
hope. Ttiey feci satisfied that the<br />
boat is lost Offiters of the Cleve<br />
land Shipbuilding Company, which<br />
built both the Western , Reserve<br />
andOilcher, are badly broken up by<br />
this latest disaster. President Coffin-<br />
berry said that no storm con Id break<br />
up the Gilcher, loaded as she was with<br />
8,000 tons of coal He stated that she<br />
either tore her bottom on the rocks or<br />
had been in ft collision.<br />
The last that the owners heard of the<br />
steamer was when she passed Mack-<br />
inaw at 2:20 o'clock last Friday after<br />
noon. As she should have reached<br />
Milwaukee on Saturday or Sunday her<br />
owners were becoming somewhat un<br />
easy, but still it was hoped the beat<br />
was all right. The announcement<br />
Wednesday morning of the finding of<br />
more wreckage nearly ended the faint<br />
hope the owners had left,<br />
The insurance companies are bard<br />
hit by the disaster. The Gilcher was<br />
insured for $180,000, divided as follows:<br />
Commercial Union, $35,000; London<br />
Assurance, $*S,e, ,...„.,.. r^, „^.^^^_,^.„ tLtaia HMuMkaiia^ '.' .(-^M^v^M^wi^^r:', •#«K*M «M^fcna ^ba.<br />
; ,
: ^a'^f^'^^f}?^^^'" 'ffuasmtr*: •?*?* • •;•«!?;•>• i; ; '7' • > . & % & : :«••&••<br />
<br />
.mediately two footmen, in the royal<br />
livery, answered his summons.<br />
"You »hall go at once to the> emperor,"<br />
;he said, is a low and very ttanqnil<br />
voice. "I will give thesft men ordem<br />
tor carriages ".id will see that a special<br />
- train is prepared for you the instant yon<br />
•reach—"<br />
•'»>, no," broke hoarsely from the<br />
jrlncea:*. "Send them away! I—I did<br />
not mean what I said." In a trice she<br />
bad grown r>itcously humble, "I—I<br />
was more than half ia jolie, my dwur<br />
lf-fopr2ssed'•• hardly<br />
j beLtc'reofnceaioil than thiit of (lie fugi<br />
tive ostrich.) " jly dc?.r, yo-.i ;>.ve quite<br />
rifflit. l"'o'>pl\d and rent<br />
Eoys with their tj-iunt pale faces,<br />
The Irirnds of hurtrer sad thirst:<br />
Men who had looked through the gates tut bell<br />
Aod darod thi devil b±. worst<br />
Up trooi the Mt£»lssin>t<br />
Frost the Sairie-acarred Georgian track,<br />
From th)* wilderness and from Gettystonrrj<br />
Those soldier* came tofmte hack.<br />
Are thesa the aiuae.oBe marvels;<br />
Does the old li^ht (learn and shuxi,<br />
AS they foUoa- the flte and tMtelfi<br />
. la the ion; uawaverlaff ltaer<br />
Ave, vera*! Here are the eonnAes<br />
Wl'h brown heads tuThvd to er»7,<br />
, And linv-whlte locks hare the gray<br />
. Sarong la that elder day.<br />
*u*» lert their joarh bahladUMU<br />
la the temifBat of yeataatnaa<br />
When aveet oat of War"* Ztittgfc cradle<br />
SUyped Peaoe in tte teeakftsrAawa<br />
— " •• _ ' • • " • - * '<br />
HaUofi! Theie'saenateranaj<br />
Unstirred in tta attee. sleep<br />
BF «a* paadewoa tteart of the ttvmt<br />
And the eaaaoa'a tower deep.<br />
An amy that keeps iu nmter<br />
On stones that as Seattle* stand.<br />
WMi tne names of teas of taowada,<br />
Tae never of all the Jaao.<br />
The winds are tonrar ehamnaj<br />
A reqniem tor theee;<br />
Brav» atitaant uatnts thtte haimira<br />
In the flasbintr mapli.i mta.<br />
And the gted birda, wtnting atrafhward.<br />
Over them patne and nat<br />
DronHnsa»oocforkrre,above .<br />
The flower of Staat aaA West.<br />
A trooe to ox9aarj*a dreaaabag;<br />
Oh, Bag that ws live to serve;<br />
Brail that we hold BDst holy,<br />
Never from thee well »wet-vet<br />
Dear nac; that rallies a aatkm,<br />
A mlshiv fiowlmtr asst.<br />
From the hreeav, rtapuns prairtra<br />
To tne ragtrtA mtm-VUm utmmi.<br />
Marzaretkl Saoga^r, ia Harper's<br />
LEFT ON Trig BATTLE-FIELD.<br />
