r - Community District Library
r - Community District Library
r - Community District Library
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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 />
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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 />
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