atwW It reels to Km Btravfc Br Tar* »*1-<br />
. . tats *« Otaaa.<br />
I did not fwl th* ali^htaat pain when<br />
struck by two bullets at the same in<br />
stant. We were ebarging farwanL<br />
must of the meu hurrahing as they<br />
•wept into the eleud of smoke raised by<br />
the two Napoleon guna. when there<br />
oatne such a sensation as one feels<br />
When his foot has gone to sleep. This<br />
sensation extended to the entire body,<br />
and I lurched about; staggered forward<br />
a few steps, and then fell to the ground.<br />
One bullet had entered the right leg<br />
Just below th* hip—the other bad<br />
smashed into the left shoulder.<br />
I was duty conscious of the fact that<br />
I was down, but I could not realize that<br />
I had been hit It was a dreamy aea-<br />
eocnt?" he asked, as he tossed thu tell of the V^att'e,<br />
but I flew mad and called him a liar.<br />
He would hav^ struck me, but just then<br />
we caught sight of a ghoul silsntly ap<br />
proaching-<br />
"Ah, you devil—I'll fix yoaJ" shouted<br />
my comrade as he raised his musket<br />
The ghoul ran away, and both of u»<br />
laughed heartily. Then ive :wept<br />
again. All of a sudden he began sing<br />
ing, His song was ,4 Capt Jinks," and<br />
joined in with great -heartiness. We<br />
were singing at the top oi our voices<br />
when a party of three oc four men, hav<br />
ing a lantern and n stretcher, suddenly<br />
appeared. We ceased our song, and<br />
one of the party held the lantern down<br />
and said:<br />
"Hard lot, eh? WelL you Yanks are<br />
a doggone queer lot of crittura anyhow!<br />
We reckoned you was all holding a><br />
camp-meeting down yere!"—N, Y. Sun.<br />
PEOPLE vVITH QUEER WOUNDS.<br />
BaUWitfe<br />
Who Stopped<br />
Hlai<br />
There are some veterans with ^oeer<br />
reeorda in attendanse at this encamp<br />
ment One of these, known familiariy<br />
as Comrade C3use, who serred fa» s><br />
Maine battery during the<br />
the scars ai forty-eight<br />
«d in a single battle, that a£ G*tty*><br />
burg. His numerous woucas resuHed<br />
from the explosion of a spherical ease*<br />
bnmediately in front of biat at<br />
aaemorablv battle.<br />
' erporal John Burns, of Ohio,<br />
eeivea a' pension for aopeculTar<br />
wbiebaar described in tb« pension Dwresai<br />
as ahoC ih the hip with a barrel of say<br />
g»r. w Burns was on guard duty at a.<br />
anaiu railroad curve in Virginia 4htrins*<br />
|9» latter part of the war, and wa»<br />
struck on the hip and disabled by a bar<br />
rel of sugar, which was thrown sudden<br />
ly from tie rickety car by the ine«nen><br />
tarn at the turn in the road. Another<br />
veteran who a> present is recorded in<br />
the bureau as having stopped a Cannes*<br />
ball with bis abdomen. He was sitting<br />
in a tent near headquarters when a<br />
spent cannon ball came bounding along<br />
and struck him in the atomaeh with<br />
rafBcient Sorce to reader him bora de.<br />
eombat, but not to kill hum.<br />
StiH another queer ease ia that of a<br />
Pennsylvania veteran who wiiL «e><br />
doubt be found ia the «%l»»at bt*«sde"<br />
during the parade. He was ratsdered<br />
totally deaf by a eaan^o ball, which<br />
whizzed by his bead in uncomfortably<br />
eloee proximity at the battle of ttstvem<br />
Hill. In deseribiug tae sensation ftftfl**<br />
ward he said it felt for an instast a* ft<br />
fifty cyclones had burst loose about his<br />
bead The eoacussAon also paralysed<br />
tUm for several miuutea. There Ji •ay-<br />
Other pensioner here who receives a<br />
monthly allowance from Uncle Sam's<br />
tiljl/fora "horse bite oa the neek," He<br />
was a cavalryman, and claims to have<br />
been bitten by a vicious animal while<br />
serving with Sheridan in his valley ride.<br />
Th« bite resulted in partial paralysis of<br />
the spine. -These are but a few Utos-<br />
satioa. The roar of battle was subdued, 1 *ratf»us of the varioua and multitu-<br />
the shouts of men seemed to coots from*ain°«* pecaliariUes of war which will<br />
miles away, and I f«lt too tired to spec<br />
ulate on what was, happeaing around<br />
me. By and by X went to sleep. I had<br />
noticed the sun just as we moved for<br />
ward. It was witnin half an hour of<br />
setting. When I awoke it ws* night<br />
and the Stars',were twinkling brightly.<br />
My throat was as parched as if I had<br />
been without drink for days, and my<br />
tongue seemed to be a stick in my<br />
mouth. I sat up, got hold of my can<br />
teen, which was full of water, and<br />
drained it to the last drop.<br />
What bad happened? Away down on<br />
the left a single gun was firing at in<br />
tervals, and here and there was a sput<br />
ter of musketry. I found it hard to re<br />
flect, but after a time it slowly dawned<br />
upon me that there nod been a battle.<br />
When did I fali cut of the ranks, and<br />
why? Where was the regiment? Who<br />
are these men lying 1 about on the<br />
ground? Let's see, Yes, this is a bat<br />
tle-field. We were held in reserve an til<br />
midafternoon. Then the brigade was<br />
sent to Hooksr, and we formed battle<br />
line along a ridge covered with bushes.<br />
We pushed. down thei .slope to a creek,<br />
over the creek to the edge of a cotton-<br />
field. They got a couple of guns to enfi<br />
lade us, and we-r-we—let's see. Our regi<br />
ment got the order to charge. I had<br />
just filled my canteen. We fixed bayo<br />
nets lying down. I remember that we<br />
sprang up and rushed forward, and I<br />
remember falling. Did I trip or stum<br />
ble?<br />
"You, there! Are you badly hit?"<br />
I came out of my stupor as a dream is<br />
broken. I was sitting tip, stUi holding<br />
my empty canteen. , The soldier who<br />
had spoken was lying on his elbow ten<br />
feet away. He had been shot in the<br />
knee.<br />
"Can you crawl?"<br />
"Yes, of course."<br />
"Then get a canteen from oae of<br />
those dead men for me.<br />
be repre&eftited at the Grand arssy<br />
eampment —Washington Post,<br />
OldttarCowirA.de*.<br />
Joseph Morrison of Clinton, I1L,<br />
came into the headquarters tent of the<br />
Seventeenth corp* and said he wanted<br />
to register. While waiting his turn ti.%<br />
the book Dr. Littlewootf of that city,<br />
who served in the Twentieth Illinois,<br />
looked at him rather suspiciously, then<br />
got up and walked around and took hint<br />
in from th* other side. Then he tapped<br />
him on the shoulder and remarked*<br />
"You were at Fort Hency end Fort<br />
Doaelson, weren't you?** "Oh, yes, 1 *<br />
came the answer, and then the strange*<br />
began to look. "Took part at Shilob,<br />
didn't you?" continued Dr. LhUewood,<br />
"and the capture of Vicksburg and th*<br />
march to the sea?" "Of course I did,<br />
and so did you, and—wall. Til be<br />
—if it istft Littlewood." shouted tb»<br />
stranger; as he jumped from his seat<br />
and made a rush for his old comrade,<br />
whom he had not seen since the day.<br />
they were mustered out after serving<br />
in the tame company during the war.<br />
Maybe they were novdelighted.—Wash<br />
ington Tost<br />
SMALL SHOT.<br />
THE largest number of men enlisted<br />
from the thirteen states of America,<br />
during the revolutionary war was 69,-<br />
761 in 1776. The aggregate of troops<br />
furnished the Union army in the war of<br />
1801-S5 was 2,320,272.<br />
PBOBABI.V the tallest G. A. R. veter<br />
an is \Villiain P. Boyne, of Green coun<br />
ty, Pa, who stands seven feet in his<br />
stockings. "During the war he was a<br />
private soldier in the Twenty-second<br />
Pennsylvania cavalry.<br />
ON-K of the old soldiers who was in<br />
Washington during the recent reunion<br />
carries on his body forty-eight scars,<br />
and exhibits an empty coat-sleeve and<br />
I made a move, and then for the first! *» artificial eye, all the result of a<br />
bursting shell at Gettysburg, H»<br />
time felt the pain of tny wounds and<br />
realized that I was helpless. The<br />
knowledge frightened me, and I be<br />
gan to shout for help The wounded<br />
man laughed at me llis paroxysm had<br />
passed away, while I was lying in a<br />
stupor.<br />
"Keep quiet!" he commanded, as he<br />
began to move himself toward m% "If<br />
you call out that way some ghoul wi!l<br />
come along and knock you on the<br />
head!"<br />
My fright passed away as he drew<br />
nearer. There was a dead man between<br />
us. He stepped and procured 'he poor<br />
fellow's canteen, and as he finally<br />
reached me, hitching along on his back<br />
by the ust cf one Jeg, we drained it be<br />
tween us. I had not recognized h's<br />
voice, but. I now found that he belong*<br />
ed to my own company.<br />
"How many dead bodies «aA you<br />
name is J. F. Chase, a veteran of the<br />
Fifth Maine Cavalry.<br />
THE late Gen. John Pope, by dating<br />
one of bis orders "Headquarters in the<br />
saddle," prompted the confederate com<br />
mander, Robert EL Lee, to perpetrate<br />
what was said to be the only joke of hia<br />
life. "What can you expert" he ia<br />
I credited with saying, "of a general who<br />
I puts his headquarters whore his hindV<br />
j quarters ought to be?"<br />
j GKN\ L-0SQ8TOKKT, one of the most<br />
famous of Lee's corps commanders,<br />
speaks in high praise of the b avery<br />
and skill of the late Gen. John Pope,<br />
1 whose qualities he had good occasion<br />
to appreciate and remember. Loag-<br />
strect says that no one could have dotra<br />
better under the circumst&tices than<br />
Pope in the struggle of August, USSS, *%.<br />
Virginia<br />
i- -<br />
4.,<br />
- IT<br />
laimwaWwal ssssssssssns.
*1: -<br />
^1¾ 1 ^<br />
SBJgWBtJfly,. ^.m|flW?/,l .jJWtllg^MWK^' H*(JI *ir ~rri!ra ,r Tnr "•K 1 ' « ; M »<br />
I vw troubled with a ae*e» eoMI «B4<br />
eo»i£& and on the jrettommcndatton of<br />
Xte*e* Wegaiau - T. 21. KULouru, Druggist.<br />
OR ; GAOK SALE-I>efsult having been<br />
M . u:u>U: lu un coiwutiorttt of a certain mott-<br />
HANCERY SALE:—State of Miefcfg*n, the<br />
C Circuit Court, for the county of Shiawassee<br />
in Chancery.<br />
Fre;3er:c^ E. Kelsej as executor of the l^t<br />
will and tes.autentof Roliin >:. Kelsey. deceased,<br />
vs Hin;in Johnson Jr.. and Peter Lenooa.<br />
In pursuance and by virtue of a decree of<br />
said Court, nmtw in the tli above entitled cause,<br />
on tl;o flft»;eiii.L daj- ot October, lrt>i. Notice<br />
is hereby given that the understgood Circuit<br />
Court Comuussiouer for said county, will sell<br />
atput !'c auction or vendue,to tbe highest biddor,<br />
at fr,,'.' iivntdoor of ibe Court bouse in the<br />
city •>{ Covunna, in said county, on Saturday,<br />
'hel.^th rl;i,v oftH^^mber, l&z, at ten o'clock<br />
.^ the forenoon, the following described i*od<br />
VI. premises to-wi i: The east half of the east<br />
*"^ of the northwest quarter cf section<br />
' *" -*I.v, iu towd seven, w>rth re,uge four<br />
; U J, the coo!>tj- of Shiawnasee. State of<br />
Y 0;»ted October 18,1SW<br />
iu i,-\v r fealf<br />
two<br />
^AS!S in<br />
Miehi'xan. Tf »v K -VLD WIN,<br />
iSiw iv* n. circuit Court Commissioner.<br />
J AS. M. OOOD,^/iiivj,().)V furc^pi^in^^<br />
c y?rj£i$irai!to** s^Le^rof<br />
county, held at the Probate tAX ^ If^t i« »K„<br />
Coruuixa on the Third day of IK "^7 n h**°<br />
yeur of our Lonl one thousand Cl Sarah 4M WUCOX and Arvilia K. j raphy, lleadiug, Penmanship, Ueograpay, and<br />
Llgheari to Alfred O. Bush, dated August «, ! Theory and Art of Teaming. Bor second<br />
A- .1*. IN,- spd recorded In theontoeof the ! grade, tn addition to third grade branches,<br />
Regii>t4»r of Deed* fr>p the county of Shiawassee i Algebra and Natural Philosophy sr-.- rr;tulr-<br />
and St:«tv ,»f .divbigaxt. on the twenty-seventh j ed. Forfirst-t.^de,the iequiremeni-.«resec-<br />
day or Ao»f j*t, A. D. IS*, io UUJT d8 of MorV i and grade branches and Botaay, *.-••.*try<br />
**gv+- «=« page X Commissioner<br />
cald mortgage, or any part thereof;<br />
Corunna.<br />
Now, therefor, by virtue of the power of<br />
gale-canfainfAliB-satd mortg3#e, *od the statute<br />
in such c**" inade and provided, notice 1»<br />
fl&rel>v Riven that ou the tw«nty>e»gLth day of<br />
January, A. D. J?S3, atone o'clock (a the afternoon,<br />
t shall sell at Public Auction, to the<br />
highest bidder, st the fro.it d*>or of the Court<br />
koikx:. In the city of Coruuua. (that being the<br />
place where the Circuit Court for Shiawassee<br />
county is Golden), the premises described in<br />
•aid mortgage, or go much thereof as aaay be<br />
necessary to pay the amount due on said mortgage,<br />
with 8 per oent. Inter*** and ail legal<br />
costs, together with aa attorney's fee of fifteen<br />
dollar* covenanted for therein, and provide*<br />
by statute, the premises being described In saStf<br />
mortoweas ail thct certain lot, piece and parcel<br />
of land situate 1^ the township of Hasettoa,<br />
to the county of Shiawassee and State of Mtchtgan.an-tkriownarKlde^'mbedasfohows:<br />
The<br />
west half ef the east half of the southwest<br />
quarter of section thirteen, in Township eight<br />
Borth, range four east, containing forty acres.<br />
Dated October W, 1888.<br />
.WXCLLAM O. WHXELBK,<br />
. Assignee of Mongagee<br />
#as. M. t}00»BL&,<br />
Attoroey for Assignee of MoilKagotw<br />
OHTGAGR SALC-Defautt t*vtog been<br />
M nwde in the eoodftJons Oi a cerUtfn wortnge<br />
tnnike br Sarah Ann Wilcox and ArvfiU B.<br />
Xsghtbeart to Alexander Muter, dated April 27,<br />
JL 1). ;^^ and recorded tntheoOoeef theBeg-<br />
Ist**- of Seed*, for tli* county of 8hfewaa*ee<br />
Cxd State of Michigan, on the twnntMitnth day<br />
Of Apru,A.D. M>l«,».7wr a of%ortgagea,<br />
on page 913, which said mortgage was only<br />
eadgtved on UA SBd day of March, 1898» by WiT><br />
liuaMaoGmgor, adrniaistntor, with the will<br />
annexed of said Awtfander MiOer. deceased, to<br />
VWrcbeth A. earner, and the said aaahrmnent<br />
was dub/recorded In tbeoSceof the Heglster<br />
•of Deeds of Shiawassee county; on the tTth day<br />
of March, igsB, in Liber No, » of Aasif&meuts<br />
of Mortgages aa page SfcS; and said mortgage<br />
wasdulyaaslgnedon the XTth day of March,<br />
l«K, by the said Eltxar crh A. darner to James<br />
». Wht^eier, and the s#Jd asshpment was duly<br />
reorxcled in cite office of said BegUter of Deeds<br />
on the «th day of January, 18W,Tn Liber No. «H<br />
of Assignments of Mortgages on page 1st; and<br />
•aid mortgage was duly assigned on tin 81st<br />
day of December, i*«t, by ta* said James B.<br />
Wheeler to WiUwtnG Wbaeicr and the said<br />
nsshrnnent was duly rerorded in th« ottce of<br />
•aid Register of Deed*, on the fourth day of<br />
Janoaiy. mSCln Liber No. 48 or aaslganwnc<br />
^Norteages, un page IB* nod on. which mortgage<br />
tttvrt is ciaiioed to t* due at the date of<br />
*h» notice, the sua of Two hundred and flfty-<br />
*!x d<br />
iy is b>'>1dcnj the pr^iuisoa d«wribed in twid<br />
m^rt js"ag*!T f* so much Inercof as may be necessary<br />
to pay th* amount due on said mortgage,<br />
wiiii 8 p\.r in-uiL i.uUsrest and all \^*i cost*,<br />
together with an Httorney's fee of flneendotlars,<br />
e:>veuated Ute therein and provided by<br />
statu if. the premU»a being •ie•cr^^i,plrceor parcel<br />
if lan^l "ittiaie MI The townmblp *tf Hawltorr<br />
in the county ot Shiawassee and the state of<br />
MtoUi/tiii and kr v,-a and d< k scribod •*folly** 1 never dlssapoluts them. There is no<br />
danger in giving this remedy in large<br />
and frequent doses, as it contains nothing<br />
injurious. 50 cent bottles for sale<br />
by F. Sf. Kilbourn, Druggist.<br />
Mr. Moore, the postmaster at Bradshaw,<br />
Va^ afte* reading an advertisement<br />
of Chamberlain's Colic. Cholera<br />
and Diarrhoea Remedy, concluded to<br />
try a small bottle of it, lie says: "I<br />
used iu two cases of colic and three for<br />
diarrhoea, with perfect satisfaction. I<br />
have handled and used a great deal of<br />
pstent-medieiue, but never tried any<br />
PKOBATE oaDKR. — Bute of Michigan that gave as good results as this.'' For<br />
Coanty of Shiawassee, ss. At a_session of sale by F, M. Kilbourn, Druggist,<br />
the Probate Court tat the Oounty of Shiawassee,<br />
hoidon at the Probate ofBce, in the city °f<br />
Corumm, on the 18th day of October, in<br />
tbe.roav one thonsaijd eight hundred and nine Oakatde School, Otrogso, Mwh.<br />
ty-two. - _' •.<br />
Present, Matthew Bush, Jadco of Probate.<br />
1 n the matter of the estate of Mary fiaadaU, For Toung Men and VVomeu. Teachers'Train<br />
deceased.<br />
ing Class Short nand and Type-Writing.<br />
On reading and flllng the peUtion, duly veii- Elemeneary and higher English Brancher<br />
lied of He»ry RaadaJt praying that a oertain<br />
Instrument now on file in this Court, purport taught. Opens September 5th, 18BB. Forcat-<br />
ing to o*iihe last wMI «nd teathsscntof saMdeaiogiie, apply to<br />
ceased, may be adattued to probate and that<br />
atSainfstiu^Da thereof be granted to Charles<br />
MBS.-I;;-». GOULD<br />
a Haynes or to aosme other ptoper person. t S54nt taw. Oliver street, Owosso.<br />
Tuereupon it M ordered, that Monday, the<br />
tl day crfNoventhernext, at ton|o*eiocldtithe<br />
forenoon, be ahshnwa for the heartng of asjd<br />
p»UMon, and *Stneheirsrthw^»iw»<br />
ceased and all other peisous lutoiested tn smtd<br />
estate, are rsqahwd to appear at a season or<br />
•aid court, then to ha hoiden st^d* Probate<br />
ofBoe.inthocttyof Coswjnm.s«>«sh^e»iise,<br />
if any there be, why the prayer of thepetltioner<br />
should not be granted: „__^<br />
Ard it Is further ordered that s*Jdpstttion*r<br />
give notice to the nohuns interested In eafct estate,<br />
of the pendency of said petMoa. •«« **e<br />
heartog tnereof. by eac«nga oopy of this order<br />
t» be pabttstatd is the Cc-Tmna Journal, a<br />
newspaper printed and cironhued in said county<br />
of 8hiawass*,fo* three swMtesivc weeks<br />
pKvfoustosaidr^yMhearhisT^L „<br />
*^ MATEBSW BCSH,<br />
[A true copy.} judge of Probate.<br />
Oy KATHKBXNX B. KXX8KT« „ ,<br />
Probate Boglster,<br />
SOBATB OBDBEL - State of Michigan,<br />
P Oounty of Shiawassee,**. At a aessJoaof<br />
the Probate Court for Sakl county, held fct the<br />
Prorite office !n the city of Corunna, on the<br />
litth Jay of October, In the year one thousand<br />
eiirht bun Ired and ninety-two.<br />
Present, Matthew BusS, Judjre of Probate,<br />
in the matter of the estate ofBUxnA* Baney,<br />
On roadlnr and flKng ,he pctirfrm, duly vwl«e>1<br />
of Hhrtay Haney* praving that adrahdstratkmof<br />
said estate bs granted toMw petit<br />
loner or to «mm other suitable person. .<br />
Thereupon It is ordered that Monday, the<br />
14th day of Nov., next, at tea o'clock In the<br />
forenoon, be assigned for the bearing of said<br />
petition, and that the heirs at law of said deceased,<br />
and all other persons interested 1a<br />
•aid estate, are required to appear at aaeeelon<br />
of said court, then to oe hoiden *t the Frobate<br />
omce, In the city of Coruimt, and show oause.<br />
If any there be, why «» prayer of fbepvtt*<br />
Uor.crchouW &ot be granted.<br />
And It hi further ordered that said petitioner<br />
give notice to the pew»ns Interested m said<br />
estate,of the bender*)- of said petition,and<br />
the hearingthereof, Iy oansing a copy of this<br />
order to he published u: the Corunna JouruaL<br />
a newspaper printed ».nd :l!rulated In said<br />
county'or Shiawassee, for three successive<br />
weeks previous to said 'iay of hearing.<br />
M A 'i'lll BW IVUSH,<br />
.Tudav oi Probate.<br />
CATHfiltlNBK.KKI.KRr,<br />
Probate Kogteter.<br />
ROBATE OUOEIt- - State of MMSilfWS<br />
P County of Sbiawas^eo, s*. At t seaSloo of<br />
the Probate Court for the county of Shiawassee,<br />
At aseesion of th-.' Probate Court in Cor<br />
: unna, on Mouday the 7th Axf of Novo mber<br />
Tbc wt:stbalf of ibc. east haif ut the south•«'«(' pi tne ye*r one thousand eight hundred and<br />
QU'arterof nectloh thirteen, tn hum eiirht, (Si, ninety-two. '.<br />
north range four (i) east, contaluiM^ t'.^riy Present, Mfitthew Hush, .Tudte of Probate.<br />
acrt-B of labd.''nu>re or W?s.<br />
In the matter of the estAt? of Joseph Walk<br />
Datfd, Oci^!'«'r ii.". '>•*.<br />
er deceased<br />
WILLIAM v!. V.'i l.ilKl.EK,<br />
John lto5 U'>Mr a house or other things here<br />
mentioned. Bead, thin.<br />
It ts not advertising talk, it Is all facts.<br />
I own 1000 acres of good farming lands, improved<br />
and partially improved farms of from<br />
to to jso acres, well locate in good lands, sood<br />
neighborhood*, socd roads, schools and every<br />
borne advanujre, in Shiawassee and south tier<br />
of townships in Saginaw county, now at a<br />
time when all well informed parties believe a<br />
rapid and permanent advance In price and demand<br />
of this kind of property Is here. Owing<br />
to recent business arrangements that will prev«ot<br />
mv personal auoervislon of my farming<br />
latere.t* I wtll sell these farms at a low price<br />
considerlnB- their real value and aside from<br />
an amount paid down sufficient tc guarantee<br />
sale balance on time and terms to suit purchasers.<br />
1 will also sell my resfdunca with % acre<br />
or more land in Corunna, besides the above I<br />
have between 5500 and &>00 ceres of goo-viands<br />
oonslstintf of several pood improved farms<br />
now occupied by tecu-.nts and sftustod in the<br />
above named counties, which will be for rent<br />
after F?b. 1st, IN*, present {occupants who<br />
have paid all rentsetc. to that date will have<br />
pre!crane*, but In uM or any case where al<br />
past rent* Lr.ve not been paid or assured ae<br />
that date, the holding will be rented to the<br />
first approved applicant and for reasonSabove<br />
I als* offea at pn-*te sale until Feb. isth aU<br />
my stock, M high grade horses, colts and<br />
roo)os,shout K> high grade \ I>nrbanu and Jersey*)<br />
cows snd heifer* and between W0 ind S00<br />
thormighbr«d merino sheets the balance will<br />
bo closed ont later at auction. This is a<br />
chsr.ee of a lifetime to buy a home or good<br />
•tacit. All will be "Old. see or write<br />
P.N.COOK,<br />
Corunna, Mich.<br />
''»'• *.-•**.&